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Kristen Bell Interview, AstroboyPosted by: Sheila RobertsAt Comic Con we had a chance to sit down and talk with Kristen Bell about her new film Astroboy. It will be brought to life on the big screen in breathtaking CGI animation on October 23rd, 2009. Set in futuristic Metro City, Astro Boy is about a young robot with incredible powers created by a brilliant scientist named Tenma (Nicolas Cage). Powered by positive “blue” energy, Astro Boy (Freddie Highmore) is endowed with super strength, x-ray vision, unbelievable speed and the ability to fly. Embarking on a journey in search of acceptance, Astro Boy encounters many other colorful characters along the way. Through his adventures, he learns the joys and emotions of being human, and gains the strength to embrace his destiny. Ultimately learning his friends and family are in danger, Astro Boy marshals his awesome super powers and returns to Metro City in a valiant effort to save everything he cares about and to understand what it takes to be a hero. Q: Is your character new to Astro Boy? Kristen: Yes. She’s new to bring a little bit of the female in, and to add a more emotional tie for Astro and make it more of a film. You usually have a boy-meets-girl story, although it’s not a love story, by any means. It’s more of a friendship story. Q: Was it better for you to have a fresh take on a character? Kristen: Yeah. It’s definitely less intimidating. I can’t imagine what Freddie went through because there are so many people who love Astro so much, and want you to deliver exactly what they want. The good thing with Cora is that no one has preconceived notions. I can do what I think is best and, hopefully, won’t be judged too much. Kristen: I really enjoyed that she has so many layers ‘cause she really tried to grow up too fast, and she’s sort of the den mother. She’s the maternal aspect for all these runaway kids. And, I can very much relate to that young maternal instinct. She also has a sense of protection for them, and she’s pretty sassy and opinionated, and keeps a very tough exterior. But, throughout the course of the movie, you learn a lot more about her and learn that she’s a real softy, on the inside. You really see who she is. Kristen: I don’t think so. Everything was based on was anime, but because this was more the American film version, there wasn’t that much that I felt I needed to change. But, truth be told, when I got the script and was practicing it into a tape recorder or into my mirror, I thought, “I sound like I’m a human being, imitating a robot, imitating a cartoon,” and I didn’t think it was very good. But, once you get in there, the coaching that you get and the way that they cut it together, at moments, I was able to zone out and not hear my own voice, and just follow the movie. That speaks to how powerful the story is. I knew exactly what was going to happen and I still teared up, which could be looked at as either pathetic or awesome. Kristen: Not a ton, for my character. I had what was available. They gave us a ton of research and knowledge about where it was coming from and why it was so important and what it means to people. But, because Cora was a new character, I didn’t really have anything to base it on. Kristen: There wasn’t a ton of direction, initially. They were eager to collaborate. I tried to go a little higher, at points, not that I need to go any higher than I already am, because she is a little bit younger. She’s only 17, so I tried to keep the tough exterior of a 17-year-old, which is very different from the tough exterior of a 29-year-old.
Q: How so? Kristen: I think that Cora emits a lot of confidence, but it’s not really there. I couldn’t explain, physically, exactly how I did it. I just knew that I had to have that in my head. She’s covering for something. She’s broken on the inside because she’s really a little girl and she’s trying to be a big girl. And, I’m a very big girl. No, not at all. But, I feel like I have a lot more life lessons than Cora does. Your demeanor changes from when you’re 17 to 29. It’s just something to keep in consideration, when you’re doing the voice of a younger character. Kristen: Her wardrobe. It’s fabulous. There are all these runaway kids and they have colorful junkyard wardrobe, so it’s really cute. There’s a lot of layers and colors. That’s what I was most excited about. And, there’s so much that goes into it, that nobody sees. They had options for her wardrobe. You look at a couple, and I didn’t get to pick, but I did get to have feedback about what she should wear and what best describes her. Characters in cartoons don’t change clothes. It’s not like a continuity, day-to-day thing, like a regular film is. So, you really have to do a lot of thinking into how you want to describe the character by what you put them in. Kristen: Both, believe it or not. He definitely let me try things I wanted to try. They were very eager to get my own voice in there and make it sound natural. As long as you got the point across, you were able to change the line. He’s got the gigantic vision, but other than that, he really wanted us to bring our personalities to it. As long as it fit with the story he was trying to tell, he was eager to collaborate. Kristen: I was lucky because Freddie recorded before I did, so I was able to hear where he was coming from. Obviously, he had a lot more on his plate, with this film, than I did, so I based everything off of where he was coming from. He’s the pivotal character, and he’s who you’re following, and I had to support him. It was great to be able to hear his lines mixed with mine. But, I did get to record with Matt Lucas, for a very short amount of time, which was a great experience for me because I’m such a fan of his. And, I got to record with Freddie, right at the end, just for a few lines.
Kristen: Absolutely. You want to make it as real as possible. If you fake it and you hear it back, it will sound like you’re faking it. It will sound like you’re trying to get out of a speeding ticket and faking it. The points in which Cora gets a little choked up, it had to be real. So, I just took the time that I needed and, luckily, got it there. But, because it’s an action movie, there was a lot of gesturing, falling, hitting your head, flying through space and stuff like that, where you have to just make a bunch of random noises, which is the weirdest part of voice-over. I was in the booth, trying to move as much as possible to make it real, and the sound guys were like, “Your clothing is so loud. Take your earrings off.” If you rub your arms together, it picks it up because those sound systems are so amazing. So, I tried not to make noise with my body, but I was definitely jumping off the walls, in that booth. Kristen: No. I stand there with an attitude. Kristen: I don’t think that it is in script form yet, but I did get the pitch and it’s awesome. And, he did pitch it to Warner Bros., but it wasn’t picked up, as of yet. I think there’s a lack of enthusiasm for it, over there. He’s got so many other things going on now. Kristen: Absolutely! Kristen: Every day. So much. There were so many things surrounding that part, like the love from the fan base, which I’d never felt anything like. And, also, the sense of family that our crew had, going to the same job, every day. It was a character that I loved to play that was also really funny, really heartfelt and had a great message for girls. I do miss it a lot. I’m at peace with the fact that it’s over, but I would like to do the movie and have a little reincarnation of her. Kristen: Other than me, no. Kristen: Initially, my entrance into the genre world was, “Hey, this is a good script.” But, the more I meet the fans and see how intelligent and into it they are, and how much they appreciate it, it’s not like working in any other genre. The sci-fi world and the Comic-Con world, in particular, just have the coolest fans, and they love the work more than anyone else. No Comic-Con fan does anything mindlessly. They catch you when you’re not doing continuity right, which is exciting. You can make something mindless for them.
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