achel Weisz has opened up about her personal expertise of getting a miscarriage after admitting she was stunned by some viewers’ averse reactions to the exploration of the subject in her new TV sequence Dead Ringers.
The Oscar-winning actress, 53, portrays equivalent twin gynaecologists Elliot and Beverly Mantle, who purpose to push the boundaries on medical ethics to problem outdated practices and convey girls’s healthcare to the forefront, within the Prime psychological thriller
The present, which is a contemporary tackle David Cronenberg’s 1988 movie of the identical identify, delves into feminine well being and the challenges it brings, together with infertility and miscarriage.
Speaking on The News Agents podcast about what she considered individuals’s reactions, she mentioned: “I think I probably was surprised because I was just telling this story about the female experience, and it didn’t seem to have been heightened or overdramatised.
“There isn’t music to make it more dramatic, it is quite simple and photographed in quite a straightforward way. So yes, I was surprised.
“Women have miscarriages, I’ve had a miscarriage, so you suddenly see blood coming out of your body and these are just all part of a female experience of being alive.
“So we’re not used to it. I think we’re not used to seeing any of those things being represented cinematically or fictionally. So maybe this is breaking some new ground, this show.”
Weisz has two kids: a daughter together with her husband, Bond star Daniel Craig, and a son together with her former accomplice, US filmmaker Darren Aronofsky.
Reflecting on the criticism of the present’s portrayal of childbirth and loss, she added: “I think we’ve gotten very used to watching portrayals of men who tie up, strangle, dismember, rape women and that’s just a kind of ordinary TV show.
“You know, Silence of the Lambs in the 90s, a man who has thrown women into a pit and was fattening them up so he could then take off their skins and make a new body for himself.
“I think there’s a vast cinematic language in many different tones about violence, about death, about shooting, about legs coming off, blood spurting… In fictional representations, we’re just completely used to that.
“Murder, death, violence, gore, spurting blood, young women being tied up, raped, beaten – but seeing a baby’s head come out of a woman, either through a C-section through her belly, or from her vagina is… That’s just the female experience. I mean, for women that do have babies.”
Weisz went on to debate US socio-political points together with gun legal guidelines and abortion.
“The right (wing) in America want to deregulate absolutely everything except for women’s bodies,” she mentioned.
“It seems to be the only place that the government are totally interfering, and guns. Guns and uteruses – it sounds like the name of a really bad rock band.”
Asked concerning the hypocrisy of anti-abortion activists who help the demise penalty within the US, she added: “Both ends of life have different rules, it is very strange.
“Children… have to be born but there’s going to be no free health care for them… and now every day, there seems to be more and more of a chance that you might get shot by an assault rifle at school.
“You can take life at the end of life; the government can choose to say you deserve to die. But at the beginning of life a woman has no choice. How do you rationalise that?”
Weisz turned a family identify after starring reverse Brendan Fraser in blockbuster The Mummy, gained an Oscar for her position in The Constant Gardener, and has starred in a string of acclaimed movies together with The Favourite, The Lobster, About A Boy and Black Widow.
Listen to the total interview with Rachel Weisz on The News Agents podcast on Global Player.
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