
UMA THURMAN has always liked a challenge, and she got one with her new film, "The Life Before Her Eyes," an intense drama about a mother haunted by a horrific decision made as a teenager.
Thurman perhaps is best known for roles in director Quentin Tarantino's "Pulp Fiction" and "Kill Bill" movies, and for years she has been highly sought out as an actress. But for "Life Before Her Eyes," she also took on the role of producer, helping shepherd a difficult story onto the screen.
Thurman plays Diana, an art-history teacher living a seemingly idyllic life, but audiences soon learn she is haunted by terrible events in her past as the film cuts back-and-forth between the present and events 15 years earlier.
As a young free spirit, Diana (played by Evan Rachel Wood) and her best friend Maureen (Eva Amurri) were cornered in a high school bathroom by a deranged student gunman who asked them to make an agonizing choice between which girl should live and which should die.
Fifteen years later, in the present, Diana is trying to come to terms with her decision as she struggles to raise her own rebellious 8-year-old daughter and deal with the possibility her husband is having an affair.
The movie deals with the tricky transition from girlhood to womanhood and the stress and strain of a mother-daughter relationship, Thurman said.
Thurman, who turns 38 later this month, is a versatile actress whose movies have ranged widely from musical "The Producers" to the action-filled "Kill Bill" movies and period drama "Dangerous Liaisons." She has already completed her next film, romantic comedy "The Accidental Husband" in which she stars opposite Colin Firth.
The New York-based star has been married -- and divorced -- twice, first to Gary Oldman, then to Ethan Hawke with whom she has a 10-year-old daughter, Maya, and a 6-year-old son, Levon.
(SD-Agencies)
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