Dakota Fanning and Kristen Stewart: The Movieline Interview

Kristen, everyone talks about how you "became" Joan Jett for this role. Once you weren't her anymore, did any of that stick with you?

STEWART: I always feel like characters change me a little bit. The roles that I play, I always take things from them, but it's just as any other life experience that was relevant to you would change you. So not particularly, no. At the same time, this was one of the best movie experiences that I've ever had, so compared to other stuff that's affected me, this is really huge.

In some ways, these girls were exploited by their producer Kim Fowley, and since you're young actresses who are recreating those situations, there are people who will find that exploitative, too. Dakota, do you feel like this is well-worn territory after all the controversy surrounding your rape scene in Hounddog?

FANNING: I don't know, I think it's pretty different. I think that since a lot of people have seen me [onscreen] since I was young, they don't want to see me in those kinds of situations. They think of me, still, as being in I Am Sam and six years old. That can not be fair sometimes, but I accept that and I understand it. I just have to be true to myself and what I want to do and do the work that moves me and inspires me. That's what I've tried to do. In this movie, Cherie was really 15 when it all happened, so I didn't feel like I was faking anything, you know? I mean, it's just acting. It's just a movie!

STEWART: With Kim, it's funny that everyone gets from the movie that he was exploiting them. It's something that's talked about all the time, that he was this Svengali or whatever, and that somehow, he shaped them and gave them a shtick. But they were who they were! They would have been a band without them -- he was their manager and gave them a lot of connections and was really eccentric and crazy, but they were really motivated. It's hard to describe their relationship, but at least Joan had a fondness [for Kim]. They were friends, and they weren't threatened by each other, necessarily. Everyone in the band had a different relationship with Kim, but just to say that they were exploited by him? Even if he pushed them to wear a corset, that's what they wanted!

FANNING: Cherie found the corset herself!

STEWART: Yeah.

FANNING: On Sunset Boulevard, she saw it in the window when she was walking with a friend. She picked it out, you know what I mean? It wasn't like it was forced upon her by him.

STEWART: Right, it's not like it's [Kim saying], "Oh you're 15, this is perfect. People will freak out when they see this!" It's like [Cherie saying], "No, I want to wear this. This is what I'm wearing." Then he went, "Oh, people will freak out. I'm going to capitalize on this."

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Do you think it's condescending, then, when people think that these young girls couldn't possibly be sexual aggressors themselves?

FANNING: Yeah, I mean, the way Cherie expressed her sexuality was to wear a corset and strut around in her underwear on stage and perform "Cherry Bomb." She emulated David Bowie and that's who she wanted to be and that's how she was sexual, which is very different from Joan. Joan went a completely different way.

The paparazzi attention on this film was intense. In a way, did it help you get into character for those scenes where the Runaways are mobbed by fans?

STEWART: I think the Runaways were so new to it all when they got any fan who recognized them, or even a huge group of them in Japan. An actual photographer wanting to take their picture was such a different experience for them. I was, like, so ready and so prepped -- it was like, "Twilight's gonna be such a big deal." I don't want to say that I knew fully [what was to come] -- actually, sort of the opposite of that -- but compared to them, I was expecting it, you know what I mean?

It's different for an actor, too. [The Runaways] accomplished something so personal, that was their own thing. Movies are a collaboration, so you can't take so much credit. You're not making a personal statement, but musicians are. I couldn't relate to that feeling of overjoyed accomplishment. That was something new, that was something that I only had with this film.

[Photo Credit: Alberto E. Rodriguez/Getty Images]

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Comments

  • Sebastian Tovar says:

    I really like this interview...the girls are very mature and playful. I thought it a would a little confusing reading an interview with three people talking, but this is beautifully structured and so informative.

  • Lauren says:

    I don't understand Kristen Stewart. She has such a strange fashion sense -- I have yet to see her in a decent-looking dress. What's up with that??

  • Tiffany says:

    I agree with Lauren. I also still can't figure out why, if she's going to be on the cover of any magazines, SHE doesn't look like she grooms/ showers properly? Plus, she's got that half-baked look which is kind weird, plus she never smiles like she happy.... Very sad

  • SEXIST COMMENTS MUCH says:

    Come on, guys, did you not comprehend the interview? You're saying the EXACT things that they, especially Kristen, are referring to as oppressive and sexist.

  • RoosterTree says:

    Hear hear. I quite enjoy watching her being interviewed specifically because she gives her answers a lot of thought, with the look on her face hinting that her mind is able to go to those dark places only men are supposed to go. Who cares if she's in a jeans & T-shirt?
    I daresay she could be her generation's Nicholson, if, as she ages, she chooses her roles well.