Current:Home > InvestCharles Langston:Dakota Johnson talks 'Madame Web' and why her famous parents would make decent superheroes -EliteFunds
Charles Langston:Dakota Johnson talks 'Madame Web' and why her famous parents would make decent superheroes
TradeEdge View
Date:2025-04-08 14:00:59
Dakota Johnson is Charles Langstonquick to admit that she never thought being in a superhero movie would be “part of my journey.” And yet here she is in “Madame Web,” saving the day with brains and heart rather than a magical hammer.
“Being a young woman whose superpower is her mind felt really important to me and something that I really wanted to work with,” says Johnson, 34, whose filmography includes the “Fifty Shades” trilogy and “The Social Network” as well as film-festival fare like “Cha Cha Real Smooth” and “The Lost Daughter.”
Johnson stars in “Madame Web” (in theaters now) as Cassandra Webb, a New York City paramedic who has psychic visions of the future after a near-death experience and finds herself needing to protect three girls (Sydney Sweeney, Isabela Merced and Celeste O’Connor) from a murderous mystery villain named Ezekiel (Tahar Rahim).
Playing a heroic clairvoyant may not have been in the cards, but perhaps it was in the genetics? Johnson’s parents had their Hollywood heyday in the 1980s and ‘90s − the Stone Age for comic book movies – but she thinks they would have gone for superhero gigs. Her dad, “Miami Vice” icon Don Johnson, "always really loved playing cops, obviously on TV,” she says, and inhabiting a character like Catwoman “would've been a cool thing” for mom Melanie Griffith.
“I’d say ‘Working Girl’ was a superhero myself,” adds “Web” director S.J. Clarkson. “It was for me growing up, anyway.”
'Madame Web' review:Dakota Johnson headlines the worst superhero movie since 'Morbius'
Dakota Johnson puts her own spin on ‘Madame Web’ character
Since the movie is the beginning of Cassandra’s story, Johnson wanted to explore “a younger version” of the character from Marvel’s Spider-Man comic books, where she’s depicted as an elderly blind clairvoyant confined to a chair. Still, in the comics, Cassandra has a “biting” and dark sense of humor and is “very clever and whip-smart,” Johnson says. “That was important to me and S.J. to include.”
Clarkson, who directed episodes of the Marvel streaming shows “Jessica Jones” and “The Defenders,” was excited about Cassie as a woman who doesn't need superhuman strength to be a hero. “The power of our mind has infinite potential and I thought that was really interesting to explore what on first glance feels like quite a challenging superpower,” she says.
Why Dakota Johnson felt like ‘the idiot’ playing a Marvel superhero
The “Madame Web” director reports that Johnson is “proper funny,” and it was important to Clarkson that she include moments of levity in the otherwise serious psychological thriller. In one scene, Cassie tries to walk on walls like Ezekiel – since both get their abilities from a special spider – and she crumples to the ground in defeat. “It was a really wonderful time” for Clarkson, Johnson deadpans. “We did it quite a few times. That was silly.”
There was also a whole otherworldly bent to deal with: Johnson and Clarkson collaborated on the best way to show Cassie’s complex psychic visions, complete with weird spider webs and flashes of future events.
“Working on a blue screen, you really have to activate your imagination a lot,” Johnson says. She had “a really good time” making the movie, but “there were moments where I was just really lost and didn't know what we were doing. It was mostly me that was the idiot who was like, ‘I don't know what's happening.’ ”
veryGood! (54)
Related
- Jamie Foxx gets stitches after a glass is thrown at him during dinner in Beverly Hills
- Britney Spears Grateful for Her Amazing Friends Amid Divorce From Sam Asghari
- 'We feel your presence': Stephen 'tWitch' Boss' widow, kids celebrate late DJ's birthday
- Palestinian security force deploys in school compound in Lebanon refugee camp following clashes
- Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go
- Why does honey crystalize? It's complex – but it has a simple fix.
- Jim Lampley is making a long-awaited return to boxing. What you need to know
- Dianne Feinstein remembered as a trailblazer and pioneer as tributes pour in after senator's death
- Opinion: Gianni Infantino, FIFA sell souls and 2034 World Cup for Saudi Arabia's billions
- Virginia man wins lottery 24 times in a row using a consecutive number
Ranking
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- Every gift Miguel Cabrera received in his 2023 farewell tour of MLB cities
- Apple says it will fix software problems blamed for making iPhone 15 models too hot to handle
- Atlantic Festival 2023 features Hillary Clinton, Nancy Pelosi, Kerry Washington and more, in partnership with CBS News
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- Inside the night that Tupac Shakur was shot, and what led up to the fatal gunfire
- The Flying Scotsman locomotive collided with another train in Scotland. Several people were injured
- 'Dumb Money' fact check: Did GameStop investor Keith Gill really tell Congress he's 'not a cat'?
Recommendation
Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
Tennessee woman accused in shooting tells deputies that she thought salesman was a hit man
MVP candidates Shohei Ohtani, Ronald Acuña Jr. top MLB jersey sales list
People's Choice Country Awards moments: Jelly Roll dominates, Toby Keith returns to the stage
Finally, good retirement news! Southwest pilots' plan is a bright spot, experts say
Palestinian security force deploys in school compound in Lebanon refugee camp following clashes
Man accused of locking a woman in a cell in Oregon faces rape, kidnapping charges in earlier case
Mets-Marlins ninth-inning suspension sets up potential nightmare scenario for MLB