Zoe Bell talks Death Proof with RT
Is it also a good thing for your career, going forward, that you can say you've done a lead acting role and can do your own stunts?
ZB: I hope so. I don't want to jinx any potential forward movement but there's a movie coming up next year - it's an untitled project at this stage - and it'll be starring me in a kind of action/adventure sort-of Indiana Jones type genre aimed at young girls for them to have an action hero, basically. Which sounds fucking cool to me. I think the brilliance there is even if there's little roles that require a lot of action the community will be like, "Fuck, yeah, we'll use Zoe, she can talk, she can flip."
It's interesting, though, balancing the two. I don't want to give up stunts, I love doing stunts and I plan to keep doing them. Of course if you're going to become an actor somewhere along the line there's a balance you've got to keep. Because the thing is, if my face becomes familiar and I'm being seen as a featured extra as a stuntwoman, then people may recognise me. But who knows, I don't know of any women, or men really, who've gone from being a stuntperson to being an actor and then mixed it up after that, so I'm kind-of chartering new territory! So fuck the rules, let's just see what we can do with it!
Is there a concern that people are going to hesitate going to you because they think you'll ask for more money than an all-out stuntwoman?
ZB: I have thought that. I would like to make it clear to those guys that I would love to do the work. Maybe it's to do with the money, but I think it'll probably be more about, "Oh, she's an actor now, we can't." And it's been interesting because the last couple of months I haven't been in town - I've been away promoting the movie - and it really doesn't take long to get out of the loop in LA, you know. I rang my friends before I left and said, "Oi, you guys; we're going to hang out, and you're going to hire me on that movie, and we're going to do this..." I want to get back in the loop as soon as I get home just to keep it rolling. Especially if this movie doesn't shoot until next year; I want to get busy. I get bored really easily. If my character is just doing action in whatever form... sweet.
Having spoken to stuntmen and women in the past it's often surprising how safe everything is played; every stunt, major and minor, is planned to the last detail. So I'm guessing that Zoe the stuntwoman is not Zoe the character, because she seems decidedly more carefree than most stunt performers I've spoken to...
ZB: More mental? [laughs] Yeah. I'm certainly not a conservative person, and you know personality traits in what you see on screen is definitely me. Whether I would jump out of a car, ride on the bonnet and then chase down a serial killer, I think that's probably the Quentin twist on Zoe Bell.
Life's too short to be super conservative but it's also too short to make it any shorter. I don't plan on dying early, but at the same time I don't plan on playing it so safe that I'll live to ninety. I think when you do that stuff for a living, if I get too nailed, not just my livelihood financially but how I love spending my time is jeopardised. When I was injured after Kill Bill I had a year where I not just couldn't make any money but I couldn't swim, I couldn't surf, I could hardly run, which is insane. I couldn't do gymnastics, martial arts, I could barely crawl on all fours. That was devastating to me.
Suddenly you realise, shit, I'm not invincible, and suddenly you have to find a balance where you can keep doing the shit that you want to do without hindering the way you want to live. But, still avoid massive risk so you can keep doing what you want to do. It's tricky.
What happened on Kill Bill?
ZB: A stunt went wrong, basically. It was one of those human errors that shouldn't have happened, but it did. Basically, they told me that all the bones in my wrist dislocated except one. The ligament that was attaching all of them got bust so I had surgery to mend the ligament. I had pins to immobilise it for three months and so after three months everything had atrophied and it was fucked for a good year before I got Catwoman and even on Catwoman I still couldn't crawl. I was battling with it for a long time; it was miserable.
It was really painful, but more than that it really fucked with my head. That was the hardest part; suddenly not knowing where I stood, or what my identity was, or what I was going to do with my life. All of those big mid-life-crisis things happening at 23 all at once. That was the scary part for me. Not to mention just being in pain all the time which made it worse.
ZB: I hope so. I don't want to jinx any potential forward movement but there's a movie coming up next year - it's an untitled project at this stage - and it'll be starring me in a kind of action/adventure sort-of Indiana Jones type genre aimed at young girls for them to have an action hero, basically. Which sounds fucking cool to me. I think the brilliance there is even if there's little roles that require a lot of action the community will be like, "Fuck, yeah, we'll use Zoe, she can talk, she can flip."
It's interesting, though, balancing the two. I don't want to give up stunts, I love doing stunts and I plan to keep doing them. Of course if you're going to become an actor somewhere along the line there's a balance you've got to keep. Because the thing is, if my face becomes familiar and I'm being seen as a featured extra as a stuntwoman, then people may recognise me. But who knows, I don't know of any women, or men really, who've gone from being a stuntperson to being an actor and then mixed it up after that, so I'm kind-of chartering new territory! So fuck the rules, let's just see what we can do with it!
Is there a concern that people are going to hesitate going to you because they think you'll ask for more money than an all-out stuntwoman?
ZB: I have thought that. I would like to make it clear to those guys that I would love to do the work. Maybe it's to do with the money, but I think it'll probably be more about, "Oh, she's an actor now, we can't." And it's been interesting because the last couple of months I haven't been in town - I've been away promoting the movie - and it really doesn't take long to get out of the loop in LA, you know. I rang my friends before I left and said, "Oi, you guys; we're going to hang out, and you're going to hire me on that movie, and we're going to do this..." I want to get back in the loop as soon as I get home just to keep it rolling. Especially if this movie doesn't shoot until next year; I want to get busy. I get bored really easily. If my character is just doing action in whatever form... sweet.
Having spoken to stuntmen and women in the past it's often surprising how safe everything is played; every stunt, major and minor, is planned to the last detail. So I'm guessing that Zoe the stuntwoman is not Zoe the character, because she seems decidedly more carefree than most stunt performers I've spoken to...
ZB: More mental? [laughs] Yeah. I'm certainly not a conservative person, and you know personality traits in what you see on screen is definitely me. Whether I would jump out of a car, ride on the bonnet and then chase down a serial killer, I think that's probably the Quentin twist on Zoe Bell.
Life's too short to be super conservative but it's also too short to make it any shorter. I don't plan on dying early, but at the same time I don't plan on playing it so safe that I'll live to ninety. I think when you do that stuff for a living, if I get too nailed, not just my livelihood financially but how I love spending my time is jeopardised. When I was injured after Kill Bill I had a year where I not just couldn't make any money but I couldn't swim, I couldn't surf, I could hardly run, which is insane. I couldn't do gymnastics, martial arts, I could barely crawl on all fours. That was devastating to me.
Suddenly you realise, shit, I'm not invincible, and suddenly you have to find a balance where you can keep doing the shit that you want to do without hindering the way you want to live. But, still avoid massive risk so you can keep doing what you want to do. It's tricky.
What happened on Kill Bill?
ZB: A stunt went wrong, basically. It was one of those human errors that shouldn't have happened, but it did. Basically, they told me that all the bones in my wrist dislocated except one. The ligament that was attaching all of them got bust so I had surgery to mend the ligament. I had pins to immobilise it for three months and so after three months everything had atrophied and it was fucked for a good year before I got Catwoman and even on Catwoman I still couldn't crawl. I was battling with it for a long time; it was miserable.
It was really painful, but more than that it really fucked with my head. That was the hardest part; suddenly not knowing where I stood, or what my identity was, or what I was going to do with my life. All of those big mid-life-crisis things happening at 23 all at once. That was the scary part for me. Not to mention just being in pain all the time which made it worse.
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on Sep 23 2007 08:20 PM She avoids the question about the Vanishing point challenger, i.e. she doesn't really care about it LOL (Reply to this) |
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on Sep 24 2007 04:22 AM I was let down by dp as a part of Grindhouse. But I seem to be one of the few who actually liked watching it better the second time on DVD. Talky, yes, but it is a lot of fun nonetheless if you enjoy it as a stand-alone film. Good date movie actually. (Reply to this) |
![]() on Sep 24 2007 05:29 AM Zoe Bell, you are INSANELY gorgeous and personable. Feel free to contact me ANY time. (Reply to this) |
![]() on Sep 24 2007 06:21 AM I actually like DP. After watching it maybe 5 times (2 at the theater, 3 at home), I can see how personal the characters have become. Sure they aren't as funny as Tarantino's other characters. They do have their good parts though. And watching her play Ship's Mast gets me on the edge of my seat everytime. If it wasn't Quentin Directing that movie, it would of been some fancy actor that you would of had to shoot away from their face. Zoe is a badass. (Reply to this) |
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on Sep 24 2007 02:37 PM I've always liked Death Proof also, but it definitely holds my attention better watching it by itself, instead of immediately following Planet Terror. I still think they should have switched the order in Grindhouse. But yeah, Zoe's pretty damn cool in that movie. (Reply to this) |
![]() on Sep 24 2007 03:17 PM See my instinct seems to hold that Death Proof should have come first as part of Grindhouse and Planet Terror should have come first internationally where they were split. The cynical me can see the Weinstein argument; you get your Tarantino flick out first theatrically or you hang onto it as part of the double-bill. But think about it. Not only does Planet Terror's crescendo ending rain on Death Proof's parade, but, seperately, if you assume the average international cinemagoer won't have seen Grindhouse, the Dr. Block sequence in Death Proof works sooo much better if you see it after you've seen Planet Terror. And if you're viewing them seperately then it doesn't matter that Planet Terror crescendos, because you're readjusted to Death Proof by the time you see it. (Reply to this) |
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on Sep 24 2007 05:19 PM I saw DP for the first time with a group of coworkers this week. I watch a dozen movies a week (mainly new releases) so I can be very hard to please. DP was a HOOT! It might have bogged down a little bit with all the girlie dialogue, (for that reason along with the ending I would classify it as a "girlie movie). But the last 20 minutes was better than anything I've rented this year. I don't know if it was intended to be a comedy but by the time Stuntman Mike got his just desserts we were howling. The only downer for me, (being a huge "Vanishing Point" fan) was that Quenin didn't find some way to include "Mississippi Queen" by Mountain in the Sound Track. Quentin's sound tracks always kick b***. (Reply to this) |
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on Oct 17 2007 08:08 PM In reply to this comment (#1144142) Yes! I've never been more turned on by a chick in a movie. Zoe rocks! (Reply to this) |
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on Oct 20 2007 03:14 PM yeah shes representing us kiwi girls worldwide go new zealand!!! (Reply to this) |
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