Eva Green has arrived at the High Court for her second day in the witness box after the former Bond girl’s extraordinary evidence yesterday.

Ms Green smiled as she entered the Rolls Building just off Chancery Lane wearing bright red and orange sunglasses, a black velvet jacket and dark jeans and boots.

The actress, 42, is embroiled in a bitter legal battle with the makers of A Patriot, a £4million movie about the ‘climate catastrophe’, with each side blaming the other for the production’s demise.

Ms Green is suing White Lantern Films for her fee of $1 million (£810,000) which she claims she is entitled to under a ‘pay or play’ clause in her contract. The movie was shut down due to funding issues in October 2019.

Yesterday she put her rudeness about production staff of A Patriot in expletive-laden texts and emails down to her ‘Frenchness’. She also apologised for ‘horrible comments’ calling the crew ‘s****y peasants from Hampshire’.

Eva Green arrives at the High Court where she is suing White Lantern Films for her $1m fee for a film, A Patriot

Eva Green arrives at the High Court where she is suing White Lantern Films for her $1m fee for a film, A Patriot

Ms Green smiled as she entered the Rolls Building just off Chancery Lane wearing bright red and orange sunglasses, a black velvet jacket and dark jeans and boots

Ms Green smiled as she entered the Rolls Building just off Chancery Lane wearing bright red and orange sunglasses, a black velvet jacket and dark jeans and boots

Ms Green, 42, is at loggerheads with the makers of dystopian British sci-fi project, which collapsed amid funding issues. Both sides blame eachother

Ms Green, 42, is at loggerheads with the makers of dystopian British sci-fi project, which collapsed amid funding issues. Both sides blame eachother

In messages used in White Lantern’s claim, Ms Green is said to refer to one of the film’s executive producers, Jake Seal, as ‘evil’, a ‘devious sociopath’, ‘a liar and a mad man’ and ‘pure vomit’. She is also said to have called production manager Terry Bird ‘a f****** moron’ and described the men as ‘total a***holes’. 

She also compared her own safety concerns about the project – including a lack of stunt training – to the fatal shooting of a cinematographer on the set of Alec Baldwin‘s film Rust.

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Ms Green, 42, is at loggerheads with the makers of dystopian British sci-fi project, which collapsed amid funding issues.

The actress had been due to play the lead role, that of a soldier, and told the High Court in London that she ‘fell deeply in love’ with ‘one of the best scripts I have ever read’.

But things turned sour, the court has heard, with White Lantern films claiming the star breached her £810,000 contract by making unreasonable demands which undermined their efforts to produce the movie.

They have revealed messages sent by the Hollywood star about the film’s producers and backers, calling them ‘super weak and stupid’.

While she apologised for ‘inappropriate language’ and ‘some horrible things’ sent by email and text, giving evidence Ms Green said that this was ‘my Frenchness coming out… this was my emotions speaking’.

The Paris-born actress and model, who began her career in French theatre after spending time in London and Ireland, added: ‘Sometimes you say things you don’t actually mean, of course they are not weak and stupid.’

Another text message, sent by one of the film’s producers, said that he thought Ms Green would ‘rather eat tumours’ than make the film with another of the producers whom she disliked. Ms Green, who was an executive producer for the project, dismissed claims from White Lantern that she sought to undermine the film’s production, telling the High Court: ‘My heart and soul was in making A Patriot.’

Bond girl Eva Green, pictured in Casino Royale with Daniel Craig, is at the High Court in a legal battle over the demise of a £4 million film project

Bond girl Eva Green, pictured in Casino Royale with Daniel Craig, is at the High Court in a legal battle over the demise of a £4 million film project

Actress Eva Green filming near Tower Bridge in October 2019

Actress Eva Green filming near Tower Bridge in October 2019

She said: ‘It is one of the best scripts I have ever read. As an actor it was very exciting, it is the role of a soldier which I have not played before. It was about climate change, which is very dear to my heart.’

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However, the Casino Royale star, who attended court in central London wearing a black roll-neck top with a smart moss green velvet blazer and sunglasses, revealed how she feared A Patriot may become a low budget ‘B film’ after disagreements behind the scenes with the film’s financiers and producers.

‘When an actor is in a B movie, you will be labelled as B actor,’ she told the court, adding: ‘It could kill my career… I don’t care about the money, I live to make good films, it is my religion.’

Max Mallin KC, for White Lantern, previously claimed that Ms Green had an ‘animosity’ towards a vision for the project held by one of the film’s executive producers, Jake Seal.

In WhatsApp exchanges with her agent and the film’s director, Ms Green claimed Mr Seal was planning to make a ‘cheap B movie’, describing him as ‘the devil’ and ‘evil’, he said.

Mr Mallin asked Ms Green if she remembered sending a different text message suggesting that the film under Mr Seal would be a ‘B-s****y-movie’.

The actress said she remembered the message. Ms Green added: ‘I never wanted this to be a B-movie but I realised more towards the end that it was going to happen.’

The actress, who played Vesper Lynd in Casino Royale and also starred in the BBC1 series The Luminaries, is suing White Lantern for her fee of $1million (£810,000), which she claims she is entitled to under a ‘pay or play’ clause in her contract.

The term ‘pay or play’ is used in the film industry to refer to when an artist is paid whether or not they are called upon to perform.

White Lantern is defending the claim and bringing a countersuit.

Lawyers for Ms Green say she is being portrayed unfairly as a diva by White Lantern. Edmund Cullen KC, for Ms Green, told the court last week ‘this case is designed to paint my client as a diva to win headlines and damage her reputation’.

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Instead Mr Cullen insists that Ms Green bent over backwards to try to complete the project.

Detailing accommodations the actress made in order to assist the film, he listed how ‘she repeatedly agreed to move back the start date, she agreed to move production from Ireland to the UK, she made repeated offers to use part of her fee to finance the project’.

The film was also due to feature The Jewel In The Crown and Game Of Thrones actor Charles Dance and As Good As It Gets star Helen Hunt. Misery star Kathy Bates was also attached to the movie at one point.

Director Dan Pringle said the proposed budget had been reduced from the £8million originally discussed with Ms Green to a lower estimate of £4.6million.

The trial continues, with Ms Green continuing to give evidence today.

DailyMail

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