Hanna Star Saoirse Ronan Shares Her Tips for Becoming a Teenage Assassin
5 April, 2011 · Posted by under Interviews · No Comments

Thanks to Caro for pointing out.

Sixteen-year-old Saoirse Ronan earns her action star stripes this week as the titular assassin of Joe Wright’s thriller Hanna, a hyper-charged, globe-trotting fairytale about a feral teen sent out into the world on a mission of vengeance. With an infectious score by the Chemical Brothers to punctuate her journey, Ronan fights through droves of enemies with a fierce precision that belies her youth and petite stature — and, as Hanna discovers friendship for the first time in her life, so too does Ronan convey a blend of preternatural maturity and childlike naiveté rarely found in performers her age.

Movieline caught up with Ronan in San Francisco at WonderCon, where she appeared with director Wright (who previously directed her to an Oscar-nomination in 2007’s Atonement), to discuss Hanna, her rumored involvement in The Hobbit, her upcoming assassin black comedy Violet and Daisy, and more.

What were the most useful skills you learned in order to play Hanna — your tips for becoming a teenage assassin?
Learn how to use a knife and how to punch. Not a steak knife, but [makes slashing motion] those kinds of knives. You can practice on Eric Bana. I’ll lend him to you. [Laughs]

Why was the knife such a favorite of yours?
I enjoyed it more than anything else. It’s not cool, but having a weapon in your hand and doing all these swipes is quite elegant, I think. So I really enjoyed it — it was almost like painting. Like brushstrokes. So that was the reason I enjoyed it, because of the motion of the swipes. Also, don’t let anyone know what you’re thinking.

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Generic “Hanna” press junket
5 April, 2011 · Posted by under Interviews, Videos · No Comments

Daniel J Waller “Hanna” press junket
5 April, 2011 · Posted by under Interviews, Videos · 1 Comment

Teen Hollywood: Saoirse Ronan Kicks Butt as “Hanna”!
5 April, 2011 · Posted by under Image Gallery, Interviews · No Comments

Thanks to Caro for pointing out.

Irish teen actress Saoirse [pronounced Sirsha] Ronan is a Gaga “monster” and Oscar nominee (for Atonement when she was 13). The pretty girl with the ice blue eyes will be 17 on April 12th and is stoked about her birthday gift Lady Gaga concert tix. We’re curled up on a hotel couch at the 4 Seasons in Beverly Hills asking about her amazing action role as a teen on a killing mission in Hanna. Quite a change from playing a dead girl in The Lovely Bones.

A few days ago we also met with Saoirse at the trendy SLS Hotel in L.A. to munch on posh desserts and we talked boys and “The Hunger Games”. Saoirse, as well as a ton of other teen and young adult actresses, lost the Katniss part to Oscar nominee Jennifer Lawrence. Saoirse was okay with it. “Jennifer will be good. She’s a bit older but she’ll be good”.

After chatting cool sunglasses, we moved on to boys; “Boys really like to do weird things to get with you, like [tick] you off”. Yeah, we’ve noticed.

Back to our current chat. We’ve noticed that Saoirse has taken out her hair extensions and has kicked off her tan Miu, Miu mega-heels. She’s in a cute yellow, green and while sun dress and we’re comfy so let’s talk Hanna.

TeenHollywood: Hanna tries to kind of join the tourist family who befriends her. You have a great mom and dad. Was it hard for you to imagine being a teen without a complete family?
Saoirse: I guess I know how important my mom and dad are to me so to imagine being without them certainly wasn’t nice. I detached my situation from Hanna’s but I wouldn’t like to imagine traveling around on my own and not have their support. Yeah, maybe a few years from now but, at the moment, I’m a kid. I imagine that this business can mess with your head if you don’t have people you can trust around you.

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BDK Reviews “Hanna” press junket
4 April, 2011 · Posted by under Interviews, Videos · No Comments

Filmcritic: Q&A – Saoirse Ronan and Eric Bana on Hanna
4 April, 2011 · Posted by under Interviews · 1 Comment

Thanks to M for the heads up.

Hanna isn’t your normal father-daughter drama. Joe Wright’s dizzying and dangerous action thriller instead tells the not-so-sweet story of an ex-CIA operative (Eric Bana) who shapes his only daughter (Saoirse Ronan) into a flawless killing machine. Together, they go after the vindictive government leader (Cate Blanchett) who’s hell-bent on eliminating these rogue agents. Sounds vicious, but Ronan and Bana couldn’t have been sweeter as we sat down to discuss Twilight, James Bond, mixed martial arts, and that moment when you realize the world is a terrible place.

Q: Saoirse, you kick so much rear end in this film.
Saoirse Ronan: That’s such a great way to put it!

Q: Your character, Hanna, has a very good chance of knocking off Twilight’s Bella Swan as the top female role model for teenage girls.
SR: That has always been my hope. No, I’m kidding. But I really do hope that she becomes [a role model]. You are never really sure how things are going to work out and what kind of style that people are going to latch onto. But Hanna is a fantastic female character, especially for young women, because she is strong. And this wasn’t made sexy or anything like that. It was quite elegant in its style and in her style. She is a very naïve and innocent little girl who just happens to be a cold-blooded killer.

Q: If they offered you the role of James Bond, would you take it?
SR: Of course I would. That tux? I could totally rock it.

Q: Eric, you have children. Did you connect to the film’s underlying theme of preparing your children for that day when they finally leave the nest and have to tackle the evils of the world on their own?
Eric Bana: Oh, yeah, I saw it like that. To me, it was a loss-of-innocence story for young people, but it also addressed, for adults, that point in our lives where we suddenly go, “Wow, the world can be a big, ugly place.” That can happen at all different ages, and I loved that about his story.

SR: And I know I felt exactly the same way when I was making the film. I thought it captured what a normal teenager goes through around this time. All teenagers want to rebel a little and break away. But I think you are always going to want to go back to your parents for that safety they provide.

Q: Do either of you have action heroes from other films whom you like to emulate when you are going through your fight sequences?
EB: I actually look to draw inspiration from athletes and real sporting people. This had a mixed-martial-arts component, which I hadn’t done before, and the stunt guys filled my head with a lot of pretty gruesome YouTube stuff that was quite handy. [Laughs] Some of the UFC stuff that I hadn’t seen before.

Q: Franchises are the rage in Hollywood today. Did you ever have discussions with Joe Wright about where Hanna’s story could go?
SR: No, but I have been thinking about it a lot these past few days. I don’t know if they are planning on doing a sequel. I guess we’ll have to wait and see how it does. But I’m not quite sure, to be honest. What do you think?

Q: I thought the film told of a singular mission, but there are an endless stream of killers the shady government could send after you.
SR: That’s true. If we could make it as detailed and as layered as this film, then maybe it could work.


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WonderCon – Day 2 – video
3 April, 2011 · Posted by under Image Gallery, Interviews, Public Events · No Comments


Gallery Link:
Public Events > 04.02.11 : WonderCon – Day 2

Los Angeles Times: Saoirse Ronan shoots for something different in ‘Hanna’
2 April, 2011 · Posted by under Interviews · No Comments


The actress reunites with ‘Atonement’ director Joe Wright for a stylized assassin-action movie, and their bond is obvious.

Shortly after she received an Oscar nomination at the tender age of 13, “Atonement” star Saoirse Ronan needed a new movie. Despite a drama background, she was intrigued by the title character in “Hanna,” an ethereally beautiful teen who also happens to be a ruthless assassin. But the project was stuck in development at Focus Features; filmmakers like Danny Boyle had come and gone.

Ronan had a simple solution: “They said they didn’t have a director,” the Irish actress (first name SER-sha) recalls. “So I said, ‘Why don’t you just ask Joe Wright to do it?’”

Wright was a strange choice, to say the least. The British filmmaker was best known for his cinematic adaptations of “Atonement,” Ian McEwan’s revered novel, and the Jane Austen classic “Pride and Prejudice.” He had won highbrow prizes. He didn’t watch many action movies, let alone direct them. A killing machine played by a teenage girl wasn’t much on his mind.

Unless, that is, it was a certain teenage girl. “If Saoirse hadn’t been involved I wouldn’t have given it much attention,” Wright says. “But because she was, I thought I should take it seriously.”

The result of that unlikely chain of events — “Saoirse hired me,” Wright says, only half-joking — is this coming weekend’s “Hanna.” The release is a Jason Bourne-like fugitive story, if Jason Bourne were an adolescent girl and “Bourne” director Paul Greengrass had spent years adapting period novels.

Ronan plays Hanna, a girl raised in isolation in northern Finland by a single father (Eric Bana) before separating from him to be pursued across Europe by coldhearted secret agents led by Cate Blanchett’s Marissa. Scenes of a vulnerable Hanna adjusting to the civilized world are interwoven with stylized action sequences of the girl violently offing her pursuers.

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Cleveland: Saiorse Ronan relishes getting inside “Hanna”
2 April, 2011 · Posted by under Interviews · No Comments

LOS ANGELES — When the thrilling “Hanna” opens on April 8, audiences will see another mesmerizing performance from the soon-to-be-17 Saoirse Ronan. Already hailed for roles in “Atonement” and “The Lovely Bones,” this beautiful young actress exhibits fierce acting talents that give way off-screen to a charming Irish brogue and a smart teen-age sensibility.

Ronan’s skills aren’t lost on director Joe Wright and co-star Eric Bana, who shared details about her during morning interviews at the Four Seasons Hotel here. Meanwhile, Ronan chipped in with insight about her latest film, among other things.

“From the start, when I read the script, I thought it would be fun to play an action heroine,” she says. “That’s kind of what I thought this girl was going to be and not really anything else. I don’t mean that in a bad way; I just mean I thought that would kind of be it, but it turned out she wasn’t that at all.

“Hanna is quite simple in her outlook on life, but she’s also quite a complicated character. She’s been through a lot and she’s dealt with a lot, and she is dealing with a lot on this journey, too. Yet, she doesn’t ‘over-emote’ — ever — if that’s the right word. Naturally, I found her really interesting to play.

“On one hand, she’s so entirely different from me. At the same time, when we actually look at her situation and her journey and what she’s going through, it kind of mirrors what a teen-ager goes through, which is breaking away from the comfort of your family life and discovering the world for yourself.”

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HFPA: Saoirse Ronan discusses the role of female empowerment in “Hanna”
2 April, 2011 · Posted by under Image Gallery, Interviews, Videos · No Comments

Thanks to jp+ for pointing out.




Gallery Link:
Online Segments and Interviews > 03.31.11 : HFPA


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