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May 16, 2008

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The Circus Comes to Town

Todd Field talks about shooting In the Bedroom on the coast of Maine

Todd Field

Todd Field

Up until now Todd Field's main claim to fame is as the actor who played the decadent, piano-playing pal of Tom Cruise in Stanley Kubrick's Eyes Wide Shut. Field's first acting breakthrough was in Victor Nunez's 1993 Ruby in Paradise, where he played a dreamer in a sleepy little town on Florida's Gulf Coast who falls in love with a shopgirl (Ashley Judd) running from her past. Then there was a turn as the tornado chaser in the big-budget movie Twister (1994). It was in Nunez's sleeper that Field learned how to make a movie on a shoestring-which inspired him to make the kind of intimate movie he now seems born to direct.

If up to now Field has been known primarily as an actor, all that has now changed with In the Bedroom, his feature debut. The movie, about a married couple's attempt to deal with their grief after their son's death, garnered a special jury prize for acting for the film's stars, Sissy Spacek and Tom Wilkinson. There is already Oscar talk; Spacek hasn't had a role as juicy since her Academy Award-winning turn in Coal Miner's Daughter (1980). Wilkinson, best known as the conservative Englishman in The Full Monty, is a surprise in a stunningly understated performance as a grief-stricken town doctor trying to keep marriage and life together after a tragic loss.

Marisa Tomei is absolutely making a career comeback in her role as an older working-class woman whose affair with the couple's young architect-aspiring son sets the tragedy in motion. At a recent New York screening of the movie Tomei described what attracted her to the role. "I thought the whole script was very evocative. You could read it and see it and hear it in your mind. A lot of time scripts are just really flat," she said. "This one was so rich." The critics seem to agree. The National Board of Review awarded its best directing award to Field for In the Bedroom. They also recognized the screenplay, which he co-wrote with Rob Festinger, and cited the movie as being among the year's Ten Best Films.

At the afterparty for In the Bedroom, which was held recently in a midtown New York hotel, the lanky 37 year-old perfectionist director, in between frequent interruptions, which included being pulled away for conferences with Harvey Weinstein and requests to pose for photographs with the film's stars, discussed shooting on the Maine Coast, how being an actor informed some of his directing choices and why being an performer is a whole lot easier than being a director.

MM:This is your first feature, and the hard work you've put into it really shows. I heard there was some concern the movie was too long at two hours and 10 minutes. Did you have to cut anything out after the film was picked up for distribution?

TF: The only things that I cut were things I wanted to do before Sundance. A lot of people had suggested cutting it early on-even some of my producing partners-but we pulled in audiences from the streets of New York last fall before we went to Sundance, and the film played at that length.

MM: You're known mainly as an actor-and this film is a real actor's showcase in many ways. Sissy Spacek and Tom Wilkinson shared a Special Jury Prize for acting at Sundance, and it's certainly Marisa Tomei's best work recently. Was the choice to give each actor his or her 'turn' a deliberate one?

TF: Absolutely. I love looking at old movies when there are real supporting roles-when I feel like I've gotten to know a whole group of people, not just one guy and a girl. There's no role that's insignificant; every character is imperative to the piece.

MM: I know you said you've been stuck out in LA working on the film, but how much time do you spend in Maine?

TF: I haven't been there at all this year. As soon as I finished the film, we moved from there to come to LA to start post and I've been stuck there ever since. But we lived there for years. We spent three months back in the summer, but that's it.

MM: You shot the film in Maine. What was that experience like?

TF: It can be very frustrating because the only thing you can count on in Maine is that the weather's going to change every five seconds. I'll set up to shoot a scene and it starts pouring rain. I remember the first day we were supposed to shoot that whole barbecue sequence: we had everyone there, everything dressed, everybody ready to go and all of sudden it went from a sunny blue day to this torrential downpour. It's a little bit like trying to catch bottled lightning. When people talk about weather in Maine, they're not making small talk. There's weather in Maine and it's changing all the time.

MM: How did the community react to the film shoot?

TF: Well, the people were very, very supportive. We couldn't have made the film without the powers that be in Rockland, Rockport, Camden and a lot of these other towns, but predominately Rockland. And they were excited that we were there-you know, the circus comes to town.

I was a little nervous because I was bringing in a bunch of strangers into my backyard, and sooner or later somebody's going to offend somebody somewhere. There's a high sense of tolerance in a small community, but you mind your p's and q's because you know you're going to see somebody for a very long time and you're going to bump into them on the street. People were so unbelievably generous and gracious, but the whole time I was holding my breath thinking, 'Oh God, somebody's going to offend somebody, and I'm gonna have to see this person for the rest of my life in this town.' (laughing)

MM: Can you talk a bit about how you shot the film?

TF: My cinematographer [Antonio Calvache] and I went to film school together. In school we were pre-digital age, so we learned things the old fashioned way. We learned how to do in-camera opticals; we learned about map paintings and rear screen projection as opposed to blue screen projection. We learned about doing everything in the simplest possible way-in a chemical way, not a digital way. If you had to shoot a night sequence and you didn't have a big light, you wait for a cloudy day and you shoot day for night. All of those things people don't generally do anymore. And we were able to do most of those things in the film, and that was very exciting for both of us because we talked about doing these things for a long, long time.

MM: So you weren't tempted to use any of the new digital technology?

TF: No. I can always tell. It always looks like crap. Always.

MM: Does being an actor make you more generous and sensitive to your own actors' needs?

TF: You try to keep a very quiet set and you try to have everything be discussed well before you get on that set. And when you're on the set you try to stay out of their way. You basically become a parent and it's like saying, 'Okay, remember to eat your porridge. Take the vitamins. I remember it was cold yesterday, so put your jacket on and then go out and play.' For me that's always the best setting. I've only had that a couple of times with a couple different directors, but that's what I tried to do as much as I could. These are all smart actors. They all took this material and elevated it to a much more interesting place than I could ever have imagined.

MM: Will you be going back to acting yourself?

TF: I don't know. Not unless somebody calls. (laughs)

MM: I read somewhere that you said as an actor you have to worry so much about your appearance, but as a director you let your appearance go to hell-although you certainly look fine. (laughing)

TF: It's nice what a nice suit will do. I clean up well. (laughing)

MM: Was it kind of liberating to lose yourself so completely as a director?

TF: No, I like to be clean. And I like to exercise. It is kind of nice to not think about that stuff because you're in your head so much. I didn't really care… You find yourself trying to remember if you've changed your underwear. It's been a week-did I change it? You sleep in your clothes a lot. You come home and drop out at one o'clock in the morning and know you're going to have to be back for the 6:00 a.m. call. And if you're really lucky, like I am, you have a wife who's kept dinner warm on the stove and you get a bite to eat when you go back to work again. But yeah, [there's] something kind of great about that I guess.


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