Watching the “Fifty Shades” trilogy was at times a less than pleasurable experience, but making the films was downright “psychotic,” according to Dakota Johnson.
The actor, who starred alongside Jamie Dornan in the adaptations of E.L. James’ bestselling and bondage-heavy book series, detailed the behind-the-scenes struggles of bringing “those big naked movies” to the big screen.
“I’m a sexual person, and when I’m interested in something, I want to know so much about it,” Johnson told Vanity Fair in cover story published on Tuesday. “I signed up to do a very different version of the film we ended up making.”
“I was young. I was 23. So it was scary,” she added. “It just became something crazy. There were a lot of different disagreements. I haven’t been able to talk about this truthfully ever, because you want to promote a movie the right way, and I’m proud of what we made ultimately and everything turns out the way it’s supposed to, but it was tricky.”
Problems first arose when actor Charlie Hunnam dropped out of “Fifty Shades of Grey” due to scheduling conflicts. His exit resulted in Dornan coming aboard to play the title role and James scrapping the original script.
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Johnson said that author exerted “a lot of creative control, all day, every day” over the production and “demanded that certain things happen.”
“There were parts of the books that just wouldn’t work in a movie, like the inner monologue, which was at times incredibly cheesy,” she said. “It wouldn’t work to say out loud. It was always a battle. Always.”
Johnson and director Sam Taylor-Johnson took it upon themselves to salvage parts of the first script, rewriting certain scenes with old dialogue the night before shooting.
“We’d do the takes of the movie that [E.L. James] wanted to make, and then we would do the takes of the movie that we wanted to make,” she explained. “It was like mayhem all the time.”
When Taylor-Johnson left the franchise after the first film, director James Foley was brought on to helm the two sequels, “Fifty Shades Darker” and “Fifty Shades Freed.” Johnson somewhat cryptically described him as an “interesting man” who brought a “different energy.”
“There are things that I still cannot say because I don’t want to hurt anyone’s career and I don’t want to damage anybody’s…
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