Sandra Bullock: “I Was Perfectly Content to be Permanently Broken”

Oscar-winner says she was coaxed into a return to acting.

Sandra Bullock wasn't looking to return to acting when Stephen Daldry called about "Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close."

Bullock's last film, 2009's "The Blind Side," was the kind of career apogee of which most actresses dream, winning her a best actress Academy Award in what essentially amounted to a coronation of Bullock as America's most beloved female movie star.

But the accomplishment — which would normally be followed by a wave of projects to capitalize on the momentum — was soon marred by public scandal. Bullock's husband, "Monster Garage" host Jesse James, was revealed to have been unfaithful. The fallout, which led to divorce, was covered relentlessly by the tabloids. Bullock still went ahead and adopted a baby boy.

When Daldry, the director of "The Hours" and "The Reader," approached her about "Extremely Loud," Bullock wasn't sure she would return to acting at all.

"I was perfectly content to be permanently broken," she says. Recognizing how that might sound in print, she smiles at the unintended hint of her personal turmoil, and adds "time-wise" to clarify the break as one from moviemaking.

"I honestly didn't think I was in a place where I wanted to work or wanted to step out of where I was," she says. "I wasn't prepared. But the opportunity was louder than my head."

The chance was to play a supporting but key role in Daldry's adaptation of Jonathan Safran Foer's novel. In it, Bullock plays the mother of an uncommonly bright, precocious child (Thomas Horn), whose father (Tom Hanks) dies on Sept. 11. It's a particularly wrenching story about grief and reconciliation.

"What a great way to get back on the horse," says Bullock, who was staying at a hotel 20 blocks from the World Trade Center on 9/11. "It was hard, but it was what it's supposed to be."

It took some courting. Daldry visited Bullock at her house, and when he asked her what she might bring to the role, the actress was frank.

"I said, 'I haven't the slightest idea,'" she says. "I was like, 'The well is deep. It's your job to stop it or get it.'"

Bullock and Daldry have a charming, easy manner with each other, showering one another with compliments. Asked why he pursued her for the part, the British director quips, "She's cheap as chips."

"I have watched just about everything you've ever made," says Daldry. Bullock, whose self-deprecating humor is undimmed, doesn't miss a beat: "I'm so sorry."

"I needed a partner in the project, somebody that would be a leading lady and look after me, look after herself, look after the character, look after the kid and look after the creation of the whole process," says Daldry. "Sandy was literally like a partner on it for me. We would write and rewrite and focus down."

One of the film's most striking and emotional scenes is a flashback to Bullock's character speaking on the phone with her husband, who is calling from atop one of the burning towers.

"The thing that made it so poignant for me was that Tom Hanks showed up that day," says Bullock. "He sat in a room not far from where I was and made that call every single time. Every time I pick up that phone, it was Tom Hanks on the other end of the line. My husband who is calling because he knows he's going to die, giving me some gift, some joy, some jewel — something that he can leave me with so he knows I'm going to be OK."

If Bullock, 47, was hesitant to return to acting, she's now appears fully back. She recently finished shooting another highly anticipated movie: Alfonso Cuaron's "Gravity," a space thriller co-starring George Clooney.

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