The Danish Girl comes in a year that has
put transgender issues firmly into the spotlight. From the transition of Bruce
to Caitlyn Jenner, to the Emmy-winning success of Amazon's series Transparent,
even the White House chose to screen The Danish Girl as part of a celebration
of LGBT artists.
Ironic, then, that Hooper has said the
script was passed around for about 12 years struggling to secure backing
because of what was seen as the story's limited appeal.
"I hope it provides a message of
hope," says the Oscar-winning Hooper, who has previously worked with
Redmayne on Elizabeth I and Les Miserables.
"It's a message that transgender
history matters. These were two extraordinary pioneers of the transgender
movement who I think history had marginalised."
Facing criticism
Before locking the final cut of the film,
he decided to screen the movie to one of Les Miserables' musical directors, who
was in the process of transitioning while making the film.
"The lights came up and she had tears
on her face, and she said the amazing words, 'How did you know?' She said it
was in many respects very true to her own experience and that was for me the
most exciting."
Despite this sensitivity to the subject
matter, Hooper has faced criticism for not choosing to cast a transgender woman
in the title role. He defended the decision,telling Variety that access to trans actors is
limited, and that he had always had Redmayne in mind.
"There was something in Eddie that
was drawn to the feminine," he says. "He played the girls' parts in
school plays. I was a bit like Gerda in the film because Gerda becomes
fascinated by the femininity in her husband and starts to paint it. I was
fascinated by the femininity in Eddie and wanted to explore it."
The film is as much about Gerda, and her
demonstration of unconditional love and acceptance through an experience which
is as much a transition for her as for her husband.
"I looked up to her," says
Vikander.
"I questioned, would I be able to do
what she did. It was an extraordinary experience trying to find that strength
because she's never passive. Lili needs to be who she is but Gerda makes the
decision to stand by her side. I'm a romantic at heart."
In fact, it is Gerda who suggests her
husband dresses as a woman. She asks Wegener to first pose for a painting, but
more significantly then suggests he attends a ball dressed as Lili, and she
goes on to paint portraits of her husband as a woman.
"You helped bring Lili to life but
she was always there," Lili later tells Gerda.
So did Gerda always know that her husband
wanted to be a woman?
"She was able to see the inner self
of the person she loved… When you know somebody really well, it's not a big
surprise when something comes up to the surface," says Vikander.
Award nominations
Vikander's scene-stealing performance,
which has been nominated for a Golden Globe and a Screen Actors Guild award,
gives the film "tremendous heart", says Hooper.
"It's phenomenal. In her hands Gerda
never feels like a victim, which I think is really interesting."
It has been an extraordinary year for the
Swede who came to the public's attention with roles in The Man from U.N.C.L.E.,
Testament of Youth, Burnt and Ex Machina, for which she has been nominated for
another Golden Globe.
Her star is set to rise further when she
acts alongside Matt Damon in the fifth Jason Bourne movie.
Redmayne is attracting an equal amount of
attention, following his Screen Actors Guild and Golden Globe best actor
nominations for his role.
The 33-year-old won the best actor award
at this year's Oscars for his portrayal of Stephen Hawking in The Theory of
Everything, another transformative role.
With the screenplay originating from 2004,
The Danish Girl has been 11 years in the making, its subject matter proving it
a difficult film for Hollywood 's
financiers to get behind.
But the critical recognition being given
to Hooper, Vikander and Redmayne shows they are together a winning combination
- and suggesting The Danish Girl was worth the wait.
The
Danish Girl is due for release in UK cinemas on 1 January.
when-29 December 2015
why-"I hope
it provides a message of hope," says the Oscar-winning Hooper, who has
previously worked with Redmayne on Elizabeth I and Les Miserables.
"It's a message that transgender history matters. These
were two extraordinary pioneers of the transgender movement who I think history
had marginalised."
how-not given
what-Few movies capture
the popular zeitgeist quite like King's Speech director Tom Hooper's The Danish
Girl. It tells the story of the 1930s Danish artist Einar Wegener, played by
Eddie Redmayne, who became one of the first people to undergo sex reassignment
surgery, having decided to live life as a woman called Lili Elbe.
where-UK
Keyword
sex reassignment surgery-變性手術
Ironic-具有諷刺意味的
marginalised-邊緣化
femininity-女人味
portraits-畫像
phenomenal-非凡的
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-35075110