The Alison and Jeff Show: Alison Brie Talks Horse Girl

Horse Girl, a collaboration between Alison Brie and Jeff Baena, premiered at Sundance, is currently playing on Netflix, and is one of the most imaginative and daring films to premiere this year. It all sprang from a long hike—and from some of her most painful memories and deepest fears. Brie sat down with Paste to tell the whole story.
Paste Magazine: Congratulations on Horse Girl, because this is a doozy.
Alison Brie: I like it being described like that!
Paste: This is what Sundance is all about, movies that take chances. And succeed.
Brie: Thank you for saying that. This is not a movie that came out of nowhere, obviously—I put many hours in writing it, putting it together—but three days into shooting I was talking to a friend like, I don’t know. I just don’t know. She said, “It’s a big swing, but you gotta do it!” I’d rather take a big swing and do something that is really exciting to me, that I can really sink my teeth into, and be so engaged, even if it’s not for everyone. And this movie certainly is not for everyone. I just feel so fulfilled by this whole process.
Paste: I love that this is becoming the Jeff [Baena, director] and Alison show.
Brie: Definitely.
Paste: Talk a little bit about your history with Jeff, which readers might not know, and then how you would characterize the partnership that’s springing up, what you mean to each other artistically.
Brie: There are a lot of different stories about when we met. He seems to have two other memories of other times we possibly met that I don’t remember it all. So in my mind, we met when Jeff asked me to do a small role in his film Joshie.
Paste: Another Sundance film.
Brie: Yep. It was a small role, but the pitch sounded interesting, and everybody that was involved with it was so great, and I thought, “Oh, why not go do one day?” I’d never really done an improvised movie before, so that was really fun. Then, the next summer he came to me, and separately to my husband Dave [Franco], and had meetings with us about his film, The Little Hours. That pitch was just unlike anything I’d ever heard before. It’s a modern comedy about 14th century Italian nuns, but we’re going to talk currently, colloquially. And it’s raunchy and crazy, but we’re nuts and we’re going to shoot it in Italy.
Paste: Because when I think about Aubrey [Plaza] and you, I think 14th century nuns.
Brie: Typecast, of course. I feel like Molly Shannon was already signed on, Aubrey was going to do it, and having seen Joshie I already was a fan of Baena. The idea sounded so different. I think a lot of artists are always searching for that thing that is different, unlike anything we’ve seen before. It was just so exciting. I couldn’t shake that. And it seemed scary to fully improvise the whole movie. I had no idea about how to really do that. Once I convinced Dave to do it, the idea of shooting a movie in Italy with my husband for a month sounded kind of great, too.