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May 25, 2012

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The End of the Affair

COLUMBIA

The End of the Affair

On Feb. 15 of this year producer Stephen Woolley, director Neil Jordan and a hand-picked cast and crew—most of whom had worked with the producer and director on many of their 10 previous collaboration—gathered on a soundstage at Shepperton Studios, just outside London, to start work on The End of the Affair.

Over 11 weeks, the story of novelist Maurice Bendrix (Ralph Fiennes), his mistress Sarah Miles (Julianne Moore) and her husband, civil servant Henry Miles (Stephen Rea), was played out against a backdrop of re-created World War II-era England. In the story, the mistress makes a promise to herself that if her lover survives the London Blitz, she will leave him. Director Jordan (The Crying Game; Interview With the Vampire), read the 1951 Graham Greene novel on which the film is based years ago, and saw it as Greene’s finest work. (One model for the film that was not used is the silly 1955 film of the book starring Deborah Kerr, Van Johnson and Peter Cushing). For Jordan, adapting the complexities of the novel for the screen wasn’t difficult. “Greene is great at moral dilemmas; human dilemmas,” explains Jordan. “The predicament that Sarah finds herself in is simple, and one that audiences can relate to on a basic level. She does what everybody would do—she prays. She says, ‘Please turn time back and let this not happen.’ When he walks in the door, she is stuck with this dilemma—does she go back on what she’s said or not?” The character of Bendrix was an amalgam of both real and literary sources. Jordan drew part of the tortured novelist from the Bendrix that Greene had written, but also sculpted him around Greene’s life, as well. “I wanted the movie to be as much a portrait of a writer as anything else,” notes the director. The design was integral to creating the right atmosphere for the story. “London is a character in the film,” says Jordan. “I wanted the whole thing to feel like an erotic ghost story. There had to be a kind of haunted aspect to it, an eroticism to it, because the minute Sarah makes this promise she’s haunted, she’s cursed. Obviously there is eroticism, from the frankly sexual to the almost mystical.”

Jordan wanted a feeling of “richness, ripeness and something spooked.” Production designer Tony Pratt says the aesthetic he and Jordan strove for had to reflect post-war Britain but also have a modern flavor. “We tried to suggest that there’s not much central heating around, there’s probably a shortage of coal and things because of the war,” says Pratt. “And we wanted to keep it fairly muted in color. But we didn’t want to make it absolutely ’40s. That would be a sort of subliminal aspect of it, but we wanted to make it look like a modern film, too.” Much of the action takes place either in the rain or at night, which may strike fear in the hearts of moviemakers but is distinctly advantageous to the atmospherics of this film.

“It’s a terrible hindrance—people with umbrellas, and actors getting wet and cold,” admits Jordan. “But it’s a great way to make the exteriors express just the right amount of mystery. All these wonderful things happen with the light.”

ARTISAN ENTERTAINMENT

Felicia’s Journey

Felicia’s Journey is the second novel to be translated for the screen by writer and director Atom Egoyan (The Sweet Hereafter; Exotica). The novel on which the film is based, written by William Trevor, concerns two old-fashioned characters who don’t quite fit their Ireland of 1998. Seve


Felicia’s Journey

nteen and pregnant, Felicia (Elaine Cassidy) leaves Ireland for the bleak industrial landscapes of England’s industrial Midlands in search of her lover, Johnny Lysaght (Peter McDonald). Along the way she falls prisoner to Hilditch (Bob Hoskins), a sociopath with a proclivity for lost girls. “Felicia and Hilditch are each afraid of facing the world,” Egoyan says. “They have wrapped themselves in various forms of denial, and in their own ways, are running away. Hilditch has elaborated a series of rituals and perversions that allow him to deal with his pain.”

Hoskins’ character has evolved from a boy who was deprived of a healthy emotional life to an adult-monster. To explain this character, Egoyan points to a scene where Hilditch carries a cup of drugged cocoa upstairs to Felicia, who is recovering from an abortion. “He looks into the camera and we have no idea whose eyes we’re looking at. We understand that he has no attachment to his feelings, and I think that that’s more terrifying than anything else. We see this person behave compassionately, but it’s all a performance.”

Shot at England’s Shepperton Studios, Egoyan worked with many of his creative collaborators, including director of photography Paul Sarossy, composer Mychael Danna and editor Susan Shipton. New to the group were production designer Jim Clay and Academy Award-winning costume designer Sandy Powell (Shakespeare in Love; Velvet Goldmine).

FIRST RUN FEATURES

42 UP

In a recent article for London’s Sunday Times newspaper, director Michael Apted contrasts his experiences bringing forth two very different films this fall as director; 42 Up and the new James Bond flick, The World is Not Enough.

“I’m inspired by The Arithmetic of Memory, a new autobiography by a contemporary of mine, Anthony Rudolf,” he wrote. “He starts off by quoting Macbeth—‘If you can look into the seeds of time...’, which, coincidentally, has become a calling card for me, as well, reflecting the central piece of work in my life, the Up series of films I made for Granada Television. I follow the lives of 14 people fr


42 Up

om the age of seven up to the present day and their 42nd year (7 Up, 14 Up, 21 Up, 28 Up, 35 Up and now, 42 Up). Can you see the man in the child? Now, it’s as if I were in my own documentary asking myself the questions the film asks—is it conceivable that there was anything in my younger self that would give any clues to the man guiding 007 as he wrestles control of Caspian Oil from the murderous clutches of the world’s most feared terrorist?”

Like the period of life it illuminates, 42 Up is caught in a reflective mid-life crisis, one that Apted is quite willing to admit to as well. “My series of UP films has the cruel trick of confronting people with the cold reality of the past. The visual truth of them on film erases any filtered version.” As with “the anguished little boy from a children’s home who didn’t want to get married because ‘Say you had a wife and had to eat what she cooked you, and say I didn’t like greens, which I don’t, and say she said you had to eat them, well then, that’s it.’ In 42 UP, he’s been married 27 years with two children and is none the worse for his greens.”

As for the temptation to play God in his films and predict how things might turn out, Apted says he got into terrible trouble with Tony, a tough street kid who wanted to be a jockey but by 21 knew he wasn’t going to make it. “So I filmed him at 21 showing me the hot crime spots of the East End in preparation, or so I thought, of his own decline and fall. I was completely wrong, as he channeled his considerable energies into his family, house and life as a cabbie.” The Bond film is Apted’s own unpredictable outcome, where he embraces what formerly might have been anathema to him.

LIONS GATE

Last Night

Seizing Y2K angst by the throat, Canadian writer (Thirty-Two Short Films About Glenn Gould, The Red Violin) and actor (eXistenZ, The Red Violin) Don McKellar wanted to break down the themes that have evolved recently in end-of-the-world scenarios. The first-time director says that, when writing the script, he turned to friends and asked what they would do on a hypothetical “last night.” The answers all fell into similar categories: spending it with your loved ones, in private contemplation, having sex, or partying. McKellar decided to explore the causes of such behavior. If chaos were to break lose, who would we be and who would we become?

Unlike blockbuster apocalyptic disaster movies, “none of my characters are trying to stop it,” says McKellar. “The world is coming to an end anyway,” he says, “so you might as well live


Last Night

your life or end your life the way you choose.” Though the subject matter might appear bleak, McKellar says his film is optimistic. “I wanted my characters to have courage, perseverance and life. I wanted them to connect right up until the very end.” Director David Cronenberg, who also appears in the film, adds: “you never find out why the world is ending; in fact, the reason itself isn’t really relevant to the story.”

The story follows several characters rather than a few main ones, and McKellar did this partly as a reaction to much of the current big-screen fare. “Most Hollywood films are too predictable,” he explains. “Feature film structure has become so rigid now. And it’s not like that in theater or in novels or in anything else, really. It’s just really oppressive, I find."

And people know that Hollywood structure so well that it’s become an almost perverse audience game of expecting something and watching the very minute variations and being satisfied by them or not. And the only way to get out of that trap is to completely throw the audience off with some kind of diversionary tactic.

“I need that sneaky approach, to take the audience by surprise. I don’t like it when things are too head-on. I’m very skeptical of melodrama and a lot of obvious film manipulation. Whenever I feel it’s too predictable, I get very conscious of breaking that structure, throwing it off.” Ironically, none of his characters seems to be losing their own structure as the world around them comes to a halt. For example, one family gathers for a last dinner, with the mother insisting on table manners. Meanwhile, a man methodically meets prostitutes at his apartment. “They’ve all dealt with it,” says McKellar.
“They’ve all dealt with the end of the world. “They aren’t exactly calm, but they’ve built these structures and rituals to keep them going.”

USA FILMS

Agnes Browne

Director Angelica Huston (Showtime’s Bastard Out of Carolina) panicked when Rosie O’Donnel pulled out as the lead a few weeks before pre-production, but she turned it around and cast herself in the role, to the pleasure of many in Ireland’s film community, where she is known for her work on another Irish epic, The Dead. Adapted from the best-selling 1994 Irish novel The Mammy, Agnes Browne centers on a mother of seven in1960s Dublin. The story had already been introduced to the Irish public through a book and radio drama, Mrs. Browne’s Boys, written by Brendan O’Carrol (who co-wrote the screenplay with John Goldsmith). O’Carrol says he tapped into a groundswell of affection for a specific type of character with universal appeal. “When I wrote the book, I thought it to be parochial, and that it would appeal to either Dubliners, or Irish people at large.


Agnes Browne

I now realize there are Mrs. Brownes everywhere,” says O’Carrol.

Huston was approached to direct by one of the project’s producers, Jim Sheridan (directed of In the Name of the Father and My Left Foot). “I chose to make this film because it brought me back to Ireland, the emotional landscape of my childhood,” says Huston. Drawing on memories of her own Irish nanny, Kathleen Shine, Huston used the woman as her role model for the Browne character. “She was a second mother to me,” says Huston. She also prepared by meeting with several women who work on Moore Street in Dublin (called Market Street in the film, where Agnes Browne runs her fruit and vegetable stand). What she wanted for the production, she says, was realism and honesty. So the film was shot entirely on location in Dublin and the crew was comprised of Irish, English and American members. Oh, and one notable Welshman, singer Tom Jones, who plays himself in the film. In the story, Browne dreams of someday seeing the singer in concert. While it’s not unusual for Jones to appear as himself (he did it in Tim Burton’s Mars Attacks! and on The Simpsons), he was a bit nervous about the trip back in time to the ’60s. “Anjelica told me not to worry,” says Jones, “as it was a surreal situation.”

Like Tom Jones, the filmmakers had to revisit their own impressions of Dublin in 1967, and then physically recreate them. Production designer David Brockhurst was blessed by the assistance of a modern medium: “We found a Tom Jones Fan Club on the internet who kindly supplied original posters and record covers. We put those through the computer and reproduced them.”

SONY PICTURES CLASSICS

All About My Mother


All About My Mother

Director Pedro Almodovar’s 12th feature is a continuation of the director’s fascination with women, but the heroines in All About My Mother are more well-rounded, not merely cartoonish victims as before (Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown; High Heels; Law of Desire) and certainly more in control of their destinies. In this film, a woman whose son dies in a car accident seeks out a former lover to tell him their son wondered who his father was until the end. But first she must tell him that after she left him 18 year earlier she was pregnant with his child, that he has just died and that she had named him Esteban, like him. That is, until the father changed his name to Lola. Finding a man named Lola, one can imagine, is never easy.

Born in 1951, Almodovar, who grew up in the Extremadura region of Spain, remembers observing women act their way out of difficult situations at a very young age, and this is a central premise of the film. “As a child I remember seeing that quality (of faking it) in some of the women in my family,” says Almodovar. “They faked more and better than men. And through their lies they managed to avoid more than one tragedy.” In fact, the film’s title is an ode to another film about actresses lying to each other, All About Eve. The film’s main character is herself a reference to another grande dame of theatricality, Blanche Dubois from Tennessee William’s A Streetcar Named Desire. And in All About My Mother, a flashback has Manuela taking her son to a Madrid production of Streetcar.

In a further evolution, Almodovar’s heroines do not clash over a man’s love. Instead, two women become involved with each other. Quoted in The New York Times, Penelope Cruz, one of the film’s lead actresses, said, “Manuela and I fall in love, but we don’t have sex. I think that kind of relation is quite new for Pedro. To give such a sexless friendship an erotic tension was hard work—something of a risk.” MM

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COMMENTS | POST A COMMENT

Comment by Consultanta juridical on 1/30/08 at 3:22 pm

All these picture houses. I remember seeing COLUMBIA written on the big screen at the cinema house, that bad image but cool sounds…

Comment by Shikai Color Reflect on 9/19/09 at 1:50 pm

Whatever interesting topic, anyway, it becomes forgotten. Dried, hay while the sun high :-)

Comment by Call Free on 10/08/10 at 1:58 am

This is a fantastic research for me as i am doing honors in media sciences. thanks a lot it will benify me a lot.

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MovieMaker Magazine

Magazine cover: November/December 1999This story was published in the November/December 1999 MovieMaker Magazine. The headline was:

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