PEOPLE

Penelope Cruz leads Italian melodrama ‘Twice Born’

12/7/2013
BLADE STAFF AND NEWS SERVICES
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    Emile Hirsch as Diego and Penelope Cruz as Gemma in the film ’Twice Born.’

    ASSOCIATED PRESS

  • Emile Hirsch as Diego and Penelope Cruz as Gemma in the film ’Twice Born.’
    Emile Hirsch as Diego and Penelope Cruz as Gemma in the film ’Twice Born.’

    LOS ANGELES — Forgetting Penelope Cruz is almost 40 years old is easy to do.

    Even when she bears heavy makeup to add wrinkles for her role as Gemma in the wartime melodrama Twice Born, it's nearly impossible for the actress to truly look weathered.

    When pressed against 28-year-old co-star Emile Hirsch during love scenes, the bond seems natural and comfortable.

    The Sergio Castellitto film opened in limited U.S. release on Friday after first premiering in Italy last year. It's based on the book of the same title, written by Castellitto's wife, Margaret Mazzantini.

    "I could not put it down," Cruz said of the tale set amid the Yugoslav Wars. When Gemma and Diego (Hirsch) fall in love during the 1984 Winter Olympics in Bosnia, they both discover they desperately want children. But Gemma is unable to conceive.

    "It's a 700-page book and I read it in a day and a half and was blown away by the character," said Cruz, who also produced the film. "Every role makes me feel like I'm a student," Cruz added via Skype from London. "It's a great feeling."

    Cruz became involved with the film early on, including casting. Hirsch was Cruz's ideal choice for the role of Diego. "I think he is an incredible actor," she said. "I have seen most of the things that he has done. I especially loved his work in the Sean Penn-directed, Into the Wild."

    She also came to love Hirsch's methods.

    To "make sure things didn't get boring" between takes, Cruz said, Hirsch would playfully strike up an argument.

    "Like he would come to my trailer and say that he'd just seen a documentary on a scientist that did blah, blah, blah, but it would stump me," Cruz said. "So I would fight him."

    This was Cruz's second collaboration with director Castellitto — she teamed with him on the 2004 film Don't Move — and the actress was encouraged to take on the larger role of producer, since she's been dabbling behind-the-scenes more and more of late.

    Earlier this year, she directed a commercial for her L'Agent lingerie line — a collaboration with her sister, Monica Cruz, and Agent Provocateur.

    Next, the actress will direct another L'Agent spot and she'll produce and star in Fernando Trueba's feature La Reina de Espana.

    Cruz remains eager to continue expanding her artistic reach — just as long as her packed schedule doesn't take her away from loved ones for too long.

    "Family is my No. 1 priority," the busy mother said of a baby and toddler with husband Javier Bardem.

    "There are so many things that I think about now that I didn't think about before," she continued. "When I look at what I'm going to do next and when, where, how, I think about my family."

    Being a mother, she added, "is the best thing that can happen to you in your life."