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Boston Herald
Boston Herald
30 Apr 2023
Emily St. Martin


NextImg:‘Fatal Attraction’ series takes different view of mistress

Joshua Jackson and Lizzy Caplan star in the Paramount+ “Fatal Attraction” series that reimagines the 1987 erotic thriller that starred Glenn Close as the terrifying mistress who “will not be ignored.”

Jackson, who recently starred in Showtime’s angsty drama “The Affair,” portrays Dan Gallagher, played by Michael Douglas in the film.

Jackson told “Access Hollywood” ahead of the series premiere that the show was “very keen to tell the story of consequences for Dan,” and that viewers get to experience Caplan’s Alex in the way Close had envisioned more than 25 years ago.

In the original film, Gallagher is a happily married attorney when he meets the sultry book editor Alex Forrest. A lapse in judgment and steamy extramarital fling leads to increasingly unstable and dangerous behavior from the jilted lover (Forrest), who will stop at nothing to get Gallagher’s attention.

Although the original painted Forrest as a villainous and crazy mistress, the new series offers a nuanced look at mental health.

“We get in and have sympathy and empathy for the journey that Alex is going on … and really make sure that we try to present in the story why this woman is,” Jackson continued to “Access Hollywood,” “and who this woman is, beyond just the villain.”

Caplan, who starred in Showtime’s “Masters of Sex,” plays Close’s Forrest and echoed Jackson’s sentiment to the Hollywood Reporter at the Los Angeles premiere. “I feel like the narrative of the film,” she said, “which is like, ‘Nice guy, horrible woman, must die’ — I think it’s really promising how far we’ve come as a culture where now audiences want to know, ‘Well, wait a minute, let’s talk more about her, her possible mental illnesses, her upbringing.'”

According to Close, the original ending of the film was quite different from the final cut, and Close fought it for weeks, saying they switched Forrest from being self-destructive to being a violent knife-wielding psychopath.

In 2010, Douglas and Close took a look back at the film and discussed some of the most iconic and pivotal scenes for ABC. Close revealed that she’d put a lot of care and effort into trying to understand why her character behaved the way she did.

“I never thought of her as a villain,” Close said, before adding that she did more research for the role of Alex than for any other role throughout her career.

“I went to a psychiatrist because I wanted to understand if it was possible for someone to have her behaviors — particularly the rabbit — and if it was, what would cause that? And I was told yes it was. So I always thought she was a human being in a lot of pain and she needed a lot of help.”

Tribune News Service