Based on the novel by Susanna Jones, the film
follows Vikander's character, translator Lucy Fly, an expat
living in Japan who begins a romantic relationship with
photographer Teiji, played by Naoki Kobayashi.
But Lucy's life is turned upside down with the arrival of fellow
expat Lily Bridges, played by Riley Keough, who befriends the
couple. Lily disappears, presumed dead, and Lucy becomes the
main suspect.
While Lucy appears tough on the outside at first, her
psychological fragility soon shows.
The film, which premiered at the BFI London Film Festival on
Thursday, requires the Swedish-born Vikander, known for "Ex
Machina" and her Oscar-winning performance in "The Danish Girl,"
to speak in Japanese in numerous scenes.
"I wish I could tell you that I knew Japanese and I learned it
in three months," Vikander, 31, told Reuters at the premiere. "I
mean I did an immense amount of work to be able to do the
Japanese ... and being bilingual I know you can't just mimic
words and sounds, you need to really know what you're saying."
"So I did everything from reading my scenes out loud in English
and then we kind of reworked on translating them to really get
the kind of sensitivity and the emotion and the subtext that I
had in my acting, hopefully ... It was a lot of work."
Director Wash Westmoreland, known for dramas "Colette" and
"Still Alice," said he was familiar with the setting when he was
first approached about the project, having lived in Japan in
1989.
"When I started reading Susanna Jones' brilliant novel I just
fell into it, just the psychology was so fascinating and the
story's so unexpected and I felt, 'Aha, I can use this to make a
neo-noir,'" Westmoreland told Reuters.
"Earthquake Bird," which will have a limited theatrical run,
will be released globally on streaming service Netflix on Nov.
15.
(Reporting by Tanya Lezaic in London; Additional reporting by
Marie-Louise Gumuchian in London; Writing by Marie-Louise
Gumuchian; Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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