How ‘The Fountain’ Became Hugh Jackman and Rachel Weisz’s Transcendent Sci-Fi Romance

Darren Aronofsky's mind-bending 2006 film originally aimed for Brad Pitt and Cate Blanchett before its ambitious vision crystalized

The Fountain

In the annals of ambitious sci-fi storytelling on film, Darren Aronofsky’s 2006 metaphysical romance The Fountain stands out as a transcendent work of visual poetry. Spanning a millennium through interwoven narratives, the film uses the ages-old quest for eternal life as a tapestry upon which to explore profound themes of love, mortality, and the cosmic dance bridging science and spirituality.

As mind-bending as the finished product is, the path to bringing Aronofsky’s daring vision to the screen proved equally labyrinthine – one originally meant to star a very different pair of actors from the ones who ultimately brought it to such sublime life.

When first conceived, the auteur had his sights set on Brad Pitt and Cate Blanchett to play the lead roles of a woman confronting death and her husband who becomes consumed with trying to cure her condition. Aronofsky even personally screened his previous film, the cult classic Requiem for a Dream, in hopes of convincing Pitt.

Pre-production proceeded for over two years before being derailed when Blanchett became pregnant, throwing the prospective $70 million production into budgetary peril. It was only when producer Eric Watson secured scaled-back funding that the restructured project regained momentum.

Even then, Pitt abruptly exited after just one day of shooting due to the director’s admitted failure in addressing the actor’s requested script revisions. “Brad lost trust in me and faith in the project,” Aronofsky later reflected. “He told me he felt like he was breaking up with a girl.”

With his originally-envisioned leads gone, the filmmaker’s quest to realize his cosmic love story seemed in jeopardy. However, new inspiration struck in the form of Hugh Jackman and Rachel Weisz, to whom Aronofsky’s ambition promptly pivoted.

While far from his first choices, Jackman and Weisz proved phenomenal catches capable of handling the daunting demands. These included incarnating the same metaphysically-linked soulmates across three separate timelines – from 16th century Spanish conquistadors embarking on a mythical quest, to the present-day where one half frantically researches immortality to save his dying wife, to the far future where a celestial traveler nurtures an ancient tree containing the essence of all existence.

Jackman was fresh off drawing raves for his versatility in the Broadway musical The Boy from Oz when Aronofsky identified him as an ideal candidate to juggle the roles of dedicated scientist, zealous explorer, and spacebound loner. Meanwhile, the director’s then-girlfriend Weisz took convincing from Jackman himself before Aronofsky was won over to cast her as the transcendent soul bridging all three timelines.

In the end, both actors shined as the cosmic soulmates, pouring every ounce of emotional heft into their parts. Jackman’s portrayal of a husband desperate to defy death itself is particularly gut-wrenching, while Weisz’s embodiment of grace in the face of mortality elevates the metaphysical themes into the profound.

Working with just half of the originally-planned $70 million budget, Aronofsky still conjured spectacular visuals from cinematographer Matthew Libatique, creating indelible images that seamlessly intercut between the parallel storylines towards a reality-shattering conclusion.

Though divisive upon release, The Fountain has rightly gained increasing appreciation in the years since as an uncompromising creative achievement by an ambitious artist working at his full powers. And at its heart lie two perfectly-cast lead performances that transform Aronofsky’s universe-spanning paean to eternity into an intimate, transcendent love story for the ages.

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