A Family of Talent

The Cast of THE KIDS ARE ALL RIGHT Talks

The Kids are All Right

Julianne Moore, Annette Bening, Mia Wasikowska, Josh Hutcherson and Mark Ruffalo discuss The Kids Are All Right.

While filmmaking often makes families of its cast and crew, the lead actors in Lisa Cholodenko’s comedy The Kids Are All Right found a special bond of respect and admiration that allowed them to play a family as well. Two-time Oscar-nominated Julianne Moore and three-time Oscar-nominated Annette Bening play the two moms, Jules and Nic. Up-and-coming stars Josh Hutcherson (Bridge to Terabithia, Journey to the Center of the Earth) and Mia Wasikowska (Alice in Wonderland, Jane Eyre) play their two kids, Laser and Joni.  Mark Ruffalo plays their sperm-donor dad. Together they create a touching, hilarious family (both on- and off-screen) whose evolution and exploits the five actors talk about in the following interview.

 



Annette Bening [plays Nic in the movie]:
With movies, everything follows from the writing. To me, The Kids Are All Right is a great and poignant story about a family who very much love each other, and who are going through what a lot of families go through – things that we all share and can relate to. There’s so much heart in it, so much genuine feeling – and it’s not saccharine, or earnest; earnest is boring.

 

Julianne Moore [plays Jules in the movie]: One of the reasons that I really responded to the wonderfully funny script is that it’s about where you are when you’ve been in a relationship for a long time and you have children. Annette and I have both been married long-term, have children and know what it’s like to parent. When you have a child that’s leaving home, it’s a big transitional time for everybody.

Mia Wasikowska [plays Joni in the movie]: Family dynamics change when people grow up and start living their own lives.

Annette Bening: All the characters in the story have their journeys. Nic and Jules are really good moms; they have brought up their children in a loving, supportive environment.  They’re human, like all the rest of us with our families.

The two women are very different from each other; I liked that in the writing, that they’re each such distinct people.

Julianne Moore: My character has tried different jobs; she was in architecture school, had a business, and now is trying to be a landscape designer. But she’s been more the stay-at-home parent, and for her the idea that Joni is leaving home now is major. Because her whole life has pretty much been about staying home with the kids.

It makes for a complicated dynamic. In movies, characters generally have a clear idea of where they’re going. In life, I’ve seen a lot of people who don’t. So I wanted to play that with Jules; her predicament is that she doesn’t feel like she can go forward or backward, she feels stuck – and Nic has to deal with that, they have to work it out together. I loved that Jules is at such an amorphous place in her life, and that seemed to be a compelling thing to play.

Annette Bening: I felt like I understood Nic; I saw her as a sane, stable, smart woman. The dilemma that she gets in, going through a hard thing – one of the joys of acting is trying to put yourself as much as you possibly can into the shoes of another person, and to look at the world through their eyes.

Mia Wasikowska: Nic and Jules bring out different things in Joni’s personality. To me, Joni always came off as a fiercely driven person; very ambitious, and wanting to achieve in school. She’s more involved in the life of the mind than, say, fashion.

Josh Hutcherson [plays Laser in the movie]: Laser gets along great with his moms, but when he meets Paul it’s that, he hasn’t really had any male influences in his life. At the beginning of the story, he’s the one who wants to contact his biological father.

Lisa, Julianne, Annette, Mia, and I all talked about, “What would you do if it was your kid? Would you let him meet him?”

Mark Ruffalo [plays Paul in the movie]: Paul is kind of interested in the idea of picking up where the moms have left off a little.

I feel that Laser expects more of a traditional dad, but Paul is much more eclectic.  Paul doesn’t totally give up on him, but goes to where he’s getting the most responsiveness, which is from Joni.

Josh Hutcherson: Laser keeps his guard up, but Joni is more outgoing, with Paul.

Mia Wasikowska: At first, she’s very apprehensive, as it’s an unexpected relationship she finds herself in.

READ MORE

Share This:
Comment on this article
Share your thoughts with us.

Add a comment

Login or sign up to comment.

 

 

No comments have been added to this article.

Our Movies
Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, SpyTinker, Tailor, Soldier, SpyNow in Theatres Nationwide
PariahPariahNow Playing in Select Theatres
Being FlynnBeing FlynnIn Select Theatres March 2, 2012
ParaNormanParaNormanComing August 17, 2012
The DebtThe DebtOwn it Today
The Broken TowerThe Broken TowerDigital Download Now Available
News & Views
Adepero Oduye and Sahra Mellesse
Inside Our Movies Poetry in Motion
Gary Oldman | Finding George Smiley
people in film Gary Oldman
More for the Movie Lover
Videos & Extras
Darkness Visible: Gary Oldman's Karla Scene
Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy Darkness Visible: Gary Oldman's Karla Scene
Clip: Karla
Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy Clip: Karla
Tom Hardy | A Hero Among his Heroes
Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy Tom Hardy
Shop
DVD Gnarr

Digital Download Now Available

Soundtrack Resurrect Dead

Digital Download Now Available

iTunes Pariah Soundtrack

Own It Today