Actress and model Natalie Martinez speaks to The Knockturnal about her upcoming lead role in the sci-fi thriller “Self/less” during roundtable interviews.Β
Martinez will play the wife of Ryan Reynolds’ character in the film which explores the risks of AI.
I thought it was kind of fun that your character – even knowing that when heβs not who she thinks he is – she goes and gives him a smooch anyway.
Natalie Martinez: You know what? It is interesting and one of the things we talked about was I donβt think she quite believes it, like imagine Iβm telling you βOh no Iβm someone else.β You know what Iβm saying? Itβs kind of like do you really even believe that? Itβs like your husband is right there whether it is or it isnβt — Iβve had people pass away and Iβd give anything in the world just to see them in the flesh one more time. You know what Iβm saying? I donβt care what form or whatever it is you just want to touch them or feel them again. And I think thatβs where that kind of comes from and that kind of secures where she even pulls back and it wasnβt even a thing about intimacy. It was just kind of like that one last time, that one chance to do it again cause even at the end sheβs like βmy husbandβ- or I think she says βyouβre worseβ or βbetterβ or something like that. So I think that part was not necessarily cheating on her husband but it was just that moment of like youβre here again let me just feel you, let me just hug you, let me just touch you.
Yeah that was good and plus he looks like Ryan Reynolds. When you read the script, what made you sign on to this? What was the casting like for you in this film?
Natalie Martinez: I like jobs that are kind of challenging and this had a lot – it was an emotional roller coaster and I always like to push myself and be like βCan I do it?β You know what Iβm saying? And itβs kind of fun when I do do it and I feel such a sense of accomplishment. The type of movie it is, like that sci-fi psychological thriller that this is, set in real science so itβs not really that far off. So I kind of like those movies that make you think. You know what Iβm saying? Like would you? How could you? Like this could really – and those kinds of movies that just spark up conversations and it was a really interesting script. And then the people working behind it, I mean we have such a talented cast and crew that was just pretty amazing. But it was just really interesting.
Well what was more torturous or exhausting for you, the emotional aspect or having to be under a house because itβs on fire?
Natalie Martinez:: Thatβs the funnest part for me. I mean literally if I could show you the reason why I wear pants suits are the constant bruises all over my legs. Literally all I do is fight. I do Muay Thai and I box and Iβm very active so if you tell me to roll over in a house when thereβs guns shooting at you and thereβs fire and explosions Iβm like βIβm down. Iβm so down.β Thatβs actually the easiest part of my job and the funnest part of my job. I love action roles so what’s more exhausting is crying cause it really has to come from somewhere. Itβs not just like βOh put tears in your eyes.β You know what Iβm saying? Cause that works for certain little things here and there but when you have to cry and go through a scene and really kind of expend yourself it really takes a lot. I mean by the end of the day Iβm just like – I canβt even open my eyes. I just want ice cream. I donβt want to talk to anybody.
Are you still working with an acting coach? How do you prepare for these kinds of roles when you do have to take it there emotionally?
Natalie Martinez: I donβt work with an acting coach anymore. I mean basically when I have auditions and I have certain things my boyfriend and I just go over the lines and talk about certain things. My boyfriendβs my acting coach – Iβve booked like four or five movies since Iβve been with him so Iβm like – Iβm going to keep him around. Yeah Iβm going to keep him around for a little bit. But no I have certain things I do, depends on the role. I mean luckily Iβve worked with great people so the director or the actors or both together have helped me kind of pull that out. The writing alone too depending on the scene and what itβs like. But I have a whole filing cabinet of videos and voice messages and letters and memories and Iβll just pick a pile and be like βoh that makes me feel emotional today.β Whether it be like dead puppies or heroes from the military coming back home, to Coldplay Parachutes. Thereβs a million and one things that make me cry.
How was it working with Ryan? Heβs super experienced.
Natalie Martinez: He is! He said how many movies heβs been in and it was some crazy ass number and I was just like βwow.β Cause he really has been, I think, in over a hundred films. Heβs worked forever and it was kind of fun and interesting. And it made everything kind of easy. Iβve been very fortunate to not have experienced those Hollywood drama diva crazy people on set. Iβve never experienced someone whoβs like thrown a fit or made it worse or harder for another actor. So Iβve been kind of fortunate. He was really funny and great and very sweet and nice. It was cool.
Heβs got Deadpool coming up. Are you going to go see that?
Natalie Martinez: No! I auditioned for it. I wanted Deadpool so bad. I think β¦ two just being another love interest again it was kind of a little – we wouldβve been the Meg Ryan/Billy Crystal…
Is there any superhero youβd want to play? Are you a comic book fan at all?
Natalie Martinez: Hell yeah! Hell yeah. I want to play Princess Kitana, Mortal Combat. Iβm a fighter, you have to remember. Iβm doing a show now called Kingdom and I play an MMA fighter so Iβm going to fight in the ringβ¦ in a couple of episodes which Iβm really excited about. Chung Lee is literally my go-to for everything. I think Iβm her every year and even off-Halloween almost. I think one of the other years I was Michelle Obama dressed as Chung Lee for Halloween. I was like mixing things up so β¦ I think I have four Chung Lee costumes. But I dig those kinds of heroes. I think Superwomanβs always been something I obviously looked up to, but I actually want to come up with some Latin fiery superhero chick. You know what Iβm saying? Some crazy girl that dances in the night and then flies away and saves the world.
If you could do the whole Self/less moment and come back as somebody who would you come back as? But now I know itβs Chung Lee.
Natalie Martinez: Yeah itβs Chung Lee. I want to come back as Chung Lee.
But would you want to do that? Would you roll back the years and come back as someone younger? Would you come back as a college student?Β
Natalie Martinez: There is so much I need to go through right now. I do not need to do this twice. And Iβm just really happy right now in the position Iβm in. I feel like this is a situation where perhaps I feel like it isnβt greener on the other side. Do you know what Iβm saying? Iβm happy and content. I feel like youβre given that chance. This is your chance you are given. So live it up to the fullest and live life. And do everything it is that youβve ever thought of or imagined. And then the finish line, just figure it out, you know? But I was thinking about that, the first thing that comes to my mind was that everyone else is going to die and what? Youβre going to stay alive? Like yeah Iβll be a robot but like I canβt give you a high five and feel it. You know what Iβm saying? None of those things interest me. You know? Iβm kind of really content and happy and I want to stick this one through. If anything I think itβd be kind of interesting to see life in some other gender. Like Iβve had my trials and tribulations and amazing times as a woman. Like I want to figure out what those are equally for a man. You know? That would be kind of interesting.
Cool. Now with your Cuban-American background do you have any desire to go visit the homeland?
Natalie Martinez: I have been.Β I have my great grandmother still there so I still have a lot of family there and just to research. My great grandmother is a hundred. Sheβs going to be a hundred and one this year. So I really wanted to go and see her and meet her. I actually have a huge family up there and itβs crazy the moment I step foot there, the moment I was there – itβs one of those things – Iβve never been to jail but I can imagine what being away for so long and finally coming back home felt like. You know? And itβs so crazy Iβm meeting my great grandmother for the first time and it was just instant connection, like family. Do you know what Iβm saying? And seeing how they are and seeing the land. And seeing my culture, my people. Itβs just made so much more sense. Like my ass made so much sense. Iβm like βOh I get it. Weβre all like bigger on the bottom, smaller on the top.β Like I get it. It made sense. Also Iβm from Miami and itβs a very highly populated Cuban community. I mean we are little Havana literally. But it was just nice to go back and see where Iβm from and my culture. And see what my people go through. It was actually kind of an eye-opener to see what they live like.
You were talking about culture. This is a very diverse production. Does it feel different for you when you go to a set like this one and you see different people from different ethnic backgrounds as opposed to going to a production where everybodyβs white except you?
Natalie Martinez: Oh a hundred percent. A hundred percent. Nowadays though in Hollywood, I feel like itβs so mixed, itβs beautiful. Itβs great you know. Cause look the last three roles I played. Yeah I just happen to be Spanish. Itβs not like βYouβre Spanish. Have an accent, walk like this, talk like this. Say something in Spanish.β Iβm not a poodle anymore that makes the tricks for you. And I feel like thatβs changed with all ethnicities. You know like ABC has African-American women leading shows that just happen to be black. It has nothing to do with who they are or what they are. Theyβre professors, theyβre the president of the United States. You know what Iβm saying? Same thing with Latins. Weβre not housekeepers anymore. Weβre not gardeners. Everythingβs kind of changed. And I really do feel that but itβs so funny that Iβve been on sets that have been so β¦ I was working on a Spanish network for Robert Rodriguez and I did Matador. And that was like a whole other world because everyone was Spanish. It was just louder. You could definitely tell the difference. I think nowadays itβs such a beautiful world weβre living in that I donβt think race, gender, ethnicity matter anymore. I just think if youβre qualified for the job and you can pull it off and people believe it, you got it.
The way theyβre debating can Spiderman be black or white.
Natalie Martinez: Yeah I mean it is what it is. I think itβs a beautiful thing though because we are all one. You know what Iβm saying? I donβt feel like itβs about the color anymore. Itβs not about any of that. If youβre still on that homie you need to f—Β grow up. Itβs such a mixed world now and itβs just about the quality of people – If youβre a good person no matter what color or race you are – I think if youβre a bad person, youβre a bad person. Period. You know what Iβm saying? So I think with acting weβve kind of broken that and weβve seen – weβve acknowledged other cultures. Like Spanish people donβt just watch Spanish television and weβve seen that with the numbers with Fast and Furious. End of Watch had over forty five percent β¦ And that made us number one the first weekend β¦ That was one of my favorite ones. And weβre starting to realize that everyone goes to the movies. Itβs not a gender or a race or a certain person.
Chasity Saunders contributed reporting.Β