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Advertisement | Sigourney Takes 'Village' RoleActress On M. Night Shyamalan's Latest FilmNEW YORK, July 30, 2004 ![]() ![]() Sigourney On Scares, 'Village'Sigourney Weaver, used to starring in scary movies, is now in what may be the most frightening one of all. She spoke to The Early Show about 'The Village.' | Share/Embed (CBS) From “Aliens” to “Ghostbusters,” Sigourney Weaver knows a thing or two about monsters on the big screen. That theme continues in her latest thriller, “The Village,” about a small community that is forced to confront the evil that lies in a nearby forest. In M. Night Shyamalan's latest film, the fear of the creatures in the woods, or "Those We Don't Speak Of" as they are referred to, threaten the community and the safety of its children. Weaver explains, “It’s about these peaceful loving people living in an isolated village and they have a kind of truce with whatever lives in the woods. They don’t go to the woods and these creatures don’t come to our village. And my son goes into the woods and sets off a spiral of events, which turn into such an amazing movie, including actually a very, very romantic love story.” Despite the advice of his elders, a curious and determined Lucius Hunt (Joaquin Phoenix) has a burning desire to step beyond the boundaries of the town into the unknown. Town leader Edward Walker (William Hurt) warns Lucius of the danger at the town's outskirts, and Lucius' mother, Alice Hunt (Sigourney Weaver), advises him to stay at home and spare himself knowledge of the greed and desires that exist in the outside world. When she first read the script, Weaver tells The Early Show co-anchor Harry Smith she had terrible nightmares. “I was not allowed to talk to anyone about it,” she says. “I think it really got into my subconscious, just the vulnerability of these people and their situation, how much I wanted them to be all right. You know? But then once I was able to discuss it with my fellow actors, I felt much better.” To prepare for her role she had to learn how to live in the 1890s. She says, “We learned how to introduce a field. We learned how to trim sheep. And I’m a little more handy now than I used to be! Not much, frankly! But a little more.” On a personal level, Weaver recently said she would rather have one child than 50 Oscars, as opposed to Katherine Hepburn, who said she could never have kids. To Smith, Weaver says, “I’m sorry that she had to make a choice like that. It’s hard to balance everything, but certainly having a family is the most wonderful thing. It clues you into the rest of life and I think it’s extremely valuable in every way.” Some Facts About Sigourney Weaver
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