"Splice's" naïve geniuses can't outsmart Chanéac That's why I had to play her strong, and with lots of spontaneity - just like a child."īut what Chanéac's "pure angel" grows up to do is like watching the best and worst of Mother Nature meet, marry and go ballistic. "I had to forget the science part to make this work," says Chanéac. "I do not play a monster," Chanéac told CTV.ca. Yet hating this test-tube terror is not easily done. Unhappy Dren flashes her fury in ways that rack up more bodies than the "Alien" and "Predator" combined. Happy Dren stares adoringly at her scientist parents (who often treat her like dirt), blinking and thinking like a curious kid gazing through the bottom of a Coke bottle. She has a bald head, wide-apart eyes (think Renée Zellweger's fishy alter ego in "Shark Tale"), Kangaroo-like legs and a deadly tail any baby T. Spawned by an illegal lab experiment, "Splice's" genome freak is called Dren (that's Nerd spelled backwards). "For me this is more a love story and a human story, not some science experiment," says French actress Delphine Chanéac, 31, who brings this Molotov cocktail of chromosomes to life with chilling dexterity. Moreau and other mad geniuses crying for their mommies on any dark and stormy night. What they create, however, in Vincenzo Natali's new sci-fi thriller would leave Dr. Just like Mary Shelley's brilliant scientist, Adrien Brody and Sarah Polley play two badass brainiacs who defy nature, God and every other moral boundary to concoct a perfect being.
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