Since the day The Bling Ring's teaser trailer was released I couldn't stop thinking about a thing: Sofia Coppola did wonders for her actresses' careers. In The Bling Ring teaser we see Emma Watson (the good and smart Hermione Granger and the damaged Sam from The Perks of Being a Wallflower) going "sexy bitch"... and I guess it will be simply wonderful for her career! In fact, all the leading ladies of a Sofia Coppola movie must be thankfull to her. They are talented, they are beautiful, they have everything in order to shine in the big-screen for a long time. We should honour Miss Coppola for showing them to the world.
While none of the "Coppola girls" got an Academy Award nomination at all (not even for a performance outside the Sofia Coppola filmography), all them delivered amazing turns and became major and well-respected names in the cinema industry. Here's my analisys of each one of the "Coppola girls":
Kirsten Dunst
- from one of the misterious Lisbon sisters to queen -
Collaborations with Sofia Coppola:
- The Virgin Suicides (1999)
- Marie Antoinette (2006)
People were already impressed by her performance in 1994's Interview with the Vampire, but her turn as Lux Lisbon in Sofia Coppola's directorial debut (1999's The Virgin Suicides) marked Miss Dunst transition to adult roles, working as a goodbye to the age of innocence and as a love letter to her beauty. After (and maybe thanks to) The Virgin Suicidies, she got the roles of Nicole in Crazy/Beautiful (2001) and Marion Davies in The Cat's Meow (2001), delivering fantastic performances that assured her "serious young actress" status. Then she was cast as the iconic Mary Jane Watson, Peter Parker/Spider-Man's love interest, in 2002's Spider-Man and she reached worldwide stardom: the movie received rave reviews, it had a huge fanbase, it grossed $403.7M at USA box-office and $822M worldwide. The success of the first Spider-Man film led Dunst to reprise the role in the 2004 sequel, Spider-Man 2, the movie was critically praised and another commercial success for the franchise, setting a new opening weekend box office record for North America. In the same year, she had a supporting part in the raved The Eternal Sunshine of a Spotless Mind (a movie that won the 2004 Academy Award of Best Original Screenplay), starring opposite Jim Carrey, Kate Winslet, Tom Wilkinson and Mark Ruffalo. In 2005, her role in Cameron Crowe's Elizabethtown originated the concept of "Manic Pixie Dream Girl", but the critics didn't like the movie and they weren't impressed by Dunst's performance. Then, she re-teamed with Sofia Coppola once again:
Kirsten Dunst appeared as the polemic Marie Antoinette in 2006's movie of the same name. The movie received mixed reviews thanks mostly to Coppola's hyper-stylized approach and modern interpretation of the doomed queen, but Dunst performance as a sad woman living in a material world was well-received for both critics and audiences. After Marie Antoinette, things didn't go fantastic for Dunst: the third installement of the Spider-Man franchise was a commercial success, but critics weren't seduced this time and fanbase members had some complains about this approach and then, thanks to personal problems, Kirsten slowed down her career. Her "comeback" (she never stopped working, but her last projects weren't successful) happened with 2010's All Good Things: the movie was a commercial flop and critics didn't like it, but Dunst performance received enthusiastic reviews and some Oscar buzz. Then, in 2011, Kirsten Dunst seduce Cannes Film Festival with her amazing turn in Lars von Trier's Melancholia and takes home the film festival's Best Actress prize. Melancholia generated huge Oscar buzz around Dunst and she got some major award recognition, but she missed the Oscar nomination.
Right now, I'm expecting another collaboration between her and Sofia Coppola... We don't need another Marie Antoinette, but another The Virgin Suicides-esque movie would be welcome.
Kirsten Dunst appeared as the polemic Marie Antoinette in 2006's movie of the same name. The movie received mixed reviews thanks mostly to Coppola's hyper-stylized approach and modern interpretation of the doomed queen, but Dunst performance as a sad woman living in a material world was well-received for both critics and audiences. After Marie Antoinette, things didn't go fantastic for Dunst: the third installement of the Spider-Man franchise was a commercial success, but critics weren't seduced this time and fanbase members had some complains about this approach and then, thanks to personal problems, Kirsten slowed down her career. Her "comeback" (she never stopped working, but her last projects weren't successful) happened with 2010's All Good Things: the movie was a commercial flop and critics didn't like it, but Dunst performance received enthusiastic reviews and some Oscar buzz. Then, in 2011, Kirsten Dunst seduce Cannes Film Festival with her amazing turn in Lars von Trier's Melancholia and takes home the film festival's Best Actress prize. Melancholia generated huge Oscar buzz around Dunst and she got some major award recognition, but she missed the Oscar nomination.
Right now, I'm expecting another collaboration between her and Sofia Coppola... We don't need another Marie Antoinette, but another The Virgin Suicides-esque movie would be welcome.
Scarlett Johansson
- lost in Tokyo in order to be found by the world -
- Lost In Translation (2003)
So, let's think: if Coppola didn't cast Johansson in Lost In Translation, the part of Nola Rice wouldn't be offered to her and she wouldn't be the movie star she's today. It's funny to state this, but Sofia is the responsible for the success of one of the biggest names in the business... she must be proud of "her girl".
Elle Fanning
- Hollywood princess since people saw her "Somehwere" -
- Somewhere (2010)
Only 14 (she'll be 15 next month), Elle Fanning is a huge promise for cinema, so young, yet so talented. Thanks to Somewhere the world discovered there are two Fanning sisters and started loving Elle: now she's one of the most loved child/young actresses in Hollywood. She will have a bright future and a second collaboration with Sofia Coppola would be delicious to happen, in my opinion. By now, thanks Sofia for giving an opportunity to this young treasure, I guess it wasn't a waste of time at all.
Emma Watson
- Hermione Granger goes wild and sexy and steals celebrities -
- The Bling Ring (2013)
While we can say it's too soon to say starring a Sofia Coppola movie helped Watson's career, since we haven't seen the final product (we must wait for June in order to see Sofia's The Bling Ring in order to state if Watson actually did a good work or not), but by now, we can support our hopes in some reports who say she nailed the part and showed a totally different side as an actress, a side we have never seen before. The Bling Ring promises to be the vehicle that will prove Emma Watson is much more than just a girl who benefits from the celebrity status she gained thanks to the Harry Potter movies and that her turn in Perks wasn't only a product of good directing work.
Title: "Coppola Girls": the Sofia Coppola influence on the careers of her actresses
Rating: 100% based on 99998 ratings. 5 user reviews.
7:55 AM
Rating: 100% based on 99998 ratings. 5 user reviews.
7:55 AM