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Tribune News Service
Entertainment
Patrick Ryan

Anne Hathaway is a booze-fueled monster in 'weird' comedy 'Colossal'

NEW YORK _ "Colossal" is the rare movie that defies description.

"I was talking to our director (Nacho Vigalondo) and I said, 'This is a difficult movie to sum up,'" Anne Hathaway says. "He said, 'Well, I just tell people that it's a movie about how when a woman gets drunk, a gigantic monster attacks South Korea.' Not bad, right?"

But a mere sentence can't fully capture what's so unusual about "Colossal" (in theaters Friday in New York and Los Angeles, expands to 65 theaters nationwide April 14, including Denver, Chicago, Washington, Atlanta and Austin).

The sci-fi comedy follows a flailing alcoholic named Gloria (Hathaway), who moves home after her boyfriend (Dan Stevens) kicks her out. After reconnecting with a childhood friend, Oscar (Jason Sudeikis), Gloria starts working at his bar and falls back into old habits, stumbling home through a neighborhood playground every morning. It's only when she watches the news that she realizes a Godzilla-like kaiju attacking Seoul is mimicking her drunken actions during those hours, forcing her to confront her addiction.

After shooting "The Intern" and "Alice Through the Looking Glass" in 2014, Hathaway, 34, was looking for a more left-of-center project.

"I had been sent a lot of good, but very commercial scripts, and I just wasn't connecting to them," Hathaway says. "I gave my agents the directive, 'I'd like to do something a little bit weird.' This one arrived and it certainly fit the bill."

Sudeikis, 41, saw hints of genre-defying '90s movies "Joe Versus the Volcano" and "Being John Malkovich" when he read it. The latter, particularly, "is so iconic and singular to those couple people that made it," he says. "That's definitely one that popped to mind."

For Vigalondo, "there's nothing more exciting than putting a familiar face in a different context," he says. "As soon as I knew Anne was interested, I got really excited, mostly because I had the chance to push her different ways."

Gloria's alcoholism was familiar terrain for Hathaway, who was nominated for a best-actress Oscar playing a recovering drug addict in 2008's "Rachel Getting Married." (She won best supporting actress in 2013 for "Les Miserables.")

"Some of the addicts I know are the most alive people I know, and I think that translates really well in these stories," Hathaway says. As someone who has been labeled "phony" and "unlikable" by online critics (spawning the name "Hathahaters"), she could also understand Gloria's frustration with the men in her life constantly putting her down.

"People have become full of regard for their own opinions and give them very cheaply," Hathaway says. "I certainly related to that."

Gloria's most oppressive foe winds up being Oscar, whose rapey vibe and deep-seated resentments come to light in "Colossal's" twisty second half. It's a shockingly dark character for Sudeikis, a "Saturday Night Live" veteran known for raunchy comedies "Horrible Bosses" and "We're the Millers."

"One of the three-word reviews was '(Expletive) Jason Sudeikis!' And you're like, 'Yeah! It worked!'" Sudeikis says. "The reactions have been fun. I was aware of the male-female (themes of the movie), but I also understood that boys have the opportunity to wake up every day and use systemic sexism to their benefit."

In light of January's Women's March and planned cuts to reproductive healthcare under President Trump's administration, both actors think "Colossal's" flawed but empowered heroine could resonate even more strongly now than she did at the movie's Toronto International Film Festival premiere last fall.

"It'll be interesting to see what it's like for people six months after the election," Hathaway says. "The timing of this one couldn't be more apt, unfortunately."

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