+ Cannes J U LY 6 , 2 0 2 1 | S P EC I A L I S S U E
MORDOR ON THE RIVIERA
How a splashy Cannes launch 20 years ago secured the fate of The Lord of the Rings
DEADLINE DISRUPTORS
Our 2021 class of movers and shakers, including: + SEAN PENN + BRUNA PAPANDREA + JEREMY THOMAS + FEMI OGUNS + STAGECRAFT + JON M. CHU and many more...
LÉA SEYDOUX QUEEN OF CANNES With four films at this year’s festival, the French star’s reign continues
PLUS: THE VELVET UNDERGROUND This means Warhol BENEDETTA Sin of the times BERGMAN ISLAND What’s Mia Hansen-Løve got to do with it?
SHELTER
7TH & UNION
MY TENDER MATADOR
THE ATLANTIC CITY STORY
PRE-PRODUCTION
COMPLETED
FOR VIRTUAL AND IN-PERSON MEETINGS DURING
CANNES FILM FESTIVAL JULY 6-11, 2021
COMPLETED
COMPLETED
CONTACT
TAMARA NAGAHIRO tamara@grandavecapital.com
6
ONES TO WATCH Five names to keep an eye on at Cannes
16
MELISSA GEORGE Her French renaissance with In His Lifetime
18
LEOS CARAX Sparks and recreation in rock opera Annette
20
MIA HANSEN-LØVE Scenes from a marriage in Bergman Island
22
TODD HAYNES Run, run, run—see The Velvet Underground
24
LÉA SEYDOUX The Palme d’Or winner heralds the festival’s return with four films in Official Selection
Deadline profiles the people, companies and politics changing the face of film and television.
34
LORD OF THE RINGS Behind the scenes on the most dangerous gamble in film history
44 50 51 51 52 54 56 60 62 63 64 69
90 CA M IL LE COT T I N P HOTO G RA P HE D BY E LI OT T B LI SS
PAUL VERHOEVEN Back in the habit, the Dutch auteur fans the flames with Benedetta
ON THE COVER Léa Seydoux photographed exclusively for Deadline by Bertie Watson. Location: Hôtel Plaza Athénée, 25 Avenue Montaigne, 75008 Paris, Dorchester Collection Hair: Etienne Sekola Makeup: Sandrine Cano Bock Manicurist: Philippe Ovak Styling: Louis Vuitton
70 72 73 73 74 76 77 77 78 80
Sean Penn Yash Raj Greg Berlanti Ava DuVernay Broken Windows Annemarie Jacir Stagecraft Leigh Janiak CJ Entertainment Frances McDormand Bruna Papandrea Rian Johnson & Ram Bergman Larry Tanz EbonyLife Media Michael B. Jordan Ryan Coogler Femi Oguns DAZN Ryan Murphy Laverne Cox Leonine Jeremy Thomas
84 Yes Studios 86 Jon M. Chu 89 Lin-Manuel Miranda
+ Cannes
D EAD L I NE .CO M
D EAD L I NE HOL LYWOOD I S OWNED AND P UB L I SHED BY P ENSKE MED I A CORP ORATI ON
Breaking News
CHAIRMAN & CEO
Follow Deadline.com 24/7 for the latest breaking news in entertainment.
Sign up for Alerts & Newsletters G E N ERA L MA NAG ER & CH IEF R EV ENU E OF F I C E R
Stacey Farish
CO - E D ITO RS - IN-CHIEF Nellie Andreeva (TEL EVISION) Mike Fleming Jr. (F ILM)
EX EC U T I V E AWA R DS ED ITO R
AWA R D S CO LUMNIST & CHIEF F ILM CRITIC
Joe Utichi
VI C E P R ES I DENT, C R EATIV E
Craig Edwards D E P U T Y EDI TOR
EXECUTIV E E DITOR
ASS I STA NT EDI TOR
EXECUTIV E M ANAGING EDITOR
SO C I A L M EDI A DI R ECTO R
D E PUTY M A NAGING EDITOR
Sophie Hertz
VI D EO M A N AG ER
David Janove
VI D EO P RODU C ERS
Benjamin Bloom Andrew Merrill Shane Whitaker
E D I TOR I A L & M A R K ET I N G D ES IGNE R
Michael Luong
SE N I OR V I C E P R ES I DENT, ASS OC I AT E P U B L I S HER
Kasey Champion
SE N I OR V I C E P R ES I DENT, G LO BA L B U S I N ES S DEV E LO PM E NT & ST RAT EG I C PA RT N ERS HIPS
Céline Rotterman
VI C E P R ES I DENT, EN T ERTA INM E NT
Caren Gibbens
SE N I OR DI R ECTOR , EN TE RTA INM E NT
Brianna Corrado
D I R ECTOR , ENT ERTA I N M E NT
London Sanders
D I R ECTOR , B RA N D MA R K E TING
Laureen O’Brien
D I GI TA L SA L ES P L A NNE RS
Jessica Cole Katya Libizova
AD SA L ES COOR DI NATO R
Malik Simmons
ACCOU N T MA NAG ER
Lauren Pollock
PRO DU CT I ON DI R ECTOR
Natalie Longman
D I ST R I B U T I ON DI R ECTOR
Michael Petre
PRO DU CT I ON M A N AG ER
Andrea Wynnyk
CHIEF ACCOUNTING OFFICER
Sarlina See
CHIEF DIGITAL OFFICER
Craig Perreault
EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT, BUSINESS AFFAIRS & CHIEF LEGAL OFFICER
Todd Greene
CHIEF ADVERTISING AND PARTNERSHIPS OFFICER
Mark Howard
EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT, OPERATIONS & FINANCE
Peter Bart
E D ITO R IA L D IRECTOR
SE N I OR EV ENTS M A N AGE R
George Grobar
E D ITO R-AT- LARGE
D O C U M ENTA RY EDI TOR
Scott Shilstone
CHIEF OPERATING OFFICER
EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT, OPERATIONS & FINANCE
Michael Cieply
Ryan Fleming
VICE CHAIRMAN
Gerry Byrne
Pete Hammond
Antonia Blyth
Matthew Carey
Sign up for breaking news alerts and other Deadline newsletters at: deadline.com/newsletters
Jay Penske
Anthony D’Alessandro Patrick Hipes Tom Tapp
S E NIO R M A NAGING EDITOR
Denise Petski
S E NIO R E D ITOR, L EGAL / TV CRITIC
Dominic Patten
S E NIO R FILM EDITOR
Justin Kroll
TE LEV IS IO N EDITOR
Peter White
FINA NCE E D ITOR
Dade Hayes
BUS INES S E D ITOR
Jill Goldsmith LA BO R E D ITO R
David Robb
INTE R NATIO NAL EDITOR
Andreas Wiseman
Paul Rainey Tom Finn
VI D EO SE R I ES
MANAGING DIRECTOR, INTERNATIONAL MARKETS
The Actor’s Side with Pete Hammond
SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT, PRODUCT & TECHNOLOGY
Meet some of the biggest and hardest working actors of today, who discuss life, upcoming projects, and their passion for film and television. deadline.com/vcategory/ the-actors-side/
Behind the Lens with Pete Hammond
Explore the art and craft of directors from firsttimers to veterans, and take a unique look into the world of filmmakers, from their own perspectives. deadline.com/vcategory/ behind-the-lens/
Production Value
Go behind the scenes with the talented craftsmen and women behind some of this year’s acclaimed films and television series. deadline.com/vcategory/ production-value/
INTE R NATIO NAL TELEVISION EDITOR
Debashish Ghosh Jenny Connelly
SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT, DEPUTY GENERAL COUNSEL
Judith R. Margolin
SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT, FINANCE
Ken DelAlcazar
SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT, HUMAN RESOURCES
Lauren Utecht
SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT, CREATIVE
Nelson Anderson
SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT, LICENSING & BRAND DEVELOPMENT
Rachel Terrace
VICE PRESIDENT & ASSOCIATE GENERAL COUNSEL
Adrian White
VICE PRESIDENT, HUMAN RESOURCES
Anne Doyle
VICE PRESIDENT, REVENUE OPERATIONS
Brian Levine
HEAD OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS & COMMUNICATIONS
Brooke Jaffe
VICE PRESIDENT, TECHNICAL OPERATIONS
Christina Yeoh
VICE PRESIDENT, SEO
Constance Ejuma
VICE PRESIDENT & ASSOCIATE GENERAL COUNSEL
Dan Feinberg
VICE PRESIDENT, GLOBAL TAX
Frank McCallick
VICE PRESIDENT, TECHNOLOGY
Gabriel Koen
VICE PRESIDENT, PMC DIGITAL ACQUISITION
Gerard Brancato
VICE PRESIDENT, PORTFOLIO SALES
Jacie Brandes
Jake Kanter
VICE PRESIDENT, E-COMMERCE
INTE R NATIO NAL F EATU RES EDITOR
VICE PRESIDENT, ACQUISITIONS & OPERATIONS
Diana Lodderhose
INTE R NATIO NAL BOX OF F ICE EDITOR/ S E NIO R CO NTRIBU TOR
Jamie Miles Jerry Ruiz
P O D CASTS
Crew Call
M A NAGING E DITOR
Deadline’s editorial director Anthony D’Alessandro focuses on below-the-line nominees. deadline.com/tag/crewcall-podcast/
AS S O CIATE E DITORS
New Hollywood
Nancy Tartaglione
FILM CR ITIC & COLU MNIST
Todd McCarthy Erik Pedersen Greg Evans Matt Grobar Bruce Haring
TE LEV IS IO N REP ORTER
Alexandra Del Rosario INTE R NATIO NAL F ILM REP ORTER
A platform for people of color, LGBTQ members, women, and other underrepresented voices in entertainment. deadline.com/tag/newhollywood-podcast/
Tom Grater
VICE PRESIDENT, PRODUCTION OPERATIONS
Joni Antonacci
VICE PRESIDENT, FINANCE
Karen Reed
VICE PRESIDENT, BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT
Marissa O’Hare
CMO, HEAD OF PMC STUDIOS
Mike Monroe
VICE PRESIDENT, STRATEGIC PLANNING & ACQUISITIONS
Mike Ye
VICE PRESIDENT, PRODUCT DELIVERY
Nici Catton
VICE PRESIDENT, CUSTOMER EXPERIENCE & MARKETING OPERATIONS
Noemi Lazo
VICE PRESIDENT, FINANCE
Young Ko
ASSOCIATE VICE PRESIDENT, TALENT & RECRUITING
Andy Limpus
ASSOCIATE VICE PRESIDENT, HUMAN RESOURCES
Brian Garcia
ASSOCIATE VICE PRESIDENT, ADVERTISING OPERATIONS
Eddie Ko
WAS HINGTO N CORRESP ONDENT
Ted Johnson
ASSOCIATE VICE PRESIDENT, INTERNATIONAL MARKETS
PHOTO E D ITO R
ASSOCIATE VICE PRESIDENT, CONTENT
Brandon Choe
Gurjeet Chima
FOLLOW DEADLINE Facebook.com/Deadline Instagram.com/Deadline Twitter.com/Deadline YouTube.com/Deadline
Karl Walter
SENIOR DIRECTOR, DEVELOPMENT
Amit Sannad
DIRECTOR, PRODUCT MANAGEMENT
Derek Ramsay
DIRECTOR, LICENSING & BRAND PARTNERSHIPS
Laura Ongaro
DIRECTED BY
A HERO WRITTEN AND DIRECTED BY
ASGHAR FARHADI THIS FILM IS NOT YET RATED
Melissa George p. 12
| Leos Carax p. 14 | Mia Hansen-Løve p. 16 | Todd Haynes p. 18
Cannes Ones To Watch
Deadline anoints the five names destined to rock this year’s Croisette Deadline’s annual group of Ones To Watch in Cannes is made up of actors and filmmakers who are all bringing something fresh to the festival—an especially important flavor after a disruptive 18 months of pandemic. The distinction isn’t always reserved for brand new faces; rather we’ve selected people who are branching out, or who find themselves in waters where they are liable to make waves. Cannes can be a place of reinvention, after all.
WITH TWO HIGH-PROFILE FILMS IN CANNES—STILLWATER AND OUR MEN—THE CALL MY AGENT! STAR CLEARLY DOESN’T NEED TO CALL HER AGENT… CAMILLE COTTIN IS HAVING QUITE A YEAR. As more and more folks locked at home tuned into Call My Agent! (Dix pour cent), the Netflix series in which she stars, her profile has risen internationally. The comedy/drama about the trials and tribulations of a Parisian talent agency had already helped her score jobs in Hollywood films pre-pandemic, and now she’s definitely someone to keep an eye on as she continues to build an enviable cross-border resume.
6
DEADLINE.COM
JESS I CA FOR D E /FO CUS FE AT U RES
Camille Cottin
CANNES ONES TO WATCH fully embrace the situations which are sometimes dramatic, but it’s also the way they are treated that makes comedy.” Cottin got the acting bug at a very young age. “It was the pleasure of playing, of dressing up,” she says. “This sort of imaginary parallel that was very present in me—I had a fair amount of imaginary friends. The pleasure to be transported into a universe other than the real one was something that was always present for me.” Theater school was a great outlet, but studying English at university simultaneously was equally enjoyable. “I really liked university because there was an autonomy. I had been really unhappy at school because I don’t like to be constrained, I don’t like discipline, I don’t like people on my back. University was really a pleasant way of working; you didn’t have to go to class, you handed in your work and were present for exams—you were completely free to work how you wanted.” Studying a combination of American and English history and contemporary literature was a bonus. “I would recommend to anyone who wants to do artistic studies to do university at the same time.” She was able to exercise her acting muscles just after school, playing “in tiny rooms in Paris that could fit 30 people” and doing fringe theater at the well-regarded The Paris native, who spent ages
making penis-shaped balloon
“That’s what I’m looking for. For
12 to 17 living in London when her
animals at a children’s birthday
me, it’s about rhythm. I see comedy
family moved for her stepdad’s
party). Connasse spawned a feature
like accelerated drama. Chaplin is
teens was especially beneficial to
job, is appearing in two films
film in 2015, The Parisian Bitch,
dramatic, but it goes so fast that
her future career and the trajectory
in Cannes this year including
Princess of Hearts, also a hidden-
we laugh at it.”
that it’s currently taken. “I went
Directors’ Fortnight closing title Our
camera comedy, which saw her
Men (Mon légionnaire) by Rachel
travel to London in an attempt to
worlds, just as Cottin is doing
but there’s a whole environment
Lang, and Tom McCarthy’s out-of-
marry Prince Harry.
in her career. Her character, the
that helps and the English classes
Cottin got her initial start in
tightly-wound Andrea, she says,
are very high-level, so I got really
the theater, while also studying
“is not a funny person; it’s super
familiar with the language, the
serious subject matter (more on
English, and did everything from the
rare that she laughs. She’s always
accents.” She demurs, “It doesn’t
that later), which may seem out of
comedies of Feydeau to Bulgakov’s
concentrated, always stressed.
mean I speak English very, very
character for an actress who broke
The Master and Margarita. Though
She spends her life trying to solve
well—I’m often looking up words—
out locally in the Canal+ hidden-
she also played the antagonist in
problems. It’s really the situations
but I love it. There’s something
camera sketch series Connasse
Season 3 of BBC drama Killing Eve,
that are funny and she’s always
enjoyable in the learning.”
(literally translated: Bitch) in which
many of her French film roles have
getting tripped up. I try to keep
she inserted herself into daily life
been in comedies. Unsurprisingly,
a small distance where we know
movie was Robert Zemeckis’ 2016
situations and turned the tables
Cottin prefers not to be defined by
we are playing, that’s also part of
war drama Allied opposite Brad
on unsuspecting Parisians (one
genre. “I think comedy, like drama,
comedy, so it’s a miniscule bit of
Pitt and Marion Cotillard. She
notorious episode featured her
can elicit emotion,” she says.
complicity with the audience. We
auditioned for that and got the role;
Both of those films tackle
8
DEADLINE.COM
Living in London during her
to the Lycée Français in London,
Cottin’s first big Hollywood
J ESS I CA FOR D E / FO CUS F EAT U RES
competition drama Stillwater.
Call My Agent! straddles both
Avignon Festival.
Security that’s transforming Hollywood? Amazing.
Deliver amazing See how
CANNES ONES TO WATCH
RUNNING DEEP Left to right: Tom McCarthy directs Matt Damon and Abigail Breslin in Stillwater; Cottin with Matt Damon and Lilou Siauvaud in a scene from the film.
she has recounted that Pitt didn’t
special about meeting someone
in France and has crafted a story
any way? Cottin laughs, “At the
remember having worked with her
who doesn’t know anything about
about the condition of life for
start we’re starstruck, and what’s
previously on a Wes Anderson-
you and who accepts you as you
soldiers and the difficulties they
funny is, once you’re in the work,
directed commercial for SoftBank.
are in the moment.”
face when returning home, notably
then you’re talent-struck. At a
PTSD. “They are too afraid to talk
certain point it’s like playing tennis
Agent! had hit big, but the series
with Matt Damon, who plays Bill
about it,” Cottin explains, “because
with a better partner, you become
has definitely helped her in picking
Baker, a father traveling from
it can have serious consequences
better. It’s very enjoyable because,
up other work in studio movies. The
Oklahoma to France to be with
on their careers. The film focuses
particularly with American actors,
show, which debuted on France 2 in
his estranged daughter, who is in
on the women who are very
there’s something that’s very full in
2015, “completely aided me,” Cottin
prison for a murder she claims she
controlled by the Légion and are
the way they get into their roles and
says of her career path.
didn’t commit. Cottin’s character,
confronted by an omnipresence of
explore situations.”
Virginie, is a theater actress raising
the army in their lives, and a very big
she says, was serendipity. “The
a daughter alone. “She is going to
absence of their men, even when
word on a potential fifth season
producer liked Call My Agent! and I
help this totally lost American try to
they come back.”
of Call My Agent!, but suspects
met with British agents who asked,
advance the investigation to try to
‘What British series do you like?’ I
prove his daughter’s innocence.”
Getting the role on Killing Eve,
Up next, Cottin will appear
Cottin says there’s no new
there could be a film. “I think if
in Ridley Scott’s House of Gucci
they have the material, they’ll do
playing Paola Franchi, the girlfriend
it. They won’t commit if they don’t
cited Peaky Blinders and Killing Eve.”
Cottin received the script
A meeting was set with a producer
for Stillwater, which she shot in
of Maurizio Gucci (Adam Driver).
have something.” Meanwhile, the
on the latter, who told her they liked
Marseille from August through
She shot the MGM movie in Italy
UK version began shooting in
to write for specific actors. “They
October of 2019, while she was on
earlier this year and says of Scott,
May in London— “If they propose
called me back and had written me
location in Corsica for her other
“He has an incredible energy.
a cameo,” says Cottin. “I would
the role of Hélène.”
Cannes title, Our Men. In Rachel
He’s surprising, he shoots very
obviously do it with great pleasure.”
Lang’s film, Cottin and Louis Garrel
fast and knows exactly what he
material, Cottin auditioned for
co-star in supporting roles as a
wants, but at the same time he’s
“There are a lot of people that I
Stillwater after McCarthy consulted
married couple. Ina Marija Bartaité,
attentive to the smallest detail.
admire and a lot of meetings that
with a former French casting
a young Lithuanian actress and
He’s very open and he always
would make me very happy. Notably,
director who suggested her name.
the daughter of director Šarūnas
welcomes propositions with a
there is something very interesting
A producer on the film had also
Bartas, is the film’s lead, playing a
lot of enthusiasm. Even when we
happening with female personalities
seen Call My Agent! and spoken
young woman who falls in love with
did a reading together, he wanted
who are actors, producers, directors
to McCarthy about her, but the
a soldier but finds they’re unable to
to know what I thought of the
who are creating their own work.
director himself knew nothing
be married. It will be a bittersweet
character, how I wanted to play it,
There’s all this energy.” She cites
about the show. “He met me at the
premiere in Cannes, sighs Cottin,
and what I thought of the story.”
Phoebe Waller-Bridge, Emerald
audition, so he took what I gave at
because Bartaité lost her life at
Of Driver, she notes he was “very
Fennell, Reese Witherspoon and
that instant without being polluted
age 25. “It’s very sad,” she says,
welcoming and there was a very
Frances McDormand. Would Cottin
by a label. When you meet people
“because she died this year after
strong artistic universe.”
attempt to go down the same path?
who don’t know anything about
being struck by a drunk driver while
Sticking with the serious
you, or admit not knowing anything, it’s very freeing. There’s something
10
DEADLINE.COM
riding her bike.” Lang is a real-life army reservist
Being around all of these major
And looking further ahead?
“It’s all very inspiring, but I don’t know
Hollywood actors in her recent
if I would be capable. Who knows?
forays, has she been starstruck in
We’ll see.” —Nancy Tartaglione
J ESS I CA FOR D E / FO CUS F EAT U RES
Allied came at a time before Call My
In Stillwater she co-stars
production, distribution, streaming, HSGYQIRXEVMIW MRGPYWMSR WYWXEMREFMPMX] ERMQEXMSR MRRSZEXMSR ƼPQ TSPMXMGW ƼPQ ƼRERGI ERH WS QYGL QSVI
LIGHTS CAMERA INSPIRATION
The Main Stage at Lérins The Palais Stage EX 4EPEMW The Marina Stage at Riviera ERH SRPMRI EX QEVGLIHYƼPQ SRPMRI
3TIR XS EPP 1EVGLʣ EGGVIHMXIH TEVXMGMTERXW
©Marché du Film
Check out our unmissable line-up of conferences offering insights on every aspect of the global film industry
More information at [[[ QEVGLIHYJMPQ GSQ GEPIRHEV
CANNES ONES TO WATCH
Kogonada THE MONONYMOUS DIRECTOR WHO’D
Julia Ducournau
PREFER TO BE ANONYMOUS PEERS INTO
WITH COMPETITION TITLE
IN AN IDEAL WORLD, Kogonada’s work would speak for
THE FUTURE—AND THE HUMAN SOUL— WITH HIS SCI-FI DRAMA AFTER YANG
TITANE, THE QUEEN OF QUEASY
itself. He came to prominence with a series of short but
BODY HORROR RETURNS TO
powerful video essays that focused on a single aspect
CLAIM HER CROWN
of a director’s work: faces in Hitchcock’s thrillers, mirrors in Bergman’s dramas, and the gentle quotidian pace
THE DAUGHTER of two doctors
highly resistant to heat and corro-
of Yasujirō Ozu’s family sagas. Ozu, in particular, is a big
who showed their little girl Psycho
sion, giving very hard alloys, often
influence on Kogonada, who adapted the name of Ozu’s
at the age of eight, filmmaker Julia
used in the form of prostheses due
screenwriter—Kôgo Noda—as an alias. “I’ve never identi-
Ducournau is unapologetically
to its biocompatibility.”
fied much with my American name,” he has said, “which
This hint of man-machine muta-
always feels a little strange to see or hear. My family uses a
After her last visit in 2016 with the
tion suggests the film is another
visceral cannibal horror Raw in
body horror, a genre pioneered by
Critics’ Week, which caused several
Canada’s David Cronenberg, whose
Columbus, in which an Asian-American man (John Cho) is
audience members to faint when
work Ducournau discovered—and
forced to reflect on his past in the Midwestern U.S. town
it screened in Toronto, festivalgo-
binged on—after watching Crash,
after his architect father falls ill. For his follow-up, After
ers were left reeling by the film’s
his 1996 Cannes succès de scandale
Yang, which premieres in Un Certain Regard, Kogonada
inspired infusion of blood and gore
(“It traumatized me in a good way,”
hasn’t travelled far, moving the action to an unspeci-
into the standard rites-of-passage
she enthused at the time).
fied nearby city in the near future. “I didn’t imagine that
story. Starring Garance Marillier—
However, the 37-year-old direc-
nickname that I’ve had since I was a kid.” Families played a big part in Kogonada’s 2017 debut,
my next film would be in the sci-fi genre,” he said. “That
who made her screen acting debut
tor doesn’t like to be pigeonholed.
wasn’t something that was on my mind. When I watch
in Ducournau’s creepy 2011 short
“I see my films as crossovers:
blockbuster sci-fi movies where the whole world is at
Junior—it tells the story of a young
comedy, drama, horror,” she has
stake, I’m often curious about the people in the back-
veterinary student who develops
said. She also bristles at the notion
ground who have to make a living—what are they doing
a craving for human flesh, which
of being seen as a woman working
within that landscape? What are their families like?”
leads to a great deal of self-reflec-
in a traditionally male stronghold.
tion and a doozy of a twist.
“I do believe that my movies talk
by Alexander Weinstein, the film stars Colin Farrell as Jake,
Cannes is already bracing for
Based on the 2016 short story Saying Goodbye to Yang
to anyone,” she has said. “I don’t
the father of an adopted Chinese girl who buys an android
Ducournau’s return—this time
want to genderize my audience or
(Yang) to teach his daughter about Asian culture. But
bumped up into Competition—with
my movie; this is just another way
when the android breaks, Jake finds himself considering
the mysterious Titane (French for
of putting people in boxes. I’m a
more than just the cost of repair. “A lot of times when a
Titanium), with Vincent Lindon and
woman, yes, I’m a strong woman,
story deals with this kind of subject matter, it’s about an
newcomer Agathe Rousselle. So far,
and my movie is feminist, but I’m
AI wanting to be human,” said Kogonada. “But in this case,
all Ducournau is revealing is that
sure that everyone can get it.”
it’s about a human trying to make sense of the loss and
the Titanium of the title is a “metal
—Damon Wise
value of a non-human being.” —Damon Wise
12
DEADLINE.COM
A P P H OTO/ FRAN COI S M O R I/ RI C HA R D S HOT WE LL /I N V IS I O N
the product of her environment.
CANNES ONES TO WATCH
Anders Danielsen Lie THE DOCTOR-ACTOR STAR OF CANNES COMPETITION TITLES, THE WORST PERSON IN THE WORLD AND BERGMAN ISLAND SWAPS HIS SCRUBS FOR A TUX
NORWEGIAN ACTOR Anders
yet, so this creates some chal-
Danielsen Lie will be busy in
lenges for me every now and then,
Cannes with two films world
on both sides.” Lie also works abroad, and
a new phenomenon for onscreen
he’ll have French director Mia
talent to be supporting various
Hansen-Løve’s Bergman Island in
movies, but Lie stands out as likely
Competition as well this year. He
the only professional actor who
won’t reveal much about his role,
will be heading to the Palais while
to spare spoilers, but says the
taking time off from his other
film’s location, the island of Fårö,
job as a full-time physician: the
was a meditative experience. “It
doctor has lately been working
was special and unique to shoot a
with the COVID-19 vaccination
film in all the places where Ingmar
program in Oslo, and has for years
Bergman shot, particularly when
Eran Kolirin
straddled both callings.
you know how blurry the lines
THE OSCAR-SNUBBED ISRAELI DIRECTOR GETS
like the main character in one
ANOTHER CHANCE WITH LET THERE BE MORNING,
of his Cannes movies, Joachim
terrorist Anders Behring Breivik
A BITTERSWEET COMEDY ABOUT A MAN UNDER SIEGE
Trier’s The Worst Person in the
in Paul Greengrass’s harrowing
In a case of art imitating life, Lie says he feels a little bit
were between his private life and his artistic life.” Lie, who in 2018 portrayed
World—the closing chapter of the
Netflix film 22 July, says he would
ERAN KOLIRIN IS BEST KNOWN TO WORLDWIDE AUDIENCES
director’s Oslo trilogy after Reprise
“love” to do more U.S. projects.
for his debut breakout, 2007’s The Band’s Visit. That film was Israel’s
(2006) and 2011’s Oslo, August 31
But the pandemic and his obliga-
submission to the Oscars and had a good shot at taking the Foreign
(Lie appeared in all three).
tions as a doctor have clearly
Language prize, but its use of English ultimately saw it disqualified.
In this latest, Lie co-stars with
complicated things of late.
Since then, Kolirin has made just three features, including this year’s
Renate Reinsve, who plays Julie,
Un Certain Regard premiere Let There Be Morning.
a woman on the cusp of 30. “She
working as a doctor and working
“It’s hard to plan a life because
Based on the 2005 book by Sayed Kashua, the story is timely. It
has reached a point in her life
as an actor are both such time-
centers on Sami, a Palestinian-born Israeli citizen who, while attending
where she has to make all the
consuming occupations. It was
his brother’s wedding across the border, is suddenly unable to return
important decisions,” says Lie.
never the plan, but it’s been very
to Jerusalem when the only road back has been blocked by Israeli sol-
“She is a talented, smart woman
meaningful at times too. Maybe I
diers, forcing the village into lockdown. Already facing a midlife crisis,
who was privileged enough to
have some different perspectives
Sami rediscovers his family and a sense of purpose. There are laughs
postpone all those choices.”
that not all actors have. I feel like
along the way, but the subject matter is heightened, given the recent
For Lie, the line between
I have a foot in the real world; I’ve
violence that has broken out in the ongoing Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
medicine and acting “is a choice
met many people in difficult situ-
“It was an awful year,” Kolirin recalls. “I finished the film and had
I should have made many years
ations and I feel that I’ve learned a
nowhere to screen it. I was constantly thinking, fuck, it’s like a tree
ago, but unfortunately I haven’t
lot about acting from practicing as
falling in the forest. Then there were these climactic events of the last
been able to make that choice
a doctor.” —Nancy Tartaglione
month, it was all happening again.” After the financing, Kolirin explains that a law was passed in Israel that a film made by the Israeli Film Fund has to be presented as an ‘Israeli film’. He scoffs, “Why does the state want you to declare what is obvious? As if I don’t know who I am and I have to erase the other guys’ identity… I don’t want this film to be used as whitewashing of anything that has been done, the things that are done are terrible.” Next up for him is a TV series planned as a German co-production to be placed at a streamer. Korilin is enthusiastic about the “quirky mystery” of a group of German tourists visiting the Dead Sea who find their bus suddenly swallowed up by a sinkhole. —Nancy Tartaglione
14
DEADLINE.COM
ALL AT SEA Mia Wasikowska and Anders Danielsen Lie in Bergman Island.
M EGA /GOL/CAP I TA L P ICTU RES /A P P H OTO/ KI RST Y W I GG LESWORT H / IFC
premiering in Competition. It’s not
Follow Deadline Insider for an exclusive inside look at the most acclaimed films and shows this awards season. INSIDER.DEADLINE .COM
MATERNAL INSTINCT Melissa George as Anna in In His Lifetime.
HOW MELISSA GEORGE ROSE UP OUT OF LIFECHANGING PERSONAL TRAUMA TO EMBRACE HER NEW FRENCH HOME WITH IN HIS LIFETIME BY ANTONIA BLYTH One afternoon in the early aughts,
With her team lurking, he made
By 2016, she was apparently living the fairytale: settled in Paris with her
and whose family and friends were all distantly overseas. Of the court battle, George says
partner and two young sons. She’d
now, “You have more bullets, you have
dodged Weinstein. Her career was
more ammunition in your pocket if
thriving. What could go wrong?
you have the money, and women
Things could go very wrong
aren’t very well-received here [in
indeed. According to a statement
France]. We are known as the ones to
George made to police, during a
carry the child. But once it’s born, it’s
disagreement with her partner in
a gift to [the father]… You’re a carrier.
their home, he struck her repeat-
You’re third in the order of the ‘code
edly. An Uber took her to the police
civil’… It says man, child, woman. You
Melissa George found herself in a
no inappropriate moves, beyond his
station. When she began vomiting,
are not regarded at all, and you add
hotel room with Harvey Weinstein.
choice of attire. But then, a week
she was escorted by a detective to
on to that an actress, and you add on
The mogul, wearing a bathrobe,
before shooting on Derailed began,
the hospital at 3am. That Uber driver
to that a woman, and not French.”
wanted to discuss two roles in his
the lead role earmarked for George
would later testify to her distraught
upcoming films Derailed and Amityville
was mysteriously demoted to a
state, and that she appeared to be
adopted country, George wandered
Horror. An assistant waited in the
supporting one. She believes this is
in physical pain, while George has
Paris in a daze, feeling her experience
hallway, but then, fortunately, so did
absolutely because of that tightly-
photographic evidence of bruising
had been “a witch hunt” and that she
George’s ‘entourage’.
controlled Peninsula hotel meeting.
and swelling to her face. However,
was “made to feel stupid daily”.
“I actually was very well protected
But she prevailed, later booking
the French court found both she and
Effectively marooned in her
While her work is well-known in the
back then,” George tells me via Zoom,
Turistas, the lead in Music Within, and
her former partner guilty of assault,
U.S., the U.K. and her native Australia,
speaking from a park in Paris, with
a big role in 30 Days of Night. She also
and George was legally banned from
in France she says she was initially
one of her sons in her lap. “My agent
booked meaty TV parts on shows
taking her children out of the country
seen as an outsider. “You are a suc-
at the time said, ‘You’re not going to
like Grey’s Anatomy and In Treatment,
without her ex’s written permission—
cessful actress in your own country,
that meeting alone.’ And [Weinstein]
for which she was Golden Globe
a disaster for a woman who knew no
but you are forced now to give it all up.
realized that I came with bodyguards
nominated. Triangle and A Lonely
one in France other than her ex, who
And so, every day I just walked around
and back-up.”
Place to Die followed, and a lead in the
relied on being able to travel for work,
[feeling] stupid.”
16
DEADLINE.COM
L AU RE N T C HA M P OUSS IN / LES FI L M S DU K I OSQU E
Renaissance Woman
critically-acclaimed series The Slap.
So beautifully directed.” The film tells the story of Benjamin (Benoît Magimel), son of Crystal (Denueve). “He’s dying in hospital and I’m his ex-wife,” George says. “And when he found out that I was pregnant, he abandoned us and never met his child ever. So, he’s lived this life of a lie and it’s about me letting go of my son to go and say goodbye to his father.” During her most desperate times these past years, George made a list of her dreams to keep her going. Deneuve was on that list, as was Sean Penn, as was working on a series like The Mosquito Coast. “That’s our version of praying, isn’t it? Manifesting?” she says. And just recently, George played her first fully-French role, in the Abel Danan-directed short Canines, starring Pauline Chalamet, which has just been green-lit as a feature. Being broken down and having to rebuild made her appreciate both herself and France, she says now. “I am more interesting, I am more calm, I’m more universal, I’m more cultured. I’m nicer, I don’t know. I just feel like when you get everything beaten out of you, you choose to put in the right Then, one day, George—who had
who would be played by Justin
Bercot, who was putting together her
ingredients and make yourself a better
left her native Australia at 21 to make
Theroux, her co-star from Mulholland
film In His Lifetime (De son vivant).
person. And it’s because of Paris.”
it as an actress in the U.S.—experi-
Drive some 20 years earlier. But still,
“I was a big fan of her as an actress,
enced something of an epiphany. “I
she did nothing. Then she got a new
just from Mon Roi and all those films,”
will absolutely be the cherry on top of
looked at the beauty of Paris. It was
agent, who immediately told her, “You
George says. Catherine Deneuve was
this renaissance. “Australian cinema is
about five o’clock in the morning. I
have 30 minutes to put yourself on
also already cast.
easy, right? Because I was born there
was just pretty much on the street. I
tape or else we are done.”
thought, OK, you’re built for this, you
“I sat on the floor and just burst
“I went in for an hour-and-a-half
Being invited into French cinema
and raised there. American cinema
meeting in French. [Bercot] stood
is easy because I was there 20 years,
are the only one that can make this
into tears,” George says. “I put up my
up at the end and just hugged me.
but French cinema, all of a sudden,
happen. You need to perfect your
camera and I did three scenes. One
She said, ‘Will you do my movie?’ I
after a traumatic experience, it’s now
French, starting now. You need to call
take each. I didn’t sleep that night.
knew it was with my idol Catherine
my home. So, to do French cinema...
your family and ask for help, starting
And 24 hours later, Rupert Wyatt, the
Deneuve. I mean from Belle de Jour, to
That’s success to me, because it’s the
now, because I had never done that
director, called my agent said, ‘She’s
everything she’s ever done… style-
place that made me fall in love with
in my whole life. I called my brother,
our Margot.’”
wise, acting-wise, she’s just historic.
myself, that made me understand
She epitomizes everything that I ever
who I am.”
called my mom, called my dad.” From
George went to her sons, who
that day on, George threw herself hard
were, by now, five and seven. I said,
into creating a home and learning the
“Mummy has to be a big girl now and
language fluently.
go back to work.” The boys under-
vital. “I knew I had one scene with
before because there was a spare
By 2018, she had managed a stint
wanted to be.” George’s role was small, but it felt
This will not be George’s first time at Cannes. “I’ve only been invited
stood. And the show’s producers
her, not a lot, but the way I see it, it’s
ticket of blah, blah, blah,” she says.
as Sean Penn’s wife in Hulu series The
allowed her to work two weeks on,
a step into the cinema in France,” she
“And of course, when I got on the red
First, shooting in one-week incre-
two weeks off, so she could see the
says. “Even though it’s been such a
carpet, everyone was like, ‘Oh my God,
ments, but mostly she was stymied.
kids in Paris. “I was professionally and
bad time for me here, it was a way to
what’s she doing here?’”
Her confidence eroded, terrified of
personally successful for the very first
show that I’m at the right place at the
leaving the children, when the script
time in my life,” she says. “I made both
right time, getting the right role at the
her own merit, representing a film
for Apple TV+ series The Mosquito
of them happen.”
right time. It’s a beginning.”
she describes thus: “It’s about the
Coast came her way, she sat on it for
Then, at last, the doors of French
At a recent private screening in
But this year, she will be there on
truth and speaking the truth, and
months, eyeing the role of Margot–
cinema cracked open. She got the
Paris, everyone was in tears, she says.
mending bad things in your life and
wife of the lead Allie Fox character,
chance to meet with Emmanuelle
“It’s really, really touching, really sad.
coming full circle.” ★
DEADLINE.COM
17
Festival de C ann es 2 02 1
Leos Carax
What is your strongest memory
Mais oui, start! The French director kicks off Cannes with his rock opera Annette
What makes the Cannes experience
★
★
with good times or bad times? special is the mix of good and bad—
BY DA M O N W I S E
★
of Cannes? Do you associate it
★
★
taste, faith, luck, etcetera. The only time I stayed during the screening of one my films here was
18
DEADLINE.COM
for Holy Motors—because I owed so much to the actors and crew, and they wanted me there. A terrible experience. I had the feeling the film was seven hours long and that the sound was coming out from under a pillow. But then
K RI S D E WI T T E
Since 1984, Leos Carax has only made five features, and all but one of them have premiered in Cannes, usually to feverish anticipation. This year, festivalgoers will be looking to see how the 60-year-old French maverick—AKA Alex Christophe Dupont—will top his intoxicatingly strange 2012 competition entry Holy Motors, which featured talking limos, chimpanzees and Kylie Minogue. They’ll get their answer when Cannes raises the curtain on this year’s opener Annette, a thematically dark, visually kaleidoscopic rock opera he co-wrote with U.S. pop duo Sparks, which stars Adam Driver and Marion Cotillard.
it was beautiful. None of the actors
and would know how to film him.
had seen the film yet, and I could
It was harder to find the actress:
Truffaut, to underline how unoriginal the theme is: a famous Hollywood
see how proud they were, so I was
someone who could act, sing, be
scriptwriter wakes up in the middle
too. But the day before had been
the part, and whom I would want
of the night with a great idea for a
to film. Marion was not an obvious
film. Excited, he writes it down on
choice, but she turned out to be a
a piece of paper and falls back to
great one. She has the mystery and
sleep. He wakes up in the morn-
grace of a silent film actress.
ing with a sense of panic… he can’t
very bad, arriving at Cannes by car with my friend under pouring rain, a huge heavy truck smashed into us full speed, and I saw us dying— which also seemed to last forever. How would you describe your Competition film Annette? A musical fantasy with some comedy, love and sex, a monster, a child, and a few corpses. When did you first become aware of Sparks and what appealed to you about them? When I was 13 or 14. I had never heard of them but I saw the cover of their Propaganda album in a department store. Liked it; stole it. Propa-
Fortunately, you don’t need imagination to make films. All you need is to see things, to hear things; you need to be haunted.
remember what his great idea was. Music—and especially musi-
Then he remembers that he wrote
cians—are an important part of
it down. With relief, he picks up the
your filmmaking. Do you always
paper. It says: “Boy meets girl.”
know what you want?
In my three boy-meets-girl films,
Music is haunting, as cinema should
the lovers met in the course of the
be. I would’ve wanted a life in music.
film. But in Annette, we understand
The vertigo of music. That is my
they have just met, right before the
biggest regret: not to be a musi-
start of the film. I liked the idea a
cian, composer, singer. But music
lot, but it’s hard to do, to not show
rejected me when I was a kid; I
the encounter, and yet to make
wasn’t good.
it perceivable that they’ve just
Cinema is the closest I could get
met—to capture the shyness, the
to composing, creating rhythms and
awkwardness and apprehension of
melodies. To direct is to conduct.
new love.
ganda and Indiscreet are still two of
When I film a scene, I’m pretty sure
my favourite pop albums today. Not
my hands unconsciously move the
Annette promises “a tale of
many songs can offer such pure joy
way a conductor’s hands do.
songs and fury with no taboo”. Is
and be poignant too at times.
Cinema and music are the only
anything taboo in cinema?
places where I feel at home: I never
Taboo or not taboo? A very old
How did the script take shape—
doubt what I like or dislike, and I feel
story. Pornography isn’t taboo
was it a collaborative process?
I know if what we’re doing is right or
because of what it shows, but
Very. We joked about that, because
out of tune.
because of how it most often
Sparks had just released a song
chooses to show it. Same thing with
called “Collaborations Don’t Work”.
Were you always intending to
cinema in general. In some religions,
Most of the storyline was there
make a film in English?
it is taboo to represent the human
already when they proposed the
English was my native language,
face. I truly understand why. But
project to me. But a movie is not a
although I lost it quite a bit. And,
cinema is all about taboo. That’s
story, and it took time and work to
yes, I knew I wanted to make a film
what every frame flirts with, some-
make it into something I could film.
in English someday. I read a lot,
thing deeply impossible, unspeak-
mostly in English. And many of the
able, unthinkable.
What were you looking for when
singers I’ve listened to my whole
you cast the film, and what did
life are English or American. I like
Looking back across your work,
Adam Driver and Marion Cotil-
English—especially when spoken by
it’s easy to see certain rhymes,
lard deliver?
people like James Mason or Gene
repetitions and recurring
Casting seems to me like a totally
Tierney.
themes. Do you put them there,
unnatural and absurd practice.
But making an American film
or is it subconscious?
Cineastes should imagine their films
was never a strong desire. Annette
How does one imagine a film?
for the persons they want to film
did start as an American project. In
Cinema is something I’ve done so
most: usually, their lover, plus one.
Los Angeles, I kept getting emails
seldom, just a few films in 40 years,
There should only be one person
from the producers, with the word
I tend to completely forget how
imaginable for a part. But the fact
“hyper-excited” all over them; but
it’s done—and how I do it. But I do
that Annette did not originate from
nothing was really happening. So, I
know it always involves an obscure
me made everything different.
brought the project back to France.
mix of extreme precision and
Adam was there from the begin-
extreme chaos.
ning, and it took us seven years and
Annette is a story exploring love.
I have a limited imagination.
three different producers to get the
One could argue that love is the
So, some of these recurrences you
film going. I had only seen him in
theme of all your earlier movies.
mention might come from that.
the series Girls. I had immediately
Boy Meets Girl was the title of my
thought, Where does this creature
first film. It could also have been the
imagination to make films. All you
come from? From what parallel
one of my next two films. It comes
need is to see things, to hear things;
dimension? And yet I felt I knew him
from that anecdote Hitchcock told
you need to be haunted. ★
Fortunately, you don’t need
DEADLINE.COM
19
Fest i va l de Ca n n es 2 02 1
Mia Hansen-Løve Returning to Cannes after more than a decade with a film paying tribute to one of cinema’s greats BY DA M O N W I S E
★
★
★
★
★
What’s Bergman Island about?
how it works for a couple who both
death, on the island, where the
immensely his work, and his films
It’s about a couple of filmmakers
write. That was the first impulse for
houses that had belonged to him
matter to me a lot, and they have
who travel to Fårö, the island where
this film, but what really gave it life
were being made available as places
been companions for me since I ever
Bergman lived in the 20 last years
was the idea that came later on: to
where you could go as an artist—
started making films. Some of his
of his life. They’re going to stay all
set the film on the island of Fårö.
whatever your field is—in order to
films I keep watching and watching
work. And, as I said, Fårö was already
again, and I never get tired of them.
summer while they each write their scripts. So, it’s about them, and it’s
Why was Fårö so important?
sort of a fantasy for me. And when
But it’s not only about the films, it’s
about the summer they’re going to
Fårö is kind of a mythic place for a
I heard of this place, I immediately
about his biography: his life and his
spend on this island.
lot of directors, and not only fans of
felt the desire not only to go there
way of working. It’s the whole thing
Bergman—few directors have a con-
and write there but mostly to set
that fascinates me about Bergman.
How did the idea come to you?
nection to a place that’s as strong as
the story I had in mind there.
I think the first thing, for me, was the
Bergman’s with Fårö. Fårö has been
desire to write a film about a couple
part of my imagination for a long,
Is Bergman much of an influence
I mean is, there are a lot of direc-
of filmmakers and then, through the
long time, but then, maybe 10 years
for you?
tors who I admire, and I never try to
portrait of them, to do a film about
ago, I heard about a foundation that
I wouldn’t say he’s an influence,
imitate them in any way or put refer-
creation and about inspiration, and
had been created after Bergman’s
but I’m a great admirer. I admire
ences of their films in my films. Even
20
DEADLINE.COM
But it doesn’t mean that his films have an influence on my films. What
D E N NI S VAN T IN E /STAR M AX / IPX
Nearly three years after she began filming it, Mia HansenLøve’s seventh film, Bergman Island, finally arrives in Cannes to mark the Parisian director’s Competition debut. Filmed on location in Sweden, and starring Vicky Krieps and Tim Roth, it takes place on the island of Fårö, where the Swedish auteur Ingmar Bergman lived and worked until his death in 2007. Surprisingly, it’s been a while since HansenLøve was on the Croisette, having appeared in Directors’ Fortnight with her first feature All is Forgiven (2007) and Un Certain Regard with 2009’s Father of My Children. “I feel very privileged to be back,” she says.
of vertigo, where the lines between
I just wanted to film her because I
reality and fiction—but also between
thought she was incredibly luminous
past and present, what is visible and
and had this rare, very rare, strong
what is invisible—have a tendency
presence, but also, I could see her as
to vanish. I realized, after writing a couple of films, that part of the pleasure that I have in making films—part of why it’s my vocation—has to do with this confusion. And I think what’s new about this film, compared to my previous films, is that in this case I try to deal with that directly, because it’s a film about directors. So, I really tried to confront that and find out how inspiration works for me, and why, and the meaning it has in my life. Why did you make it in English? I think the main reason—or I would say necessity—for me to do it in English has to do with the fact that the film is so personal. I mean, all my films are personal, but it’s the first film where I deal with a character who actually does the same thing in life as I do. And directing this film in English, with English-
in Bergman Island. I know it might
Directing this film in English, with Englishspeaking actors, was a way for me to turn myself into fiction, to not be locked into something that would seem like documentary.
a director. I could believe in that. And Tim Roth? Tim arrived later on. At first, I could only think of an American actor for that part. We shot over two years, so for the first year Tim wasn’t part of the cast. We didn’t know who was going to be in that part, which was a bit awkward, but also interesting. And while I was waiting to shoot the second part of the film, I thought of Tim. I had seen him in many films of course, but to me he will always be the actor in Alan Clarke’s film Made in Britain. I was interested in his fragility, which sounds surprising. But, to me, there is something about that in his presence. Although he plays a lot of tough guys in very masculine types of films, I could see something else in him that was a little bit opposite to that. Why did Bergman Island take two
speaking actors, was a way for me
years to film?
to turn myself into fiction, to not be
Well, we were supposed to shoot
locked into something that would
the whole film in 2018, with Greta
seem almost like documentary. I
Gerwig, and very shortly before we
wanted this film to be total fiction,
shot she had to drop out, because
so I couldn’t see myself making this
she was going to direct Little
film with a couple of French direc-
Women. It happened really quickly,
tors because it would have sounded
and we were already there with my
almost obscene, too close to me
team, so we decided to shoot a part
somehow. So, to me, English was the
of the film that we could film with-
door to fiction.
out her, in order not to lose the other
sound paradoxical, but even though
actors. But then I needed extra time
there is a lot about Bergman in my
How did you choose your cast?
to rethink the film without her, so
film—obviously—I don’t think my
Vicky Krieps I had seen in Phantom
that’s why we had to cut the shoot
film tries to be in any way a film that
Thread. That’s the only film where
into two parts. It actually turned
you could say is a heritor of Berg-
I had seen her, but she impressed
out to be a very happy experience,
man’s style or way of writing.
me so much. I thought she was
because I enjoyed being in Fårö so
really extraordinary in that film. But
much that I was quite happy to be
The set-up for the film suggests
it wasn’t only that—in order to play
able to go back there the next year.
a blurring of fact and fiction,
a director, you need to have certain
which seems to be a very com-
qualities that I don’t think all actors,
Your filmmaking has been
mon theme of your films…
even great actors, have. It’s quite
described as a cinema of free-
Yes. I think I have to confess that
special, I think. You need a certain
dom. Would you agree?
fascinates me: the way when you
authority, you need to be credible as
My filmmaking? Well, I don’t know
make a very personal film, at some
somebody who has a certain intel-
exactly what they meant, but I take
point you can experience some kind
lectual life, somehow. So, first of all,
that as a compliment. ★
DEADLINE.COM
21
Fest i va l de Ca n n es 2 02 1
Todd Haynes The Oscar-winner dives into the world of music yet again with documentary The Velvet Underground BY DA M O N W I S E
★
★
★
★
★
Todd Haynes reinvented the music biopic not once but twice, first with the controversial glam-rock epic Velvet Goldmine (1998), a pastiche of the life and times of David Bowie, and then with 2007’s I’m Not There, a dazzlingly surreal look at the many faces of folk poet Bob Dylan, sanctioned by the man himself. His latest, bankrolled by Apple TV+, might seem tame by comparison; a documentary about The Velvet Underground, it traces how Lou Reed, John Cale, Sterling Morrison and Maureen Tucker—four disparate Manhattan musos shepherded by pop-art legend Andy Warhol—changed rock and roll forever.
What do The Velvet Underground
amazing, remarkable thing about
a very clear idea of where you
mean to you personally?
The Velvet Underground is that they
wanted to go?
It’s hard to overstate their influence
came into being at the time when
I did, to the degree that I knew I didn’t
Did you ever meet Lou Reed?
as a band. I discovered them at a
Andy Warhol was giving up visual arts
want a movie with a lot of later gen-
I wish I had. I would see him around
particular time in my life, probably the
for filmmaking. And that was just the
erations of artists or musicians telling
New York at events, like the Biennial
very beginning of my college years,
tip of the iceberg, because there were
us how great The Velvet Under-
at the Whitney, and I was always too
and [in them] I located the roots
so many other avant-garde filmmak-
ground were. I wanted to go back to
fucking terrified to ever thrust myself
of a lot of other music that I was
ers working and inspiring each other
that historical and cultural time and
upon him. And I was probably wise,
already getting deeply influenced and
and participating in each other’s
place, which by today’s standard,
from all the stories you hear from
inspired by—artists like David Bowie,
films. And what that meant to me,
feels even more completely alien to
people who did. But I have a feeling
Roxy Music and Brian Eno.
with regard to what a film about the
artistic practices today, even in the
he may have been aware of my work.
Velvets could be, was that I wanted
movies that are being made in mar-
He let us use “Satellite of Love”, for
famously said about The Velvet
to use the visual language of these
ginal places. There was just such an
instance, in Velvet Goldmine, when he
Underground, that hardly anybody
films, as a foreground/background
explosion of art and experimentation.
was still around.
bought a Velvet Underground record
template for talking about this music,
So, I immediately wondered how we
at the time, but everybody who did
and how the band came into being,
could make this the visual language
How does he feature in the film?
started a band.
because it was all around them. The
of the movie. And, by the same token,
He was a structuring absence for
visual language of film, of art, and of
I thought, OK, the rule will be, we only
the film, and we addressed that in a
You’ve made films about music
that time was something that you
interview people who were there. And
variety of ways, certainly by putting
before, but in a fictional way. Was
wouldn’t ever want to have to recre-
then it was really about accessing
people in who knew him well growing
that an option here?
ate. You wouldn’t ever want to have
archives, which is the process that
up and could talk about his evolution.
No. I think pretty early on it became
to turn it into a fiction.
took the longest. I now know how
John Cale is really our center-
documentaries can take so long to
piece interview through the film, and
be built, because you’re really writing
Maureen Tucker was an amazing
clear to me, when looking at this period in New York culture, that the
22
DEADLINE.COM
How did you start? Did you have
LE V RAD I N / M EGA
I think it’s true what Brian Eno
them as you’re making them.
abilities would be, and in fact, initially, her limitations were worrying. But John Cale and Lou Reed really figured out what to do and how to use her, in a way that was so specific and so perfect, really. You can’t imagine anybody else singing the songs that she sang in the band. The Velvet Underground’s official albums are endlessly being repackaged. Is there any rare or unheard music? There is. Most of the material of live performances and demos have been released over the years, but there were rehearsal tapes we got from [Reed’s widow] Laurie Anderson that are remarkable. We use some of that in the film. There are live tapes of Lou Reed performing his lyrics at poetry readings in 1970 in New York that are so beautiful to hear. And then there were recordings of conversations that Danny Fields, a colleague of Lou Reed, gave us, where he was talking with him, somebody he really trusted, which was different to how he would behave with journalists. And we also found some videotape footage of the band in 1968, performing after John Cale had left the band. Stuff that has person to talk to as well, because,
of the story that he was their first
never, I don’t believe, ever been pub-
when things got volatile between the
“manager”. He was the reason why
licly seen before.
two men, she was just this recurrent
people went to see these shows,
peacemaker and someone who Lou
initially. No one knew who The Velvet
just adored and had put in a place of
Underground were, they went to see
safety and trust—something he didn’t
an Andy Warhol happening, so he was
often do with people. So, we were
the driving force. In fact, it’s a topic
able to really hear about him. Also, his
in the film, that they almost started
voice and his interviews are there. His
to feel they were a little experimental
presence is really felt in the film, and
exhibition of creatures who were
his voice, of course, is in the music.
being put on stage. Warhol famously wanted to put Nico in a plexiglass
How about the likes of Nico and
box, which she of course refused.
Andy Warhol—are you looking at
We tried to integrate everything, I guess, in a way that feels like it flows
I wanted to go back to that historical and cultural time and place, which feels completely alien to artistic practices today.
and moves emotionally through the course of the band, and the changes in the band. Because the music is so well known, possibly because there’s not that much of it, I wanted you to feel you were hearing it afresh, so you’d feel what it might’ve been like to hear it then and there. How does it feel to be bringing the
all the people in the band’s orbit?
And what about Nico?
Oh sure. Well, the story is about how
The band was really interested in Nico
this unlikely collection of people
around the time [New York socialite]
came together. That’s probably built
Edie Sedgwick was starting to fall out
into the stories of most bands, but in
with Warhol. And Nico, who Warhol
this case, there were just unique and
had met two years before, but was
strange circumstances. And once
spending more and more time in the
the Velvets really coalesced, Andy
Factory, was this astonishing-looking
erful way to experience it. There’ll be
Warhol’s Factory was a magnet for
woman and strange dark personality.
no better venue on the planet than
creative activity. It had to be a part
No one really knew what her musical
the Lumière theater in Cannes. ★
film to Cannes? Oh, it’s so exciting. Especially after all of us being so locked up and wondering if we’ll ever see a movie on a screen again... seeing it big and, of course, hearing the music at its best in a big theater, is an extremely pow-
DEADLINE.COM
23
With no fewer than four films in this year’s Official Selection, LÉA SEYDOUX, the Palme d’Orwinning queen of Cannes, will make a barnstorming return to the festival that has become her second home. Joe Utichi meets the actress everybody wants to work with…
Photographs by
Bertie Watson
Location courtesy Hôtel Plaza Athénée, 25 Avenue Montaigne, 75008 Paris, Dorchester Collection
24
DEADLINE.COM
Hair: Etienne Sekola Makeup: Sandrine Cano Bock Manicurist: Philippe Ovak Styling: Louis Vuitton
DEADLINE.COM
25
PORTRAITS OF A LADY ON FIRE
Left: Léa Seydoux as Simone in Wes Anderson's The French Dispatch. Right, clockwise from top left: Seydoux in Bruno Dumont’s France; with Gijs Naber in Ildikó Enyedi’s The Story of My Wife; again in The French Dispatch with Denis Ménochet and Benicio del Toro; with Denis Podalydès in Arnaud Desplechin's Deception.
any of us have been itching to dip our toes into the water of real life ever since the vaccine rollout hinted at an end to the pandemic lockdown. For Léa Seydoux, the next 11 days will be a plunge: with four films in Cannes’ Official Selection, three of them in Competition, her festival itinerary will be relentless. Bouncing between premieres and press, she will be reunited with directors Wes Anderson and Arnaud Desplechin, with whom she’s worked before, for The French Dispatch and Deception, respectively. France marks her first collaboration with Bruno Dumont, while Ildikó Enyedi directs Seydoux in The Story of My Wife. “It’s crazy,” Seydoux says of the flurry of activity. And she's excited about what the work represents. “I’ve done one American film, a European film and two French films, and they are all so different. It’s exciting they’ve all been chosen by Cannes.” She credits the pandemic. She had shot three of the films before the world shut down in the Spring of 2020, and she was able to shoot the fourth—the Desplechin—in the Fall, squeezing it in between waves of the virus. But it is true, also, that Cannes is a second home to Seydoux. She has missed only one edition of the festival since 2013, the year she shared in the Palme d’Or win for Blue is the Warmest Color. And she remains one of only two actors— the other her co-star, Adèle Exarchopoulos—ever awarded the prize for their performance. “I have many strong memories in Cannes,” she says. “Of course, it feels like home a little bit.” It is certainly fitting that Seydoux will own the Croisette, more than two years on from the festival’s last real edition. She made her first visit in 2007, not long after her career began, and in the 14 years since, she has established herself as one of France’s most beloved exports. Blue is the Warmest Color was a defining film—on which, more later—but she had already been nominated for three César awards by then, and her career in Hollywood had taken root with films like Inglourious Basterds and Robin Hood—which both got Cannes premieres—as well as Mission: Impossible - Ghost Protocol. A cynic might attribute her swift rise to nepotism—Seydoux’s
26
DEADLINE.COM
DEADLINE.COM
27
LE PACT E / IN D I E SA LES /PYRA M ID E F I LM S /S EA RC HL IG H T P ICT U R ES
uncle is the chairman of Gaumont, and there are other industry connections in the family—but there were no easy rides as she set about becoming an actress, and her family didn’t create any opportunities for her. “I was not raised in that world at all,” she insists. “I come from this cultured family, but at the same time I was completely left alone as a kid. I was a misfit. I was very bad at school, and I’ve always felt a little bit like I was an orphan; that I didn’t fit into any box.” So, what changed? “I fell in love with an actor,” she says. “A very arrogant actor.” She would follow him around the streets of Paris, engineering excuses to run into him, but he showed little interest in her. “I thought, OK, I’m going to become more famous than he is. I want to prove to him I exist and that I can be a great actress.” She never got the boy, though she is more famous than him now. (“I won,” she laughs. “Except not really, because he never loved me.”) In any case, it was inconsequential, because what she found, as she took her first steps into acting, was purpose. “I was completely lost, and then when
"I WAS NOT RAISED IN THE FILM WORLD. I COME FROM A CULTURED FAMILY, BUT AT THE SAME TIME I WAS COMPLETELY LEFT ALONE AS A KID. I’VE ALWAYS FELT A LITTLE BIT LIKE I WAS AN ORPHAN; THAT I DIDN’T FIT INTO ANY BOX. WHEN I WAS AROUND 18 OR 19 AND I WAS MEETING SOME ACTORS, I STARTED TO THINK IT WOULD BE A GREAT JOB TO DO. IT FELT LIKE ACTING WAS MADE FOR ME." —Léa Seydoux
will; another great fit for an actress who had grown up immersed in both worlds. But Simone barely speaks. “I think I have like three phrases [in the entire film],” laughs Seydoux. She finds working with Anderson very special. “He’s such a unique director. You can recognize his films by their aesthetic form. It’s very galvanizing, working with him.” She likens the experience to working with Quentin Tarantino. “It’s really like a theater troupe they both assemble,” she says. “For them, cinema is like a stage play. With Wes, you don’t have any trailers or a green room. You share everything, with the other actors and the technicians. We all sleep in the same hotel, and every night we have dinners together. He knows the names of all the extras. There’s no hierarchy.” The Anderson experience will continue in Cannes, she says. “He wants us all to stay together at the same hotel outside Cannes. He really sees us as a family. And Quentin is the same.” She remembers her time on Inglourious Basterds fondly, even though her role was as brief as a blink. “Quentin was the first big director I had
I was around 18 or 19 and I was meeting some
worked for,” she says. At Cannes in 2019, when
actors, I started to think it would be a great job to
Tarantino was presenting Once Upon a Time... in Hollywood and Seydoux had Roubaix, une lumiere,
do. It felt like acting was made for me.”
they ran into each other. “He said, ‘I’m so proud
Suddenly, she was able to apply that sense of
of you, and proud of how you’ve grown as an
not belonging to create new characters. “I always felt transparent, like I could become whoever; I
as well. There are many layers there, you know. And
actress,’” she remembers. “I was so touched. Can
could be anyone. It’s a strange feeling, but I’m like a
it’s true, I think, for me as a person. I feel that way.”
you imagine how crazy it was for a young actress,
blank page, and people can project things onto me.” Her parents divorced when she was three, and
Anderson first encountered Seydoux in 2013, as the star of a series of Prada commercials he
22 or 23, to work with him?” It was a milestone in her early career and helped
Seydoux spent time in Africa with her mother, as
directed with Roman Coppola, and he later gave
define the path she had hoped to build. “I don’t
well as making an annual trip to summer camps in
her a small part in The Grand Budapest Hotel. He
want to be a French actress,” she says. “I want to
America because her father wanted her to learn
wasn’t present for the Prada shoot. “We shot in
be an actress. I want to travel abroad and not have
English. She felt lost again there, struggling to com-
Budapest,” he says. “I had scouted the locations,
any limits. Even with men and women; I don’t like
municate, but it taught her to be adaptable. “And
but I wasn’t there for the actual shooting; I was
the gender thing. Femininity and masculinity. I love
I think as an actress, that’s a force, because I can
watching over a live feed.”
actors who are at the same time masculine and
adapt to any genre. I can play bourgeois, or I can play a girl like in Sister or Roubaix, une lumiere.”
He recalls passing notes to Coppola, who would relate them to Seydoux. “It was a really unusual
feminine. I don’t like to be stuck in a particular way.” Her character in Blue is the Warmest Color,
thing, because I saw how quickly she was adapting
she says, allowed her the latitude to bring more
to her character in Wes Anderson’s The French
to the things I was saying, and just making them
masculinity into her performance. “It really was
Dispatch. Seydoux plays Simone, a buttoned-up
her own so easily and so quickly,” Anderson says.
more than a film for me,” she now recalls. “It was a
prison guard who becomes the muse to Benicio
“I was caught off-guard. The big thing was she
real-life experience, and it changed my life. When
del Toro’s incarcerated artist Moses Rosenthaler.
was just so good, right there live on the spot, with
we shot the film, I knew it was going to be special,
As stern as she is as a guard, Simone revels in the
me watching like an audience member from a
but I didn’t think it would be that special.”
freedom she feels when she poses nude for the
thousand miles away.”
In a funny sort of way, she says, she could relate
artist’s abstract paintings.
The part in Budapest Hotel was in the script
The release of Blue is the Warmest Color was eventually shrouded in controversy when Seydoux
before Anderson considered Seydoux for the
and Exarchopoulos spoke out about director
though the very nature of The French Dispatch,
role. With The French Dispatch, he says, “I wanted
Abdellatif Kechiche’s approach to shooting the
with its patchwork of stories featuring one of the
to do a bigger part with Léa. I wrote it with her
film’s sex scenes, which Seydoux said made her
most impressive ensemble casts ever gathered,
specifically in mind.” The film makes extensive
feel “like a prostitute”. The planned two-month
ensures that no part is. “But I feel like [Simone] is
use of what Anderson calls “non-accommodative
shoot ballooned to five months, sometimes involv-
a concentrate of everything. It’s funny; very funny.
bilingualism” in which its characters continually
ing 18-hour days, and demanded everything of its
It’s deep. She’s very cold, but she’s very emotional
switch between speaking French and English at
stars, who often found Kechiche’s lens trained on
“It’s not a big part,” she says, and she’s right,
28
DEADLINE.COM
LOCATI O N COU RT ESY H ÔTE L P LAZA AT H É N ÉE , 2 5 AV E N UE M O N TAI G N E , 750 0 8 PA RI S , D O RCH EST E R CO L L ECT IO N HA I R: E T IE N N E S E KO LA ; M A K EU P : SA ND R IN E CA N O BOC K; M A N IC UR I ST: P H ILI P P E OVAK ; ST Y LI N G : LOU IS VU I T TO N
grandfather is the chairman of Pathé, her grand-
THE ONLY WAY IS UP
"I’M PROUD OF BLUE IS THE WARMEST COLOR. CINEMA IS A WAY TO LEARN THINGS AND GROW. WHILE IT WAS UNCOMFORTABLE TO HAVE EXPERIENCED THAT, I NOW FEEL I CAN DO ANYTHING. ACTING SHOULD NOT BE COMFORTABLE. YOU HAVE TO PUT YOUR FLESH AND BLOOD ON THE TABLE. " —Léa Seydoux
through that process,” she says. “Cinema is a way to learn things and grow, and while it was uncomfortable to have experienced that, I now feel I can do anything.” Besides, she says, “Acting should not be comfortable. You have to put your flesh and blood on the table.” In fact, Seydoux’s approach to the work has always been director-led, and Kechiche praised her for it in that same press conference. It is no coincidence that she has repeated collaborations with Anderson and Desplechin at this year’s festival, and she has made multiple movies with Benoît Jacquot, Rebecca Zlotowski and Bertrand Bonello. Actors frequently talk about how important that collaboration with a director is, but Seydoux lives and breathes it. “As an actress, when you work with a director, you have to understand your director in a very deep way,” she says. “You have to understand their culture and where they come from. Cinema is a form of language, and you must adapt to the director’s language, in a way. With Wes, even though
them even in private moments, when they hadn’t
he’s American, he loves French culture, and lives
been aware they were shooting. “It was very dif-
half in Paris and half in England. This I know, and
ficult to make,” she says now. “And it was difficult
when I’m on set with him, there’s something I’m
because Kechiche is crazy. He is crazy. He was
able to understand even beyond words.”
manipulating us, and that was extremely difficult on a psychological level.” She recalls Kechiche banning her from screen-
It is the same with Arnaud Desplechin, her director on Deception. “To work with him, it opens doors to new meaning,” she says. “You understand
ing the film ahead of its Cannes premiere—an
things in a larger way. His cinema comes from
act she calls “violent”—and the panic attack that
literature, so working with him is like reading a
ensued when she feared what the film might show.
book.” Deception is based on a Philip Roth novel.
It screened towards the end of the 2013 festival,
The Story of My Wife, too, is a literary adaptation,
and Seydoux pleaded with festival chief Thierry
from a work by Hungarian author Milán Füst. “With
Frémaux to let her preview the film, which he did.
Ildikó Enyedi, who directs The Story of My Wife,
In her mounting anxiety, she hated it. “I thought,
she’s Hungarian, and I feel I’ve been able to reach
oh god, this is crap. He had cut almost half of the
her, and her culture, through working with her.
film. We shot so many scenes that aren’t in the
The language you speak has nothing to do with it;
film. I thought it would be the end of everything for
cinema is really a language of art.”
me.” Instead, the film received rapturous plaudits
For Seydoux, a deep collaboration like this is not
from the moment of its first press screening, and
as simple as becoming a conduit for what a direc-
Seydoux, Exarchopoulos and Kechiche were “on
tor wants to say to the world. Her different col-
a cloud” all the way through to the prizegiving
laborators have allowed her to channel a range of
ceremony at festival’s end.
characters—to imprint upon her blank page—but
Seydoux had not been underhanded in sharing
she has found her own expression beyond the sim-
her discomfort with the shoot. She had made
ple act of choosing roles. “Isabelle Huppert used to
her first comments at the Cannes press confer-
say that when she was working with a director, she
ence for the film, with Kechiche present, and the
was making her own film inside the film, and I think
story only snowballed when the film went on to
it’s quite true,” she says. “As an actor, you have your
Telluride later in the year. Kechiche then went on
subjectivity. A director becomes an interlocutor
the attack, at one point apparently threatening to
with whom you can question the world. Because
sue Seydoux for slander, and it is fair to say the two
cinema is also about asking questions, and differ-
remain estranged.
ent directors have different perspectives.”
Still, Seydoux says she wouldn’t change a
She arrives to set without pretensions, ready to
thing about the experience of making the movie.
find her character in the collaboration. Mia Han-
“I’m proud of the film, and proud of having gone
sen-Løve is currently shooting her new film, Un
30
DEADLINE.COM
Léa Seydoux's many roles... A: As Sabine Moreau in her first studio blockbuster Mission: Impossible - Ghost Protocol (2011). B: With Owen Wilson in Woody Allen’s Midnight in Paris (2011) . C: As Belle in Christophe Gans’ Beauty and the Beast (2014). D: Making her screen debut aged 20 as Aurore in Girlfriends(2006) . E: Playing Isabella of Angoulême, 13th Century Queen of England, in Ridley Scott’s Robin Hood (2010). F: Making history as Emma in Abdellatif Kechiche’s 2013 Palme d’Or-winner Blue is the Warmest Color, with co-star Adèle Exarchopoulos. G: In her first Bond outing as Madeleine Swann in Spectre.
PARA M OU N T/ E VE R E TT/SON Y P I CT U RES /PAT H E FI L M S /U N I V ERSAL /S U N DAN CE S E LECTS /COLU M B IA P ICT U R ES
A
D
B
C
E G
F
DEADLINE.COM
31
LÉA SEYDOUX HAS BEEN A CANNES
"BECAUSE [DANIEL CRAIG] COMES FROM THE THEATRE, I THINK HE WANTED TO MAKE JAMES BOND A MORE INTERESTING CHARACTER. HE’S MADE HIM VULNERABLE AND LET HIM SHOW HIS FLAWS. BY SEEING THE CHARACTER’S IMPERFECTIONS, THE AUDIENCE CAN RELATE TO HIM." —Léa Seydoux
understands Bond’s world, the dark forces that he is up against, and his psyche. We wanted to challenge Bond emotionally and Léa’s character does this in No Time to Die.” They also simply wanted the chance to work with her again. “Léa is very committed to
CHECK OUT
and makes you feel the connection with them because she makes them feel real.” Seydoux has spoken about how ‘Bond girls’ have become ‘Bond women’ during Daniel Craig’s run as Bond. What he has done with
LOOKS
into the modern era. “Because he comes from
THE YEARS.
the theater, I think he wanted to create a more interesting character,” she says. “He’s made him vulnerable and let him show his flaws. By seeing
Logan suggested that hearing about the deal beau matin, with Seydoux. “It’s early, because we
gave him “chills”. “Barbara and Michael are really
just started, but I’m impressed by her simplicity,”
the ones who decide everything,” she says. “And
the director says. “Simplicity is always what I’ve
I don’t think that will change. I’m not afraid of
been looking for ever since I started working with
what the future holds.” Broccoli and Wilson describe tracking
children, adults, or more famous actors. I’m
Seydoux’s career through The Beautiful Person,
always looking for simplicity in acting, and Léa
Farewell, My Queen and Blue is the Warmest Color
has that quality on a level that’s really impressive.
before casting her in Spectre. “What struck us is
And she carries an emotion that’s quite unique,
her authenticity—she is an extremely versatile
I find.”
actress—she plays each role with great truth, never a false moment in her work.” It is a sentiment Seydoux echoes. “The thing
at home on the set of a James Bond film as she
I’m always looking for when I’m acting is truth,”
is working in independent cinema. She played
she insists. “I’m obsessed about it. And it’s what
Dr. Madeleine Swann in Spectre and reprised
I mean when I say you must put your flesh and
the role in the much-delayed upcoming Bond
blood and everything into it. I love it when it’s
adventure No Time to Die. She is the first ‘Bond
true. And I hate when I feel it isn’t.” With our time together approaching an end,
roles in subsequent films—and jumped at the
Seydoux turns the tables on me. Who are my
chance to come back. She was surprised by how
favorite directors? I rattle off a list, leaving out
unique each film felt. “Sam Mendes, who did
far too many names, and then put the question
Spectre, and Cary Fukunaga, who did No Time
back to her. Perhaps coincidentally, she almost
to Die, are very different,” she says. “And when
exclusively lists departed directors she can never
you act, it is always informed by who you are as a
work with: Kubrick, Bergman, Bresson, Rohmer.
person. So, I was very different, because Spectre
Only one name she cites, Pedro Almodóvar,
was five years before.”
might yet cast her. She may have become an
“Léa’s portrayal of Dr. Madeleine Swann
actress to impress a crush, but what she found
explores the complexity of what it is like to be
in cinema has become the great passion of her
in a relationship with James Bond,” say Bond
life. “For me, cinema is something that helped
producers Barbara Broccoli and Michael G.
me to live, as simple as that,” she says. “Really, I
Wilson. “Given the background of her character
think if I didn’t have cinema in my life, I would be
being the daughter of a Spectre assassin, she
desperate, very desperate.” ★
DEADLINE.COM
CARPET
THROUGH
billion to buy MGM, and Bond screenwriter John
32
HER RED
the role, she says, has evolved the franchise
The franchise, she thinks, is also in safe
Girl’ to do so—Maud Adams played different
FIRST VISIT
always illuminates the characters she plays
hands, even after Amazon shelled out $8.45
Seydoux rejects any notion that the worth
SINCE HER
IN 2007.
relate to him.”
of cinema exists on a spectrum; she is as much
EVER
her profession and gives 100%,” they say. “She
the character’s imperfections, the audience can
actors, whether they would be unknown actors,
MAINSTAY
M EGA /Z I B I/ WE N N .CO M /N E WSCO M / TOD D WI L LI AM SON / I NV I S I O N /AP/DAVI D S I L PA /U P I /P H I L LOF T US /CAP I TAL P I CT U R E /E X P R ESS SY N DI CAT I ON
2009
2010
In a navy Chanel gown at the premiere of Pedro Almodóvar’s Broken Embraces.
2013
In ruffled tulle and corset at the premiere of Robin Hood.
2016
2011
With Owen Wilson and Woody Allen at the premiere of Midnight in Paris.
2018
With co-star Gaspard Ulliel for Xavier Dolan’s It’s Only the End of the World.
2019
In Louis Vuitton for the premiere of Rebecca Zlotowski’s Grand Central.
Facing the press corps in Vuitton for Arnaud Desplechin’s Roubaix, une Lumiere.
As a member of the Competition jury, on the Palais steps for Pawel Pawlikowski’s Cold War.
DEADLINE.COM
33
In 2001, a lavish Cannes party and 26 minutes of footage changed the course of film history. As Peter Jackson’s The Lord of the Rings trilogy approaches its 20 th anniversary, Mike Fleming Jr. gathers key players to take a look back at a breathtaking gamble
34
DEADLINE.COM
N E W L I NE CI N EM A /E V E RE T T
An Enduring Fellowship
ONE RING TO RULE THEM ALL Clockwise from left: the hobbits, played by Dominic Monaghan, Elijah Wood, Billy Boyd and Sean Astin; Ian McKellen as Gandalf; Orlando Bloom as Legolas; director Peter Jackson; New Line’s Bob Shaye; Viggo Mortensen as Aragorn.
E
ver since Bob Shaye launched the com-
project, The Frighteners with Michael J. Fox, had
leaning into Cannes of 2001,” says Jackson’s long-
pany in 1967 to release arthouse, for-
been a commercial failure. On paper, none of it
time agent/manager Ken Kamins. “‘Let’s blow
eign language and cult films on college
looked like a recipe for success. Indeed, by 2001
people away.’ But of course, once you decide
campuses, New Line Cinema had been a
there was a decided perception that the failure
you’re going to spend $2 million dollars on a party
studio known for out-of-the-box choices neces-
of the first film, The Fellowship of the Ring, could
and treat 26 minutes like a premiere, the stakes
sitated by being the last stop for good material.
sink Shaye’s studio, and some of the international
are total. Get it right and you are on your way to
From the audacious early John Waters films like
distributors whose presales allowed New Line to
something really important and powerful. Get it
Pink Flamingos to Wes Craven’s A Nightmare on
make its films.
wrong, and you’ve made the biggest miniseries in
Elm Street, New Line found gems others missed,
The Cannes Film Festival would play a major
the history of TNT.”
even after Ted Turner bought the studio. New Line
role in turning around the skeptics and settling
had launched Jim Carrey with The Mask, leveled
the nerves of all involved. Cannes has always been
of the principals who took one of the most pres-
up Mike Myers with Austin Powers, and given a
an international launchpad for films, but Shaye
surized rides in all of Hollywood history, to recall
home to filmmakers like Paul Thomas Anderson
and Jackson came armed only with 26 minutes
the films and that memorable night in Cannes
with Boogie Nights and David Fincher with Se7en.
of footage of a film that would not be finished for
where everything clicked, presaging three straight
Shaye had shown his studio to be a place of cre-
months. Still, they treated it like a film premiere,
years of blockbusters, a near $3 billion global
ative risk taking.
with distributors and junket press brought to Châ-
gross, and a collective 30 Oscar nominations and
teau de Castellaras, a castle in nearby Mouans-
17 wins, including Best Picture for 2003’s Return
like The Lord of the Rings trilogy. As a matter of
Sartoux, that was transformed into Middle-earth
of the King. Says Shaye: “If you were there that
fact, no one else in Hollywood had; three films,
by the art departments and set designers of the
night in Cannes, it would be something you’d
each with budgets of $120 million, filmed back-
trilogy. It would be another $2 million gamble for
always remember.”
to-back over a protracted shoot in New Zealand.
Shaye and his team. But it would prove to be an
Presiding over the project was filmmaker Peter
important chapter on the route to release for
be defined by this: saying yes to Peter Jackson’s
Jackson, at that time best known for small-
what would become the most successful series
last-ditch attempt to turn J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Lord
budget flicks like Heavenly Creatures, Braindead
of independent movies ever made.
of the Rings trilogy into two films, after Disney’s
But New Line had never taken a financial risk
and Meet the Feebles, whose only studio-backed
“It was Bob who came up with the idea of
Twenty years on, Deadline has gathered some
No matter what else he does, Bob Shaye will
Michael Eisner turned down Miramax bosses
DEADLINE.COM
35
Harvey and Bob Weinstein. Other studios had also
accept the Weinsteins’ financial ultimatum, but
said no, and Shaye was Jackson’s last chance. The
Ordesky urged him to at least hear Jackson’s pre-
Weinsteins gave Jackson a daunting challenge: a
sentation. Things had changed in the period since
week to shop a project that would call for them to
De Luca and Ordesky first told Shaye about the
get 5 percent of first dollar gross. If Jackson found
potential opportunity. Time Warner had acquired
no takers, he would withdraw, and Miramax would
Ted Turner’s company and it was uncertain how
find another filmmaker willing to tell the sprawling
New Line fit in alongside Warner Bros. Shaye was
tale in a single film. Shaye watched a VHS presen-
also clashing with his wunderkind picture picker
tation and listened to how Jackson would execute
De Luca and wanted to bolster the slate.
no. It shouldn’t be two films, he said. It should
I were having a sort of interpersonal conflict, dis-
be a trilogy; a holiday blockbuster for three years
agreements about operating procedure,” Shaye
straight. It became one of the ballsiest executive
recalls. “My partner Michael Lynne kept saying,
decisions in Hollywood history.
‘We don’t have enough movies and where are the
“We had always been the outsider,” recalls
with our development and more inclined to be
thing, we were always the last guy in town that
open to possibilities because I knew that we really
anybody would think of to pitch a project. On The
weren’t in such great shape for the next year or
Lord of the Rings, we had Time Warner behind us at
two. I was not particularly interested in proving
that point, but nobody understood who we were,
myself to anybody but perhaps Ted [Turner]. With
including [CEO] Jerry Levin, and the entire Time
all of that concern in the back of my mind, I walked
Warner staff. We were just kind of left over from
into the conference room to see what Peter had
some crazy moment that Ted Turner had. They
put together.”
took place between Time Warner and Turner.” When Shaye read trade stories about Mira-
execute it. “Peter said, ‘We don’t have to go to fancy special effects houses to get this stuff. We’ve
a really good idea,” he says. “Then [production
got a little studio called Wingnut in New Zealand
president] Mike De Luca and Mark Ordesky [presi-
and an algorithm we developed so we can have
dent of NL’s prestige film label Fine Line] came into
big crowd scenes where all the different figures in
my office one day and said it looked like Weinstein
a crowd don’t do the same thing because you’re
was going to make this available to the community.
just repeating the same technique over and over
‘Are we interested?’ I said, ‘Yeah, in principle, it’s
and over. We’ve developed a way that every char-
going to be an incredible opportunity, but what’s
acter looks like they’re doing something different.
the situation?’ Mark said, ‘Well one of the few
It’s going to be a lot less expensive than going to
things that’s really going to turn you off is that the
get custom designs of every group of characters.’
Weinsteins personally are getting 5 percent of first
The other really innovative thing was he would
dollar gross as part of the deal.’ I said, ‘To hell with
use forced perspective to make the hobbits small,
that. That is definitely not happening. Not in a mil-
and humans like Gandalf regular sized in the same
lion years. I’m going to give Weinstein 5 percent of
frame. He’d do that with different focal lengths on
gross? Forget about it.’”
the camera, creating the illusion that one is larger,
seed had been planted. He was fond of Jackson, who’d written a treatment for one of the Night-
and one is smaller. Then I saw the reel and it really worked. It was excellent.” Shaye bought into Jackson’s vision in the room.
mare on Elm Street sequels and who was close to
Jackson’s budget was $60 million a film at that
Ordesky, sleeping on the exec’s couch when he
point, and New Line could cover that. In the time
came to L.A. from New Zealand in those early days.
they’d been with Ted Turner, they hadn’t been
Jackson was making the kind of movies that fit
questioned about their spending. “All of our films
New Line’s formula: tight-budget genre.
had been successful with one exception, Little
“I’d seen Meet the Feebles and Braindead; we
DEADLINE.COM
Shaye was extremely impressed, not just with Jackson’s vision, but with his meticulous plan to
max’s plans for the Tolkien books, “I thought it was
Shaye thought that was the end of it, but the
36
sequels?’ I was getting more and more frustrated
Shaye. “Until we got to the Ted Turner financing
wanted to sell us from the moment the merger
RINGED PLAYERS From top: Sean Astin as Samwise Gamgee with Elijah Wood as Frodo Baggins; Andy Serkis as Gollum; Christopher Lee as Saruman.
“What happened in the interim was Mike and
Nicky,” Shaye says. “They must have thought they
were part of that subset of movie making,” Shaye
were dealing with sorcerers or something, but
says. “We were not high society, we were street
nobody ever said, ‘You can’t do this.’” In his mind,
people, and then Peter made Heavenly Creatures,
Rings could be New Line’s very own version of the
which I thought was a really excellent movie. And
James Bond franchise, with a banner blockbuster
then The Frighteners, which I was less enthusias-
released each year.
tic about.” When Ordesky told Shaye that the Weinsteins
And the 5 percent first dollar gross to the Weinsteins? “Sure the 5 percent pissed me off tremen-
were officially seeking partners and Jackson was
dously, but I wasn’t going to cut off my nose to
in L.A. to pitch Rings, Shaye took the meeting as
spite my face,” Shaye says. “The fact that I didn’t
a courtesy. He was still adamant that he wouldn’t
get along with Harvey Weinstein, and that we were
N E W L I NE CI N EM A /E V E RE T T
his plan. And then he gave the filmmaker another
bitterly competitive with that company, I wasn’t going to say no. And, of course, I knew that we were the last stop on Peter’s trip. That also didn’t bother me; I’ve been insulted before.” He had made up his mind before Jackson’s presentation was even over. “And then Peter comes in with his production designer who has these 40x60 full color pictures of the landscape and the locations in New Zealand, a place I knew nothing about. I was floored.” There was still plenty of risk: Jackson was unproven as the director of an event-sized trilogy, and so was New Zealand as a reliable production hub. Shaye didn’t know how determined Jackson was to change all that. “You have to know this about Peter,” says Kamins. “There was a sense of civic and national pride that he was also wearing, because he really wanted this desperately for New Zealand. The first time I ever went to go visit Peter in New Zealand, he put on one of the James Bond films. I can’t remember which one, but there was a sequence where there is a glass map of the world. Peter hits pause and says, ‘What do you see?’ I said, ‘I’m not sure what I’m looking for.’ He goes over to where Australia is, and he points. He said, ‘Take a look. New Zealand is not on that map.’ Then he looked me dead in the eye, and he said, ‘But it will be.’” Still, the budget was a guess, and shooting multiple movies at once just wasn’t done. Studios would rather pay a premium to regroup a cast than be left holding the bag if the first one failed. Many fantasy films with franchise aspirations never got past the first film. “That was part of the final bedding process, when Peter just happened to slip that in,” Shaye recalls. “I said, ‘Let’s do them one at a time and see how it goes.’ He said, ‘No, no, we have to do them all at once. The actors are going to be older. It’s going to take a year to get the films done and one film released. Many of these locations will require us to build roads, to bring equipment in and we’ll have to completely cut up a significant part of the landscape. The New Zealand government won’t allow us to keep those roads and the disarray.’ So, the bottom line was, there was no way around it. All three had to be made at once.” New Line’s international chief, Rolf Mittweg, had been selling the project as a trilogy anyway, so they moved ahead, but the doubt still remained in Shaye’s mind. If the first film had been a failure, some international distribution partners would likely attempt to back out of an ongoing deal. “That was the risk but there’s always a risk, in every film,” Shaye declares. “There could be a snowstorm the day you open. The term ‘risk-free movie’ is an oxymoron. The point is, I thought that the risk was sufficiently covered by the prospects of success. It was a risk
LEGEND IN MOTION From top (left to right): Orlando Bloom as Legolas, Ian McKellen as Gandalf and Viggo Mortensen as Aragorn; Sean Astin as Samwise, Elijah Wood as Frodo, Dominic Monaghan as Merry and Billy Boyd as Pippin; Ian McKellen as Gandalf.
DEADLINE.COM
37
that I was willing to take, the kind of decision that
of box office, you have to be prepared to take
people who make production decisions have to
the risk. But three movies, when you are halfway
make all the time. You weigh the risk against the
through the first movie shoot, that’s complicated.
reward and if the balance is substantially enough
We teased them with some footage. Japan and
in your favor, you dive off the high board. That’s just
the Far East, we had a hard time with it because
the way the movie business is.”
they didn’t know the books, but we got a huge Mittweg doesn’t sugarcoat the result if Fellowship
enough to cover the costs of production for each
had flopped. “It would have been a suicide mis-
movie; that would have to double. It was then that
sion,” he says.
Shaye began to consider the long odds of the bet
it wasn’t until Shaye had committed that he had
around my head or he didn’t have a clue himself,
questions about the filmmaker. He travelled to
but when we sent our own production team down
New Zealand with some international buyers who
to Wellington to see what was going on, they came
were still on the fence, “I had a good faith feeling about Peter,” Shaye
for anything less than $120 million,” Shaye says. “I
says. “I don’t say that you trust filmmakers all the
went back to Rolf and I said, ‘We’re going to have
time. I didn’t really know his mindset, but I believed
to change the percentages and the prices that
in him, and that was, by the way, a big risk. You
we’re getting for international because Peter just
give a guy from New Zealand $120 million to make
got it wrong. You can’t make this film for $60 mil-
a movie and then you’ve got two more behind it.
lion. It couldn’t be done. Rolf said, ‘I definitely want
I had to think a lot about that. We decided to go
it and it will be fine.’ So, we went for it.”
to New Zealand, and Rolf wanted to take some of
The risk to the foreign distribution partners
our key buyers who were still hesitant about buy-
cannot be overstated. The deal was to buy all
ing into three pictures that were going to end up
three, or none. “The international presales were
being $300 million. Peter put together a half-hour
a big part of the financing, and what we did had
sample reel of dramatic scenes.”
never been done before,” says Cam Galano, who
As he waited for the film to be laced up in Jack-
was New Line EVP and European Supervisor and
son’s screening room, he looked at the posters on
made deals under Mittweg. “Think about it. You’re
the wall for Jackson’s films Braindead, Meet the
a distributor, and you’re being asked to pay a very
Feebles and Heavenly Creatures. “It suddenly struck
high price not for one, but three, knowing if the
me that this guy is making $50,000, $60,000
first didn’t work, you’re stuck, just the way New
and $75,000 movies, cheap exploitation films,
Line would be stuck financing the movies. They
and we’re giving him $300 million dollars,” Shaye
were very expensive at the time, and there were so
recalls. “This is really bloody crazy. I’ve almost
many unknowns.”
never felt so panicked as I did at that moment.
Then again, indie distributors rarely get to be
There are all these guys walking in to see this
in the middle of films with such potential, which
screening of some of the acting scenes to decide
at the time were the domain of the major studios.
whether they’re going to be making huge guaran-
“We were enthusiastic even though it seemed like
tees, risking their companies. I felt like I’d been sold
a massive risk at the time,” says Nigel Green, who
a bill of goods and it was too late to do anything.
with his late brother Trevor built Entertainment
When we went into the screening room, I really had
Film Distributors into the biggest indie distribution
my heart in my hands, so to speak.”
company in the U.K., helped by being New Line’s
His skepticism about Jackson’s ability to take
output partner in the region. “We had to commit to
the leap vanished in the 20 minutes it took to show
three movies at the same time, it was definitely the
the footage. “The reel Peter put together had Ian
biggest commitment to a project—one film or a
[McKellen] and Orlando [Bloom], and everybody,”
trilogy. We’d made large commitments to produc-
Shaye recalls. “It was so good that I felt we could
tions, but never that size on an acquisition for U.K.
get the special effects and everything straight-
rights. A lot of us were family run companies; my
ened out, bring our own people in it, do whatever
brother and me, and Metropolitan in France with
was required. It was an excellent cast. It was well
Sammy and Victor Hadida. Decisions were made
photographed. It was first class stuff, and so we
by people who love film. I don’t know that you
walked out of there with confidence. We actually
would run numbers analytically and feel [Rings]
closed almost all of our international deals off that
was a safe bet. This was a bet made on enthu-
trip to Wellington.”
siasm and not technical calculations, because
“I totally appreciate the position that New Line,
nobody had made a bet at that level on a trilogy,
Bob Shaye and Michael Lynne were in and I don’t
financed in the way Bob and Michael did this.”
look back on any of it and judge them remotely,”
Says Mittweg: “If you want to have high profile movies, the ones that can amass huge amounts
DEADLINE.COM
There was enough anxiety to go around. But
he made. “Peter was either trying to blow smoke
back and said the first film could not be made
38
number from the U.K., and they did very well.” Still,
Jackson says now. “There was a lot of pressure, and they were very upset with us as the budgets
N E W L I NE CI N EM A /E V E RE T T
The pressure, though, never stopped mounting. It soon became clear $60 million wouldn’t be
went up. The anger was understandable. They aren’t the bad guys in this story; we are really the bad guys for going over budget. Eventually, it stabilized when Barrie Osborne came in as producer a few months into us shooting, when the movie was re-budgeted and realistic. We all felt a bit under siege, but looking back on it, I get it, I understand it all now much clearer.” Being on the other side of the planet from Shaye’s nervousness probably helped, but Jackson recalls a moment where he was shooting the Helm’s Deep scenes from The Two Towers, way up in a rock quarry in Wellington, and he could see Osborne lugging a large box with a cell phone because service was so unreliable, walking because the path was impassible by car. “It was a period of time when New Line were at their most angry with us in terms of the budget,” Jackson remembers. “I am on the parapet, probably with Viggo [Mortensen], and I see Barrie. It took him about 30 minutes to huff and puff his way to get on the top, and so I kept on shooting. Barrie arrives and says, ‘I have the studio, I’ve got to connect you with Michael Lynne of New Line.’ I ask why. He says, ‘Oh, he’s going to threaten to sue you and sell the house from under you to cover the cost overruns.’ Barrie was just the messenger, but it was one of the only points where I really snapped. I said, ‘Just tell Michael Lynne that I’m shooting this fucking film and I’m doing the best job I can, and I’m not going to interrupt my day with a phone call like that.’ Barrie picked up the cellphone and made his way back down to the car and drove off.” While Shaye could be an ornery studio boss, Jackson saw a different side of him when he completed the first film. Jackson flew to Los Angeles with the footage that would eventually be shown in Cannes, and set up a screening for Shaye at Shaye’s house. “Before it started, Bob signaled to me with his finger, you know, ‘Come with me.’ I followed him, and we went into a bathroom, he shut the door. I’m there alone in a bathroom with Bob Shaye thinking, what the hell is this? He looked at me and he said, ‘Please, Peter, please, we have all these partners, they’re relying on the success of this film. If it doesn’t work, they’re going to go under, so I just want you to know how important it is for me that we don’t let our partners down.’ And he began to cry. I mean, Bob began to sob, and it was literally the most personal moment that I ever had with him. I just said to Bob, ‘Look, I’m doing my best, Bob. I hear you, I get it, and I understand, and I’m trying to make the best film I can.’ He really cared. He was crying not on behalf of New Line. He was crying on behalf of all the international partners that they brought on board to help finance the film, the Greens and the Hadidas, all the independent distributors that had bought into the project. He
FIGHT ON From top: Ian McKellen as Gandalf; Orlando Bloom’s Legolas rides into battle; Viggo Mortensen’s Aragorn leads the troops.
DEADLINE.COM
39
MYTHICAL QUEST Left to right: Elijah Wood’s Frodo reaches for the fabled ring; Andy Serkis as Gollum with Sean Astin as Samwise.
was crying on their behalf, not on his own, or his
Jackson’s reel that he went for broke to turn
own company’s behalf.”
around the skeptical buzz on the film and build
boy oh boy, could you feel it. I don’t know if Bob
Says Kamins: “Those were high stakes, and
After shooting for a year and a half in isolation,
momentum for the late-year release. Shaye
remembers what I remember, which is me and
Jackson himself had become somewhat troubled
decided on a Cannes premiere-style launch,
Bob and Peter literally standing in the stairwell
with what was being written about his films, and
unveiling 26 minutes of scenes, followed by that
by the projection booth of the Olympia, wait-
the expectation of looming catastrophe. “People
party staged at the historic Château de Castel-
ing for the first screening to start. Both of them
knew that three films were being shot, and a lot of
laras, just outside town. Actual sets from the
looked sick to their stomachs. They were both
press I read—and some of this was New Zealand
movie were transported to turn the venue into
white as a sheet and couldn’t breathe. They liter-
press—would talk about how risky it was for New
Middle-earth, complete with cave trolls, Ring-
ally didn’t know what was going to happen, and
Line, that if the first film failed New Line would
wraiths and Frodo’s house in the Shire. It was $2
then the footage hit. We had a pretty good sense
probably cease to exist, because they’d be stuck
million well spent.
as people walked out, that they were buzzing,
with two other films that they can’t do anything
Jackson came to Cannes with cast and a reel
with,” Jackson says. “It is totally understandable
that began with him and Gandalf in the wizard’s
significant people who would normally occupy
press would speculate about the worst case
wagon to introduce footage which established the
the Croisette, both in the media and other major
scenario. These thoughts were going through our
Fellowship of men, hobbits, and an elf and dwarf
distributors who didn’t have the film. There was a
minds as well to some degree, but what bothered
to deliver the ring to Mordor. Then came the entire
buzz, and it was moving fast. You could feel that
me is some were written as a fait accompli. ‘Fan-
breathtaking sequence as the group enters the
something important was happening.”
tasy is always unsuccessful at the box office,’ and,
underground mines of Moria, battling Orcs, goblins
‘New Line is taking crazy risks with this unknown
and the fiery demon Balrog.
bad it might be.’”
“Everybody thinks the make-or-break moment
Says Galano: “If I had to choose a word to describe the buyers, it would be… euphoric.” “Sammy Hadida, who has passed away but
of a big movie is the opening weekend, but in some
who was head of French distributor Metropolitan,
Rather than rattling him, this criticism fueled
respects, I think that Cannes screening was our
saw me in the lobby and literally picked me up off
Jackson. “I’m the sort of guy that if I read people
opening weekend, certainly in terms of all these
the ground and kissed me on the mouth, he was
are speculating on how much I’m going to fail,
distributors being on board,” Jackson says. “The
so excited,” recalls Ordesky. “I thought his face
that makes me all the more determined not to
success of the movie in its initial release was going
would break from smiling so big.”
fail. I thought, I’m going to show you, I’m going to
to depend a lot on the amount of effort and hard
work like a crazy guy to make the best films I pos-
work that the different distributors put into the
with turning their nerves into excitement. “[There
sibly can. In a sense I’m grateful for those stories
film, because they were all in charge of promotion
was] a sense it would change not just our com-
because I do look back on that as being something
and marketing in their own territories. What that
pany, but everyone involved,” he recalls. “We sat
that really gave me the extra 10 percent to do the
Cannes screening did was it motivated and united
alongside the press, all of us experiencing it at the
best job I could.”
all of them in the sense they realized this could be
same moment. Then, the acute sense of being in
huge if they put in the extra effort.”
the world of the movie at that party with 1,000
Shaye became confident enough after seeing
40
DEADLINE.COM
Hadida’s brother Victor credits that screening
N E W L I NE CI N EM A /E V E RE T T
director,’ so, ‘Let’s talk about the failure and how
and a number of us were getting reports from
WICKED IMAGERY Left to right: Orcs in action; Oliphants charging towards the Rohirrim at the Battle of the Pelennor Fields.
people. They recreated the Shire. It was incredible
of excitement he hadn’t expected. “It showed so
are expecting something different than what
relief, mixed with excitement.”
many things,” he says. “The level of artistry that
we think we’ve created.’ After Cannes, they got
Weta Digital and Peter’s team were capable of
it right. The posters of just Elijah with his hands
says Cannes helped everyone focus on finishing.
Aside from turning around the buzz, Jackson
in bringing that cave troll to life in a way that felt
and a huge ring in it, on bus stops and everything
It was also a revelation for actors who’d spent
genius. To feel that palpable buzz of excitement
else. You didn’t know if this would translate to
one and a half years acting in green screen. “We
in the air was wonderful. It became real. And the
box office success, and I watched Bob Shaye and
had most of the principal cast there—the Hobbits,
party, with cave trolls and Ringwraiths on horse-
Michael Lynne sweating it.”
Ian McKellen, Viggo Mortensen and Liv Tyler—and
back? It was extraordinary, and I have not seen
it was the first time they’d seen finished work,”
anything like that since.”
Jackson says. “Imagine being Elijah Wood or Ian,
Shaye could feel the shift when, later, he
The rest, though, is history. While acrimony and lawsuits between New Line and Jackson would follow—Shaye exited the studio he
and you’d shot the mines of Moria scene in New
showed the footage to Time Warner’s Levin, who
founded not long after the Oscar haul and indie
Zealand probably a year and a half earlier with
asked him what territories were still available.
record gross of nearly $3 billion—Shaye looks
green screens, running around the studio shout-
“I told him Germany might be available and he
back on his big gamble with fondness.
ing at things. When Ian confronted the Balrog, he
said, ‘I’m going to take it directly to our inter-
was on a green screen stage looking at a tennis
national people and I hope we can buy it.’ I felt
I hasten to add I had nothing to do with—that
ball. And then you’re suddenly seeing the finished
vindicated in the sense that we were always the
came about after the fact and was just about
sequence scored with all the visual effects. It
little jerks nobody cared about, and all of sud-
the hubris that develops in organizations when
wasn’t just the distributors or the press, it was
den, they’re looking for our product. That was
they think they’re on top of their game—I’m very
the actors themselves getting a sneak preview
quite satisfying.”
proud of what happened,” Shaye reflects. “I’m
in May of what this finished movie in December
Sean Astin, who played Frodo’s Hobbit com-
“Except for the unfortunate imbroglios, which
extremely fortunate and proud that Peter did
might be like. I just remember them all being very,
panion Samwise Gamgee, feels that the reel and
such a great job. This really was lightning in a
very excited that all that work in New Zealand was
reaction elevated the scope of the marketing
bottle; I never experienced anything like it and of
going to pay off.”
campaign. “The Cannes Film Festival showed
course I look back on the whole thing—or most
what we knew, that the film was spectacular
of it—with great satisfaction and a modest but
together an unsolicited audition tape that got
and we had created something that would stand
intense smile on my face.”
him in the room with Jackson and Walsh and
the test of time,” he says. “It filtered up, down,
won him the Frodo role. He says Cannes made it
and all around. I remember the initial marketing
dios is taking spending $460 million for a Lord of
clear to the entire cast this might be something
campaign sort of missed the mark, treated it as
the Rings series that doesn’t have Peter Jackson,
special. They’d been cocooned in New Zealand
kind of a Dungeons & Dragons thematic approach
Shaye declines to answer directly. But it seems he
in a way that insulated them from the insecurity
and missed the classical feel. I remember all of
would not be one to bet against Tolkien’s Middle-
and budget concerns, but seeing Middle-earth
us, our hearts were sinking because we’re like,
earth. He says, “I wouldn’t try to second guess
realized onscreen for the first time brought a level
‘Oh, no, maybe the studio or the marketing folks
them at all. I just wish them well.” ★
Elijah Wood was a teenager when he put
Asked how he gauges the risk Amazon Stu-
DEADLINE.COM
41
SAT U R DAY, AU G U ST 14, 2021 AN ALL-DAY VI RTUAL EVENT fe atu ri ng br an d new i ntervi ews wit h the no mi nees SP E ND A DAY W I T H T H E C R EATORS , W RI T ERS A N D TA L E N T F R OM T H E M OST ACC L A I M ED S H OWS ON T EL EV I S I ON TODAY
con t enderstelevision.de adline .com
51 52 86 62 73 77 76 51 72 54
AFTER A YEAR OF unprecedented disruption from outside forces, our 2021 class of DISRUPTORS are working to right the ship, and ensure a healthy future for film and television. But what's especially encouraging this year is how many of them are determined to create opportunities for others to come along, rewriting the industry to be a more inclusive place. This year's group, in alphabetical order...
60 69 73 78 63 89 77 74 64 44 56 70 80 50 84
GREG BERLANTI BROKEN WINDOWS JON M. CHU CJ ENTERTAINMENT RYAN COOGLER LAVERNE COX DAZN AVA DUVERNAY EBONYLIFE MEDIA ANNEMARIE JACIR LEIGH JANIAK RYAN JOHNSON & RAM BERGMAN MICHAEL B. JORDAN LEONINE FRANCES MCDORMAND LIN-MANUEL MIRANDA RYAN MURPHY FEMI OGUNS BRUNA PAPANDREA SEAN PENN STAGECRAFT LARRY TANZ JEREMY THOMAS YASH RAJ YES STUDIOS
44
DEADLINE.COM
D I S R U P T O R S
SEAN PENN The actor and director keeps it all
in the family with Flag Day
BY MIKE FLEMING JR.
T
he son of actor/director Leo Penn and actress Eileen Ryan, Sean Penn will be keeping up the family tradition this year at Cannes when he premieres Flag Day in Competition. Based on her 2004
memoir, the film follows Jennifer Vogel’s personal
story of idolizing her bank robber and conman father. Penn directs and plays the dad character, while—in a startling breakout turn—his daughter Dylan stars as Jennifer, and his son Hopper plays her brother. Flag Day comes after Penn dedicated the past year to the distribution of Covid-19 tests and vaccines through CORE (Community Organized Relief Effort), a humanitarian project he founded in 2010 following the Haiti earthquake tragedy. This will be his 11th appearance in Cannes. DEADLINE.COM
45
How long had you developed Flag Day, and
movie], between her and Katheryn Winnick when
doing a take and the director’s approaching them
how long did it take for you to feel that
they’re in the kitchen.
with notes. It’s, fuck you, I suck, and what was that
your daughter Dylan had the chops to play
note again? But at the end of that day, I’m seeing
Jennifer Vogel, and that she’d share scenes
There’s a physical confrontation between
her give that great performance, and I do think
with you?
them in that scene.
I was able to be helpful a lot of times, but also a
Originally the script was sent to me by Mark
I say this jokingly, but I felt it in a sense that
lot of times she had such an immediate instinct.
putting her through take after take of that scene,
She’s a very intuitive person, and therefore an
I should probably call Child Protective Services
intuitive actress.
whatever you’d like to do.” Once I read it, I thought
on myself. Look, the business can beat any of
it would be something I might act in. I brought it to
us up, it beats us all up at some time. It rises us
days, having collected the footage of the things
But it was thrilling, you know, the end of those
Alejandro [González Iñárritu] and he got involved
up, it beats us up, we rise ourselves up, we beat
she was putting out there. Really thrilling.
with it a little bit with Jez for a bit of time. And
ourselves up. The tough part to me of acting, is
then it sat there.
encouraging them in a profession where you are
This is your 11th film premiering at Cannes. You
Bill Horberg was the one who originally
a canary in a coal mine on emotional things, and
won the best actor prize, and you headed the
initiated it as a producer in the first place, and
over some years that can really take its own toll if
2008 jury. How important is it to be part of
when he and I talked about directors, we also
somebody isn’t finding a real way to contextualize
this festival, which signals the reopening of
talked about Dylan. At a certain point, I was seeing
it to themselves, and be able to not take your
the theatrical movie business that basically
her and knew that if I went and played this part,
work home too much and all that basic stuff. Like
got crushed by streaming and the pandemic?
whoever the actress was, I would spend the whole
any craftsperson, any professional that deals
I wouldn’t say that Cannes is the only film festival
time looking for my daughter’s face in her face. It
in the world of intense emotion needs to find a
that represents what I’m going to say, but none
just seemed that she would own this thing.
healthy place to put that. If I have a concern for
represent it better. Initially it was Gilles Jacob and
my kids, it’s in that area more than the business at
now Thierry Frémaux. They are cellular believers,
We were having some trouble identifying the right director for it, and other projects came up,
large. I’ll encourage them on any path they want
in love with cinema on a big screen, theatrical
and Dylan was a little reluctant because she didn’t
to take, and at the moment film is for both of my
cinema, versus streaming and what seems to
feel that she had enough experience. I didn’t want
kids a great interest, and not only as actors. I know
be threatened by that, especially movies that
to push her, and by that time I could not imagine
my daughter’s very interested in writing to direct
are thoughtful, in some way or character-driven.
doing it without her. I told Bill, “Hey, maybe you
herself, you know?
Cannes is just a big celebration of that. When
should move on, I don’t want to slow you down,
you go there with a film as an actor or director,
and I would like to see this movie get made.” And
As a filmmaker, how much of an advantage is
your schedule doesn’t allow you to participate in
then, it came back around. It’s like we say, every
it also being an actor?
the festival at large. The very best time I ever had at Cannes came when I was on the jury, having
movie’s got its journey. But in the summary of this
I always feel that when I’ve written a script, it’s the
one, it ended up where we all feel it was supposed
writer that I think can be an advantage in talking
the experience of this swarm of international
to be. I had never, ever thought to direct myself in
to actors, because as a writer you have done a
cinema, great cinema. The imagination that
any movie and I don’t know that I would think to
version of it in your imagination as you’re typing.
comes through the prism that isn’t just American,
do it again.
You’re hearing the music of it. So long as you’re
because we’re assuming it’s so monocultural
tailoring the way that you talk to somebody, I do
in our thinking, and to find out, my god, there
Why not?
think the advantage comes from having been
are really great filmmakers in the Philippines,
It’s as burdensome as I thought it might be. When
inside the piece, which is the writer part of it. That
you know? These things sound so exciting, and
I see other people doing it, I say to myself, I don’t
I’m an actor, I don’t think that gives me a great
having had that, and knowing that that’s what’s
know how the hell they do it. I’ve seen people take
advantage, because actors are all so different in
going on under the seat of whatever film you’re
on large-scale things, like Bradley Cooper and Ben
how they approach things. If I were directing me,
going to, and that you’re a part of that with those
Stiller, and my hat’s off to them. But what I did
yes, it’s an advantage, but in directing others I
other filmmakers, that’s really exciting. This year,
have here that was so unique, was my daughter.
think I go to the writing side. And with any script
there are some really visionary directors with
And, like you said, at a time of her having the
that I have not written, like Flag Day, I do a couple
films. It seems on the surface anyway, like Thierry
chops. This [movie is informed by] a life of her
of serious passes, adjustments on it, so that by
Frémaux put together something pretty thrilling.
coming home from school and telling me stories
the time I’m done I try to convince myself I wrote
I think, especially for the films that are lucky
and bringing forward the characters from school,
it, and with Jez Butterworth’s writing that’s how I
enough to show at the Palais there, that’s the way
not in mimicry but in that kind of connected
praise myself. But it’s really that I’ve found enough
you want a movie to be seen.
sense where you really felt who that person was,
of my music so that it becomes the same thing. You seem like a pretty tough guy, but can we
and I think that’s in essence the instincts of an actress. Long before she would have admitted any
What were the biggest challenges of
interest in acting, I just always thought she was an
asserting yourself as the director, as the
anticipate a little tearing up as you share the Flag Day red carpet at Cannes with your
actress. But it wasn’t until we got to set that there
co-star, and Dylan’s father on set?
daughter and son?
were some major WTF moments on the kind of
I’m going to tell you, there were challenges. She’s
There are no guarantees one way or the other. It’s
truth machine that she can be.
a strong, young woman and I’m her dad, and so,
a big deal for me, a big deal. It’s funny. We had a
yeah, there were challenges sometimes. But I was
rehearsal because I went once with them as my
You started acting earlier. She’s 30. As a
so overwhelmed by her. Of course, the amount of
guests, but this is different with both of them in
parent who has seen all sides of a business
pride I got to experience on a daily basis, whatever
the movie, and with her leading the thing, yeah,
that can chew up young people, how did you
day she may have had... Let me put it this way, I
it’s pretty exciting. I’m very excited for her. Where
feel about your kids acting?
was working with a director recently who said that
the future may not hold for any of us a lot of
Good question. Let me take you to a scene [in the
there are only three thoughts an actor has after
opportunities for a film like this to be presented
46
DEADLINE.COM
A P P H OTO/C H RI S P I Z Z E LLO/R IC H A RD S H OT W EL L/ IN V I S I ON
Rylance on behalf of Jez Butterworth. Mark said, “This is something Jez wants you to act in or direct,
”THE VERY BEST TIME I EVER HAD AT CANNES CAME WHEN I WAS ON THE JURY, HAVING THIS EXPERIENCE OF THIS SWARM OF INTERNATIONAL CINEMA, GREAT CINEMA. THE IMAGINATION THAT COMES THROUGH THE PRISM THAT ISN'T JUST AMERICAN, BECAUSE WE'RE ASSUMING IT'S SO MONOCULTURAL IN OUR THINKING, AND TO FIND OUT, MY GOD, THERE ARE REALLY GREAT FILMMAKERS IN THE PHILIPPINES, YOU KNOW? THESE THINGS SOUND SO EXCITING.“ —SEAN PENN
DEADLINE.COM
47
FAMILY TALENT Dylan Penn stars as Jennifer Vogel in Flag Day, an adaptation of Vogel's memoir.
as a movie in the theaters, just to know that she’ll
and it’s... if you wanted to shoot that movie today,
and looking at film. But you know, I regret my
have had this experience. Because people might
you’d be lucky to get to make those choices. It’s
own missing out on that. I remember touring
not like a movie, and all that stuff, but if you go in
an extraordinary movie and... I wish I could sit
universities with her thinking, wow. But you need
there believing in the thing, and you go in there on
down and talk through that movie with him, shot
to be ready and hungry to learn and I didn’t get
your own terms, then there’s a certain magic to
for shot. Never did do that, and I wish I had.
hungry to learn at that age. I got it a little later.
that, no matter what happens. You were among the young cast of Taps, along
Your dad flew missions in World War II,
Your dad was an actor and a filmmaker, your
with fast risers like Tim Hutton and Tom
and afterward got blacklisted as an actor
mom was an actress. What kind of influence
Cruise. Were you competitive?
for attending meetings in support of
were they on you?
Tom was so, what’s the word, sincere a guy, that I
unions and refusing to name names of
It’s hard to articulate. I grew up in a house where,
overlooked his talent. I will tell you that I loved him
others who attended, before the House
working in theatre, working in film, drama was held
and thought he had no chance in this business.
Un-American Activities Committee witch
in high esteem. It didn’t occur to me that I was
Because he was just so nice, and seemingly naive
hunt. I defy anyone who watches Citizen
going to want to get involved in it until I was in my
at the time. Of course, he’s become this force as
Penn to not be gobsmacked by the sustained
late teens, in the senior year of high school. I had
a professional. As good as he was in Taps, I totally
accomplishments in post-earthquake Haiti
thought I wanted to be a lawyer and I got involved
underestimated his talent, the things that came
by you and your relief organization. What is
in making Super 8 movies and got the bug. Once
later which are really extraordinary, and he’s really
it inside of you that makes you plunge into
I got into it, it was at that age where you’re not
a machine.
these seemingly impossible humanitarian
You mentioned your mom saying you’d better
check? How much of your dad is in you to
I never felt the direct connection until I was probably in my mid-20s. Although, when I started
go to university. How much harder were you
lead these efforts?
to work in theatre, my parents would come.
on your kids about finishing school than your
In one sense, I’d answer the question saying a
Ultimately it became quite encouraging, but my
parents were on you?
lot, a lot. I’m in a daily conversation with my
mother, the first thing that she saw me in, she
I think I was tougher on them, but they needed...
dad, because he was a hero to all of us. And I’m
said, “You have got to go to university, you got to
It was different, and their personalities are so
not talking about the war stuff, I mean, just as a
have something to fall back on. That was terrible!”
different, so the expectation was high. Hopper
man. He was such a good, kind, decent, talented,
But ultimately became quite encouraging.
was more like me as a student. You know, much
smart guy, and very generous with people and
And Dad was a filmmaker. It’s interesting. I
more interested in his childhood than his studies.
very supportive of people. And so, you know,
just ordered and got a DVD of the first feature
Dylan was much more tough on herself in terms
given that he was that, what he was doing in his
film that he made in 1965, a movie called A Man
of all that. She went to USC for a little while,
war fighting experience had a seven-mission life
Called Adam. I wanted to kick myself. I had seen
and then one night just called and said, “Dad,
expectancy and after that it was all volunteer.
it at some point where I wasn’t paying attention
this is not for me.” And I said OK, and then she
And he broke the record at 37 missions, was shot
to what directors were doing. And I look at it now
started getting involved in writing a lot of things
down twice getting the aircraft back over allied
48
DEADLINE.COM
MGM
rescue missions, where most of us write a
associating it with your parents until later, so
lines before jumping out. And so having done that
things. I mean there are certainly a lot of times,
What is the lesson in not shutting off
with an incredible, real deep connection to, and
and it makes for good cinema, when your rage
dialogue with leaders in countries who are on
an appreciation of Americanism, of what that
is forward, or it’s like, “Get this!” and you’re
the outs with the U.S. government?
dream could be, patriotism… To come back and
screaming. I do think that it becomes increasingly
Well, this was a very particular thing, and that’s a
have the country you fought and risked your life
apparent naturally for all of us to be in pursuit of
longer conversation. But certainly, in general, I am
for, tell you, you can’t work anymore. I think he
a more compassionate demeanor in whatever
someone in favor of dialogue.
went through about five years where he wasn’t
you’re doing. And then that much moreso given
able to work under the blacklist. He never spoke
where our country is right now, that just fighting or
strapped away from traveling. Some people have
about that with bitterness. He always wrote it off
just demanding—just the pretention of your own
a lack of curiosity to travel, and biases. But I find
as growing pains of the country. That part of him I
self-righteousness being the valid one—it’s gotten
the people on the political right or people on the
did not inherit. I’d have been one pissed off MF’er,
to a point of diminishing returns.
political left and anywhere in between, any that
and it does piss me off to think about that stuff as
So, I’m going to call the way that a lot of things
Some people are socially, economically
have worked in Foreign Service really know the
it applies to my own father, as it applies to people
did happen out of certain aggressions of mine
world, and have looked at our country through
even today in so many ways, new and viral ways
over the years, that there are just diminishing
the eyes of other cultures. There’s a lot more
and so on. It’s hard to be a human today, which is
returns on that way of approaching it, and maybe
tolerance and a lot more belief in dialogue in
one of the things that’s great about filmmaking.
it’s just a younger man’s game in that way.
those people.
There was an example where that
conservative, and have led long lives in public
It’s the place where we can talk about it, literally, directly, or just by expressing something.
I have great friends who are extremely willingness to go outside the box paid off
service. We have so much in common with our
It sounds like your father stoically bore the
in a profound way. We saw you criticized
perception of conversations, including with these
burden of what happened to him. How did
on TV for your relationship with the late
bogeymen, be that Fidel Castro or Hugo Chávez
observing the scars shape you?
Venezuelan President, Hugo Chávez, with
or Evo Morales. It’s not that it is an apologist
I don’t know that what I observed were scars,
whom the U.S. government always had
conversation, but it’s a much more nuanced
because the person who took care of business
a strained relationship. When you heard
conversation to have.
during that time was my mother. She could work.
that amputations of crushed limbs with
He got a job in a plastics factory for a time, but
rudimentary hardware tools were going on
The U.S. has turned a corner for the better
she was the reason they ended up coming out
without anesthesia after the earthquake
lately, but the pandemic continues to rage
to California, and because there was a lot of
in Haiti, you got morphine and other
in poorer countries. What’s next for CORE in
television work happening at the time, she was
anesthetics by simply asking Chavez. That
that regard?
able to support the family with Twilight Zone guest
was unbelievable.
So, we are in the favelas of Brazil now, doing
Well, I had... You know, it was a kind of a
vaccination clinics. We are in India. And we are
starring parts, or Bonanza or whatever. I’m a beneficiary of parents who loved each
safe thing, because about six days before
in a lot of the behind-the-scenes advocacy
other, and I think more than I saw the scars of
the earthquake, Madonna had sent me her
for distribution. We are very concerned to get
what had happened, for the most part before
documentary on Malawi, and I watched it here at
vaccines to Haiti, which is having a spike. It
I was born, I saw a relationship that had been
the house and that was my introduction to Paul
dodged the bullet for a while, in part because it
strengthened by it. I think more than anything, it’s
Farmer, the founder of Partners in Health, which
had a pre-Covid lack of tourism, and once Covid
not so much my dad’s activism that would have
works significantly in Haiti, but they work around
happened, you didn’t have a lot of influx of people
played a role in this, it’s that I had it so damn good
the world. Paul is an extraordinary Harvard
from the outside coming in. But now it’s becoming
that it’s just too obvious, and it just kills you when
doctor who built an incredible NGO in Haiti 30
a bigger issue, and so we’re trying very hard.
you see how difficult so many people have it.
years before I ever got there. He had an interview
And then it’s just the luxury of being able to say, in the case of the things I’ve gotten myself involved in, ‘Let’s start with, I can afford a plane
In all of these things, CORE can’t be… the
in that documentary, and I was so impressed
procurement of morphine at the earthquake is a
with him, I looked him up and saw who he was.
very unique situation. There was a kind of... I don’t
Haiti had been in my thoughts the week
want to say lawlessness. There was that also, but
ticket,’ stuff like that. And then, being a high-
that the earthquake happened, and when it
profile person, you’re a magnet to good and bad
happened and I thought, OK, do something there,
there was an understanding that a lot of things had to be waived and looked at very differently,
people, but you’re able to cast your team and
I’ll bet Paul Farmer’s there. I was able, through
and also, because the United States military had
things come your way much more easily, including
her a number for him, and sure enough he was
been given control of the ports by the Haitian
in a place like Haiti or whatever it is. So, it’s not all
there. I asked him what was needed and he told
government. So, international law, everything
stuff that I can answer because it truly is not all
me: 350,000 vials of morphine. It’s always been
applied very differently, at least I think so, unless
stuff that I own specifically. I lucked into a lot of it.
my joke, an actor in Hollywood knows where
somebody knocks on my door for doing these
to find narcotics, but most don’t know where
interviews. But CORE can’t bring this stuff into
I’ve had the pleasure personally of watching
to find bulk narcotics. Things are different in a
the country, not without a lot of officiation, and
you evolve as an artist, but I’ve also watched
country like Venezuela. No one in politics, from a
there’s a cold chain.
you go from the paparazzi-punching bad boy,
president down, is going to overrule their Minister
as you were once called, to this statesman
of Health and say, “Hey, this person who is not
then be part of working with the Haitian Ministry
who’s done so much humanitarian work.
credentialed to have or get near morphine, we’re
of Health in its implementation. Bringing together
What changed your approach?
going to give it to them.”
It’s a complicated question because as [Citizen
We didn’t bring it from the United States, it
What we do is advocate for its delivery, and
our clinicians to be able to give the injections. That’s what we’re up to and I think we will stay in
Penn director] Don Hardy exposed very well, I can
was brought in from Venezuela to the Venezuelan
that game in those territories and then expand
get really frustrated with the hat-in-the-hand
Embassy on a military transport. We picked it up,
as possible, until we are whatever small part of
part of this, and yet, these are like so many
and then started distributing it.
seeing this thing end, worldwide. ★ DEADLINE.COM
49
D I S R U P T O R S
YASH RAJ
In a country hit hard by the coronavirus pandemic, Yash Raj, and the wider Indian film industry, has rallied support for its workers while it waits for studios and cinemas to reopen
S
ince the coronavirus epidemic
affected by the shutdowns is Yash Raj Films, the
covers the full spectrum of crew from construction
became a pandemic in the spring
Mumbai-based company that has been operating
workers to dancers, many of whom earn their
of 2020, few waves have been as
since 1970 and which works across fields including
money on a day-to-day basis. At the time of writing,
deadly as the one India experienced
production, distribution and talent management.
the company had made a request to the Chief
As Yash Raj’s Senior Vice President Akshaye
Minister of Maharashtra to allow it to purchase
in April and May this year. At the
time of writing, confirmed infections have been
Widhani explains, the company’s charitable ethos
those vaccines from the government so that it can
steadily dropping since reaching a peak of more
is inspired by its late founder Yash Chopra, who
speed up the vaccination drive and get the industry
than 400,000 per day in early May, and, while
worked in Hindi film for 60 years. “For his son, our
back on its feet as soon as possible; the company
nobody is expecting miracles at this stage, there’s
current chairman Aditya Chopra, there was no
says it will cover all costs related to the immuniza-
hope that an improving vaccination drive may mean
better way of honoring his father than giving back to
tion program. “This section of our industry has been
the worst is now behind them.
the same people who helped the company achieve
hit the hardest, and our hearts go out to them and
all that it has,” comments Widhani.
their families,” comments Widhani, who notes that
Naturally, film and TV production was put firmly on hold as the government locked down the
To do this, Yash Raj has instigated the Yash
many of those involved in the various initiatives have
country in a bid to stem infections, with shoots
Chopra Saathi Initiative (“saathi”, in Hindi, can mean
struggled to pay rent or afford healthcare while the
paused across the country. The industry instead
“comrade” or, more informally, “mate”), through
lockdown rolls on.
turned its energies to backing the recovery bid, and
which it is organizing vaccinations for film workers,
some of the stories that have emerged since have
teaming with the Youth Feed India movement to
July, but, at the time of writing, no firm date has
been inspiring: Army of the Dead star Huma Qureshi
provide ration kits to low-paid workers and margin-
been set and the situation remains fluid. Alongside
has mobilized her sizable following in both India and
alized communities, and giving direct financial aid to
production, the reopening of cinemas will also be
abroad to fundraise the construction of a pur-
those who have worked on its productions and are
key, with Yash Raj still primarily drawing its revenues
pose-built 100-bed facility to treat Covid patients,
currently laid off due to the hiatus.
from the big screen releases of its titles, many of
with backers including Zack Snyder; Priyanka
Since the initiative began, Widhani says the
There is hope that shooting could resume by
which have been shelved while venues remain
Chopra Jonas and husband Nick Jonas set up a
company has provided rations to “thousands” of
shuttered. “YRF makes films that are big-screen
fundraiser to buy much-needed oxygen supplies for
families of four, as well as giving 5000 rupees (close
experiences for audiences,” says Widhani, “and
Covid patients; the actress Bhumi Pednekar estab-
to $70) directly to more than a thousand people
holding such titles back—so that our audiences can
lished online social media initiative Covid Warrior to
affected by this period. That’s in addition to a
enjoy these films in cinemas post-pandemic—has
coordinate efforts to secure vital resources; while
similar initiative last year, when Yash Raj handed out
been challenging to say the least. The movie theatre
megastar Amitabh Bachchan, who had his own
5,000 rupees to more than 3,000 workers during
is a medium we strongly believe in as a company,
battle with Covid last summer, said in a recent blog
the initial Covid surge. “These are people who don’t
and hopefully our audiences will too once the
post that he had donated some 25 crore (north of
have the luxury of taking time off, or working from
pandemic is [under] control.”
$3 million) to relief efforts to date.
home,” explains the exec. “They work 12 hours a day,
Looking forward, the Yash Raj exec says he
every day, just to be able to provide their family with
remains optimistic for the future of the country’s
the basic necessities to survive.”
screen industries. “From what we know historically,
These are just a few examples of the positive headlines that have emerged in India during this tricky period. One company that has been
The vaccination initiative is aiming to provide
this industry will be one of the first to bounce back,
spearheading initiatives to provide tangible
inoculations for 30,000 registered members of the
because community experiences will come to the
benefit to both Covid patients and industry workers
Federation of Western India Cine Employees, which
centre-stage in a post-pandemic era.” ★
“WE’RE HELPING PEOPLE WHO DON’T HAVE THE LUXURY OF TAKING TIME OFF, OR WORKING FROM HOME. THEY WORK 12 HOURS A DAY, EVERY DAY.” — A K S H AY E W I D H A N I , YA S H R A J
50
DEADLINE.COM
COU RT ESY YAS H RAJ/XAV I E R COL LI N /I M AG E P R ESS AG EN CY/ M EGA/ DAN N Y M O LOS H O K/ IN V IS I O N FO R T H E T E L E VIS I O N ACADE M Y/AP I M AG ES
BY TOM GRATER
GREG BERLANTI With 15 series on the air, Greg Berlanti uses his considerable influence to level up the representation of the LGBTQ community. That approach will take a groundbreaking turn with the upcoming Green Lantern, in which Alan Scott, the first character in the DC Universe to take that superhero’s title, is gay. Berlanti is also producing Michael Grandage’s My Policeman for Amazon, an LGBTQ-themed love triangle starring Harry Styles, Emma Corrin and David Dawson. Next, Berlanti has plans to go back behind the camera. Having directed 2018’s Love, Simon, a critical and commercial hit film that tells the story of a young gay man who is forced to hide his sexuality throughout high school, his follow-up project is a remake of The Little Shop of Horrors, with Scarlett Johansson and Chris Evans. Further down the line is a biopic of Rock Hudson, the closeted matinée idol who died of an Aids-related illness in 1985. —Mike Fleming Jr. ★
AVA DUVERNAY Since making her feature debut
Google: in June, the tech giant and
in 2010 with I Will Follow, Emmy-
ARRAY announced a new $500k
and Oscar-nominated filmmaker
feature-film grant available to
Ava DuVernay has become one of
up-and-coming creatives from
the busiest directors in the biz. But
historically underrepresented
she’s just as big a player behind the
communities, with below-the-line
scenes, and this year DuVernay and
support from the ARRAY Crew
her long-standing ARRAY project
initiative that was launched earlier
were awarded top honors at the
this year. DuVernay’s commitment
Peabody Awards for “amplifying
to diversifying film and TV sets
film and TV projects by people
extends to overseeing shows where
of color and women filmmakers”.
inclusion is front and center; such
The honor comes in the wake of
projects include the Oprah Winfrey
a new venture DuVernay and the
Network drama Queen Sugar, which
ever-expanding ARRAY launched
she EPs, and The CW’s superhero
recently in partnership with
series Naomi. —Justin Kroll ★ DEADLINE.COM
51
D I S R U P T O R S
BROKEN WINDOWS Before the pandemic, streaming was going to be the death of cinema. But as the lockdown eases, could it see the theatrical experience reborn?
BY DADE HAYES
he said at an investor conference. “That was very
train is actually powered by a battery instead of a
the coronavirus pandemic has
important to Scorsese to get a theatrical release. I
coal boiler?
re-wired the film business, con-
think Netflix actually wanted a theatrical release as
During WME parent Endeavor Group Holdings’
sider Army of the Dead. Released
well, because it really helps to set up and ‘eventize’
June 3 call with Wall Street analysts, president Mark
in May, the Zack Snyder zombie
that movie.”
Shapiro said the agency has been “more flexible”
action spectacle cost about $90
What does an eventized movie look like in the
in its dealings with studios. “We’re having these
million to make. Initially set up at Warner Bros. more
new world, though? That is a very unsettled ques-
conversations upfront and they are paying for that
than a decade ago, it traveled a winding path to
tion. The North American box office has shown signs
flexibility. So that moves right to the benefit of all of
Netflix, which grabbed it in 2019 as it was dra-
of life, and a few analysts see it regaining its 2019
our clients.”
matically ramping up its film output. Unlike other
level of $11.4 billion by 2022 or 2023. But it’s hardly a
prominent titles that the streamer released before
given, and the playing field is less level than ever.
the pandemic, Army snagged a one-week exclusive
In addition to streamers’ increased leverage,
Kristen Konvitz, a senior agent at ICM, agrees that the old methods can no longer really apply. “Over the past year, a lot of things have evolved,”
run from Cinemark, the No. 3 U.S. exhibitor. It was
major studios’ decision to emulate them with direct-
she said. “In a world [during the pandemic] where
the widest theatrical opening of any streaming
to-streaming or day-and-date patterns could create
there’s no theatrical and there’s a little bit of veiled
movie to date, and it came just as turnstiles were
a self-perpetuating cycle. “If windows do shorten
mystery to it, we are looking for new ways to guaran-
starting to spin again. Spring releases had cracked
more permanently,” a senior Netflix exec told
tee participation.”
the $100 million mark, and while capacity con-
Deadline, “the one thing that means is that theaters
For decades, there have been Hatfield-and-
straints were still putting limits on the possibilities,
are going to need more films.” Zoradi and other top
McCoy tangles between film purveyors and theater
the movie business felt more like itself since the
exhibitors acknowledge as much and have been in
chains over windows, and parallel battles over gross
Covid nightmare began in early 2020.
talks to book more pure streaming fare. Scorsese’s
participation. Filmmakers and stars betting on
next outing, Killers of the Flower Moon, is aiming for
themselves by taking less up front, only to reap rich
opened to just $780,000 in about 600 theaters,
a bigger splash in megaplexes than The Irishman
benefits in success, are being tempted to get their
despite mixed-to-positive reviews and strong social-
when Apple rolls it out in 2022. “It’s set up to have a
fair market value. For every Joker—which brought
media buzz. The gross was about half what industry
theatrical release,” star Robert De Niro said. “We’re
windfalls of tens of millions to director Todd Phillips
pundits projected and was surely undercut by the
still working out the details.”
and star Joaquin Phoenix—there are other lost
Here’s the thing, though: Army of the Dead
audience knowing it could wait a week to stream it.
Given the firepower of major streaming players
opportunities that a streaming service would have
About 72 million subscribers would do just that over
like Amazon Prime Video, Apple TV+ and Netflix,
its first month, the company said, making it one of
there could be at least a movie a week capable
its most-watched films ever. Ticket sales amounted
of playing wide—at least, according to traditional
streaming services during the pandemic. While most
to coins between the sofa cushions for Netflix,
measures. But the leverage has practically reversed
other aspects of American society and business
which is far more focused on adding subscribers
from the 2019 dynamic. At that point, theaters were
entered hibernation for weeks or months, streaming
than negotiating theatrical splits or orchestrating
dug in and figured Netflix and others would need
boomed and kept on booming. Netflix added as
thousands of playdates.
access to their screens. Now, after theaters survived
many customers in the first half of 2020 as it did in
brushes with bankruptcy and the kind of existential
all of 2019. During the theater closures that shut-
Cinemark as CEO, said the deal was a notable
questions they have never faced before, there is a
tered venues in major cities for nearly a year, licens-
reversal of the impasse over The Irishman in 2019.
greater urgency to secure product.
ing to streaming ended up being a viable business
Mark Zoradi, the former Disney exec who runs
Because of theater owners’ reluctance to depart
All of the uncertainty has upended compensa-
locked in at market rate. One complicating factor is the role played by
alternative for suddenly revenue-deprived studios.
from the standard 90-day window, the Martin
tion for gross players and thrown a monkey wrench
Dozens of films large and small—from Coming 2
Scorsese-directed Netflix release did not secure
into the business model of films. How will the
America and The Trial of the Chicago 7 at Paramount
buy-in from any major exhibitors. “If that were today,
waterfall of revenue from ancillaries be calculated
to Greyhound at Sony and Finch at Universal—have
we would find a way to come to an agreement,”
and shared if the theatrical engine at the front of the
been offloaded to streaming over the past year.
52
DEADLINE.COM
C LAY E N OS / N ET F LI X /A M AZO N STU D IOS
F
or a big movie that illustrates how
In most cases, the figures are vague—Borat Sub-
Evans’ former compound in Bel Air and even plan-
this is going to happen,” Endeavor CEO Ari Emanuel
sequent Moviefilm, Amazon reported last fall, was
ning to rebuild the screening room lost in a fire, his
said on the investor call on the subject of windows.
enjoyed by “tens of millions” of Prime members in its
rhetoric, and the facts of the deal, leave an element
“We are negotiating on behalf of our clients and our
opening weekend.
of doubt.
own properties to make sure that we get the proper
Eric Wold, an analyst with investment firm B.
The companies have forecast $3 billion in
economics as we go forward, and that’s the way we
Riley, is bullish on the ability of both distributors
merger-related synergies, which is more than the
are going to operate until we find the proper flow,
and exhibitors to effectively cleanse themselves
amount of the AT&T-Time Warner deal that saw
which is going to take a little bit of time as Covid
of laggard deals thanks to Covid. Good riddance
about 2,000 people leave WarnerMedia, includ-
kind of moves on.”
to the old windows, he says, with their stale titles
ing a number of seasoned executives. Zaslav has
obligated to play to empty auditoriums for weeks.
long ridiculed the lofty spending in the scripted TV
streaming players to disrupt the movie business
A more variable windowing approach, he says, can
arena, preferring to stay in the realm of inexpensive
just like they did television. Amazon, even before its
“optimize the performance of certain films and the
unscripted fare like 90 Day Fiancée.
game-changing purchase of MGM, was aiming for
One thing that isn’t changing is the appetite for
“ONE OF THE IRONIES OF NETFLIX’S MASSIVE $450 MILLION OUTLAY FOR TWO SEQUELS TO LIONSGATE BREAKOUT KNIVES OUT IS THAT THEIR FINANCIAL MODEL DOES NOT RELY ON THEATRICAL PLAY.” entire theatrical exhibition ecosystem. Strong films
In settling with dozens of stakeholders affected
broader hits. Apple, in addition to Scorsese’s Flower
will play through traditional window lengths and
by “Project Popcorn” (as the day-and-date initiative
Moon, has landed Will Smith-Antoine Fuqua col-
poor performers will utilize the positive optionality
was dubbed internally), WarnerMedia forked over
laboration Emancipation and paid a record-setting
of these agreements to free up auditoriums and
hundreds of millions of dollars. Legal action was
$25 million for Sundance acquisition CODA. The
potentially drive greater revenues for all involved.”
averted, and the initial furor largely died down once
shelves are filling at streaming companies at the
films like Godzilla vs. Kong caught fire in theaters.
same moment when Disney is sending a number of
unknown among the traditional studios. Its infamous
Warner has a gaudy 35% market share, but funding
titles to Disney+, while Warner has said that half of
(or at least infamously communicated) decision to
every release as though it were a hit is extremely
its 2022 slate will go to HBO Max.
put all 2021 films out on HBO Max at the same time
capital-intensive. Netflix, with a content budget
they hit theaters continues to cast a shadow over
approaching $20 billion, is built for that kind of
plan to deliver at least one major movie a week to
its relations with talent. While many dealmakers
investment. Not so a traditional studio.
subscribers. “We’re going to have enormous movies
Warner Bros. remains perhaps the biggest
blame AT&T and its pick as CEO of WarnerMedia,
One of the great ironies of Netflix’s massive $450
Netflix kicked off 2021 with a trailer promoting its
over the course of this year,” the Netflix exec said,
Jason Kilar, the regime-to-be may not be a change
million outlay for two sequels to Lionsgate breakout
citing Red Notice with The Rock, Ryan Reynolds and
in the direction of artistic freedom and a belief in
Knives Out is that their financial model does not rely
Gal Gadot, and Adam McKay’s Don’t Look Up, which
theaters. Discovery is about to take the reins of a
on theatrical play. But the valuation of the sequel
stars Leonardo DiCaprio, Jennifer Lawrence and
merged entity with WarnerMedia if it gets regula-
deal would not have been possible without the
pretty much the rest of Hollywood. “Theaters are
tory approval next year, and longtime Discovery
theatrical run of the original film, demonstrating the
going to want them on their screens.”
CEO David Zaslav is a wild card. While he’s signaled
appeal of the film as a franchise starter.
a passion for the movie business, buying Robert
“There’s no clear answer right now with how
But if Netflix isn’t sweating the grosses? Well, what happens then? ★ DEADLINE.COM
53
D I S R U P T O R S
ANNEMARIE JACIR The award-winning filmmaker on representing Palestine’s overlooked film history and how she intends to pass her knowledge on to a new generation
BY DIANA LODDERHOSE
W
hen Annemarie Jacir pitched her thesis film at graduate school some 20 years ago, her advisor told her the best
place for her script was in the garbage. It was an ambitious project for the young Columbia University student: A Palestinian film crew navigating their way through Israeli checkpoints in occupied territory as they attempt to reach Jerusalem certainly didn’t fit the traditional mold of thesis short films. But the brilliance of Jacir and her work is that she is not a filmmaker who conforms. Steadfast in her ambition to bring this story to light, she put the project together through old-fashioned crowdfunding, sheer determination and grit. She shot the 17-minute short film, titled Like Twenty Impossibles, across a year and a half in occupied Palestine during the Second Intifada, one of the region’s most violent times in modern history, a brave feat for the then twentysomething writer, director and editor. “It was crazy,” recalls Jacir about the shoot. “It was such a violent time and I remember being caught in the middle of some really terrifying moments where I really feared for my life.” As the saying goes, “One man’s trash is another man’s treasure.” Like Twenty Impossibles premiered as an Official Selection at the 2003 Cannes Film Festival, marking the first short film from the Arab world to enter the event. It went on to win numerous awards at international film festivals, propelling Jacir’s profound message. “It was such an honor and such an amazing moment after such a difficult time,” says Jacir. “It’s the thing that changed my career. I felt it was the beginning of finding a community that for me is everything today–a film community of people who love cinema. It felt like the beginning of a family. On a practical level, because of that film I was able to connect and meet people that became my partners to help me make my first feature, and some of them I still work with today.” Jacir’s journey to the director’s chair has been an interesting one. Born in Bethlehem and educated at an international school in Saudi Arabia, Jacir moved Interested in writing, she also spent a lot of time hanging out with a video editor friend in the editing room. “I wasn’t thinking that would ever go anywhere, but I started playing with images at that point and editing,” she says. She became involved in high school theater, working behind the scenes and directing plays. In college, she majored in politics and literature but kept thinking about film, unsure what part she was interested in the most. After graduating, Jacir took the plunge and moved to LA, taking various assistant roles before she scored a gig reading scripts in the literary department at a talent agency.
54
DEADLINE.COM
J U LI E E DWA RDS /L FI /AVALO N /N E WSCOM /M EGA
to Texas for her junior and senior years of high school.
“[CANNES] WAS THE BEGINNING OF FINDING A COMMUNITY THAT FOR ME IS EVERYTHING TODAY—A FILM COMMUNITY OF PEOPLE THAT LOVE CINEMA. IT FELT LIKE THE BEGINNING OF A FAMILY.” “That was really where I learned the craft and the formatting of screenwriting,” she says. But LA didn’t feel like the right fit for Jacir. “I didn’t feel like I had a place there,” she recalls. “It wasn’t the kind of cinema that really interested me and there
And that’s important to me because I think history
was originally set up based on this principle of helping
is important. I owe a lot to those before me, a lot of
other filmmakers.
doors were opened to me because of those who came before me.” She adds, “As filmmakers, the kind of access
“We started off as a collective in which we were all doing everything,” she says of the company. “Whether it was shooting, directing or producing, we were all
was something about the whole place that didn’t feel
that we have, it’s something that’s a really long-term
helping each other make our films. Films are col-
so creative to me.”
process and that a lot of people are involved in. There
laborative, so when we first started out it made sense
As a young woman in Hollywood, she says
are a lot of people whose names I maybe don’t know
for all of these talents that pooled together to trade
she was told on numerous occasions to hide her
who slowly, slowly opened these doors for us. These
hats and help each other out.”
Palestinian roots. “I’ve never hidden the fact that
things just don’t happen out of nowhere. I’m aware of
I’m Palestinian,” Jacir says. “I have a lot of identities,
the generation before me, and the generation before
out her career, and a willingness to help future
female and Palestinian being two of them. But I was
that, and what they have done.”
generations of filmmakers stems from her teenage
told more than once in LA that if I wanted to break
Indeed, this is an important concept for Jacir as
This sense of camaraderie has prevailed through-
years when, fresh out of high school, she came back
into the industry, ‘Don’t say that you’re a Palestinian in
she pays homage to Palestinian generations in her
to Bethlehem to teach English; before pursuing her
this city, don’t talk about it.’”
films. Her second feature, When I Saw You, is a warm
graduate degree, she taught workshops.
Yearning for something more and unwilling to
and heartfelt film about a Palestinian refugee in
“I knew I had a privilege because I spoke English well
conform to Hollywood standards, she applied to
Jordan who became separated from his father in the
and I went to an international school, so I was able to
graduate school at Columbia University in New York
chaos of war in 1967. That film was also Palestine’s
study abroad,” she says. “So, I wanted to bring that
and after she was accepted, she drove across the
Oscar entry in 2012 and, notably, the film was entirely
back to Palestine for those who can’t travel and those
country, putting LA behind her.
Arab-financed, with all Palestinian producers.
who have not been able to have that opportunity.”
Since Like Twenty Impossibles first launched her
Her third feature, Wajib, a comedy-drama road
Jacir has always strived to create opportunities for
voice into the international festival circuit, Jacir has
movie through Nazareth that sees a father and his
those who have not been afforded them, either by
written, directed and produced more than 16 films.
estranged son come together to hand-deliver his
birth or by the system. When she shot Salt of this Sea
She has been a member of the Un Certain Regard
daughter’s wedding invitations to each guest, also
in Palestine, she insisted on hiring as much local crew
jury in Cannes as well as a member of the Competi-
touches on the complex historical tensions between
as possible.
tion jury in Berlin. She produces under the banner of
Palestinians and Israelis.
“I had a wonderful French cinematographer—Ben-
Jordan and Palestine-based Philistine Films, which
While she gravitates to stories set in this world,
oît Chamaillard—but other positions I really wanted
she co-founded with Ossama Bawardi in 1997. Her
Jacir says story is paramount, rather than this idea of
to hire as much as possible locally because people
first full-length feature, 2007’s acclaimed Salt of
being a representative for all Palestinian voices.
would shoot films in Palestine and the entire crew
This Sea, follows a working-class American woman,
“I don’t want to represent Palestine or Palestin-
would come from abroad. I mean, how are local
whose parents were Palestinian refugees, as she
ians, I want to tell stories that I feel are real stories
makes her first return to her family’s homeland. That
that are really interesting to me, that are complicated
film, which was the first feature film by a Palestin-
and aren’t just black and white,” she remarks. “I want
sity-based Dreams of a Nation Palestinian cinema
ian woman director, became her second work to
to ask and leave questions. But sometimes, when you
project, dedicated to the preservation and promotion
debut in Cannes, where it won the FIPRESCI Critics
are in a space where you are the only film screening
of Palestinian cinema. In 2003, she organized and
Award in 2008, and garnered 14 other international
from that particular region, people really want you
curated the largest traveling film festival in Palestine.
awards, including Best Film in Milan. It was Palestine’s
to be the spokesperson, or they want your film to
She’s taught courses at numerous schools, including
official submission to the Academy Awards for Best
represent something.
Columbia University and Bethlehem University, and
Foreign Language Film (the category now called Best International Film). Despite so many ‘firsts’ attached to her early
“It’s two-sided because the people who are not
infrastructures supposed to start then?” Jacir founded and curated the Columbia Univer-
she has been a mentor at the Doha Film Institute.
Palestinian want you to represent the country but
“When I first started in the business I had so
then the Palestinian community wants you to use
many questions and I didn’t know who to go to
work, Jacir is quick to eschew the notion that it
your film to tell the world about everything because
or how to start,” she recalls. “But there is so much
means much. She’s graciously conscious of the
for so long our story has been left out and we have
talent out there, and there are so many stories and
female filmmakers and Palestinian artists who came
been invisible.”
so many creative people, so when I started doing a
before her. “I think it’s important to know that there were and
She adds: “I want to make films that question
lot of workshops in Palestine, I just felt like I had to
and make us ask things that make us uncomfortable.
share whatever knowledge I had and spread it to the
there are a lot of female filmmakers that are from
We’re not victims, but we’re also not heroes. Nobody
younger generation.”
Palestine and the Arab world,” she says. “It’s true
is one thing.”
that many are working in the documentary space
Where Jacir does feel an enormous amount of
She adds: “It’s this younger generation that I really believe are going to raise the bar. They will make mov-
more but there is a history there and I always feel
responsibility is in uplifting, supporting and teaching
ies and they will keep doing things better and better
those kinds of statements sort of erase the history.
the next generation of filmmakers. Philistine Films
than the generation before them.” ★ DEADLINE.COM
55
56
DEADLINE.COM
D I S R U P T O R S
STAGECRAFT ILM’s new LED technology has revolutionized sci-fi and
is about to bring period drama into the 21st Century. But its time and energy-saving benefits will change everything
BY TOM GRATER
P
rior to the pandemic, virtual production—the use of digital tools to mimic and replace live-action production paradigms—was still a relatively under-the-radar emerging
technology most recognized for its use on Disney’s The Mandalorian. However, the ongoing
spate of lockdowns around the globe has thrust its potential firmly into the spotlight: suddenly, the prospect of being able to house ambitious shoots in a dynamic contained space, which can recreate multiple high-quality locations on a daily basis, has shifted from being an intriguing possibility to a reality that could prove crucial for the future of this business. Disney-owned VFX company Industrial Light & Magic (ILM) has established itself at the forefront of the virtual production movement, thanks to its work on the interstellar Disney+ DEADLINE.COM
57
”IT CAN WORK OUT CREATIVELY AND ECONOMICALLY FAVORABLE. WE FIND CREWS COMMONLY SHOOT 30-50 PERCENT MORE PAGES OR COVERAGE A DAY. IT OPENS UP THE POSSIBILITY FOR STAGECRAFT TO BE USED ON A WIDE VARIETY OF PRODUCTIONS. “
FUTURE THINKERS Top: The Mandalorian with Baby Yoda, AKA Grogu. Above, left to right: Rob Bredow and Chris Bannister of ILM.
58
DEADLINE.COM
COU RT ESY IL M
— R O B B R E D OW, I LM
series, but the company has been involved in
production needed a champion to push it into
been building out its virtual production team
the tech for more than 20 years. “It dates all the
the mainstream. In this instance, few could claim
in the U.S. and recently established its first
way back to A.I. with Steven Spielberg,” explains
that crown more justifiably than The Mandalorian
purpose-built Volume in Europe at Germany’s
Rob Bredow, SVP and Chief Creative Officer at
creator Jon Favreau. “In order for there to be a
Studio Babelsberg, the largest one on the
ILM. “Stagecraft is the umbrella term we use to
paradigm shift, you need a visionary leader,” says
continent to date. The first show to christen the
cover all of ILM’s end-to-end virtual production
Bredow of working with the filmmaker.
new facility will be 1899, the ambitious pan-
technology. That encompasses everything from virtual scouting and virtual cameras through
Favreau had previously employed virtual production techniques on projects including The
European period series from the creators of hit German original Dark.
to LED screens, which is one of the newest
Lion King and The Jungle Book, but it’s his use
applications and is really moving the tech
of the tech on the flagship Disney+ show that
Bannister believe virtual production technology
has raised their profile. For The Mandalorian,
will become widely adopted across the entire
forward right now.”
Looking to the future, both Bredow and
The Stagecraft team has continuously
the director worked with Stagecraft to create
industry. The pair note that on The Mandalorian
pushed the boundaries of virtual production,
a purpose-built virtual production set—known
it was often the more lo-fi scenes where the
and the tech has already evolved through
as a ‘Volume’—at Manhattan Beach Studios
benefits shone through. “Werner Herzog’s character’s office was shot in Stagecraft,” says
numerous incarnations. The key recent update,
in Los Angeles. Using the latest hardware, the
as Bredow notes, has been the introduction of
setup could render a host of complex and exotic
Bredow. “The production efficiencies it can mean
giant LED screens, which display high-quality
interstellar environments one after the other,
for a scene like that are notable: the set dressing
digital backdrops that encircle a production
eliminating the need for location shooting. “One
was only a few poles, some boxes, his desk, and
stage and move as the camera moves, creating
of the things that made virtual production a
accessories. The rest was loaded in digitally.
a real-time, dynamic landscape. Rendered
perfect fit for The Mandalorian is that they had
That was quicker to build, faster to shoot in, and better for the environment.”
via gaming software, these photo-real images
to create an entire series worth of Star Wars
effectively remove the need for green screen.
landscapes at the same cinematic quality that
This ground-breaking tech was first used by
the franchise has always embraced,” explains
industry tries to embrace going green, virtual
ILM primarily for lighting on 2016’s Rogue One:
Chris Bannister, ILM’s Executive Producer of
production could be a boost to those efforts.
A Star Wars Story, but it found its true use two
Virtual Production. “The technology actually
years later on Solo: A Star Wars Story, when the
allowed them to shoot on all of these planets,
after a big production,” says Bredow. “You save
company built a wraparound screen encircling
which would have been really challenging to
on all of that with virtual production—you can
its Millennium Falcon interior set. “We put the
accomplish at the necessary level of scope and
use these LED walls for years. It does draw some
actors in the cockpit, and they could watch the
quality otherwise.”
entire Kessel Run play out in front of them for 20
Bredow recalls “an eye-opening day” on
His final point is a salient one—as the entire
“There’s a lot of construction that can’t be reused
power, but they’re quite energy efficient. You can also re-use backgrounds. We have generic
minutes straight,” recalls Bredow. “Ron Howard
The Mandalorian shooting schedule, when
could call cues on the fly, and it made the
the Mandalorian’s ship the Razor Crest had
have commonly shot movies, such as Iceland.
performances different. It was eye-opening how
to travel to three different planets in a single
All you need to do is layer your own production
much it changed the filmmaking process and
day. “Because we were in Stagecraft,” he
design and set dressing.”
improved quality. That really inspired us to see
says, “we were able to bring the locations to
the opportunity there.”
us, rather than having to move the crew. They
that, while the majority of fully-fledged
pre-loaded everything into the Volume and the
virtual production shoots to date have been
art department dressed it three times in a day. It
blockbuster-level projects, their vision is for
As well as helping actors, who no longer need to imagine the backdrops they are performing
locations from all over the world where people
The Stagecraft team are keen to note
in front of, virtual production can also benefit
was very efficient. After everyone saw that day of
the tech to become viable for all levels of
the entire filmmaking ecosystem. A lot of work is
shooting, there was no question. We were never
filmmaking. “Our target pricing has been to
shifted into the pre-production process, meaning
going back—this had changed the way we make
achieve a Stagecraft day for less than the price
everyone is more prepared once on set. “It ends
these kinds of shows.”
of what it takes to move a production across the
up being incredibly creatively satisfying,” says Bredow, “because you get to see everything on
ILM now has three permanent virtual
same town,” Bredow explains. “It can work out
production stages, two in Los Angeles and one
creatively and economically favorable. We find
the day: your production designer gets to design
in London at Pinewood, and usually has one or
crews commonly shoot 30-50 percent more
not just the foreground but also the background;
two additional temporary facilities on the go. At
pages or coverage per day, depending on how they want to use that efficiency. It opens up the
your director of photography gets to light the
present, the Stagecraft team are overseeing a
digital aspects of the set and integrate them
pop-up Volume in Sydney, on which Thor: Love
possibility for Stagecraft to be used on a wide
into the practical aspects, and the VFX team
and Thunder is being shot (director Taika Waititi
variety of productions.”
get to integrate themselves with those other
previously worked with Stagecraft on his episode
departments. It’s a game-changer for those
of The Mandalorian). Coming up soon will be Ant-
pandemic and international shoots become
departments, though it affects everyone.”
Man And The Wasp: Quantumania, which director
less challenging, expect virtual production to
The tech also drastically reduces the post-
Even as the world emerges from the
Peyton Reed recently revealed is set to film in
continue to evolve and to see greater uptake
production process, as the majority of VFX is
Stagecraft’s Volume at Pinewood. “It’s been
across the business. ILM is investing heavily in
rendered in-camera while shooting. This allows
exciting seeing different filmmakers take these
the technology, which remains in a nascent form
key creatives—directors, producer, showrunners—
creative tools and push them forward in different
right now, and the ceiling of its application is far
to see everything come together in real-time
ways,” says Bredow.
from being reached.
on a monitor on set. If a particular effect isn’t
But it’s not just ILM who are in on the
“It has really been light years between where
marrying well with your backdrop, you can make
act. Numerous companies around the world
we started and how far we’ve pushed it,”
an adjustment there and then.
are setting up virtual production stages and
comments Bannister now. “I’m very excited to
employing the tech, not least Netflix, which has
see the possibilities.” ★
As with any emerging medium, virtual
DEADLINE.COM
59
D I S R U P T O R S
LEIGH JANIAK How the director is redefining the phrase ‘Netflix and chill’ with a bloodsoaked horror trilogy based on R.L. Stine’s bestselling Fear Street novels
BY STEVIE WONG three times, and so we would have a new camera
chise is tough enough. But when
style, and a new production design, and the tone of
producer Peter Chernin reached
how I was working with the actors was changing,
out to indie director Leigh
because we were trying to reflect these different
Janiak with the idea of adapting
time periods.
author R.L. Stine’s popular Fear
But you know what? I was just looking straight in
Street books, the end result was not one, but three
front of me. I joked that I was only living in the pres-
consecutive movies. Set in the cursed town of
ent—there’s no past, there’s no future, it’s just what’s
Shadyside, Ohio, they feature a recurring core cast,
in front of me today—and I had an amazing team of
interconnected storylines and an ambitious timeline
people around to help me.
that starts in 1994, before jumping back to 1978 and
I share a lot of cast between the two films. I was
then 1666. Shot over 106 days, the R-rated trilogy is
How did you approach the three Fear Streets
familiar with some of the actors before because
being screened over three weekends on Netflix.
visually and tonally?
I had worked with them in other things. But there
I was a teenager in the ’90s, and Scream was one of
were surprises, too. There were amazing people that
It’s hard enough to make one horror film, but
the first horror movies that I really saw as a teenager
came up, like Benji Flores Jr., who plays Josh. I wasn’t
three, back-to-back? What were you thinking?
who could process things. It blew my mind. It felt
familiar with him, and he crushes. Like, he sells some
It was definitely crazy. Basically, Peter Chernin had
like a whole new type of movie, and I think it’s one
crazy shit. [You need] someone who can put their
this amazing idea that he wanted to do some kind
of the best movies ever made, period, genre aside.
whole worth into explaining the mythology. I mean,
of new type of theatrical release by making three
There was also that whole swath of ’90s slashers,
what a dream, finding him! All of them, though, were
Fear Street movies and releasing them all together.
like the I Know What You Did Last Summer films,
just incredible. When we moved into 1978, it was
I pitched this idea of having the movies connected,
where there was a bit of self-awareness and a lot
like, “Oh my God. I have to find another amazing
because if we’re trying to get people to watch these
of fun. Since the Fear Street books take place in the
cast. How is this going to work?” But we dug in, and
films really close together, how do we make them not
’90s, the presence of these movies was obviously
we found them.
feel like they’re just getting fucked around to bring
the biggest influence. In the three films there’s a discrepancy of social
them back? So, we ended up coming up with this
Then with 1978, I really tried to tilt more in the
idea that’s a hybrid of traditional television content
direction of the ’70s with camera movement, tone,
class: all of the victims seem to come from the
and movies by connecting the stories, yet hopefully
and the fact that you have the girl who’s the virginal,
poorer town of Shadyside, whereas wealthy
finishing each of the stories and making you feel it’s
goody two-shoes that’s kind of unlikable. I definitely
Sunnyvalers stay unharmed…
fully complete.
looked at Friday the 13th. You can’t make a horror
The characters that we created have been told by
movie in a summer camp without doing that.
society, or by their town, that they’re ‘other’ in some
How does one even begin to tackle three films
For the 1600s one, I looked at Terrence Malick’s
way. Sometimes it has to do with race. Sometimes
that visit three completely different time
The New World, because I love that movie. It’s
it has to do with sexuality. Sometimes it just has
periods in detail?
just this beautiful, wonderful, pure world, and you
to do with gender or socioeconomic status. That’s
Because I had been involved from the story incep-
just watch these colonists come and destroy it. It
baked into the bigger mythology of the world of
tion, writing the scripts and everything like that, I felt
becomes so disgusting, and so polluted, and it felt
Shadyside and Sunnyvale.
like it was very intimately in my veins. But then we
really perfect for what we were trying to accomplish
started shooting and I was like, “What are we doing
with the third movie.
here? We’re making three different movies, and
We’re telling the story of perpetual outsiders. All of them are being told that there’s no way out of this bad world that they live in. Without risking
we’re shooting them all at once.” I think a little bit
You have a very large cast for all these films, how
sounding too heady about it, our killers represent
of me thought I was being stupid, in that I was like,
long did it take to find them?
systemic inequality—generation after generation,
“Oh, people do this in TV all the time.” The differ-
The casting process happened over months, and
you can’t escape it, it’s just coming for you. That’s
ence was that we were reinventing the same world
we started casting 1994 and 1666 first, because
what these kids have been told their whole life. That
60
DEADLINE.COM
J ESS I CA M I G LI O/N E T FL IX
K
ick-starting a new horror fran-
was interesting to me, and I think, because we have
does this work?” When Netflix entered the conversa-
is an abundance of “fucks” in the movie. I did a
the trilogy, we were able to break that open and let
tion, right away it was like, “This is what we’re going
‘fuck pass’ when I was going through my director’s
the characters try to fight back and win in a different
to do, and this is how we’re going to do it.” They were
guide—I had something like 15 “fucks” in a scene. I
way. I was also interested in finding characters that
so excited. I don’t know why, but it just clicked. So, for
remember I got a call from someone at the studio
normally would get killed off right away and letting
me, it was a dream. I feel very happy about the week
who was watching the dailies. They were like, “Um,
them live beyond that first 20 minutes, let alone
between each film, because I think that it still makes
so do you think that sometimes you could shoot an
movie to movie. That was very important to me.
it an event. Plus, you don’t have to wait too long,
alt version?”
because I hate waiting too. Originally, these films were going to come out
We were shooting 1978 last, and I remember we were all so tired at this point. I swear it felt like I was
monthly in the theaters. What does it mean to
How important was it for you to make these
only saying, “More blood.” Everything is covered in
you to have them out over three consecutive
films as bloody and as scary as they turned out
blood in that movie. I was just like, “I can’t.” It was
weekends instead?
to be?
reflecting this place where I was inside.
I love going to the movie theater, so it was person-
I had some personal rules: the films have to be
ally a little heartbreaking. Also, I’m coloring it for
edgy; they have to feel cool. They have to feel like
What did you do when you wrapped?
the movie theater, and I’m mixing it for the movie
movies that I would want to watch now, at my age,
When I first got home to L.A., I had a few days
theater. But truth be told, there was something very
but also if you’re 13, 14, and thinking, I shouldn’t be
before post started, and I was just in a fog, thinking
exciting about Netflix insofar as they have proven
watching this, but I’m going to.
like, “Wait—I don’t need to drink 10 cold brews a
that they’re the ones on the cutting edge and can figure out how we do this new thing.
There were various conversations earlier in the
day? What’s happening?” But after two years of
development stage where people said, “Well, does
working on Fear Street, I’m ready to get back to
it have to be this bloody?” And I was like, “Yeah, it
work. I’m actually going to shoot two episodes of
we would get to the point where we figured out how
does.” These are slasher movies. It’s not a haunted
HBO’s The Staircase, which Antonio Campos is
to properly release them theatrically. But I don’t
house movie. The characters need to speak how
doing. I’m excited to go back on set and just reset
know that we ever really got to that place of, “How
teenagers speak. Although, I will say that there
my brain.
At the time, we were all crossing our fingers that
★
“I HAD SOME PERSONAL RULES: THE FILMS HAVE TO BE EDGY; THEY HAVE TO FEEL COOL. THEY HAVE TO FEEL LIKE MOVIES THAT I WOULD WANT TO WATCH NOW, AT MY AGE, BUT ALSO IF YOU’RE 13, 14.” DEADLINE.COM
61
D I S R U P T O R S
CJ ENTERTAINMENT How the Korean company that produced Parasite is cutting a swathe of innovation and representation throughout the industry
fter years of growing one of the
movies that landed in the Top 10 that year. Among
is eyeing 8 million paid global subscribers by 2023. A
world’s strongest local entertain-
them, Parasite, which it produced.
further priority will be placed on K-pop to produce
ment industries with high-quality
CJ ENM, which is also behind Fox’s I Can See Your
more competition shows outside of Korea.
product, a sophisticated audience
Voice, is Korea’s foremost film and television studio,
The Vice Chairwoman of CJ, Miky Lee, is one of
and a box office that consistently
cable operator and music producer. Eyeing a bigger
the key drivers of the expansion and one of the most
ranks among the Top 5 international markets,
role on the world stage, it recently committed to
powerful female executives in the business. Lee is
South Korea seemed to suddenly burst into global
investing more than 5 trillion won ($4.5 billion) in
mainly responsible for the overall strategic direction
consciousness with Bong Joon-ho’s smash 2019
content creation over the next five years.
and management of CJ ENM, alongside her brother,
hit Parasite. This was the first-ever foreign language
In announcing the investment, CEO Kang Ho
Jay Lee, who is the chairman of CJ Corporation. She
film to win the Best Picture Oscar, as well as,
Sung said CJ will “compete with global platform and
founded ENM in 1994, after being one of the early
shockingly, the first time the country scored an
media powerhouses”.
investors in DreamWorks, and since then, the com-
International Feature nomination, much less a prize. Hollywood execs, box office watchers, and
Not that it wasn’t already a player outside of
pany has built such influential divisions as exhibition
Korea. In 2020, CJ made a strategic investment in
giant CJ CGV, which has cinemas in China, Indonesia,
festival curators have long had their eyes on Korea,
David Ellison’s Skydance Media, whose TV division is
Myanmar, Turkey, Vietnam and the U.S.; as well as
but even with such confirmed talent as Bong (who
adapting 2019 Korean fantasy drama Hotel del Luna
cable network CJ Media, and Mnet Media, which
made cult hit Snowpiercer in 2013 and Netflix’s Okja
as a series. This past May, it partnered with HBO Max
includes cable music television, music distribution
in 2017), Park Chan-wook, Lee Chang-dong and Kim
to develop a competition series in Latin America.
and live concerts. Lee also created KCon, a conven-
Ki-duk, mainstream worldwide awareness was not especially rampant. One company that has arguably tipped the scales
CJ also owns leading series producer Studio Dragon, and the plan going forward is to form more production studios specializing in variety shows, film
tion promoting Korean pop music, and produces the country’s largest K-pop awards show. Lee has previously been quoted as saying that
is CJ ENM. In 2019, a local film it released, Extreme
and animation, and to enter into further partnerships
facilitating the worldwide explosion of Korean pop
Job, grossed more than Avengers: Endgame in the
with content creators in the U.S., Europe and Asia.
culture is a role she was born to play. “I’m happy to
market. It also had three of the total four Korean
The company’s streaming platform affiliate, Tving,
be the bridge, just walk over me.”
62
DEADLINE.COM
★
N EO N/ E V ER E T T/AP
A
BY NANCY TARTAGLIONE
FRANCES MCDORMAND She is a woman of few words, and clearly not an actor who feels the need for ego gratification through public attention. But when she speaks, people
McDormand then became a producer of Nomadland, signing on to star, which helped to empower writer/director Chloe Zhao, who became only the
listen. With two words —”inclusion rider”—during her 2018 Oscar acceptance
second woman ever to win Best Director. The film, which shone a light on a
speech for Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri, McDormand sent
disenfranchised group, also won Best Picture and brought McDormand her
Hollywood scrambling to their phones to google what it meant. They soon
third Oscar. McDormand will next star with Denzel Washington in Joel Coen’s
learned she was referring to the guarantee of a level of diversity in casting
The Tragedy of Macbeth, and will produce and star in Women Talking, directed
and production staff. Thus, her words paved the way for the town to lean in
and scripted by Sarah Polley. Based on the 2018 novel by Miriam Toews, and
on making much-needed change, and the notion of the inclusion rider caught
inspired by a recent events, it tells the story of a group of women in a Bolivian
on quickly.
Mennonite colony dealing with systemic sexual abuse. —Mike Fleming Jr. ★ DEADLINE.COM
63
64
DEADLINE.COM
D I S R U P T O R S
BRUNA PAPANDREA Break up the boys’ club, share the risk, trust your instincts: the producer behind TV’s biggest hits explains why her female-focused shows are defying expectations
BY DIANA LODDERHOSE
T
he global pandemic may have brought
thriller Gone Girl and Cheryl Strayed’s memoir
the world to a standstill, but it didn’t
Wild. When working with Reese Witherspoon at
stop hitmaker Bruna Papandrea from
their company Pacific Standard, they earmarked
plowing ahead with her bustling
Big Little Lies from Aussie writer Lianne Moriarty.
production slate. The Australian-
Running from 2017 to 2019, the show went on
born producer was set to begin shooting Toni
to become a huge hit for HBO, with a stellar
Colette starrer Pieces of Her in Vancouver, Nine
cast including Witherspoon, Kidman, Shailene
Perfect Strangers with Nicole Kidman in L.A. and
Woodley and Zoë Kravitz, spawning two series
Anatomy of a Scandal in London, when COVID-19
and winning eight Emmys.
descended upon the world last year. Undeterred, tenacious and a decisive
Since setting up Made Up Stories in 2017, Papandrea has continued to put women at the
problem-solver, Papandrea was able to pivot the
center of projects, proving to the industry bigwigs
productions of Pieces of Her and Nine Perfect
that her hits aren’t just anomalies: women are
Strangers, convincing cast and crew of both
bankable and audiences will come again and
projects to relocate to Australia’s relatively
again to watch them. Her company produced
Covid-free east coast (Anatomy of a Scandal later
last year’s captivating thriller The Undoing. The
finished in London) for the many months much
Kidman and Hugh Grant starrer became one of
of the world was in lockdown. For Papandrea,
the most watched TV series of 2020 and the first
whose company Made Up Stories has offices in
show in HBO’s history to grow weekly over the
L.A.—where she lives with her producer husband
course of six episodes. She also produced Eric
and eight-year-old twins—and Sydney, this quick
Bana vehicle The Dry, as well as Penguin Bloom
swivel to her homeland is a perfect example of
with Naomi Watts—both of which proved to be
how her ability to get things done has earned her
big hits at the Australian box office—and she has
a spot as one of the most dynamic producers in
more than a half-dozen projects in production at
the television and film business.
any given time.
Papandrea is perhaps best known for championing female-led stories, and she has
I sat down to talk with Papandrea via Zoom while she was quarantining in a Toronto hotel,
a remarkable instinct for optioning novels that
having flown there from Australia to work on
are going to click with international audiences
another high-profile project—Netflix thriller
on screen, such as Gillian Flynn’s best-selling
Luckiest Girl Alive, starring Mila Kunis. DEADLINE.COM
65
You’re across so many successful projects
I hear you're quite a ferocious and fast reader.
that I’m here is because there’s a movie that I’ve
in both film and TV right now, but this is no
More so before I had two children. But yes, I am. I
been developing for seven years—probably the
overnight success story. How did you start in
certainly don’t read as much as I did in my twenties.
longest thing I’ve ever had— called Luckiest Girl Alive
the business?
But, again, if I love something, I can’t stop. I don’t
that is shooting out here. Then I have another show
I've always had jobs since I was around 13 years old
tend to read as much for pleasure anymore, but I
going in Atlanta that’s taken six years to get off the
and I exposed myself to a lot of things, from acting
do find that I get a lot of pleasure from reading the
ground—Long Slow Exhale— which is an incredible
to writing to law. My real entry into film was that
stuff we get sent.
show from showrunner Pam Veasey. Now, these
as an assistant at a commercials company run by
What about genre? You seem to have recently
or The Undoing had—a lot of things do happen
cinematographer Dion Beebe and his wife. I ended
gravitated to a lot of thrillers. What do you
really fast for us—but they’ve really restored my
I had a playwright friend who recommended me
two things did not have the train that Big Little Lies
up going there producing commercials. I was very
think is it about these types of stories that
belief that the landscape can shift. Sometimes
young, around 24 at the time, and it was what
draws you to them?
you need another piece, or an actor comes in—in
got me into the film business, because with that
I gravitate more towards things that I want to watch
this case it’s Mila Kunis, who has been an amazing
money I funded my own short film and then started
as I get older. I love a mystery. I grew up on Fatal
producing partner, and a real force of nature to help
making low-budget films.
Attraction, Malice, The Parallax View, lots of thrillers.
get Luckiest Girl Alive into production. So, I feel quite
I love that genre. Someone said to me recently,
emboldened right now because I have these two
“You’re such a crime buff,” but I don’t really listen
things that I’ve lived with for so long and it’s hard
point in your career?
to crime podcasts or anything like that. I have a
because you feel such a responsibility to the novels.
My big break absolutely was right after I made
bit of an aversion to very violent things. I try not to
There have been things I’ve given up on, but there
my first movie, Better Than Sex, in Australia for
do things where children are in too much jeopardy.
are some things I won’t give up.
$900,000, and I met Anthony Minghella at the
There are certain things that I don’t want to explore
Toronto Film Festival. That was really my big, life-
myself. But there are areas that I’ve targeted. I
What’s the landscape looking like out there for
changing career break, because then I went to work
love grounded sci-fi. I loved Arrival, for instance, I
female-driven content?
with him and Sydney Pollack [in London], which
thought it was just extraordinary, and I wished I had
There’s still an amazing double standard in the
was the best break anyone could hope for—they
made that movie. So, we’ve been searching and
business when it comes to women. I don’t know
were such good men, such good humans. I didn’t
searching, and finally we found this book To Sleep
how many times I’ve heard, “Well, we have one of those in development anyway.” I always say, “So?”
finish college, and I like to think of that as my film
in a Sea of Stars by Christopher Paolini, which we’re
school, working for those two men. It was there
developing. It ticked all the boxes: young female
But it’s a good reminder, because that’s my job to
that I really honed my love of adaptation, because—
lead, big sci-fi world, but also incredibly moving.
find a way to produce it. We all need reminders, but
obviously—Anthony was such a great adapter of
it’s quite disheartening at times.
books. Everything really took off for me after those
Has making stories with strong female leads
five years.
always been intentional or is it just what you’re
Do you think the needle is moving?
drawn to?
Yeah, I think it is moving. It’s moving a lot more in
You’ve got such a good eye for adapting
When I started Pacific Standard with Reese, we
television than it is in film. Television has always
content. There's Big Little Lies, Gone Girl and
were very determined to put women in front of
been slightly more groundbreaking. Even going
Nine Perfect Strangers, to name only a few.
the camera. Then when I started Made Up Stories,
back to David E. Kelley’s show Ally McBeal. I think
What are you really looking for when you’re
I really thought about extending that mission. It
you can make and discover people in TV, you can
scouting material?
doesn't have to be a female lead, but I just want
reflect more of the world we live in on TV. But even
I always tell the women who work with me, “Listen
the females to have great roles. It can be a female
in TV it's getting harder, because there is this slight
to your instinct and respond the way you always
author or someone behind the camera. We’ve
corporatization going on, obviously, with all these
respond to something.” For me, it’s always
definitely focused on female novelists, writers
brands aligning. We’ve stayed agnostic in terms
character-driven, kind of genre-agnostic, but it has
and filmmakers being able to tell any story they
of being able to work with everyone, because you
to feel unique. When we can compare something
want. But as much as there’s been a groundswell
need to. We have a big and diverse appetite, and we
to something else, it's not as interesting to us. The
for female stories, it’s still hard. I don’t care what
want to be able to work with lots of different people.
worst question you get asked is, “What’s it like?”
anyone says, it’s still harder to sell a period piece
For me, the biggest success is when you can make
with a woman at the center than it is with a man
something that feels distinctive in terms of the
at the center. Apparently, men can still do anything
the business, but what about earlier on in your
world, the characters, and the filmmaking. I don’t
they want! I’m very lucky and I’m very optimistic,
career? Did you have any moments where you
You’ve spoken a bit about recent challenges in
use a book scout like most people. The writing
but I have sensed myself in the last year getting
felt things weren’t happening because you’re
either holds me or it doesn’t. Wild was such a great
more and more agitated when I see another World
a woman?
example of this, because Cheryl Strayed is such
War II movie with a man at the center, or something
I get asked that question a lot. No, because I think
an extraordinary writer. She just captivates you
like that.
with her words. Lots of people could have written
There is still this perception from studios and
that story, but it wouldn’t have been the story she
networks that female-driven projects are an
it’s the Australian in me. We have a woman who’s our producing partner in Australia called Jodi Matterson, who is unbelievable—she’s just good
told. For me, it’s all about that. I definitely have
anomaly. If you look at The Queen’s Gambit, it’s
at everything. When you come up through the
a strong instinct as to what to pay attention to.
an anomaly. If you take Wonder Woman, it’s an
Australian system, you have to understand how
Recently, we lost a book that I didn’t read myself,
anomaly. Every time it happens it's still as hard to
to finance and how to find material, and you have
and I was kicking myself because I was very busy
get the next thing up and going as it was before—
to understand how to make it, because there’s no system of development, there’s no big U.S.
and something in me said, “You should have read it.”
and I’m not sure when that will change. But the
And I didn’t listen to that instinct. But you win some
good thing about us is that we don’t give up. For
hierarchy. But I’m very scrappy. I still book my own
and you lose some.
instance, I’m here in Toronto, and part of the reason
travel, set up email accounts for the company, that
66
DEADLINE.COM
QU I N N J ON ES /AF F- USA .COM / M EGA /V IN C E VAL I T U T T I/ H U LU/ N E T F LI X / EV E R ET T/ N I CO TAV E R N IS E /H BO
What would you say has been a real turning
NOVEL IDEAS Clockwise, from above: Grace Van Patten with Nicole Kidman in Nine Perfect Stangers; Naomi Watts in Penguin Bloom; Hugh Grant and Kidman in The Undoing.
”I DON'T CARE WHAT ANYONE SAYS, IT'S STILL HARDER TO SELL A PERIOD PIECE WITH A WOMAN AT THE CENTER THAN IT IS WITH A MAN AT THE CENTER. APPARENTLY, MEN CAN STILL DO ANYTHING THEY WANT! I'M VERY LUCKY AND I'M VERY OPTIMISTIC, BUT I HAVE SENSED MYSELF IN THE LAST YEAR GETTING MORE AND MORE AGITATED WHEN I SEE ANOTHER WORLD WAR II MOVIE WITH A MAN AT THE CENTER.“ DEADLINE.COM
67
for this pipeline. Once we were firmly established there, we started the conversation about shooting Pieces of Her in Australia, which Netflix helped us pivot to do. With Anatomy, we finished that show in London, although it broke my heart not to be on set and work with my lifelong producer friend Liza [Chasin]. I’m just happy that things kept moving really fast. You’ve worked with Nicole Kidman on Big Little Lies, The Undoing and Nine Perfect Strangers. Why do you two work so well together? You know how if you have one really good experience then you want to do it again? Well, that’s the first part. We had known each other for 20 years. We tried to work together, and came close a couple of times. I almost got involved in Rabbit Hole years ago. Then Big Little Lies came along, and when I found out the book was Australian, I thought, “Oh my God, this is it.” And then she read it, and loved it, and we had two seasons of that show. Then David [E. Kelley] wrote The Undoing for her, and they invited me onto it because we’re a bit MODERN GURU Nicole Kidman as the unhinged retreat leader Masha in Nine Perfect Strangers.
of a team. When Nine Perfect Strangers came along, we decided to align with Lianne [Moriarty] again.
Where I’m very passionate is trying to find women
There’s an ease to it all. But, yes, I think we’ve pretty
I come from a very working class, very poor family.
roles not just in directing, but other roles, like a
much worked consistently for five years together
I’ve always worked. I’m not afraid to take risks,
female transport captain, or a female gaffer. It’s not
at this point. We’re producing Roar for Apple TV+
because if it all went away, I’d be fine. I don’t tend
just about the directors.
to let financial decisions dictate my choices, and
together, and we have other things, so let’s see what happens.
I think that liberates you, in a way. I’ve never let
Let’s talk about the impact Covid has had on
I have the same thing with Naomi Watts, who
anyone else make my decisions for me.
your business in the last 18 months. You guys
has been my friend for even longer. We looked for
were about to shoot several projects in North
a long time for something to work together on.
America and the UK and then had to relocate
We came close so many times, and then, finally,
one was gifting me a movie, but when I was on
to Australia.
we made Penguin Bloom last year together. But I
movies that men got put on, they somehow felt I
We were actually three days from shooting Pieces
want to do more with her. It’s becomes that repeat
wasn’t experienced enough, or it was a favor. You
of Her in Vancouver. We were eight weeks from
business. You know, we feel like we haven’t been
still feel a lot of that kind of 'club at work' situation,
Anatomy of a Scandal in London, and about three
successful people if people don’t want to work with us again.
But one thing I did find early on in my career is there was still this idea of jobs for the boys. No
particularly in the film business. The business I really
from Nine Perfect Strangers—three different shows
want to be in is making really big movies. I’d make a
on the precipice. And pretty early on, in March or
Marvel movie in three seconds. That would excite
April [of last year], we all saw this wasn’t going to be
Penguin Bloom was a huge success in Australia
me as something I haven’t done.
great. I was talking to Nicole [Kidman] one day and
earlier this year. As well as The Dry, which
was like, “What are we going to do?” Then, because
you produced, starring Eric Bana. They both
You’re employing women, you’re working with
we both have such deep roots in Australia, it felt
topped the box office there.
women, you’re empowering female stories
like the perfect show to keep people safe, because
And The Dry is the most male movie I’ve ever made!
and creating jobs for all these women in the
it was essentially shot on one location. We sent a
I did laugh. But that goes to Jane Harper [author of The Dry], whose stories are mostly very male-driven.
industry and you’re also an ambassador for
location scout out to Australia to see what was
ReFrame. Why is it important to you to be
there. Then it became about convincing this entire
She writes incredibly, and that’s the big factor for us
involved in something like this?
cast to go to Australia for six months, because,
when we meet voices like that. The whole thing was
ReFrame is a think tank that was started by Women
once you’re there, you can’t just run off and do
an incredible experience.
in Film and Sundance Institute, where a bunch of
other things.
It's been incredible to watch people embrace
us identified core problems with women in the
People were either bringing their families
The Dry outside of Australia as well. The media
industry, such as female directors who couldn’t
with them, or leaving people behind. We had no
and the critics have embraced it. That movie
get their second feature off the ground. It’s those
resistance at all, because people just saw this
is particularly special to me, because Robert
female filmmakers who made one great movie, and
as a great blessing, to be able to work again. But
Connolly, who wrote and directed it, gave me a big
then were lost because they didn't get the studio
it was very stressful all the same. We were very
break when I was starting out. He was an amazing
movies. A group of us women are also mentoring
determined not to lay anyone off in our own
producer in Australia—he made one of my favorite
one of the schemes. It’s a great organization
company or reduce wages, so we were focusing
movies, The Boys—and he got offered Better Than Sex to produce, but he was too busy. So, he told me
that developed the ReFrame stamp, which
on how to keep the company afloat. Thank god for
demonstrates gender-balanced hiring, and people
our business—people that obviously kept watching
to go and make it, and that movie was my career-
feel this sense of pride if they can get that stamp.
content during lockdown, so there was a necessity
starter. It’s nice to come full circle, 20 years later.
68
DEADLINE.COM
V IN C E VA LI T U T T I /H U LU/J OR DAN ST RAUSS /AP
kind of thing. I’m not afraid to not succeed, because
Is it important for you to keep making these Australian stories? Yes, for sure. Jennifer Kent’s movie, The Nightingale, was one of those. Even though it was very tough, she is obviously an extraordinary filmmaker, and that story is hugely important to Australian history. I definitely want to make them, but in a way that will capture international audiences. We’re doing one of Amazon’s first global originals for TV—The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart. This book, written by
RIAN JOHNSON AND RAM BERGMAN
Holly Ringland, is one of the most beautiful pieces
How the creative team behind Knives Out proved
of literature I’ve ever seen come out of Australia. Sigourney Weaver is going to star in it and it’s just
to be the sharpest tools in the box
going to be amazing.
BY DAMON WISE
You’re working with all the major streamers— Netflix, Amazon, Apple TV+, Hulu, Peacock. Would you ever consider signing an overall deal with one of them? Many of your contemporaries have done this. Never say never. I take every year at a time, but the way that I've always wanted to set up our business is with as much autonomy as possible. And, for us, the relationship with Endeavour Content has been really good, because they believe in us. Together, we have financial skin in the game, and we match them cent for cent. When it’s your responsibility and you think hard about decisions, you’re able to pursue your passion. So, that partnership has been good. Yes, we’ve been approached over the years, but it hasn’t felt right, because right now we’re working with all of these amazing companies. What I don’t want to ever happen is that the pressure to have a volume of content that trumps the quality. Who inspires you in this business?
Rian Johnson and Ram Bergman’s journey to the
last roles). The budget this time was $40 million
I saw the documentary on Jane Fonda recently and
Star Wars universe began at a film festival that
and returned a global gross north of $311 million,
she’s had, like, five lives. She was an activist before
now seems far, far away—Sundance 2005, where
but Johnson and Bergman’s T-Street Productions
anyone was an activist. She was producing, she was
Johnson made his feature debut in the US Dramatic
retained the rights, which were available on a picture-
acting, she did loads. I am really inspired by women
Competition with Brick. Starring Joseph Gordon-
by-picture basis. In March, it was announced that,
who use their voice for change.
Levitt and inspired by the ’30s/’40s hardboiled
after a fierce but low-key auction involving all the
crime novels of Dashiell Hammett and James M.
streaming majors, parts two and three of the Knives
Julianne Moore is one of those women, she stood so firmly against gun violence. Laura Dern has
Cain, the jive-talking noir thriller, set in a small-town
Out franchise had gone to Netflix for an eye-popping
been an activist her whole life. I love the women
high school, stood out a mile from its indie peers.
$450 million.
who have been self-starters, like Phoebe Waller-
Produced by Ram Bergman on a shoestring budget
Johnson and Bergman did not hang around; as
Bridge, because, where I come from, I didn’t have
of $450,000, Brick won Johnson the year’s Special
lockdown in Europe began to ease, the pair began
the easy path, and it’s hard to find those access
Jury Prize for Originality of Vision.
pre-production in Belgrade, Serbia, planning to shoot
points to the industry.
Originality would become a keyword for future
interiors locally and exteriors in Greece. The second
The women that rise to run those corporations,
Bergman-Johnson joints, from 2008’s stylish con
time around, big names have not been hard to net,
NBCUniversal’s Susan Rovner or Amazon’s Jennifer
caper The Brothers Bloom, to 2012’s time-twisting
with Dave Bautista, Edward Norton, Kate Hudson
Salke, they inspire me because it’s hard to get to
sci-fi Looper, and 2017’s critically acclaimed but
and Leslie Odom Jr. signing on. But the funny thing
those positions, because it has traditionally been
fanboy-frustrating Star Wars: The Last Jedi. But it
is, Johnson and Bergman managed to beat the
a very male-driven business. Sherry Lansing has
was 2019’s surprise smash Knives Out that took the
Hollywood system at its own game without even
always been what I see as one of the first women to
industry by surprise. Reprising Johnson’s interest in
meaning to try. Speaking just before the release
do it. Kathleen Kennedy, of course, is an inspiration.
mystery thrillers—owing a debt this time to Britain’s
of the original Knives Out, Johnson almost said as
My dearly lost friend Alli Shearmur was probably
Queen of Crime Agatha Christie—it starred Daniel
much: “I’ve never thought in terms of sequels to any
one of my greatest inspirations. She showed me
Craig as detective Benoit Blanc, investigating an
movies I’ve made,” he said, “but the idea of doing
that you can be a great human being, have a family,
all-star cast (Chris Evans, Jamie Lee Curtis, Michael
another Benoit Blanc mystery, in a new location, with
do all of those things and run a studio. To this day, I
Shannon, Don Johnson et al) over the death of a
a new cast, treating it like Agatha Christie would treat
often think of what she would say to me. ★
famous author (Christopher Plummer in one of his
another book—that just seems like a blast.” ★ DEADLINE.COM
69
D I S R U P T O R S
LARRY TANZ How Netflix’s VP of Original Series for EMEA is radically expanding the streamer’s web of inclusivity
major driving force behind breaking language barri-
Eisner’s digital studio
ers with its strong European offerings and has had
Vuguru in 2014 to head
a string of hit titles crossover and connect with U.S.
up its content acquisition
audiences. French mystery thriller Lupin, starring
in Europe, the streamer’s regional presence was no
Omar Sy, became the first French series to make it
more than a little townhouse on a canal in Amster-
into Netflix’s top ten list in the U.S. and ranked num-
dam. Seven years and one pandemic later, the exec,
ber one in various territories, reaching a reported
who is now VP of Original Series for EMEA, is making
76 million viewers. Spanish drama La Casa de Papel,
shows in 20 different countries, with people on the
better known as Money Heist, was gobbled up by
ground in London, Madrid, Berlin, Rome and Paris to
international audiences during lockdown, reaching
name a few.
65 million viewers and spawning five series. German
“It’s just an entire transformation,” says Tanz,
70
DEADLINE.COM
Indeed, it has. Netflix is now reputed for being a
Tanz from Michael
programs such as big-budget neo-noir Babylon
speaking via Zoom from a hotel in Paris. “Back then,
Berlin and sci-fi thriller Dark have captivated global
we weren’t even doing original content outside of
audiences, with the latter becoming the streamer’s
the U.S. and we were just starting our U.S. original
third most-watched international series in America.
content. It’s just been amazing journey.”
Meanwhile, French comedy Call My Agent! crossed
N E T FLI X
W
hen Netflix lured Larry
BY DIANA LODDERHOSE
“LOCAL AUTHENTICITY IS IMPORTANT TO US. IT SHOULDN’T FEEL LIKE SOMEONE FROM OUTSIDE CAME INTO YOUR CULTURE AND MADE A SHOW IN YOUR COUNTRY.” borders and has several remakes for the program in
and attracting new ones is largely dependent upon
forward to developing content in? “The one I’m
the offing.
aligning themselves with the best local production
very excited about right now is Russia,” he says,
teams in each territory.
pointing to ANNA K, a contemporary reimagining
“What we’re seeing as we become more local and closer to the local creative communities with
“The way that we can be most effective is by
of Leo Tolstoy’s iconic novel Anna Karenina. It’s
local executives, is that we just get better at making
being on the ground, commissioning and building
Netflix’s first-ever Russian original drama series and
shows that are more specific and more relevant,
relationships with producers,” says Tanz. “It’s
the streamer will partner with Moscow-based 1-2-3
and so we’ve seen all of these big successes like
interesting because in Europe, the Middle East and
Production for the project.
Lupin,” says Tanz. “So, it’s really about that evolution
Africa, it’s a different approach to making content
we’ve had of going from a little townhouse, making
than in the U.S. We really partner with producers
Tanz says, “There’s so much enthusiasm and energy
and commissioning shows out of LA, to specific
on a creative level and we’re not making all of these
around tapping into their great, great storytelling
country teams and offices commissioning local
shows ourselves. We are actually making them with
tradition. There’s so much we can do there and we
shows locally.”
great local producers. It’s a much different relation-
heard so many great pitches and met so many great writers and producers.”
Having recently returned from a trip to Russia,
The expansion has been striking to say the least,
ship from the traditional Hollywood studio model
and captive audiences during the pandemic tapped
where you sort of do everything yourself. Here, it’s
into the fact that Netflix’s library was much deeper
quite the opposite. We’re entirely working with local
ecosystem, which saw a huge increase in appetite
than a mere glance at the recommended titles list.
producers, so we rely on them for the execution
for content in the wake of the pandemic, but Tanz
Global viewing of non-English titles by Netflix mem-
but also for help in sourcing and developing great
says this infrastructure has been a real plus in terms
bers doubled in 2020 compared to the previous
creative ideas.”
of Netflix entering the space in that consumers in
year. Suddenly, it seemed there was a whole new slate for audiences to binge-watch. Tanz is proud that the international success of
Additionally, Tanz feels a responsibility to con-
Russia has an extremely dynamic local VOD
the territory understand the streaming business.
tribute to regional infrastructure when making local
“It’s really hard to explain streaming to new markets
content. He points to upcoming multilingual period
and help people figure out how to get it on their TV
these titles has been driven by the performance of
mystery-horror series 1899, which is made by Dark
and all of the groundwork that you might have to
local content in its own market. That, he says, has
creators Jantje Friese and Baran bo Odar (the duo
lay in another market, say, like some of the markets
been a key objective for developing Netflix’s EMEA
inked a significant overall deal with Netflix in 2018
in the Middle East. But in Russia you don’t have to
content. “When we’re making or commissioning
that sees them exclusively create projects for the
do that and it’s a big advantage. We’re happy to
these shows, we’re really almost explicitly saying,
streamer for an initial five-year period). The show
compete head-to-head based on our content. I
don’t make us a Spanish show for the world, don’t
was filmed at Studio Babelsberg in Germany on
think our global catalogue is what differentiates us
make us a Turkish show for the world, and definitely
a brand new, state-of-the-art ‘virtual production’
there and the local content we’re just about to start
not for the U.S. Make it so that it’s going to be the
facility known as a ‘Volume’. The 4,500sqft stage
producing there.”
best show for the local market, like Germany or
is similar to the technology used on Disney’s The
France,” he says, emphasizing the importance of
Mandalorian and is surrounded by an LED backdrop
precipice of the streaming wars, Tanz is optimistic
authenticity of local stories in their marketplace.
that is rendered in a video game engine (Unreal
about the future and remains thoughtful about
“For example, we have a show called Snabba Cash
Engine) in real time, moving with the camera to
where the next wave of creative voices will come
from Sweden,” says Tanz. “It’s an awesome show
create a realistic background and sky that creates
from. “We feel good that we’re running in the right
and when we first looked at it, we thought, OK, how
the illusion of shooting outdoors and across
direction,” he says. “It’s not a ‘winner takes all’
can this show travel? But then we got into it, and
different locations. It’s ground-breaking tech that
game for us. When we look at the total share of all
we thought, let’s just make this show the best show
also reduces the post-production process. Netflix
of entertainment and TV viewing, we’re kind of a
ever in Sweden, and it’s been a huge success for us
backed the project along with various sources
small piece of it, so there’s a lot of room for multiple
there. But it also happened to get watched outside
including the Investment Bank of Brandenburg, and
players to grow.” He adds: “There’s a lot of demand
of Sweden as well. I’d say that that is one important
also committed to shoot multiple series on the
for great stories and what excites me about that is
North Star for us: local impact and local authentic-
stage. “It’s a good example of how we can enable
we have an opportunity in this region in particular
ity. It shouldn’t feel like someone from outside came
creators to do their best work and their most
to help build and develop the next generation of
into your culture and made a show in your country.”
ambitious work but also contribute to the local
storytellers. And we can do that from the ground up
ecosystem,” he says.
in a diverse and inclusive way. We don’t have that
This ethos is a major factor for how Tanz and his team have approached growth in the EMEA region.
And while Netflix has solid footprints in major
And while the content industry sits on the
issue Hollywood does about people getting seats at
He’s honest and humble enough to admit that
European markets such as Spain, France and
the table. We’re building tables with seats that we
Netflix can’t do it alone and pleasing its members
Germany, what market is Tanz most looking
get to help fill up.”
★ DEADLINE.COM
71
D I S R U P T O R S partnership with Sony, inking a two-year first-look deal to develop scripted TV series. It has a slate of film and series projects in with Netflix. The first of
EBONY LIFE MEDIA
Tired of being ignored by the Western and European media, Mo Abudu came up with a comprehensive plan to put African news and culture on the world map
BY JAKE KANTER
miered last October, while the slate also includes an adaptation of Death and the King’s Horseman from Nobel Prize-winning playwright Wole Soyinka, who just so happened to be Abudu’s very first guest on Moments with Mo. EbonyLife is working with AMC Studios on Nigeria 2099, a futuristic story of a Lagos police officer who becomes embroiled in a global conspiracy after being assigned to protect a visiting American businessman. The company also boasts a co-production deal with Jada Pinkett Smith and Will Smith’s Westbrook Studios for at least two series and one film. On top of all this, EbonyLife is lighting up the Nigerian box office with the highest-grossing movies of all time locally, including The Wedding Party and its sequel—both of which are streaming on Netflix. “Every single thing we’ve done, we’ve had to fight like hell to get them done,” Abudu says, reflecting on the “three levels of discrimination”
o Abudu attempted to crack
back-and-forth between the two countries, which
she faces as a Black, African woman. She breaks
Hollywood for years, but her
share a time zone), but her career took off in the
down EbonyLife’s storytelling vision into four
steely belief that the world
latter and she rose to become the head of HR
genres: Afro-history, which is where the Sony
needed to hear African stories
at oil company ExxonMobil. Abudu grew tired of
Dahomey Warriors series hails from; Afro-futurism,
was met with resounding
corporate life and cut her teeth as an entrepreneur
illustrated by Nigeria 2099; Afro-impact, which
silence. Emails went unanswered, leads from a trip
by launching an HR consultancy service before
involves telling contemporary African stories like
to Los Angeles quickly went cold. Abudu, a megas-
making her move into entertainment.
Òlòturé; and, finally, Afro-politan, which gives voice
tar in Nigeria with her own chat show and TV
The dramatic career switch was no small
to the everyday lives of Africans and has delivered
network, grew frustrated. Then, one day, her Lagos
matter in a country where work in the energy
office got a call from a Sony Pictures Television
industry is considered a job for life. But then Abudu
sales executive wanting to sell Abudu’s network,
considers herself a disruptor by nature. “One thing
hunger for authentic local stories, her hard work
EbonyLife TV, an international television format. It
that disruptors have going for them is that they’re
paying off at exactly the right time. “If you want
proved to be her Sidney Lumet moment. “I said to
very passionate about the things that they do,”
me to watch your stuff,” she reasons, “then why
my head of programming, ‘Tell him we’re not effing
she says during a Zoom call from Nigeria. “And
don’t you respect me a little bit more, and take
interested in any bloody format! I’m sick and tired
they have the ability to persuade, positively, and
the time to watch stories about me and about my
of someone trying to ram all these stories down
convince people around them that they’re making
continent? That’s why I’m grateful to platforms like
our throats. You tell him, we’ve got stories we want
the right decision.”
Netflix because what they’ve done is diversify the
to sell to the world.’ I was really upset,” she recalls.
Using her connections from her time in
hits such as The Wedding Party. Given the global explosion in streaming, and the
viewing audience around the world. And people
Her anger proved to be a turning point.
recruitment, she set out to become a talk show
will tell you that some of the best stories now on
That Sony executive listened, put EbonyLife in
host, taking lessons in presenting in London and
Netflix are not even English-speaking.”
touch with colleagues in LA, and eventually, the
devouring tapes of Oprah Winfrey. By 2008, she
two companies forged a co-development and
had launched Moments with Mo, and 13 years
to LA’s go-to woman for African stories has
production alliance. At the tip of the spear of this
on, she can count the likes of Hillary Clinton and
earned her the moniker ‘The African Oprah’. It’s
agreement was a commitment to develop a major
Christine Lagarde among her guests. Syndicated
not a comparison that she welcomes entirely.
series about the Dahomey Warriors, an all-female
across Africa, the show spawned EbonyLife
“Anything that comes out of Africa, there will
military regiment from the Kingdom of Dahomey in
Studios and Abudu’s mission to bring stories from
always be a Western equivalent of it for people
Western Africa.
the continent to the world.
to understand,” she says. “I respect everything
Although born in London, Abudu’s roots are
That Sony deal has mushroomed into 20
Abudu’s trajectory in television from latecomer
that Oprah has done, but her journey is not my
in Ondo Town, Nigeria. Her childhood was split
projects being in active development with
journey.” As Abudu forges her path, Hollywood is
between the U.K. and Nigeria (even now, she is
American studios. EbonyLife has expanded its
finally listening. ★
“IF YOU WANT ME TO WATCH YOUR STUFF, THEN WHY DON’T YOU RESPECT ME MORE, AND TAKE THE TIME TO WATCH STORIES ABOUT ME AND MY CONTINENT?” —MO ABUDU, EBONYLIFE
72
DEADLINE.COM
COU RT ESY EBON Y LI FE /A M AZO N /M A RVE L ST U D I OS
M
these, human trafficking feature Òlòturé, pre-
MICHAEL B JORDAN Michael B. Jordan grew up in front of the camera
about an athlete caught up in the corrupt Chicago
in the series The Wire and Friday Night Lights, then
justice system—and producing projects including
began his ascent as a movie star with the Ryan
The Liberators, about the all-Black 761st WWII
Coogler-directed Fruitvale Station. Next up, he will
regiment that led the charge to desegregate the
make his directing debut in Creed III. But behind
armed forces in America.
the scenes, he’s making things happen too, as
A film and television overall deal at Amazon,
his Outlier Society production company works to
where he starred in Without Remorse, gives Jordan
empower change.
the opportunity to use an unprecedented sales
One of the first to sign on to an inclusion rider to ensure diversity, Jordan produced and starred
platform to empower others. He has joined forces with former Nike marketing executive Chad Easter-
in Just Mercy, highlighting the work of renowned
ling to create the marketing firm Obsidianworks—a
civil rights attorney Bryan Stevenson to defend the
venture that will bring together companies and
rights of wrongly-convicted prisoners. Jordan is
consumers in the pursuit of authentic representa-
also exec producing 61st Street for AMC—a drama
tion of people of color. —Mike Fleming Jr.
RYAN COOGLER After Black Panther’s $1.3 billion gross estab-
leader Fred Hampton. That film got six Oscar
lished him as a record setter, Ryan Coogler has
nominations, including Best Picture, with Daniel
become an empowering influence in making pro-
Kaluuya winning Best Supporting Actor, and H.E.R
jects happen that lean into diversity. He formed
winning Best Original Song for “Fight for You”.
Proximity with his wife Zinzi Coogler, Sev Ohanian,
Proximity’s next film is the LeBron James-star-
Ludwig Göransson, Archie Davis and Peter Nicks
rer Space Jam: A New Legacy, the sequel that
to create event-driven feature films, television,
releases on Warner Bros. and HBO Max on July
soundtracks and podcasts. Their chosen projects
16, while Coogler is directing the Black Panther
are looking to bring audiences closer together
follow-up, even as he continues a godfathering
through stories involving underrepresented
role in Creed III and Bitter Root. The latter film—an
subjects and voices.
adaptation of the Image Comics series about
Proximity came roaring out of the gate with
monster hunters in 1920s Harlem—will be
Shaka King’s Judas and the Black Messiah, the
directed by Regina King for Legendary.
drama about the life and death of Black Panthers
—Mike Fleming Jr. ★ DEADLINE.COM
73
D I S R U P T O R S
FEMI OGUNS The U.K. agent on repping A-List Black talent, shaking up the established order, and buying a London theater
BY ANDREAS WISEMAN
E
iighteen years ago, Femi Oguns was handing out flyers around London offering youth the chance to learn at the UK’s first ever Black-centric drama school.
Today, Identity School of Acting and sister
agency Identity Agency Group are creative powerhouses. IAG reps dozens of established and emerging stars, including John Boyega, Letitia Wright, Malachi Kirby, Ella Balinska, Melanie Liburd, and Simona Brown. Most of the company’s leading
I think it’s fair to say that the pandemic has had an
to undo the amazing foundations set, we had to
lights trained at Identity School of Acting.
adverse effect on all sectors of the industry and
take classes online. It was extremely daunting,
Identity’s aim from the outset was to increase
beyond, but one thing that has been derived from
but I always say, struggle breathes creativity, and
diversity in an entrenched industry, and to shake up
this, in my experience, is the willingness to adapt
not only has it been a refreshing experience for
a homogenous and establishment system. Oguns
and, in turn, evolve. As a business, these challenging
the students and tutors alike, but it’s also created
wanted to foster an environment where actors
times have shown us how robust a model we have.
an avenue for actors who would never have
would be judged on their merit and ability rather
been able to afford to travel to London or Los Which parts of the business are growing most
Angeles. I’m proud to say we have students from
rapidly at the moment?
all over the world now, from the African continent
the drama school, that the Londoner launched
I can honestly say, hand on heart, every single part,
to China, all sharing and developing with one
an L.A. offshoot in 2018. And that’s not all. In this
whether it’s all down to social global consciousness
another. The only caveat is they all need to speak
chat with the actor-writer turned agent-producer-
that has overridden the financial. Diversity taken
fluent English and have that raw talent. The great
entrepreneur, Oguns reveals he has also recently
seriously has worked in our favor.
news is, the school in London has reopened, Los
Oguns has done just that. So successful was
acquired a London theater as a stage for the company’s talent. Despite his achievements, coming up against
Angeles will reopen in September, and the online Is the agency planning on pivoting to a man-
platform is now here to stay, opening up to a new
agement model?
global audience.
the odds, it could be said that IAG flies under the
We have to remember British agencies have always
radar, especially in Hollywood.
been managers from the inception (well, the good
When you first set out, one of your aims was
ones anyway). It’s only when we join our U.S. part-
to increase diversity in the industry and
ners that we modify our position ever so slightly.
to shake up the existing system. How has
Oguns discusses his journey, the ongoing challenges around representation, and what’s next.
that thinking shaped the curriculum at the A number of the actors on IAG’s roster have
You opened up a drama school in L.A. a few
schools, and how has the curriculum evolved
taken off in recent years. How has their success
years ago. How is that going, and how is the
alongside the industry’s evolution in terms
impacted the agency?
school doing in London? Do you have plans
of representation?
It can only be taken as that constant reminder that
to open any more?
It’s always been at the center since the very start
the sacrifice was well worth it. IAG continues to
It was very scary. After the roaring success of
18 years ago, and the by-product of how effective
cement itself as the leader in the representation of
the opening in Los Angeles, which was capped
it is can be seen in the streams of success com-
diverse and extraordinary talent.
off with a fully-packed audience of industry
ing out of the school. Our curriculum is unique,
professionals all in attendance to celebrate our
effective and progressive.
How is IAG coping during the pandemic? To
first-year anniversary at the Chinese Theatre, we
what extent has business and the bottom line
had to close a couple of months later due to the
IAG could be a prime target for American
been impacted?
pandemic. Thinking on our feet and not wanting
companies looking to expand their overseas
74
DEADLINE.COM
DA N K E NN E DY/COU RT ESY I D EN T I T Y AG EN CY G ROU P
than the color of their skin.
When America sneezes, the rest of the world catches a cold, so I’m not surprised the U.K. has finally put its wheels in motion. There is definitely a steady change happening, but still work to be done. To what extent do you think campains such as #TimesUp and #OscarsSoWhite/ #BAFTASoWhite have had a positive impact on the industry, and to what extent are you feeling enthused now about the work organizations such as BAFTA are doing in the arena of diversity? It has had a major impact. I call it throwing a cold bucket [of water] over the heads of the naysayers to give them a wake-up call. It’s amazing what an ice bucket can do on a hot summer’s day. Even they feel refreshed. We’ve discussed casual racism and stereotyping from certain casting directors in the past. To what extent is that still a problem? If it comes to my doorstep, which it has done in the past, I end up charging the producers twice the amount when they come back to their senses, for wasting my time and theirs. Are there enough gatekeepers from diverse backgrounds in the U.K.? If you have to ask me that question, there presents portfolios. Has there been interest and how
What are you working on at the moment and
long can you hold out?
how much will producing be a part of the mix
Yes, there has. And I don’t hold, I surf!
at IAG going forward?
As your actors become more successful in
I like to think of it as the final piece of the puzzle.
America, they may encounter frustration
Does IAG have private backing or investors?
We have the agency, the school, and now our very
from local actors about ‘Brits taking U.S.
Could it get more investment?
own theater opening this year—the production
roles’ or Brits taking roles about African-
Nope, all self-sufficient.
company was always next. It never made sense to
American experience. To what extent do you
train, then nurture and develop and then not create
understand that frustration?
To what extent have you thought about
content with the artists you’ve gone on a journey
A problem is a problem simply waiting for an
expanding the agency into countries beyond
with. Watch this space.
answer. That’s why I brought Identity School of
the U.S.? Which ones?
the answer!
Acting to the States. For me it was always only
So far, we’ve considered Australia, Canada, China
You’ve spoken before about very closely craft-
about one thing: actors having the correct access
and Africa.
ing John Boyega’s career and trajectory with
to incredible training.
him. To what extent are you still doing that Who are some of the up-and-comers on IAG’s
together and do you take a similar approach
How do you look back on your journey now?
roster who are most exciting right now? Who
with any of your other actors?
You were an actor and writer, but you also
should we be looking out for?
This is a formula not only isolated to one client
handed out flyers in the streets trying to
There are many, but I’ll name only one for now, to
but to all of them. That’s how we get the collective
get people interested in the idea of a drama
avoid a backlash when I go back in the office. So,
result and success.
school. And look what that has become. Does anything stand out that you wish you had
you should watch out for Simone Ashley, the new lead in Bridgerton. You’ve been branching out into producing.
What is your assessment of where the U.K.
done differently?
industry as a whole is today in terms of
You can’t second guess when God has always been
achieving better representation and diversity?
at work. ★
“I’M PROUD TO SAY WE HAVE STUDENTS FROM ALL OVER THE WORLD NOW, FROM THE AFRICAN CONTINENT TO CHINA, ALL SHARING AND DEVELOPING WITH ONE ANOTHER.” DEADLINE.COM
75
D I S R U P T O R S
DAZN
Fighting talk from Chairman Kevin Mayer and Co-CEO James Rushton on the sports streaming service that’s determined to punch above its weight
BY JAKE KANTER DAZN has grown in maturity since 2020, emerging
to stars including Juventus icon Cristiano Ronaldo.
tor, you need only look at two big plays it
from the sticky, sport-free months of the pan-
“It’s a watershed moment that, in 20 years’ time,
has made in recent months. In March, the
demic with a clearer vision and greater determi-
MBA textbooks will be talking about as being one of
global sports streaming platform unseated
nation to dominate. “We are a more mature, more
the key indicators of a paradigm shift in consumer
Comcast-owned Sky as the home of Serie
focused, more intelligent business than we were
habits,” Rushton says of the pact. There were reports that DAZN was interested
A soccer in Italy. A couple of months later, DAZN
a couple of years ago,” Rushton reflects. Elevated
repeated the trick, outpunching Sky again to land a
to acting CEO last year, he says the pandemic has
in making a bid for English Premier League rights
“game-changing” five-year pact with Eddie Hearn’s
given DAZN the opportunity to reset and focus
in the UK before organizers decided to roll over
boxing juggernaut Matchroom for “at least” 16
on its “key drivers”. Central to this was radically
existing deals with Sky, BT Sport, and Amazon
fights a year in the UK and Ireland.
expanding DAZN’s footprint from a handful of
in May. “Would domestic football enhance our
territories, including the U.S., to more than 200
U.K. offering? Of course, you would be naive to
playbook, given the pay-TV operator used major
markets last December after “a few false starts”
think otherwise,” says Rushton. “Does that mean
events like the Premier League as a battering ram
because of coronavirus.
we’d have partaken in a tender if one would have
They are deals ripped straight from the Sky
to establish itself as a market leader. Then owned
Piggybacking on its boxing rights, including
happened? No idea.” So, was DAZN frustrated that
by Rupert Murdoch, Sky was itself a disruptor.
Anthony Joshua vs. Kubrat Pulev and, more
it didn’t even get a look in? “You have to play the
DAZN’s Serie A and Matchroom agreements also
recently, Canelo Alvarez vs. Billy Joe Saunders,
cards that you are dealt,” says Mayer. “If you get
highlight shifting sands in an industry that is rapidly
DAZN has used the global rollout to hoover up user
emotional and frustrated, that’s when you make
lurching towards streaming. Backed by billionaire
data and build a greater understanding of audience
poor decisions. We’re going to take things one
Len Blavatnik’s Access Industries, DAZN thinks it is
demand in different locations. Rushton says this
rights auction at a time.”
well placed to capitalize on this momentum and
has allowed the company to look at global rights
live up to its moniker of the Netflix of sports.
plays in other sports that match the universal
table, and Mayer admits it would be “nice to have”.
appeal of boxing. The data is also enabling DAZN
DAZN has been linked with a bid to acquire current
minding DAZN’s tactics is co-CEO James Rushton.
to place smarter local bets, such as the five-
rights holder BT Sport, which was put up for sale
His chairman is Kevin Mayer, a man who will need
year Matchroom deal in the UK, which gets the
in April. Rushton declines to comment on such
little introduction after launching Disney+ during
streamer access to fighters including Conor Benn
speculation but says it’s “flattering” that DAZN
a decorated career at Disney. Mayer also had a
and Katie Taylor.
is considered part of the conversation. Premier
To borrow a soccer analogy, the coach master-
brief spell as the boss of TikTok last year before
Rushton is coy about what rights the company
The Premier League is not completely off the
League rights are also due for renewal in the U.S.,
Donald Trump tried, but ultimately failed, to block
will be pursuing next, but Mayer is a bit more
where NBC is the current home of the competition.
the social media app in America. He joined DAZN
forthcoming, pointing to the likes of mixed martial
Mayer acknowledges that European soccer is
after a spell as an advisor to Access Industries,
arts, golf, and tennis as potential areas of interest.
popular in America, but Rushton says boxing is
during which time he became convinced that the
Both say there is no secret in soccer’s global
DAZN’s current priority in the country.
streamer was “onto something really substantial”.
appeal. DAZN reportedly paid €2.5 billion ($3
Both Rushton and Mayer acknowledge that
billion) for Serie A rights, meaning it will be home
The broader aim is to build a diversified portfolio of rights, meaning the streamer is protected even
“IT’S A WATERSHED MOMENT THAT, IN 20 YEARS’ TIME, MBA TEXTBOOKS WILL BE TALKING ABOUT AS BEING ONE OF THE KEY INDICATORS OF A PARADIGM SHIFT.” —J A M E S R U S H TO N , DA Z N
76
DEADLINE.COM
DAZ N /N A NCY RI V ERA/ BAUE RG R IF F IN .CO M /M EGA /I N T V
I
f you want evidence that DAZN is a disrup-
RYAN MURPHY Sitting in a meeting one day, Ryan Murphy looked around and realized that he was the only gay show creator in a room full of straight men. If he didn’t use his influence to increase the representation of the LGBTQ community in front of and behind the camera, then who else would? That epiphany led to the creation of Pose, the groundbreaking Emmy-winning series about the Transgender community and ballroom culture in NYC in the 1980s. For HBO, he directed and produced the Emmy-winning adaptation of The Normal Heart, the Larry Kramer play about the AIDS crisis, and he won an Emmy for directing The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story. He won the Tony for producing if it loses contracts or misses out during auc-
Boys in the Band on Broadway, populating the seminal
tions. Former ESPN+ leader Mayer explains:
play by Mart Crowley with an all-LGBTQ cast, and then,
“We need to put ourselves in a position that
of course, he produced the film version for Netflix.
would allow us to transcend any turbulence
Murphy also created the HALF Initiative to make
in the business model and technology. And
Hollywood more inclusive, creating equal opportunities
you do that by owning the best content. We
for women, members of the LGBTQ community, and
need to have the wherewithal to own the best
minorities behind the camera. All of his productions
rights in meaningful territories. By virtue of our
strive toward inclusivity.
business model and our spinning flywheel,
After signing a $400 million deal with Netflix in 2019,
it gives us momentum and provides us with
Murphy is in the rare position to be able to use his clout
some degree of protection from incursions
to level the playing field, and he’s already produced
from competitors.”
two award-winning LGBTQ documentaries for Netflix:
And it’s not just sports rights. DAZN plans to evolve its offering to include gambling (Rushton’s co-CEO is Shay Segev, the former boss of major U.K. betting firm Entain), merchandise, gifting, and original content. It’s already dabbling in the latter through brands including The Boxing Show and The Last Dance-style documentaries like Ronaldo: El Presidente, which follows the work of Ronaldo Nazário, the Brazilian former soccer star.
Secret Love and Circus of Books. —Mike Fleming Jr.
LAVERNE COX In the battle for diversity and equal rights over the last
DAZN is “very close” to turning a profit,
decade, there are few individuals who have been more of a
Rushton says. The streamer’s most recent
disruptor than Laverne Cox. She first burst onto the scene
accounts for 2019 show it made a loss
in 2013 portraying transgender inmate Sophia Burset in
of £1.6 billion ($2.2 billion) on revenues
the hit Netflix series Orange is the New Black—the role not
of £440 million, though this was during a
only made her a star, it marked a new milestone when the
period of investment and growth. It does
49-year-old became the first transgender person to be
not disclose user numbers. DAZN is open-
nominated for an Emmy in a guest role. Cox would go on
minded about a future IPO, but Rushton
to earn three more nominations for the part, and she has
stresses that Access has backed the
continued breaking barriers in the industry: in 2017 she was
company and takes a “long-term view” of its
the first transgender person to play a transgender charac-
value, unlike private equity houses. DAZN’s
ter in a regular starring role in CBS’s Doubt. She refuses to
vision is simple, he says—become the larg-
stay quiet on trans representation, and last year exec-pro-
est and most important sports streaming
duced the GLAAD Award-winning Netflix doc Disclosure:
platform around the world. “We’re disrupt-
Trans Lives on Screen, which took an in-depth look at how
ing in spirit, but in terms of our proposition
Hollywood depicts transgender issues and individuals. This
[as a streaming service], the disruption
year, her movie career was further boosted by a supporting
has happened. Now it’s time to provide our
role in the Oscar-nominated dark comedy Promising Young
service to the best of our abilities.” ★
Woman. —Justin Kroll DEADLINE.COM
77
After acquiring major titles and leaning into streaming’s “irreversible megatrend”, will the German power company roar into the lead?
BY ANDREAS WISEMAN 78
DEADLINE.COM
COU RT ESY LEO N IN E
D I S R U P T O R S
LEONINE
N
ew York investment firm KKR began its remarkable German buying spree in 2019. When it was done, one of the world’s biggest film and TV markets looked dramatically different. The ambitious studio it created, Leonine, is an accumulation of companies, including film and TV powerhouse TMG, film distributor Universum, Dark producers Wiedemann & Berg—one of Germany’s leading TV production labels—and multiple factual indies.
Last year, the company got further investment from pan-European media entity Mediawan Alliance
(which is backed by KKR and French investment firm MACSF), then they moved into a new Munich HQ and launched a TV sales business with the 10-part international action series Professionals, starring Brendan Fraser. One of the most talked-about new companies in Europe, Leonine has a library of thousands, and impressive pulling power. The firm’s clout has already been brought to bear in film markets, where it’s acquired major titles, including Knives Out, John Wick: Chapter 3—Parabellum and Roland Emmerich’s upcoming Moonfall. Consolidation on higher ground makes sense in a market where the streamers are growing apace. Leonine’s CEO Fred Kogel (pictured)–formerly of ZDF, ProSieben and Constantin—discusses the firm’s rapid rise, and how COVID-19 has impacted business and growth plans.
“OUR KEY TARGET IS TO BECOME THE NUMBER ONE INDEPENDENT DISTRIBUTION & PRODUCTION COMPANY IN GERMANY.”
Let’s go back to the beginning. Why did it make
that there could be something we could do. Then
You had said you wanted to release 20 films a
sense to launch Leonine and what were the
I sat down for three, four months working on a
year theatricall, so lockdown must have hurt
main obstacles?
concept, which required a certain size and quality,
a little.
When we talk about beginnings, that would be
and adhering to certain characteristics of the
Yes, we had wanted to do 20 films. We will release
early 2018: two years before Covid, but a few years
German market.
10 films in the second half of this year. We think
into the massive digital disruption we’ve seen in
we will have a blockbuster year in 2022.
the entertainment industry. My idea was very clear.
The company’s M&A has been well-docu-
I knew there would be more and more streamers.
mented. But where is Leonine today? What are
There is expectation that private equity
That’s the irreversible megatrend, and how that
the main priorities for the company?
firms will sell on their investment at some
content is consumed. It was always important for
The first three years was about bringing the
point, often after a five to seven-year span of
me to build the company for the digital world.
companies together and doing a full integration.
growth. Is it possible that Leonine is almost
Now we are full-steam on growth again. This comes
50% through its life cycle of being a KKR-
for the streamers entering Germany, as well
in two forms. Firstly, through organic growth in
backed company?
as volume for the broadcasters who would be
production, in our fiction and non-fiction com-
It’s true that that is a common life span for
competing. In my previous 25-year career virtually
panies, and also growth in our distribution units,
private equity firms, but as a management team
everything had always ended at the German, Aus-
especially digital distribution. The second part is
we’ve never thought in terms of when KKR’s exit
trian, or Swiss borders, but for the first time, there
inorganic growth. We want to M&A again and we
will be. We’re very much focused on the next
was a chance that German content could travel
are preparing for that. We want to grow bigger.
stage of growth.
internationally, because we have the quality of
As you know, last year we came together with our
people and projects in Germany, and the streamers
sister company Mediawan to give us a broader
In terms of the company’s revenue, roughly
give us a global platform.
European perspective.
what percentage comes from TV and what
There was going to be a need for local content
Our key target is to become the number one
percentage comes from film?
To what extent did you feel trepidation about
independent production and distribution company
We differentiate in terms of production, distribu-
the undertaking, or that there would be a
in Germany. I don’t think we are far away from that.
tion and licensing. Our main revenues come from
target on your back?
But we are working very hard and very humble
production though. Distribution and licensing
In terms of the psychology of it, to be honest, it
every day in that target.
revenues are similar, but TV production accounts
was a relief. I had founded Kogel & Schmidt and
for the largest slice. Production in total is at least
Constantin Entertainment previously, but I’d never
What type of M&A might we see?
worked with a private equity investor before. That
It will be important to grow in fictional production
made it a pretty unemotional, clear path. It was a
via companies that make premium TV series. This
Which projects on the slate are you most
great experience.
is something we are looking for. We are looking not
excited about?
only in Germany but also at other European targets.
We have a big TV project called The Gryphon that
This will be our main focus.
we are doing for Amazon, and we have the Bayern
How did you first meet the KKR team? I first met the KKR guys in 2006 or 2007. They
80 percent.
Munich documentary series also for Amazon. In
asked me if I was interested in doing a different job,
To what extent has Covid knocked the com-
terms of theatrical movies, it’s Borderlands, the
but I had to pass because I was with Constantin
pany off its stride and dented the bottom line?
franchise that we bought from Lionsgate. That’s
at that time and was not ready to get out of my
In the end, thank God, not very much. Of course,
one of our major movies. Of course, there’s also
contract. We had meetings from the mid-2000s
Covid hit us in theatrical revenues, but we had a
Moonfall, which is due for release early next year.
onwards, but there was never the right project to
very good year last year in terms of production,
We also have some local German series, including
collaborate on.
and especially in nonfiction production. There was
Krass Klassenfahrt, which is based on a successful
a big need for content. Our home entertainment
German YouTube series, and features a cast of
private equity] Philipp Freise and I got together
At the end of 2017, [KKR co-head of European
and licensing divisions also did well. Our integrated
influencers. We’re also lining up some non-fiction
again. We discussed the landscape, and we agreed
model really helps.
projects for the streamers. ★ DEADLINE.COM
79
If there’s a kerfuffle on the Croisette,
the prolific U.K. producer is never far away…
BY ANDREAS WISEMAN 80
DEADLINE.COM
COU RT ESY RECOR D E D P I CT U RE CO M PAN Y
JEREMY THOMAS
D I S R U P T O R S
O
scar-winning producer Jeremy Thomas
few living producers are more synonymous with
knows a thing or two about making waves.
Cannes than Thomas, who this year is the subject
his daughter, Susan Delfont, who have both now passed away, sadly. I stayed at their apartment,
The man once described by director
of a new documentary about his decades-long
and I went to the premiere of The Go-Between. I
Bernardo Bertolucci as a “hustler in the fur of a
connection to the festival. The Storms of Jeremy
was very young because I was at school, working
teddy bear” has lived both at the heart of the U.K.
Thomas by Northern Irish filmmaker Mark Cousins
for Delfont.
film establishment and as a passionate advocate
will get its debut in Cannes Classics section. Joseph Losey’s The Go-Between, 1971… That’s
for counterculture, whether in the novels of authors William S. Burroughs and Paul Bowles or the punk-
What sets Cannes apart for you?
a great place to start.
rock anarchy of the Sex Pistols.
There’s a particular ambiance. It has something
And I’m not so old. I mean, in my heart, I’m still a
special. It’s a unique combination of business
child… You know, it’s taken so long to do all this
Thomas has worked on has created as much of
But none of the 75+ features the 71-year-old
and curation. That sets it apart from most other
stuff, but it just went by in a flash, boom. But after
a stir as David Cronenberg’s adaptation of J.G.
festivals. It’s very good for a producer like me.
all these years I’ve still got the same philosophy
Ballard’s Crash, which debuted on the Croisette
about the films I make: be a disruptor.
25 years ago. The drama, about an underground
By my calculations, this edition of the festival
subculture of scarred, omnisexual car-crash
marks the 50th anniversary of your first ever
said, “Well, I mainly look for controversial subjects.”
victims who fetishize auto accidents, became a
trip to Cannes, and you’ve hardly missed any
I mean, that’s a hard drive for what I’m looking for.
lightning rod among critics and politicians.
over the years.
I’m looking for something that doesn’t need a huge
Is that right? I first went with Bernard Delfont and
P&A commitment. There can be a natural interest
After landing 18 films in Official Selection,
They said, “Do you like controversial subjects?” I
DEADLINE.COM
81
in what I’m doing because the counterculture
the people behind me in a restaurant say, “These
a very strong take from one of the top few critics of
area is enough to try and bring the project into the
people should be strung up.”
the day.
What do you think Crash is about—what does
central London due to censorship.
mainstream. I’m drawn to counterculture: Ballard, Burroughs, Bowles. Most of the filmmakers I’ve
The movie is still not allowed to be shown in
worked with, they all sit in that sort of area. Yes, I
the movie mean to you? It’s interesting to try
love my cars and boxing, but outside of that, it’s a
and understand the frustration people had
lot of interests outside the mainstream. You caused a scandal at Cannes in 1996 with a counterculture film. David Cronenberg’s Crash
Crash won a special jury prize, even though
with it.
jury head Francis Ford Coppola wasn’t keen
Well, it could be interpreted as being as simple as,
and didn’t want to give it anything at all.
“Wear a safety belt.” But it’s really about the erotic opportunities of a car crash and wounds. It’s about
He didn’t want to give the film a prize. I’ve heard from friends of mine who were in the jury that
famously kicked up a storm. Did you have any
people on the fringes of society. I thought it was
Francis felt very strongly about it. But the jury is
idea while making it that it would provoke
absolutely brilliant, the film. When I first saw it, I
ultimately a vote. Jury heads can be very influential,
such outrage?
was so thrilled.
but it’s still ultimately one person, one vote.
No idea. No idea. Having done Naked Lunch with David and having seen Dead Ringers, I was very
What do you recall now about the film’s
Did all that noise bother you at the time?
broadminded. I never dreamed that it would create
Cannes screening?
No. When you make films like that, you think: it
this absolute maelstrom. None of us—David, [EP]
Some people left the auditorium. There was a lot
wasn’t made for you. Not everything can be made
Robert Lantos or myself—thought that it was going
of banging of seats, as usual. They had to get a
for everyone. I was at the center of the maelstrom.
to be like that… [Novelist J.G.] Ballard was with us on the podium at the press conference in Cannes. He was the only one waiting for it, and ecstatic by it
bigger room for the press conference because they
To be in that center, for someone like me, it doesn’t
couldn’t get all the press in. There were hundreds of
get better than that, because you know you’ve
journalists in there. It was like an assault.
made an impact.
My friend, the journalist Alexander Walker, was
It was like that on the film I made about the Sex
COUNTERCULTURE CLUB Left: Thomas with Bernardo Bertolucci. Right: Crash stars (l-r) James Spader, Holly Hunter, Deborah Kara Unger, Rosanna Arquette and Elias Koteas.
because it had worked. The film had worked, and
there waving his newspaper at David and he was in
Pistols [The Great Rock ‘n’ Roll Swindle] and even
it really got to people. He told David he thought
a fury pacing up and down the back of the theater.
as a teenager going down to Powis Square where
the film was better than his book. But then the film
There was reporting of it in the UK press for weeks.
they were shooting Performance with Mick Jagger,
was banned in London, and I was ostracized by the
It was something else.
James Fox and Anita Pallenberg, it was always about trying to reach the center of the maelstrom.
Chris Tookey of the Daily Mail and Walker from You really felt completely ostracized by the
That’s just one day in Cannes; your story goes all
the Evening Standard really went after the
over the world. You can’t buy that. That’s the whole
film community?
film didn't they?
point of being a disruptor. You disrupt.
Well, among the people who were deciding things,
I knew Alexander. I never met Chris Tookey, and
it was a hot potato. My career was impacted by
I don’t care for his criticism because he comes
And how did David respond to all this? Did he
it. You had politicians and cinema licensors on
from a different place, he uses different eyes to
take it in stride or was he upset by it?
national television talking about the outrage and
watch films with. Alexander was a brilliant critic,
No, he took it in his stride. He was on Newsnight
how everyone involved in it should be ashamed
and he wrote brilliant reviews, and his review for
with Jeremy Paxman, and they tried to animal him,
of themselves. The tabloids couldn’t get enough
Crash was very, very good, it was just that it was
but David just dealt with him like the super brain
of it, even telling people to not buy goods from
sensationalized, and we had really offended him.
that he is. He wiped the floor with Paxman.
Sony because they were distributing the film. One
“Beyond the bounds of depravity” was the headline.
day, I was in the Isle of Man with [director] Philip
It crossed a line for him. He really thought it was a
How did you feel about the film’s box office? It
Noyce looking for locations for a movie, and I heard
sick film by sick filmmakers for sick people. That’s
didn’t exactly rake it in.
82
DEADLINE.COM
COU RT ESY RECOR D E D P I CT U RE CO M PAN Y
film community in Britain.
Good in the U.K. It made around £1.5 million. There
was torpedoed at Cannes.
was no need to take out advertising because it
our ancestors? Are we to take books off shelves, and ultimately burn them? That's not very
was on so many front pages. The movie had some
Johnny Depp’s movie The Brave, another one
champions at Sony in the U.K., unlike its experience
of your movies, also had a bumpy ride in 1997,
appealing either.
in the U.S., where Ted Turner had seen the film with
didn’t it?
What’s taking up your time now? Mark
Jane Fonda and they were very offended. It really
The Brave was a heartfelt and very fine job from
Cousins has made a film about you and your
got hammered.
Johnny, which we maybe shouldn't have taken to
connection to Cannes.
Cannes. Maybe it wasn’t ready. It’s very enticing
Well, I can’t say too much about that just now
By that stage, you were well steeled for
to go to Cannes, of course. The film had Marlon
but there’s plenty more to come on that soon...
Cannes’ unforgiving side. You were on the
Brando and Johnny and wonderful collaborators on
Bernard Rose has made a film called Traveling
Competition jury in 1987 when Maurice Pialat
set. I think it was a sensationalistic moment, it got
Light, which I’m helping on a little. It was shot in
won and was booed by the audience even
lost a bit, and I’m sad for Johnny. I hope he makes
lockdown and stars Danny Huston, Stephen Dorff
while accepting the Palme d’Or. Yves Montand
another film. After that sort of Cannes experience,
and Tony Todd.
was jury president that year.
it never really got a proper life afterwards, and it’s a
I was only 38. I had built up a good bond with the
little bit of a… I suppose, a hidden gem, in a way.
I’m sure you’ll want to work with Takashi Miike again after making multiple films with him,
festival already, especially after Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence. They really were happy with that film. It
One last question on Cannes as a crucible, and
including Hara-Kiri: Death of a Samurai, the
was quite a memory for me to be on that jury with
disruptors associated with the festival. What
first 3D film in Competition at Cannes.
Norman Mailer, Elem Klimov, Jerzy Skolimowski,
have you made of Lars von Trier over the years,
If I can. I love going to Tokyo, but I haven’t been able
Theo Angelopoulos, Nicola Piovani, Danièle
and do you think he should be welcomed back
to get there. And I love Italy, of course. All my old
Heymann… That was a jury. Fuck. Very strong
to the festival?
filmmakers that I can work with. But I can only do
people. Klimov was very heavy.
He has been a magnificent filmmaker. His films
so much.
”CRASH WAS A HOT POTATO. MY CAREER WAS IMPACTED BY IT. YOU HAD POLITICIANS AND CINEMA LICENSORS ON NATIONAL TELEVISION TALKING ABOUT THE OUTRAGE AND HOW EVERYONE INVOLVED IN IT SHOULD BE ASHAMED OF THEMSELVES. I HEARD SOME PEOPLE BEHIND ME IN A RESTAURANT SAY, ‘THESE PEOPLE SHOULD BE STRUNG UP.’” And Pialat defiantly got up and gave the
have broken ground and that’s not an easy thing to
Given your close connection to Ballard, I was
audience as good as he got.
do. Europa, Breaking the Waves, these were brilliant
quite surprised to not see your name listed
Yes. But I’m very happy with that choice. There was
films. His work has morphed into many different
when I reported on a new series adaptation
things over the years. I think there is a place for Von
of his novel Super-Cannes, with Brandon
no influence on us. It was an excellent film. More recently you encountered Croisette
Trier at Cannes, but he should understand that he
Cronenberg directing.
took the jokes too far.
Yes, years ago, I developed a script of that novel
drama with Terry Gilliam’s film The Man
with John Maybury aboard to direct. I don’t know
Who Killed Don Quixote, which you were
In that sense, has the #MeToo movement
how they're going to deal with the central theme
very involved in over the years. It was pretty
caused you to reappraise what’s acceptable?
of the book. There are some very controversial
dramatic. I was there at the impromptu press
It’s very hard. I don’t really want to discuss it a
moments, including underage sex, and I couldn’t
conference called by producer Paulo Branco
lot, but I’ve been through a lot with filmmakers
deal with that. But this will be an adaptation, of course, so it will have its own rhythm, I’m sure.
in which he laid out the legal issues facing the
over the decades. I have been on film sets since
film on the eve of its premiere.
the age of 10 and I’ve seen some very dominant
Ballard was my good friend, and I knew him
It was very sad for Terry. I didn’t produce the film.
people. I have worked with very extreme people.
well, for more than 20 years. I spoke at his funeral.
I owned some rights and tried to help him get it
I’ve seen directors get performances in incredible
I managed to make two films of his novels, but
made. In the end, the film was damaged, heavily
ways. Look at Hitchcock. But life has changed, the
he died just before we started the third, High Rise.
damaged by all that malevolence. The distribution
game has changed, relationships have changed.
There are a number of books of his I’d still love to
deals that were in place dissolved, and so the film
That said, how many crimes can we pull up from
make into films. But time is limited. ★ DEADLINE.COM
83
D I S R U P T O R S
experiencing a big Italian wave right now. It has YES MEN Left to right: A scene from Yes Studios' Fauda, with (l-r) Boaz Konforty, Doron Ben-David, Lior Raz, Idan Amedi, and Yaakov Zada Daniel.
YES STUDIOS Whether English remakes or Hebrew originals, Israeli drama
is going global. Yes Studios’ MD Danna Stern explains why the streamers and studios just can’t say no…
Facebook pages, and so on. What other factors beyond Netflix account for the boom in Israeli drama? We all produce under regulation in Israel. In the pay-TV space, Yes TV, our owner, and our pay-TV competitor HOT, have to spend 8 percent of our revenues on original Hebrew-language production. Free-to-air channels have to spend 15 percent. In the last few years, the state broadcaster KAN has started to do very well in scripted content. So, there’s a consistent flow of money into production. There’s also a generation now who grew up with these broadcasters showing Israeli, U.S. and British shows, so that generation thought, hey, we could do that. We have more film and TV schools per capita than any other nation—I think we’re into double figures. When I went to school there was only one. So, there has been a lot of change, and these conditions have given creatives an avenue. And it’s not just Netflix, Apple TV+ has had two significant Israeli series this year, including Tehran.
auda, Shtisel, Your Honor, On the
Looking back, Israel has been a growing force
Spectrum and Magpie—these are
in the drama world for more than a decade,
At the same time, are you seeing a growing
just a few of the hit series shopped
but there seems to be a real boom at the
demand for foreign language shows in Israel?
globally by producer-distributor Yes
moment. Is the world finally catching up, or
Don’t forget, all English-language shows are
Studios, Israel’s powerhouse drama
is this a particularly fertile period for Israeli
foreign language for us. But there’s a lot beyond
conduit. Launched only four years
drama?
that too. For a long time, it was very sequestered
ago, the international arm of local broadcaster
Looking back, Netflix going global back in 2016
to certain genres and certain types of channels.
Yes is on a roll. Not only does it cut remake rights
was a big technological shift—there are so many
Suddenly everybody is discovering French drama
around the world on its biggest properties, but
more opportunities for foreign language shows
and comedies, for example. In the past, you didn’t
it’s also seeing a growing appetite for the original
now. In Treatment [2005-8] was the first big Israeli
need to exert yourself and read subtitles for a
versions of its shows.
show to get multiple adaptations. Then there was
French crime show, because every country had
Prisoners of War [2010], which became Homeland
their own. I would say that our own series are often
but has taken off globally thanks to a Netflix deal.
Shtisel, for example, first aired locally in 2013,
in the U.S., and in 2016 Fauda really took off as
a hybrid of genres. They’re really just kind of their own world.
In June, the company launched period drama
an original-language show. Before Netflix, we
The Beauty Queen of Jerusalem—its biggest
were really looking to the U.S. alone, but now the
investment to date, and one of Israel’s biggest ever
audience is global. Fauda’s biggest fanbase by far is
naturally drawn to storytelling. We’re sharers.
series. Set in the early-to-mid 20th Century, the
in India and Brazil.
We’re very open as a nation, very warm. We also
ambitious show charts the history of a family living
We follow the performances of all our shows
I think there’s something about Israelis—we’re
go through a lot. Just look at the last couple of
through such storied milestones as the end of the
internationally. Although Netflix tends to launch
months in Israel. What we’ve gone through and
Ottoman Empire, the British Mandate for Palestine,
them at the same time around the world, we can
what we’ve seen. It’s just... it’s mind-boggling.
and then Israel’s war of independence.
really see when local interest spikes, because we
There has been a war, rockets, sirens, the world
run our social media in English and we often get
turning against us, back to us, there was a tragic
discusses the boom in Israeli drama and what’s
Yes Studios’ managing director Danna Stern
a very strong reaction. So, for example, Shtisel,
stampede at an Orthodox festival that killed
next for the company..
which first launched years and years ago is
dozens of people. There has been a lot. That
84 84
D DE EA AD DL L II N NE E .. C CO OM M / AWA R D S L I N E
N E T FLI X / EV E R ET T
F
BY ANDREAS WISEMAN
caught on in Italy like wildfire—interviews, articles,
”THERE'S SOMETHING ABOUT ISRAELIS—WE'RE NATURALLY DRAWN TO STORYTELLING. WE'RE SHARERS. WE'RE VERY OPEN AS A NATION, VERY WARM. WE ALSO GO THROUGH A LOT. JUST LOOK AT THE LAST COUPLE OF MONTHS IN ISRAEL.“ —DANNA STERN , YES STUDIOS musters creativity, to an extent. There is drama all
Their money isn’t going into making Shtisel or The
an ultra-Orthodox community that doesn’t exist.
around us.
Beauty Queen of Jerusalem.
She created one, but it still observes the same
How are the changes in the market impacting
international players. KAN’s series Tehran, was
kind of fantastical. So it’s in that same world. She’s
what executives can achieve?
exactly that—it was Cineflix coming in during
done two features that have gone everywhere on
Money is coming in earlier for development and
production and offering an MG against distribution
the festival circuit.
Fortunately, we’re very interesting to
rights. If you take a look at any of her films, they’re
production. In the past, we had to take on all the
that helped make the show much bigger. Off the
risk ourselves on the broadcast side, but now
back of that, they did very well when it was sold to
Died, which is kind of a surprise. It’s a personal
international revenue really helps and it can be
Apple TV+.
story of a guy who discovers he has cancer and
relied on.
We have an amazing little show called Who
falls in love with a girl in the cancer ward. People Has Yes made any Arabic-language shows or
have been really responding well, internationally.
But at the same time, surely, there’s a
dramas from Palestinian creators?
We just completed a big documentary called
balancing act—you don’t want to water down
That’s a good question. Palestinian storytelling
Dirty Tricks. That came from an in-house idea. We
culturally specific material in a bid to reach
from Gaza or the West Bank would normally not
produced it from scratch, and it’s doing the festival
global audiences….
go through Israel in any shape or form. Lots of our
rounds as we speak. It premiered at Hot Docs.
That is absolutely true. How much explaining do
shows are dual-language, but usually from Israelis.
you do? The first season of Shtisel was in 2013, five
Of course, there is a large Arab Israeli community,
Are there any young talents emerging from
years before Netflix picked it up. We didn’t have to
and we have worked with creators from that
the acting world?
explain everything. We didn’t need to spoon-feed
background. Israel itself is a diverse country, of
Many. The Beauty Queen of Jerusalem has an
you the information. That puts pressure on the
course. We are a country of immigrants.
actress who is fabulous and plays the title role.
creative proposition. We’re on the cusp of that,
This is the first thing she’s ever done. Her name is
and I hope we know how to reign that in.
What’s the next big show on your slate? The
Swell. Like the wave. Swell Ariel Or. Pretty much
Beauty Queen of Jerusalem?
on the strength of the trailer alone, she already
And because there’s more money coming into
That’s the big one launching now.
Israel from outside, is there more pressure to
has U.S. representation. That’s quite phenomenal. It’s amazing how quickly young Israeli actors are
create for global?
How will the rest of the world see the show?
Right. So, two things are happening at the same
Talks are ongoing. We also have a show called
time. There’s less money in this [local] market,
Embezzlement, which we’ve finally finished filming.
getting repped now. There’s Reef Neeman from our shows Fauda and On the Spectrum. And the star of Fire Dance
which is 8 percent decreasing because of
That was a Covid casualty, because we had
is brand new. This is her first role. Her name is
decreasing subscription and advertising revenues.
about five days to shoot outside of the country
Mia Ivrin. Tehran star Niv Sultan is another young
But there are also great opportunities abroad.
and we just couldn’t get on a plane. So, that’s
actress who has signed with WME.
finally coming together, and it will be one of the How many subscribers do you have compared
next shows that we launch. Probably later on this
Will there be a fourth season of Shtisel?
to Netflix?
summer, I would say. It’s based on a true story of
I don’t want to break anyone’s hearts, but I think
They have more than a million subscribers,
a major financial embezzlement, a woman who
that story has been told. And don’t forget, this cast
according to our tracking. In a country of nine
essentially emptied out the coffers of her bank to
has been together for a really long time. Almost
million people, that’s a lot, considering up to five
help her brother, who was deep in gambling debt.
a decade. I think we got all the stories we could
people might watch each sub. We’re at around
I’ve seen rough cuts and it’s really good.
without becoming overly dramatic. I feel like we’ve
560,000 subscribers. At our height, we were probably 640,000. I think HOT has the most subs
We just announced a new show called Fire
taken it to the limit, but, you know, we did good.
Dance, which, if you liked Shtisel, I think you’ll like
among the multi-channels at around 700,000.
a lot. It’s [also] set in the world of older Orthodox
So, no fourth season?
Again, those are our estimates. The more players
Jews, but it’s not Shtisel, either in look or feel. It’s
No fourth season in this capacity, but there is
in the market, the greater squeeze it puts on
by Rama Burshtein, who is a very well-known
obviously still an appetite for that family. So, I think
everyone else’s subs numbers. There are two
filmmaker. She, herself, is an ultra-Orthodox
we’re figuring it out. I think there will be something.
newish OTT players in the market that aren’t
woman, and I believe the only ultra-Orthodox
It’s probably not a Shtisel four. We love the story.
subject to the same regulation and don’t have to
woman creating films for general audiences, and
We love the creators.
produce any local Hebrew content. That puts a
this is her first series. It’s a story of unrequited love
squeeze on the local production sector. Between
that can never be consummated due to religious
A spinoff season, perhaps?
them, they have at least as many subs as us.
rituals and beliefs. It’s kind of a fantastical look at
Your words, not mine. ★ DEADLINE.COM
85
D I S R U P T O R S
JON M. CHU Gearing up to make Wicked, the In the Heights director looks back at the highs and lows of his breakthrough success
BY STEVIE WONG
T
he visceral reaction was almost instant. In 2008, Jon M. Chu was working on his big directorial feature debut Step Up 2: The Streets, when his choreographer Luis Salgado invited him to New York to watch a
Broadway musical he was in called In the Heights.
“I’d never heard of Lin-Manuel Miranda, but when I saw it, my jaw dropped on the floor,” Chu recalls, “This show spoke so deeply to me, a Chinese from the bay area, not Latino or from Washington Heights, and yet it felt so close to home, because I knew what it was like to be raised by not just your parents, but your aunties, uncles and neighbors.” A decade later, Chu had the opportunity to pitch Miranda the film adaptation, just as Chu found himself at a crossroads, deciding what kind of storyteller he really wanted to be. Having proven himself as a solid commercial director, the failure of Jem and the Holograms in 2015 made him reassess his choices. Then he made a little film called Crazy Rich Asians. The 2018 romantic comedy set in the ultra-wealthy echelons of Singaporean society not only broke box office records but created conversations about the lack of minority-lead storylines represented in Hollywood. The success had studios scrambling to green-light projects with minorities as central characters, and by then, Chu was already attached to In the Heights. Here, he discusses the pressures he felt as a young filmmaker, the strange evolution of In the Heights, and why, for him, it feels like “a personal sequel” to Crazy Rich Asians.
86
DEADLINE.COM
AX E LL E /BAU E R- G R IF FI N /M EGA
stars out of its Asian cast, kicking off countless
It’s been a long road for In the Heights and
It does feel like all the lessons you learned
then I had to beg from myself, who am I? What
now you can finally let it out.
as a filmmaker throughout your career, from
are you going to say? And it went right back to
I’m so ready. We had a premiere in Washington
the choreography-heavy Step Up films, to
the place that I left off in film school. I thought,
Heights, and we were so appreciative of
big-budget crowd pleasers like Now You See
there’s something about music and movies and
everybody’s cheers and applause and
Me 2, to your emotional connection to Crazy
dance, and being able to communicate the things
laughter. We also had a lot of dancers from the
Rich Asians, has set you up for this moment
that words can’t. I grew up in the Silicon Valley
neighborhood itself. That was electric, we really
with In the Heights.
in a mixed media environment in the dawn of
made this for them.
I think, and I’m not quite sure I’m out of it yet,
technology, where I was inundated with a lot
how to process it all. But what I’ve observed is it
of information very quickly at a very young age,
happens very, very slowly, and one step at a time.
before a lot of kids probably were. And so now I
It’s been over a decade since you first saw In the Heights on Broadway, what made you
I look back at when I made my short film at USC
am in a leadership position and a power position
strongly connect with the show?
that Spielberg saw, that had this hubbub where
to be able to really use that, to process the world
In the show, Usnavi has a strong relationship with
I was on the cover of the trade mag. And they
in that way.
his abuela, and I had my own version with my
wrote articles about me reinventing the musical,
And that’s where I found this thing that I
booboo Claudia. She taught me how to make
because my short was a musical, and they were
wanted to do, which was to explore my cultural
wontons, and she would keep the books for the
like, “Oh, this guy’s going to come to the movie
identity crisis, while at the same time, making
restaurant [Chef Chu’s] every night. She’d have
musical and remix it and add on the new chapter,”
it fun and entertaining. Crazy Rich Asians came
a bag full of receipts and had her little abacus.
and none of that came true.
along, and In The Heights came along at the same
And even though the details are different in In the
I won the lottery, but once I had won, it was
Heights, I felt similar sounds and details. So when
like, “Well, how do I do this again? Oh, I don’t even
time to do those things.
the producers [Scott Sanders and Mara Jacobs]
know how to make a movie. I need to learn how
Before making In the Heights, you had a really
asked if I had a take on it, I immediately leapt at the
to make a movie first.” Then you start making
transformative experience with Crazy Rich
chance. There was something in the combination
movies. “Oh, what’s coverage? Oh, that’s what I
Asians, right?
of what Lin and [the book author] Quiara Alegría
have to do? Oh, that’s what a review is. Oh, this
Both Crazy Rich Asians and In the Heights were
Hudes had written, plus what I knew about movies
is what the audience wants. I spent two, three
in the same space of ideas that I wanted to do,
and seeing the universality of this story, that I
movies, figuring that out, while also learning that I
the things that I’ve been holding back, been
thought would make a good combination. But then
had to work with a studio and get resources from
too fearful to just go do. And I knew I could
I had to sit down with Lin, and he was gaining his
them. And you learn, you make mistakes. So then
execute these things. But for Crazy Rich Asians, I
momentum with Hamilton, so I was still nervous to
in another two movies, I got to work with actors
understood pride intellectually, but until I made
be sitting down with him.
who bring together that whole thing. The whole
that movie, I really didn’t. I honestly didn’t think
We talked about dreaming as kids, with the
time, you just don’t know, you’re just trying to stay
people were going to go see it, I just thought I just
same visual touchstones of DuckTales, Animaniacs
afloat. By the end of it, when I was working with
needed to do it for myself.
and of course Disney animated musicals. But the
Morgan Freeman, Mark Ruffalo, and Michael Caine,
By the end of it, by watching people watch
main thing that we connected on is wanting to
I was like, I can hang with the best of the best right
it, I felt some of the things through them. I got
dream big dreams that we didn’t think nobody who
now, so what am I doing sequels for? What do I
to witness them looking up and feeling proud of
looked like us had, and that we had come out the
have to say now? All the logistics stuff over the
these people on the screen and saying, “Yeah,
other end, and what was our responsibility. And
years sort of went away, and it wasn’t conscious.
I can be cool, I can be handsome, I can be
that could this framework of Heights communicate
It was like, instead of me asking permission to
charming, I can be evil. I can be all those things.”
the enormity of dreams, and the importance of
make a movie from a studio now, I was like, “Oh,
And it filled me. I realized that movies are a very
home when you’re having those dreams. Also the
I’ve made you guys a lot of money. You owe me
powerful mechanism.
question of, if we can shoot in Washington Heights
a couple. So I think I’m going to do something.”
and bring those dreams to Washington Heights.
And I wasn’t begging for anything from them. So
Something that has been waning over the years has been the question of, are movies dead?
”I WAS LIKE, I CAN HANG WITH THE BEST OF THE BEST RIGHT NOW, SO WHAT AM I DOING SEQUELS FOR? WHAT DO I HAVE TO SAY NOW? ALL THE LOGISTICS STUFF OVER THE YEARS WENT AWAY, AND IT WASN'T CONSCIOUS. INSTEAD OF ME ASKING PERMISSION TO MAKE A MOVIE FROM A STUDIO NOW, I WAS LIKE, 'OH, I'VE MADE YOU GUYS A LOT OF MONEY. YOU OWE ME A COUPLE. SO I THINK I'M GOING TO DO SOMETHING.' AND I WASN'T BEGGING FOR ANYTHING FROM THEM.“ DEADLINE.COM
87
Do people just want to watch it on their phone,
our responsibility to inch forward, and actually
and rewrites for some of the songs?
or at their house while they cook? For me, seeing
make it better. So looking at In the Heights, it had
It was very collaborative. We would all get
the audience reactions was like, this medium is
all those things in it, an Americana flavor, but you
together with [music director] Alex Lacamoire
a necessity for our culture. We actually need to
could dust it off and you can show that even in
at Lin’s apartment, which is an incredible thing
have this stop-gap. We need to have the space
the cracks, there’s beauty because it survived.
to witness by the way, I wish I had my cell phone
to challenge ourselves. We have to have the
And Lin showed me that, in these communities
on but I was too scared to record it. And they’re
space to turn off the noise. We have to have the
where there is a family commitment to each other,
just on the piano trying things and singing. I’m
space to pay attention, to commit to something
this is where American stories start. For me it was
watching this in real time, and then Quiara’s
for an hour-and-a-half with strangers that we’re
in Northern California, at a Chinese restaurant
speaking up asking, “Jon, what do you think?” and
not algorithm-ed to be next to, and then have
where my American story started. And so I was
I’m like, “Oh, I’m a part of this. Oh yeah. OK. This
serendipitous interactions to walk out of a dark
just honored to be able to take that on and use
is great. Yeah. Let’s maybe add another verse to
theater after dreaming together. But we need to
the things that I learned over the last decade to
that thing?” They’re like, “No, that’s not great Jon.”
rewrite the story of who gets to be here. And so
help bring that to life.
In the Heights fit that bill, in a way, I saw it as a personal sequel to Crazy Rich Asians.
I’m like, “OK. I’ll just keep throwing out ideas, safe space, safe space.” [laughs] What I love about
What was it like for you to be collaborating
Lin and Quiara and the whole team is they love
with creators Lin and Quiara Alegría Hudes?
making things. They’re kids making things at a
I appreciate that you’re redefining what
You suggested some interesting changes
very high level, but they are just playing. It really
Hollywood films look like in the process.
from the original show.
was the most amazing experience of my life.
This was my next step to that idea, which was to
I can’t imagine being in their position. I mean, I
extend ourselves to go further into the Hollywood
think it’s a lot harder for them than for me. I’m
genres of what classic Hollywood is, which is
a little bit nervous, but also, it’s not my baby.
serendipitous way. Even though you had
a musical. Let’s go into what I was taught was
Heights came out of a necessity of expression for
delivered a cut of this film back in 2019,
American. The reason why I put the M in my
Lin. This came out of a decade of working with
everything was put on hold until this summer
name, Jon M. Chu, is because I saw Yankee Doodle
Quiara. But at first, Lin was a little bit distracted
because of the pandemic. But it feels like
Dandy as a kid, a musical that is about George
with Hamilton. So I had to work a lot with Quiara
releasing In the Heights now fits perfectly
M. Cohan, who wrote all these patriotic songs.
at first, and he trusts Quiara immensely. The good
with the emotional hopes and dreams we had
And I was very patriotic kid. So because George
thing is that Lin loves movies. He’s a cinephile. So
to put on hold.
M goes by George M, I was like, “I’m going to call
he understood that movies were a very different
When I joined, Lin and Quiara had already gone
Timing has been on your side in a
myself Jon M.” So it’s embedded in me, this idea
medium. So he was also less precious than
through a decade-long journey, and they said to
of the greatness of America, and that dreams can
probably someone else who didn’t know movies
me, “We created this story, but the story has its
come true. It’s just as you get older, you realize
or loved movies.
America is not what you were taught. It was an ideal that my parents bought into, but we all have
88
DEADLINE.COM
spirit of its own. It has its own timing.” There’s a lot of weird things that happen around it. So they’re
How did it work when it came to the music
like, just hang on because in the end it always
WAR N ER BROS / E VE R ET T/LU I Z RA M P E LOT TO/E U ROPAN E WSWI R E/ P I CT U R E-AL LI AN C E / D PA /AP IM AG ES
MUSICAL MAN Left to right: Chu checks out a shot on set in Washington Heights; a dance scene from Chu's latest film, In the Heights.
knows where it’s place is, and will always come through. And so I took that as, “yeah, that’s funny.” When we were shooting it, we were like, “This is amazing. We’re shooting this in the streets of Washington Heights. We’re getting amazing stuff. Look at this cast, we’re getting at them at the right moment. This is happening exactly as the story has presented itself to be.” And then we were finishing up and we screened the movie and we’re getting amazing feedback. We finally did it. We made it. This movie is finally coming out. And then the pandemic hits and we’re like, “Oh yeah, it has its own life.” And we look at each other like, maybe the lesson was that it’s supposed to disappear. And we’re just supposed to know our focus should be on the art, the craft,
LINMANUEL MIRANDA Following a Pulitzer Prize nomination for his musical In the Heights, which brought
audiences into the life and neighborhood of a bodega owner in New York, and a Pulitzer
and say, “We make something and whatever
win for Hamilton, the musical that infused a dusty historical tale with hip-hop and a diverse
happens after it doesn’t matter.” That’s what I
cast, Lin-Manuel Miranda is creating opportunities for Latinx people as his influence grows.
thought maybe the lesson would be. And now
Miranda wrote the songs for Vivo, a Cuba-set musical, and is producing a new version of
the pandemic is starting to close, and theaters
The Little Mermaid, which cast Halle Bailey, a Black actress, in the star-making role of Ariel.
are starting to open, and people are needing joy
While Miranda was compelled to apologize for a lack of Afro Latinx representation in In the
and love and celebration, and knowing how to
Heights, his growing influence will allow him to continue to create more opportunities to honor
get back up again. And what is better than the
diversity as he straddles both stage and screen. —Mike Fleming Jr.
story of Washington Heights that tells you how to get up. I surrendered to the universe a long time ago on this movie, and a lot of things in life. So I’ll accept what it gives. And I’m just very happy that it gave the best gift it could give to the story, which is the world’s ear and eyes. What do you think this creative journey of yours is telling you to do next? You know, I’ve trusted the universe in guiding me to the stories that I want to tell by what’s happening at the moment. I do believe movies should meet the moment. It’s a running record of where we’re at emotionally. I’m working on Wicked right now, and I think it has some very resonant things of what it means to have a place of innocence like Oz. What happens when you realize it isn’t as innocent as you thought, and that a real change needs to happen instead. Real change isn’t easy, real change is messy, and means you need to feel anger, fear and sadness. You need to go all through those things before you can come out differently. And I think that musicals do it in the most entertaining way and fun way. I just feel privileged that I get to be the recipient of people speaking out and waking me up and saying, “Is anybody on the other side to help do these things?” And I’m like, “I’m either part of the problem or I’m listening.” I’m not perfect, and I don’t know exactly what I’m doing, but I am reacting, and I’m doing the best I can to use the things that I know to express the frustrations that I’m learning and feel deeply about. So we’ll see. I’ve been around this business long enough to know it comes in waves, but I will accept what’s happening now and I’ll just continue to do the work. ★ DEADLINE.COM
89
DUTCH COURAGE He shocked the Netherlands in the ’70s and ’80s and scandalized Hollywood in the ’90s. Now Paul Verhoeven is bringing his lesbian nun saga to Cannes. What could go wrong? BY MIKE FLEMING JR. because the man is the superior and she is the
In 2007 you wrote the book Jesus of Nazareth,
for filmmaking, director Paul Verhoeven
inferior.” That kind of thinking was dominant in that
which stripped the miracles from his story,
has been a maverick disruptor, mixing
century, and of course it was also being promoted
along with the idea that Christ expected to
sex and violent imagery in his provoca-
by the Roman Catholic Church.
realize his kingdom on earth before he was
tive early Dutch films (1973’s Turkish Delight, 1980’s
There are notes in the archives of Florence that
betrayed and crucified. You were going to
Spetters), then taking the formula to the U.S. with
describe the trial of the older nun, and there is really
make a movie out of that. What happened?
a run of shocking and subversive ’90s Hollywood
nothing else available in archives anywhere in the
Did your curiosity about religion and the Cath-
blockbusters that included RoboCop, Total Recall,
world. Judith C. Brown, who wrote the book, found
olic Church lend itself to Benedetta instead?
Basic Instinct, Showgirls and Starship Troopers. Now,
them by coincidence when she was in Florence
Well, first of all, I tried. I worked with Jean-Claude
he’s adding the historical repression of religion to
looking for other stuff for her courses. She’s a pro-
Carrière, a scriptwriter for Luis Buñuel. Amy Pascal,
the mix with Benedetta, a French-language film
fessor. I thought that recreating those times—where
who at that time was the head of Columbia, was
he’ll premiere in Competition at Cannes. Starring
lesbianism didn’t even exist as a word, and where a
interested, but our efforts, even to write a basic
Virginie Efira, it’s the true story of a Sister Benedetta
woman would be burned if she had a sexual relation
outline, failed. I think it was because Jean-Claude
Carlini, a 17th Century abbess whose claims of mys-
with another woman—would be interesting. That
Carrière was a Buddhist, and with me being… call
tical visions and miracles were investigated by the
was something that [Holy Roman Emperor] Charles
it agnostic or atheist, whatever, I’m not a Christian.
Catholic church in a trial that lasted from 1619-23
V said at the beginning of the 16th Century: if a
But we couldn’t find a common vision on how that
and resulted in her imprisonment.
woman is with a woman, they should be sentenced
movie should be done, so, ultimately, we gave up
to death by burning. I guess we’ve made some
and Jean-Claude Carrière, who had gotten $50,000
progress, I’d say.
from Sony for writing the outline, sent his fee back.
Benedetta is based on the 1986 book Immodest Acts: The Life of a Lesbian Nun in Renaissance
So that was so interesting to me, that this hap-
That, I think, was class.
Italy. There’s a lot to unpack in that title. What
pened, and that the notes of the scribe also pointed
was it about this that sparked you?
out exactly what these two nuns were doing with
ferent from each other. In [Carrière’s] outline, Jesus
I would probably not be shocked by anything like
each other, in really intimate detail. It felt like it
was never even seen talking, he was just there, a
that, I just read it and thought it would be an inter-
should be made into a movie. For me everything
person that didn’t open his mouth. For me, what
esting movie, because so much has happened
came together: there’s the church politics, there’s
Jesus has to say in his parables was very important
between 1623 and now. At that time, the idea of
the religious layer, and then there’s the sexual layer
to the rest of civilization. But, out of friendship, we
a woman being attracted to another woman was
in the movie, which are all also in the book. All that
decided not to do it. Then, many attempts later, I
something people couldn’t understand would be
together was fascinating enough to try to make
really felt that I honestly didn’t know exactly how
possible. There was a lot of writing about it, say-
a movie about it. It was not that easy—it took us
to do it as a movie, and that that’s probably why I
ing, “A woman would always be attracted to a man,
some time.
wrote a book [instead].
90
DEADLINE.COM
I think that somebody said we were just too dif-
PAT H É
F
rom the moment he gave up academia
Benedetta was one of the films going to Cannes last year before it was canceled by the pandemic. Why wait a whole year to bring it out? First, I had a hip operation that went a bit wrong, and that caused a delay. The film was supposed to be in Cannes last year. But it was because of this hip operation that I couldn’t come over to France to finish the movie in time for the festival, and then, during the next [possible window], France was locked down. So, it was the hip operation and then the coronavirus lockdown [that caused the delay]. We are in a moment of heightened sensitivity in America with #MeToo and what some would
RELIGIOUS REBEL Virginie Efira as 17th century abbess Sister Benedetta Carlini in Benedetta.
call ‘cancel culture’. The Benedetta trailer indicates some very provocative, sensual stuff.
and said something like, “We can see your vagina.”
cared about the nudity. There were no discussions.
What do you imagine the appetite is for such
And then she said, “Of course—that’s why I’m doing
Yeah. We made the set closed a little bit, so that
films in this moment?
it!” I told that story to Sharon when we were having
no people could walk in. It was a smaller group of
Well, I can’t foresee that. Really, I have no idea. We’ll
dinner together during the shoot, and she thought it
people that I used. But for the rest, there was no
have to see how the film will be received in France,
would be great idea to do that. So, that’s my mem-
discussion, I swear to you.
or Holland, or in the United States, but there is a big
ory. She heard the story, and you know, in Joe Eszter-
difference. In France, the fact that we portray two
has’s script, there was already a mention [of that]
So, it’s not that big of a deal because you’re
nuns in sexual scenes will have an impact. People
in dialogue that he wrote between Michael Douglas
transparent about it?
will like it or not, but they will not make more out of
and Sharon. They’re in the car, after the interrogation.
Nobody is anxious. Nobody is suspicious. If that
it. Now, in the United States, when you have those
It’s raining, and Sharon says to Michael, “You know I
would be the case, you couldn’t do it. You have to
kinds of scenes, there would have to be what they
don’t like to wear any underwear, don’t you, Nick?”
be in a situation where the people involved—the
call an intimacy coordinator. Did you know that? In France, nobody would think about that. We didn’t have to write in the contracts, like
That line was in the script, and when you see the
two women, mostly —feel completely feel at ease
scene just before the interrogation, you see [she is
and accept the situation as written. Or you should
getting dressed]. Michael is looking at that, and she
have a discussion if they’re not comfortable.
has been happening more and more in the United
puts her dress on, and she has no underwear. So that
The situation in France and in Holland would not
States, how much nudity there would be with the
was already in the script, but, of course, the scene
require an intimacy coordinator. So, yeah, I think it
two actresses, Virginie Efira and Daphne Patakia. I
[where she would uncross her legs] was not in the
probably would be, at this moment, pretty difficult
mean, there was really no talking about the nudity. It
script—that came into the movie when I discussed
to make a movie like Elle or even Black Book, or a
was like, “Yeah, OK. Of course, we go to bed, we take
it with Sharon, when I told her the story. I know her
movie like Benedetta, in the United States.
the clothes off.” An intimacy coordinator would be
story is a bit different, but that’s my story. You transitioned to Hollywood and jumped
very strange there, and in Holland they would perhaps be even more liberal with these things. I don’t
Many actresses have reflected back on nude
right into these big, bold, sexy studio block-
think that anybody would be offended by nudity
scenes they’ve done, and some now say they
busters. What was the biggest culture shock?
there. So, what I want to try to express is that how
were left feeling exploited, or not protected, by
There was none. In fact, what I felt there I wouldn’t
the film will be received—in the United States, or in
their filmmaker. How do you make an actress
even call it a shock. It was more me looking back
France, or, say, western Europe—might be different.
feel like you are taking the ride together and a
to when I was very young and a fan of comic strips.
nude scene is not at her expense?
Some were American, like Superman. When I was
Sharon Stone recently published a memoir in
Well, first of all, most actresses almost have no prob-
young, I loved that stuff. One of my favorite Dutch
which she described being surprised when she
lem at all. That’s point one. The scene is written that
comic books was science fiction. So, I don’t think
was shown the famous interrogation scene
way. In Benedetta, it was written that they accept
there was a shock. It was more, “I’ve never done
from Basic Instinct…
the scene as it is, and if they had problems then that
this, so let’s do it.”
You know that’s nonsense, don’t you?
could be discussed. Of course, we might change it, whatever, but of course, you cannot do that without
When you made movies like RoboCop, Total
Well, she wrote that she slapped you and left…
it being satisfying to the two actresses. And it was
Recall and Starship Troopers, you introduced
She didn’t slap me at all.
that way. There was no discussion about, “Do you
ideas decrying fascism and corporate greed.
see my nipple?” or this or that. No. it was just, “OK,
Starship Troopers was about soldiers battling
we’re going to do the scene as written.”
giant deadly instinct, but you recreated imag-
What is your recollection? We are on good terms, Sharon and I, at the
So, on top of that, of course, to protect them
ery from Leni Riefenstahl’s Nazi propaganda
moment, so I would put [that story] in the category
and have another voice, on Benedetta the D.P. of the
films. How many audiences picked up on that?
of “My memory is this, and your memory is that.”
movie was a woman [Jeanne Lapoirie]. If you talk
Not enough at the time, because me and the
My memory is that [that scene] is all based on
about the male gaze, well, the first person that saw
scriptwriter, Ed Neumeier—who wrote RoboCop
a woman that I met when I was a student in Leiden,
the film was a female looking through the camera.
with Michael Miner—were criticized as being neo-
at the university. She would do that: she would
A woman D.P., and if she would see a problem, she
fascist or neo-Nazi, one of the two. What I was
come up to us and she would open her legs. My
would tell me. But, of course, there was never one.
trying to express, I think in retrospect, I was not
friend and I saw her doing that, so went up to her
Nobody ever cared. It sounds strange, but nobody
unsuccessful at. But if you look at what’s happening
DEADLINE.COM
91
SISTER OF MERCY Efira as Benedetta Carlini, an Italian nun whose relationship with another woman was documented during a trial by the Roman Catholic Church.
now, doesn’t it feel like democracy is in peril? The
Showgirls was not normal, but it was still more nor-
million. My producer, Jon Davison, who did Robo-
first line in the movie says it’s set after the failure
mal than all the other movies that I made here. It’s
Cop and Starship Troopers, said, “If you make one,
of democracy. That’s [actor] Michael Ironside talk-
more realistic than any of them. A lot of what hap-
it should be a thriller, and you should do it for $35
ing. After the failure, he starts to say what came
pened in the film really happens [in life], but the
million. $10 million is too difficult, but $35 million is
after that, and what came after that is, to a certain
sentiment was, people didn’t feel really desire to go
doable, and I advise you to do it that way.”
degree, a fascist universe. It’s based on Robert Hein-
there. If I’d have known what the reaction to Show-
lein’s book, which you can say is realistically neo-
girls would be, I wouldn’t probably have done it.
The pandemic saw the rise of streaming, to the detriment of the theatrical film experience.
fascist, and I felt that we should show the audience that these characters played by Casper Van Dien,
The movie made money on home video and
Does streaming appeal to you? And how does
Dina Meyer and Denise Richards are heroes—but, by
has been reappraised as camp spectacle. You
it impact the ability of a maverick filmmaker to
the way, they’re also fascists.
became the rare filmmaker to show up and
take risks?
At the time we wrote it and shot it, it’s not that I
accept the Razzie Awards won by the film. Why?
I’m not so interested in that streaming stuff. It might
was aware that there was a possibility that democ-
Well, that was when my Jesus thinking came through.
ultimately go in that direction, but I feel that’s a pity.
racy in the United States could be in danger, but it
When somebody hits you on the right cheek, you
I still hope that people will find their way back to
came much closer in the last couple of years, more
turn the left one. I thought that, really. I’m an admirer
cinemas again, once everything is more normalized.
than I thought possible. I love living in the United
of all these things that Jesus said, his parables and
I have the feeling that I would take risks anyhow.
States, but still recently I had the feeling that there
stuff, but it was really me thinking, He said that. OK,
Elle was a risky project. If you look at the narrative, a
was a possibility that one of the most wonderful
go. And the amazing thing is that it worked! I had to
woman gets raped and starts a sadomasochist rela-
democracies in the world could slide into something
go forward because we’d got seven Razzies, for worst
tionship with her rapist. Of course, you can see it as a
else. Now, if you look at television, everyone’s talking
acting, the worst song, the worst film, worst director…
revenge movie, because ultimately, the bad guy gets
about what’s happening to democracy.
Nobody else was there to get them. So, I had to walk
killed, but it was also pretty risky thematic material.
forward to get each Razzie. They had only one award, in 1980, there was such controversy that it
so I had to give it back for the next time.
Benedetta, for me, doesn’t feel that way, but I might be wrong. There is a coming together of
That I dared to be there, and was not making fun
sexuality—in this case, female and female—and the
hatched the National Anti-Spetters Commit-
of myself… I gave a speech that was kind of funny. At
church’s belief that it is wrong. So, the sexuality and
tee and hastened your move to Hollywood.
the end, there was ovation. People were so enthusi-
religion, you will see that in the movie. You will feel
After Showgirls (1995), you’ve said some doors
astic, not about the movie but about the fact that I
there is a strong layer of what I call “the sacred” in
closed for you because of the bad reviews and
was there. They felt that it was so unique, and were
the movie. I believe that feeling makes it possible to
controversy. Which of those two experiences
so thankful that somebody would do that.
do all the other stuff; the bad stuff, the dangerous
was worse for you?
stuff of criticizing religion or whatever you want to
Worse? That’s difficult. Spetters or Showgirls?
So, an OK night but not a great night?
call it. I feel, and I have felt in my life, that people can
Spetters had the advantage that, although the
Yeah. Sure. And Jesus was right.
be inspired by the sacred. I wanted that, and I believe
criticism was horrible—worse than Showgirls—the
that the characters in Benedetta, at that time, were
movie worked. People went to the movie. It was
After your Hollywood detour, your most recent
in a world where the sacred was dominant. So, in the
very successful in Holland. And that is what did not
films have a decidedly European feel—both Elle
movie, I felt it needed to be there. You can tell me
happen with Showgirls. Financially, it was not good.
(2016) and Benedetta were made in French.
later if I was right or wrong. The idea that the church
With Spetters, I was still protected. As we all know,
Would a jump back into a big-budget Hollywood
could decide that a woman should be killed because
directors are very dependent on the movie that
film appeal to you?
she was a lesbian—that’s quite horrible. Isn’t it? An
they made before. After Showgirls, I was a little bit
[Long pause]. Sure. Yeah. Sure. I am, in fact, also
inquisition. Remember, the Crusades were full of tor-
in Hollywood jail. I think they still trusted me after
working on that. It doesn’t have to be a $200 million
ture, and I think the church has done horrible things,
Showgirls, but only with science fiction. They didn’t
film, more in the direction of Basic Instinct, so it’s a
so you’ll see that, too. But there’s also a layer that
trust me with something that you would call normal.
budget that will not be much, perhaps under $60
says that there’s something sacred there. ★
92
DEADLINE.COM
PAT H É
When you released the Dutch film Spetters
FILM
A S e rie s of Exclu si ve Events D e si gne d to G i ve A MPAS, BAF TA and Gui ld Memb e r s an O ver vi ew of Thi s Yea r ’s Awa rds S e as on Fi lms
LONDON
LOS ANGELE S
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 9
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 14
HAM YARD HOTEL
DGA THEATER
N E W YO R K
I N T E R N AT I O N A L
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 4 MUSEUM OF THE MOVING IMAGE
TO BE ANNOUNCED
D O C U M E N TA R Y
THE NOMINEES
TO BE ANNOUNCED
TO BE ANNOUNCED
F O R M O R E I N F O R M AT I O N A N D T O R S V P P L E A S E V I S I T:
C O N T E N D E R S F I L M . D E A D L I N E .C O M D E A D L I N E .C O M / AWA R D S L I N E
93
An all-new class of first-class travel North America Los Angeles Aspen Napa Jackson Hole Sun Valley
Europe London Ibiza Nice Mykonos
Find out more at Aero.com
(SS ÅPNO[Z HYL VWLYH[LK P PU [OL ,< I` (LYV .\LYUZL` 3[K H SPJLUZLK HUK YLNPZ[LYLK HPY JHYYPLY PU .\LYUZL` HUK PP PU 5VY[O (TLYPJH I` <:(* (PY^H`Z 695 33* KIH (LYV (PY \USLZZ V[OLY^PZL HK]PZLK I` (LYV (LYV ;LJOUVSVNPLZ 0UJ HJ[Z HZ [PJRL[PUN HNLU[ MVY (LYV .\LYUZL` 3[K HUK PU [OL <: HZ H JOHY[LY VWLYH[VY HUK PUKPYLJ[ HPY JHYYPLY \UKLY <: +6; 7HY[ 380 (SS WHZZLUNLYZ HYL YLX\PYLK [V HJJLW[ [OL HWWSPJHISL 6WLYH[VY 7HY[PJPWHU[ (NYLLTLU[ HUK VY *VUKP[PVUZ VM *HYYPHNL H[ [OL [PTL VM IVVRPUN 2021 (LYV ;LJOUVSVNPLZ 0UJ