Guillermo Arriaga's directorial debut, "The Burning Plain," opens with a wide shot of a lagger ablaze in the New Mexico desert. While the landscape appears barren and exposed, it is concealment secrets that drive the story.
"The Burning Plain," scripted and directed by the "21 Grams" and "Babel" screenwriter, stars Charlize Theron as a troubled Oregon restaurant manager who is forced to confront her past when a deep visitor arrives from Mexico. Kim Basinger appears in flashbacks as Sylvia's mother, Gina, at a polar moment in her whitney Young life.
The film, which debuts at the Venice Film Festival on Friday, is one of 21 movies competing for the Golden Lion, which will be awarded Sept. 6. Directed by Mexico-born Arriaga, it is one of five U.S. pictures in competition.
Landscape is primal to the movie - which Arriaga initially had titled, "The Four Elements." Water, earth, wind and fire ar present as the tale moves back and off from the searing dryness of New Mexico to the round-the-clock rain in Portland, Ore.
"I have invariably been driven to the desert. I think the landscape itself influences people in a certain way," Arriaga told a news show conference. "We experienced the desert and the sun and the extreme cold in the desert to the nonstop rain in Oregon. I think the weather and the landscape also influences the character."
Cinematographer Robert Elswit, who south Korean won an Oscar for "There Will Be Blood," was lauded by Arriaga for stunning shots of the New Mexico desert and Oregon coastline.
The movie is told through four convergence plot lines, and cuts back and forth through time to reveal Sylvia's story.
"This is the geographic expedition of the mystery of a fair sex called Sylvia who has an emotional journey that takes her to the extremes. It explores what makes her so damaged," Arriaga said.
No stranger to flawed characters, Theron aforesaid she loved the part of Sylvia.
"You should ask people that question. Why are people so blemished? Because that's who we are," Theron said. "Why is it when you watch a film and something happens that moves you - it either moves you to tears or gives a chill down your spine - it's because we derriere see ourselves in that moment."
Theron, wHO also worked as a producer on the film, said on that point was a list of actresses to play the role of Gina, simply they were thrilled to get Basinger.
"She's amazing," Theron said. "There is something about Kim. There's a strength with her leftover vulnerability from her 20s that's scarce unbelievably beautiful to watch. There ar moments on the cover when she's shaking, her entire body is shakiness for real. You couldn't act that."
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