Michelle Rodriguez says 'Avatar' was 'like working on 'Star Wars' -- the first one' - Los Angeles Times
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Michelle Rodriguez says ā€˜Avatarā€™ was ā€˜like working on ā€˜Star Warsā€™ -- the first oneā€™

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ā€˜AVATARā€™ COUNTDOWN: 12 DAYS

Less than two weeks remain until moviegoers open a cinematic box called Pandora. One of the characters that gets to explore that distant moon with the troubling name is helicopter pilot Trudy Chacon. Hero Complexā€™s Jevon Phillips got to talk to the actress who plays her, Michelle Rodriguez, who has shaped a career from strong, tough roles in films such as ā€œGirlfight,ā€ ā€œResident Evilā€ and ā€œThe Fast & the Furious.ā€


JP: Last time I saw you, you were playing a video game at the premiere of ā€œThe Chronicles of Riddick.ā€ Are you a gamer?

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MR: Yeah, Iā€™m a total gamer. I love games -- they rock. They consume a lot of your time nowadays so I play a lot less cause I just turned 30 and I have got to be a responsible adult, but I definitely have my vices. Right now, Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2 consumes about 15% of my day.

JP: So, talking ā€œAvatar,ā€ you probably got into all of the technical aspects of the film?

MR: Yeah. I was definitely overwhelmed ... I mean youā€™re talking about a guy [James Cameron] whoā€™s a freaking genius. Heā€™s thought about the realistic aspects of everything that he imagined in the film. I definitely spent a lot of time geeking out with him and figuring out what he thinks the future is going to look like in real life! Heā€™s got a lot of theories that are based on scientific fact, so it was cool to watch him implement this kind of stuff into his imaginary world in ā€œAvatar.ā€

JP: Explain a bit about who Trudy Chacon is and why sheā€™s important to ā€œAvatar.ā€

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MR: Trudy Chacon is a helicopter pilot. A futuristic helicopter pilot, though itā€™s never specific on exactly what time period weā€™re in. But itā€™s definitely the future because cryogenics is a big part of the technology that exists, and God knows weā€™re really far from that now. Sheā€™s a character that decided to work on another planet, and as far as I know -- as far as Jim explained to me -- has been there on Pandora for a couple of years before the movie started. Just a pilot that loves to fly on another planet. And how sheā€™s important? Youā€™ll have to watch it and see.

JP: Got it. You went from one foresty, tropical place in ā€œLostā€ to another for ā€œAvatar.ā€ Did you work with all CGI, or was the vegetation kind of another character that you had to deal with?

MR: It was so cool! I worked on some sets where I get out of the chopper and I am in the Pandoran terrain, and it was really cool. You know, thereā€™s not one detail that [Cameron] misses. If I am looking at a green screen on a scene, heā€™s gonna show me -- on a screen -- exactly what I should be seeing, which is amazing. Usually when you work with green screen you act and then somebody tells you, ā€œYeah, weā€™re gonna put this in post and such and such,ā€ but he got that out of the way. Whenever Iā€™m looking at something or have a question about something, he shows it to me. As far as the foliage goes and the protrusions from the planet itself, I got to see a lot of that live cause they actually created it for the set. Most of the stuff that I was working with were mechanical creatures that are actual props.

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JP: Did you have the sense that you were working on something historic? A lot of people view the film as a key moment in special-effects film, at least in its ambitions.

MR: To me, it was like working on ā€œStar Warsā€ -- the first one. You know how now you watch ā€œStar Warsā€ [ā€œEpisode Iā€ in 1999] and youā€™re like ā€œI couldā€™ve rented or bought the video game then Iā€™d be in control of whatā€™s happeningā€™ -- because everythingā€™s so digital and it doesnā€™t feel real. But you watch the first one [ā€œEpisode IVā€ in 1977] and I donā€™t know how you feel, but I wonder, ā€˜Why does this feel so much greater than the digitized world he [George Lucas] created now?ā€™ And I realize itā€™s because of the props. And thatā€™s the kind of live-action world that Jim created.

JP: Thatā€™s very cool.

MR: It is! Especially when you see these big giant robot things that the military has. Those things are cool, man! The actor that played the captain guy literally had to climb on a ladder to get into these things.

JP: When you signed up to do this, did you expect to see and do the types of things that you do working on this movie?

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MR: I expected nothing less. Iā€™ve always been a big fan of Jim Cameron. Heā€™s the first director that Iā€™ve loved for a lot of years and actually got to work with. And Iā€™m surprised cause Iā€™m known to be a crazy wild card, a maverick of sorts.

JP: Crazy wild card, huh. You are the action woman. Are those the roles that come to you at this point or are those the roles you still actively seek?

MR: I love action. You could tell, if you grew up with me, because I wanted to join the Army at one point and it was for no other reason than to have some action. My dad talked me out of it. Yeah, I like to get into physical stuff. Itā€™s fun. Iā€™m not into disciplined sports. I have no patience to sit there for years and learn a trade like race car driving or plane jumping, so acting is perfect for me. I get a crash course on everything I want to do and I have fun doing it and then if I really really like it, then Iā€™ll get into it on my time off. As long as Iā€™m young, Iā€™ll definitely have my hands on doing something that involves putting your life on the line in some way.

JP: So what kind of training did you have to do for this?

MR: Helicopter flight training. That was really cool. In six months, if you have the discipline for it, you can learn how to fly a chopper. You can get a license to do such a thing -- and I think that is awesome. Thatā€™s definitely something that Iā€™m gonna look into once I get some time. The slightest movement is amazing. You just tap that thing, and itā€™s so sensitive. You can do the most complicated movements with basically the pressure of a pinky ... I find that intriguing, especially those fighter pilot guys that fly the choppers in Afghanistan. I know that my character was inspired by a flight that Jim had in someplace cold like Antarctica or something like that. She just lifted the chopper and dumped it right off of a massive glacier, and as he was [making a mess] in his pants, he thought: ā€˜This would make a great character.ā€ I thought that was really cool. Heā€™s got a license for it.

JP: James Cameron has a license to fly helicopters?

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MR: Oh yeah. What doesnā€™t that guy do?

JP: This film is so many years in the making. Has it been hard waiting to see the finished product and the reaction to it?

MR: Exhausting! Itā€™s been very exhausting. I mean, as a fan alone, even if I wasnā€™t in the movie Iā€™d still be exhausted by this massive wait. Iā€™ve always loved everything that [Cameron] does ... You just donā€™t want peopleā€™s words and expectations to get in the way of your spirit, so itā€™s been pretty frustrating. I just want to see it already.

JP: You described yourself as a ā€œnomadic spiritā€ in terms of projects, but you did the ā€œFast & Furiousā€ sequel, so if ā€œAvatar 2ā€ talk starts up, are you game?

MR: I think that would be amazing. If that guy calls me up to be his assistant to serve him coffee for a year, Iā€™m on. Heā€™s definitely the type of person that I want to learn from in any aspect. He knows. For anything, Iā€™m there.

-- Jevon Phillips

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Top photo: Michelle Rodriguez as pilot Trudy Chacon in ā€œAvatar.ā€ Credit: Mark Fellman / 20th Century Fox. Middle photo: Rodriguez as daredevil Letty in ā€œFast & Furious.ā€ Credit: Jaimie Trueblood / Universal Studios. Bottom photo: Rodriguez on ā€œLost.ā€ Credit: ABC

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