Kate Beckinsale on Going to Prison, Not Playing Judith Miller

It’s not just the phone connection for our interview — Kate Beckinsale speaks quite softly, perhaps a result of her prim-and-proper London
upbringing, and study of literature at Oxford University. No matter.
Beckinsale has two big-stick 2008 performances, the first in David
Gordon Green’s Snow Angels, from earlier in the year, and the second in
writer-director Rod Lurie’s Nothing But the Truth, in which she plays a
reporter whose life — professional and personal alike — begins to
fray after she’s imprisoned for refusing to reveal a source in an
after-the-fact story about a drummed-up case for war. Just in advance
of the release of the latter, ripped-from-the-headlines film,
I spoke with Beckinsale about the challenges of not playing New York Times reporter Judith
Miller, how Lurie is like Martin Scorese, and how black leather made her famous
. For the Q&A feature, from New York Magazine‘s Vulture, click here. For more on the method behind her
“schizophrenic” filmography and the insight she’s gained into the interview process after now having played a reporter, jump forward in time by clicking here.