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Digital Spy Reviews Smashed; Screen Crush Names Mary one of the Top Women of 2012

Digital Spy has reviewed Smashed and wrote that Mary impresses in the “raw drama”:

Winstead is fearless, playing a variation on her ‘good girl’ persona that feels absolutely real and painfully relatable – you needn’t have any experience with substance addiction to identity with her struggle. But beyond the terror of what the addiction does to Kate physically and emotionally, it’s her slow process of coming to terms with reality that gives the story both its sadness and its strength. Because we like Kate and Charlie, and their relationship genuinely seems to be grounded in love, we want them to be able to work through their problems.

Ponsoldt tells his poignant, honest story in unsentimental strokes, and his script is both sharply observed and consistently surprising. He offers just enough in the way of backstory to add shading to Winstead’s already nuanced performance, with a childhood weight issue referenced early on and Kate’s unashamedly boozy mother (Mary Kay Place) making a charged appearance later in the film.

Smashed is a smart, sensitive and appropriately uncomfortable watch, offering an unrelentingly clear-eyed view of dependence, both emotional and substance-based.
Also, Screen Crush named Mary one of the top women of 2012 in film and television:
Often we watch films in which actors portray those afflicted with addiction and there’s something so disingenuous about the performance — it’s either over the top, or clearly a sober person meekly playing dress-up, stumbling around in someone else’s shoes. Not so with Mary Elizabeth Winstead, who gives what I feel is the performance of her career up to this point. As Kate, Winstead plays an alcoholic, married to her similarly afflicted husband (Aaron Paul), and while we’ve been conditioned to see drunk women on TV and in movies as cute and slurring, clumsy baby deer, Winstead gives us the antithesis with her brutal, unflinching portrayal of true alcoholism. In my review I noted that when intoxicated, her voice becomes something unnatural and inhuman, and it’s completely unsettling to watch. When alcoholism takes over, the people we once knew no longer exist — they may look the same, but their mind has been replaced by someone we no longer know, and just the same, Winstead may look like Winstead the actress, but in ‘Smashed,’ she’s no longer the same person, and it’s incredible to watch.
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New Smashed Reviews and Interviews

With SMASHED in UK theaters today, new interviews and reviews about Mary’s role in the film have been posted online. The first interview comes from HeyUGuys, where they talk about the film and her performance, awards buzz, superhero movies (and the Captain America 2 rumors), as well as where she sees her career going from here.

The UK’s The Week also says that Mary’s performance deserves an Oscar win:

This small, precisely observed portrait of alcoholism is “an unsentimental movie for the age”, says Stephen Holden in the NewYork Times. Reminiscent of the classic Days of Wine and Roses, minus the old-time Hollywood melodrama, “it is anchored in a solid, convincing performance”by Mary Elizabeth Winstead.

Playing Kate with resonant intelligence and healing humour, Winstead is “a revelation”, says Peter Travers in Rolling Stone. and
should be on the list for a best actress Oscar nomination. Together with Aaron Paul, “they are dynamite”.

Winstead is “never less than excellent”as the grandly unhinged Kate who ends up hanging by a thread, says Joshua Rothkopf in Time Out. The self-control in her performance is “astounding”.

BBC News also has an interview with Mary which you can view here.

“I’m very aware my chances are not very high so I’m not getting my hopes up,” says the actress, previously seen in quirky movies like Scott Pilgrim vs The World and Quentin Tarantino’s Death Proof.

“But it’s lovely to hear anyone say anything like that about a performance I’ve done, and I certainly can’t help but fantasise about the idea of being a part of it in some way.”

“I had seen Mary in big action films like Die Hard 4.0 and the remake of The Thing,” says Smashed director James Ponsoldt, whose work won a special jury prize at the Sundance Film Festival last January.

“But spending time with her, I realised what a wonderful imagination she has and how willing she was to really prepare for this role.”
And finally, The Guardian has a video review that you can view here.
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New Interviews with Mary Discussing Smashed; New Review

A couple of new interviews with Mary have been released in the UK in anticipation for the Dec. 14 release of Smashed. The first interview comes from The Telegraph. Also, head to the gallery to see a new Mary shoot she did for the paper. On filming Smashed in 19 days:

The breakneck, 19-day shoot was, she tells me during a recent interview in London, “kind of eye-opening… it felt like acting boot camp.

Before this, any time that I auditioned to play somebody that had a dark past or any sort of troubled or tortured quality, people would always say, ‘You’re too sweet, you’re too nice, you’re too normal – you could never have problems’. And you can’t help but start believing that stuff.”

On how Smashed required her to be emotional:

“When you are playing someone who is dealing with issues on a really personal level, if you don’t bring your own issues into the equation, it’s not going to feel really personal to the people watching it,” she says.

“My issue that I uncovered in doing this film is that I have always been an extreme people-pleaser to the point where I have had people involved in my life because I want to make them happy, not because it does anything for me,” she says. “My whole life I’ve been like ‘oh I don’t have any problems, I am so boring’, but making this film I had to acknowledge that I do have problems and no matter how big or small they appear to other people, your own problems are big to you.”

Click on the link above to read that interview in full. The next interview comes from HuffPo UK where she says playing the role of Kate was scary and the advice she got from Bruce Willis on the A Good Day to Die Hard set:

Continue reading New Interviews with Mary Discussing Smashed; New Review

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The Variety Studio: Awards Edition Full Interview

A few weeks ago on November 28, Mary attended The Variety Studio: Awards Edition event in Los Angeles. At the event, Variety talked to Best Actress Oscar hopefuls Elle Fanning, Rashida Jones, Leslie Mann, Quvenzhane Wallis, Mary Elizabeth Winstead and Emayatzy Cornealdi. Naturally, Mary talked about her much award-buzzed film Smashed. Check out the full video interview below:

If you missed pics from the event, you can view them here.

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Mary Nominated for a Phoenix Film Critics Society Award

Examiner just posted the nominees for the Phoenix Film Critics Society and Mary is nominated for best actress!

The Phoenix Film Critics Society is pleased to announce the slate of nominees for our 2012 Annual Awards. The winner in each category will be announced on Tuesday, December 18, 2012. The Best Picture will be chosen from the Top Ten Films of 2012.
BEST ACTRESS IN A LEADING ROLE

Jessica Chastain “Zero Dark Thirty”

Jennifer Lawrence “Silver Linings Playbook”

Quvenzhané Wallis “Beasts of the Southern Wild”

Mary Elizabeth Winstead “Smashed”

Congrats, Mary!! 🙂

Update: Jessica Chastain won.

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Stylist Interviews Mary About Smashed and Moving Away From Horror Films

Smashed opens in the UK this Friday (Dec. 14) and Stylist magazine caught up with Mary where she talks about how she landed the part of Kate, alcoholism and horror films. Click on the link above to read the interview in full.

What drew her to the character of recovering alcoholic, Kate?

“I was craving the role,” she tells Stylist. “There aren’t actually that many roles out there for women and while I’ve had a lot of fun flying around in horror films I was getting sick of the niche and reputation I was becoming known for. When I saw the script for Smashed I didn’t think that I would be considered for such an incredible part. For one thing, I’d been having a hard time even getting meetings for smaller independent films because people thought I was too nice and not interesting enough. But once you’ve had a part like Kate, and once you’ve finished filming, I think it’s understandable that you don’t want to go back to playing the girlfriend or the wife.”

Mary also talked about how she had  to examine her own life in order to relate to her character:

“I’ve always been a massive people pleaser – someone who tries to keep a happy face and put a positive spin on everything,” she says. “I’m very aware about that fault in myself and I know that I paper over certain things that aren’t so great in my life much in the same way that Kate does with her addiction. Seeing that in me helped with Smashed, though, as it gave me some degree of insight into what Kate might be going through.”

As for all the Oscar and award buzz she’s getting?

“I can’t buy into any of the Oscar hype. It’s such an outside chance and completely not what I was seeking from the role that I prefer not to even think about it. I think often in Hollywood there can be two types of roles for women – the strong and the sexy – and because I’m definitely not the sexy I was always more likely to be cast as the strong. Hopefully the more vulnerable side of Kate’s character, the side which makes the audience love her, will mean that I can move in a slightly different direction, though.”

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New Smashed Reviews

A couple of new Smashed reviews have been posted online, praising Mary’s performance in the film. The first review is from the St. Louis Post Dispatch:

There will never be another Marilyn Monroe or Elizabeth Taylor, but Hollywood may have found a new Lee Remick in Mary Elizabeth Winstead. Like Remick, Winstead could pass for a cheerleader (as she was outfitted in Quentin Tarantino’s half of “Grindhouse”). But behind the pretty face is a brave actress, and “Smashed” is her answer to “The Days of Wine and Roses.”

Winstead plays Kate, an elementary school teacher who lives in a hipster enclave of Los Angeles with husband Charlie (Aaron Paul of “Breaking Bad,” who may be the new Ben Foster). The Sundance-approved script by writer-director James Ponsoldt doesn’t waste time charting their downward spiral or its causes — by the time we meet them, Kate and Charlie are already falling down drunk.

While Kate’s embrace of AA (where the confessors include Octavia Spencer) is a bit too quick, Winstead strikes a believably ambivalent note about whether her youthful exuberance is a bad thing.

The JCOnline also loved Mary’s performance in the film:

The performance of Mary Elizabeth Winstead as a young alcoholic battling to get and remain sober elevates “Smashed” from clichéd underpinnings.Winstead’s vulnerability, turmoil and pain as she faces the challenges of beginning a new life without the crutch of booze are heartbreaking as well as courageous.

Hollywood has had a long history of movies about drunks from “A Star Is Born” to “The Lost Weekend,” from “I’ll Cry Tomorrow” to “Days of Wine and Roses.”

And many cover the same areas: the denial, the loneliness, the inner turmoil and self-loathing. “Smashed” displays many of these familiar themes as well.

Yet Winstead’s performance overcomes the familiarity as we watch her downward spiral and her climb to redemption.

 

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Empire Interviews Mary on SMASHED

With Smashed being released in the UK on December 14th, Empire Online recently caught up with Mary where they interviewed her on the film. Be sure to check out the video interview below:

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Mary in Total Film Magazine!

Mary looks stunning in the newest issue of Total Film magazine where she talks about her new film Smashed due out December 14th in the UK. When asked if she knew taking on the role of Kate and the film was going to be a good career move for her, Mary admits: “I didn’t think of it so much as a great career move, but I knew it was what I needed to do. I was just feeling really scared of not becoming a better actor and of getting stuck.”

Head to the gallery to check out the scan and read the full interview. Credit to Paige for the pic! 🙂

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