Whirlwind year lets Michelle Williams realize her own worth
LOS ANGELES — Michelle Williams can’t believe it’s been less than a year since “the pay stuff.” Time has seemingly accelerated since last October when, while shooting the comic book movie “Venom,” the unimaginable began to happen: Titans of her industry started to fall under #MeToo. Then months later, after reshoots for “All the Money in the World,” which were hurriedly completed to remove scenes featuring one of the accused, Kevin Spacey, Williams became the centre of a very public controversy over a vast pay discrepancy between herself and her co-star Mark Wahlberg. She was paid less than $1,000. He got $1.5 million.
It’s also a year in which she married musician Phil Elverum, and started making some atypical career choices for a four-time Oscar nominee who has in her adulthood always veered toward art house films of directors like Kelly Reichardt and away from the commercial, from big budgets and from comic book films like the one she’s currently promoting.
During a promotional day for her latest film, “Venom,” Williams cranes her neck performativity to look at the somewhat grotesque poster behind her, half of which is star Tom Hardy’s face, and the other half is the tar-like people-eating alien “symbiote” that he becomes. “Nope,” she says. “Doesn’t seem like me!”
But Williams is finding that she’s ready to take some chances and to bet on herself.