Madame Web wasn’t exactly what Dakota Johnson signed up for

Dakota Johnson isn't surprised at the Madame Web backlash, hints at studio interference

Madame Web wasn’t exactly what Dakota Johnson signed up for
Dakota Johnson Photo: Frazer Harrison

Madame Web hadn’t even really hit theaters yet before Dakota Johnson had already started distancing herself from the movie. Working on a blue screen “was absolutely psychotic. I was like, ‘I don’t know if this is going to be good at all!” She said in the lead-up to the movie. Now that the movie is out and people are enjoying a lot of laughs at its expense, Johnson is being a little more explicit about her feelings. “I probably will never do anything like it again because I don’t make sense in that world. And I know that now,” she says in a new interview with Bustle.

Most interestingly, she notes that “sometimes in this industry, you sign on to something, and it’s one thing and then as you’re making it, it becomes a completely different thing, and you’re like, Wait, what?” This follows previous comments she’d made to The Wrap that “there were drastic changes” made to the script, “And I can’t even tell you what they were.”

Many reviewers sensed that the final result of Madame Web had been tampered with by higher powers: “Tahar Rahimmay may well have had every single utterance dubbed with the worst ADR you’ve seen on a big-budget blockbuster,” The A.V. Club’s Manuel Betancourt observed. Johnson herself lends some credence to the theory of studio sabotage. In these big blockbusters, “decisions are being made by committees, and art does not do well when it’s made by committee. Films are made by a filmmaker and a team of artists around them. You cannot make art based on numbers and algorithms,” she says. “My feeling has been for a long time that audiences are extremely smart, and executives have started to believe that they’re not. Audiences will always be able to sniff out bullshit. Even if films start to be made with AI, humans aren’t going to fucking want to see those.”

Johnson may never reveal exactly what the difference is between the Madame Web she signed up for and the one that made it to the screen, but she understands why the movie is being “ripped to shreds.” “Unfortunately,” she confesses, “I’m not surprised that this has gone down the way it has.”

 
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