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  • Nice to see you again.

  • How are you?

  • Good.

  • How are you doing?

  • Great dress.

  • Houston, this is mission specialist Ryan Stone.

  • I am off structure and I am drifting.

  • Do you copy?

  • It's so exciting to talk to you again, Sandra.

  • Nice to see you.

  • I'm really happy you're here today.

  • So you were floating in space with George Clooney, alone.

  • I'm sure a lot of women envy you.

  • I think they do.

  • And with good reason- very good reason.

  • You've been friends for a long time, right?

  • Yes.

  • He is probably one of the most fun people to be around.

  • If there's ever a moment that you think, you know,

  • work is hard and then he arrives on set,

  • and everything becomes hard work,

  • but with a lot of joy attached.

  • He brings the party.

  • Your character has such an interesting story.

  • And I think you had to go to very dark places to bring

  • that across.

  • Yeah.

  • Where did you take that from?

  • You know, it's just- this film was odd because you were always

  • in some contraption that limited your ability to act.

  • It's like everything was mathematical,

  • and industrial, and technological.

  • And you have to just dig.

  • We built a character, and then you just had to dig deep.

  • A lot of times I had to rely on music.

  • That's all I had was a little ear piece in my ear,

  • and then everything else was silent

  • because of what I was wearing.

  • And Alfonso had all this music that I got to pick from,

  • and sounds.

  • And I went with the sound guy, and I said,

  • these pieces of music make me feel certain things.

  • So if I'm stuck I'm going to ask you to play certain elements.

  • At least wake you up inside, when I just

  • wanted to kill every one, because you

  • had nothing to help you.

  • So I had music, which I got from my parents.

  • Did you feel more pressure than on other films,

  • because it was you, like 90% of the movie.

  • It was just you.

  • I know I should have.

  • And I do now that everyone's bringing it up.

  • I didn't then, because what was so much bigger

  • was the technology that was working.

  • We had four sound stages with massive robotic arms

  • and contraptions, and mathematical equations,

  • and things that we had to do to be safe,

  • and so many people involved, that you never

  • felt like it was you.

  • It was all the technical geniuses

  • were the lead actors in this film.

  • This was their baby.

  • You're just a part of the machine

  • that's helping tell the story.

  • You never think-- I never thought for one second,

  • oh my gosh, it's just me, and I better not screw up.

  • I always think that about myself.

  • I always am hard on myself.

  • I'll be harder than anyone else is.

  • And I would leave every day feeling so disappointed

  • in my work, because I didn't know if I accomplished anything

  • for what Alfonso needed.

  • There was nothing to show me.

  • It was the strangest thing.

  • So I spent three months not feeling great about myself,

  • but that's only because I wanted to do so well for Alfonso.

  • And now are you happy when you saw the movie?

  • Oh my gosh.

  • The movie was so beautiful.

  • I'll never be happy with my work.

  • That's just what we do.

  • We pick ourselves apart.

  • But I didn't see myself when I saw

  • the movie for the first time, which was in Venice.

  • I didn't see me.

  • I saw this visual painting, and these sounds, and the music.

  • And I got to be a part of the story

  • that he was telling, that I'd never seen before.

  • It put you in it physically, that I'm

  • sure after I see it several times

  • then I'll start picking myself apart,

  • but there's so much to see before you

  • get to me in this movie that it just- I

  • was able to see a movie for the first time

  • and enjoy it, rather than dissect it.

  • After such a long day of shooting

  • where you are in constant danger of life,

  • what do you do to keep down?

  • You go and you go find a little one-and-a-half-year-old.

  • And you squeeze and you hug, and you run like a child, and

  • I had never been so happy to be outside.

  • And you just have fun.

  • It's like, you just-

  • It reminded me that literally life is meant to be enjoyed.

  • And once your confined, and you're

  • in such a dark head space all the time,

  • you literally-- it feels like someone's unlocking you.

  • And I couldn't get outside fast enough.

  • I could run fast enough.

  • I couldn't wait for the weekends, where

  • you could be in grass and playing outside.

  • It just-- it made you feel like a child

  • again, because as an adult we get- I think

  • we just get bogged down with worry,

  • and trying to control things that, just in the end,

  • just don't matter.

  • Thank you so much.

  • And by the way, last time we met,

  • you mentioned your little son.

  • And you told me that he liked gummy bears that much.

  • Oh my god.

  • He and his mother like Gummibärchen.

  • So I brought some for him and for you.

  • Oh my gosh.

  • [MUSIC PLAYING]

Nice to see you again.

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