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The movie in which Scarlett Johansson had the worst time in her life

Scarlett Johansson spoke in a recent podcast and confessed what was the film that marked her, at just 17 years old, as being "hypers-xu@liz-d" by Hollywood.

The movie in which Scarlett Johansson had the worst time in her life

Scarlett Johansson has been in the news a few weeks ago after denouncing that Hollywood made her a s-xu@l icon when she was a teenager. 

Recently, she gave more behind-the-scenes details about what she lived through for years and confessed which is the film that cost her the most to make, and the one that consequently turned out to be the one in which she had the worst time.

Johansson opened up and talked about how difficult it was filming the Sofia Coppola film that launched her to stardom in 2003 when she was just 17 years old. We are talking about the romantic drama 'Lost in Tokyo', a well-remembered film even today.

That film earned Coppola an Oscar for his original screenplay, and it turns out to be a film that is still very valid today. In this project, Scarlett played the role of Charlotte, one of the protagonists with Bill Murray in the skin of Bob.

On the Table for Two podcasts, Johansson recalled that shoot and revealed that it was not satisfying for her, which she said has to do with the stage in which she was "hypers-" in Hollywood. "That filming was very hard," she began by explaining herself.

She later added: "Our characters (both Murray's and his) had a very deep relationship and that was difficult for me, I had a hard time making that movie for many reasons." The actress confessed that at that time, at just 17 years old, she felt that she had been in a "fever dream" after finishing the film.

Let's remember that Johansson had declared that in the beginning she was S- and that turned out to be very hard for her. When she was taking her first steps in the industry, she said that she was forced to accept roles where she had to show herself.

“Young girls are treated like objects, that's a given, so I think whatever box they put you in is going to define the rest of your life. Now obviously women have greater decision-making power over the path they want to follow, ”she declared.

And then she added: "In my adolescence, I began to play the role of a woman who was the object of desire and then I could not get out of there, I was stuck to it." She argued that choosing characters over looks projects a short career, as she's putting exteriors over talent. “It's a fleeting thing, and then you run out of opportunities, I felt like I was really fading,” she remarked.

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