elcome to Jessica Chastain Network, your oldest and most complete resource dedicated to Jessica Chastain. You may better remember her as Molly Bloom in Molly's Game or Maya in Zero Dark Thiry. Academy Award winner for The Eyes of Tammy Faye, Jessica spans her career from big to small screen, seeing her not only in movies like The Help, The Debt, Miss Sloane, Woman Walks Ahead, The Zookeeper's Wife, The Good Nurse, she also played some iconic roles for series like Scenes from a Marriage and George & Tammy. Recently she registered a podcast series, The Space Within, and had a role in Memory and Mothers' Instinct. This site aims to keep you up-to-date with anything Mrs. Chastain with news, photos and videos. We are proudly PAPARAZZI FREE!

Crimson Peak is featured on current issue of Mexican magazine Cine Premiere and the promotional images are to die for. Check digital scans added in our gallery, courtesy of our friend Gabby from tom-hiddleston.com.

October 10, 2015   Luciana


A new interview with Jessica has been published on Time website, in which she talks about how to find sympathy for a devil, the movie’s revolutionary take on sex and why Crimson Peak will help make Hollywood a better place for women seeking out robust roles.

TIME: You decided to pursue the role of the villain Lucille instead of the heroine Edith when you were first presented with the script. Why?
Jessica Chastain: Mia is far better than I would have ever been in that role. I think she’s brilliant in the movie. When I read the script, I had never played a character like Lucille, and I wanted to explore that type of loneliness. It was just extreme loneliness. I wanted to find the compassion for this person who ends up doing these terrible things.

The character could have easily become an over-the-top Disney stepmother type of villain, but you feel compassion for her. How do you walk that line?
The thing about Guillermo, and what I love so much about his films, is that he has so much compassion and love for his monsters. When approaching the character, I knew I was going to be in really good hands because I wasn’t interested in just exploring evilness and darkness. That to me is very uninteresting, just as uninteresting as it would be to just explore light and goodness. I want to know what could happen to a person to behave in a way that would make them look like they were a monster.

It’s rare to see two female leads in a movie. Was that something that attracted you to the script?
I speak a lot about diversity, and I’m constantly looking for projects that have more than one point of view in them. I very rarely get to work with actors who are women. I had a great time on The Help. And when I read the script [for Crimson Peak] I was really pleased that there were these two fantastic female characters and that I would have scenes with another actress because that’s my really my desire—to work with as many different kinds of people as possible.

Check the entire interview at Time website.

October 10, 2015   Luciana


Jessica is on cover of TV Media magazine, featuring a beautiful new photo, part of The Martian promotional shoot. Check digital scans added in our gallery.



October 7, 2015   Luciana


As you can see, we have up a new layout featuring a mix of Jessica’s recent photoshoots to InStyle and Telegraph (two of my favourites so far!). The pretty header was made by my friend Nicole and the theme base is from Sin21, modified by me.

Let me know if you find any error, or offline page, since I’m still tweaking the theme.

October 6, 2015   Luciana


Scans of Radio Times magazine, containing the interview previously mentioned in our post, has been added to the gallery.



September 30, 2015   Luciana


Added scans of Sci-Fi Now current issue, featuring Crimson Peak and The Martian:



September 29, 2015   Luciana