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Write what you know. Thats the
often-dispensed advice of screenwriting gurusa mantra thats
largely dismissed by the more experienced (and generally more
successful) moviemaking publicbut a statement that journalists
and critics still latch on to as an analytical crutch, concluding
that the thoughts and attitudes of a films main characters
must closely reflect the thoughts and attitudes of the films
makers. For identical twins Mark and Michael Polish, creators
of the unexpectedly moving Twin Falls Idaho (1999),
the question of how they related to the conjoined protagonists
at the center of their film went far beyond the psychological.
I realized we did a good job when we started to do press
for Twin Falls Idaho and began to notice that love seats
were provided during interviewsthe journalists were expecting
to interview conjoined Siamese twins, says Michael,
who directed the film. It doesnt take long to realize that
not only are Mark and Michael of separate bodybut completely
distinct personality and talent as well. While their latest film, Jackpot , an exploration of the road to fame and fortune
through the eyes of disillusioned karaoke songster Sunny Holiday,
shows relatively little physical trace of the moviemakers themselves
(Mark does have a cameo), it has the Polish brothers style
written all over it.
Jackpot marks the brothers
sophomore foray into feature films. Like Twin Falls, Jackpot examines the relationship between two mensoap salesman
turned wannabe country singer Sunny Holiday (Jon Gries) and his
manager Lester Irving (Garrett Morris)who begin to feel
the strain of their own dependencies. Departing on a nine-month
tour of some of middle Americas finest karaoke establishments,
Sunny and Les are propelled by dreams of celebrity, with George
Jones Grand Tour leading the way. A sort of new millennium
Midnight Cowboy, the film celebrates the romantic notion of struggling
to achieve a dreamand the worldly realism of failing to
do just that.
According to Michael, what really
inspired us was an appreciation for country-western music, especially
some of the old-time stuff. We wondered what would happen if people
who didnt have a venue to sing decided to do karaoke as
they tried to become stars. What happens when he starts taking
it too seriously? For Sunny, talent lies in the art of imitation.
The audiences who come to see him are not there for Sunny Holiday,
theyre there for whichever artist he is covering. As Les
tells him, Youre not in the shower anymore. You have
an audience that is here to listen to you sing Escape
like Rupert Holmes does. They do not need to hear your version.
These folks come in here, have a drink, shoot the shit and if
they close their eyes, theyre in the third row of a Rupert
Holmes concert.
Born in the Mexican border town of El Centro, California and raised
in Northern California, the brothers have always displayed a flair
for the artistic. I poured paint into an electric pencil
sharpener when I was in high school and began painting,
declares Michael. In some ways, that translates into filmmaking
others might say I was a lazy Jackson Pollock. Though unorthodox
in his methods, Michael was accepted into the fine arts program
at CalArts, where he earned a BFA in visual communication. Because
he was too young to enter the film program, Mark opted to forgo
college and continue his pursuit of an acting career.
Jon Gries stars as Sunny
Holiday |
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Though Michaels art school education
may have helped the brothers tell their stories in a visually
compelling way (the lighting and composition of Twin Falls
Idaho intentionally mimics the work of Vermeer and Hopper),
it brought them no closer to their dream of making movies. While
they knew they could tell a story (and envision what the final
product should look like), they lacked the technical know-how
to make it happen. Picking up an Arriflex camera and a roll of
black and white 16mm film, Mark and I decided to collaborate,
just on small things, just to see how wed cut everything
with a beginning, middle and an end.
Those initial collaborations eventually led to Bajo del Perro
(Under the Dog), a short film about Mexican boxing which played
at film festivals around the country and won several awards, including
Honorable Mention from the Directors Guild of America and
the Young Filmmakers Award at The Walt Disney Company. Between
1994 and 1996, Mark and Michael penned a trilogy of screenplays,
starting with Northfork (the project theyre currently
working on), followed by Twin Falls Idaho and completed
with Jackpot .
Of their own road to success, there
is an epic version that starts with the time I was walking my
dog and met Jon Gries, says Mark. Impressed with the script
for Northfork, Gries (Get Shorty) convinced Rena Ronson, who at
the time was Senior VP of International Sales for Trans Atlantic
Entertainment, to meet with them.
I was immediately struck by them,
their energy and all of those things you get when you connect
with people. Their enthusiasm was monumental, and clearly addictive,
remembers Ronson of their initial introduction. Though they originally
pitched her the idea of Northfork, it was the concept of
conjoined twins, and what it meant to be separate from a loved
one or partner in life, that intrigued her. It was
original, dark, odd and carried a uniqueness that I had never
before seen on filma lot of the wonderful ingredients that
make movies like this nearly impossible to get financed!
Though a universal story of love and
separation, because of the films offbeat protagonistsand
the fact that investing in Twin Falls meant investing in
two unknown moviemakersfinding one angel was
the key to getting Twin Falls Idaho financed. But true
to their artistic nature, Mark and Michael look at the investment
from a more straightforward point of view: We found someone
who was willing to risk losing $500,000, states Michael.
In 1999, the quietly compelling story
of Blake and Francis Fallsconjoined twins who decide to
reenter a perversely curious society to find the mother who abandoned
thempremiered at the Sundance Film Festival. Though it had
been a long road to completion, all the struggles seemed to pay
off when Sony Pictures Classics offered us a deal that made
us happy as filmmakers: they didnt want to touch the negative.
They bought Twin Falls as is, flaws and all, says Mark.
When it came time to look for a home for Jackpot , we
knew that Sony was the first place we wanted to go, he continues.
Luckily, they enjoyed the piece and our relationship continues.
Michele Hicks with Mark (left) and Michael Polish in Twin Falls Idaho (1999). |
Though they are currently in pre-production
on the last of their trilogy films, Northfork, a 1950s-set
story about a dam being built in Montana and the repercussions
of what happens when they decide to flood the valley, Mark and
Michael recently completed a several week acting stint on Neil
Jordans upcoming Double Downan English-language
remake of Jean-Pierre Melvilles French New Wave classic Bob le Flambeur. Jordan offered them the role after seeing Twin Falls Idaho. When you add up what was involvedworking
with Neil Jordan and Nick Nolte, a great script, plus the South
of FranceI had to make Mike reconsider his retirement from
acting.
In a series of conversations from Nice,
France, where they were shooting Double Down, as well as their
home base of Los Angeles, Mark and Michael Polish spoke with MM
about their own road to success. Armed with an encyclopedic knowledge
of popular culture (which is clearly evidenced in Jackpot ),
both brothers can speak at lengthwith authority and humoron
just about any subject. But when the topic comes back to moviemaking,
theyre always serious. Here, they discuss their early struggles,
the art of imitation and where their 30-year collaboration will
take them next.
Jennifer Wood (MM): Both Twin
Falls Idaho and Jackpot are part of a trilogy, with Northfork as the third installment. Whats the connection
between these three stories?
Michael Polish (MIP): Theme-wise,
they have to do with peoples relationships to each other.
There are two guys in Twin Falls and two guys in Jackpot who are trying to figure out their identity within each other.
Mark Polish (MAP): Both are
a quest for identity and individuality. When Northfork is completed,
I think there will be a clearer link to all three of the stories.
MM: Is that quest for identity
and individuality a theme in your own relationship?
MAP: We know each other so wellI
know his strengths as well as his weaknessesso its
very much like a puzzle. We each have certain pieces that complement
each other. Its always a good game of tennis with us, hitting
ideas back and forth, always forcing one another to get better.
I dont think we need to assert our individuality. We respect
each others talent and thats where we succeed.
MM: Twin Falls Idaho, Jackpot and Northfork are all named after North American towns.
In Twin Falls, the title comments on the characters and
the places. What does Jackpot signify?
MIP: Its more a state
of mind, since we dont actually make it to Jackpot [in the film].
MAP: Jackpot is a small
gambling town, where people from Twin Falls and Salt Lake City
come to bet their paychecks. Thats what Sunny Holiday is
doing. Hes betting everything he has on becoming a country
singer. Everyone has some kind of Jackpot in their lifesomewhere
theyre driving to. It may not be fame or fortune, but its
always a better place than where theyre at.
MM: Of the three screenplays,
why choose Twin Falls as the first to make? Because of
its originality, I assume it wasnt an easy sell?
MIP: Any first-time filmmaker
is going to have a difficult time financing their first feature.
You have to be willing to go the distance for your vision. Your
struggle gets filed away next to the last persons struggle.
What makes it different is the story you want to tell.
MAP: Although TFI was perceived
as non-mainstream, it had a marketing hook: no one had seen a
movie about Siamese twins. So there was intrigue due to the originality
of the story. But as we found out, the more original the less
the budget was going to be. You can always tell the faith in the
movie by the size of its budget, and we were quite low on that
scale.
MM: Your films display a meticulous
attention to detail, from color and lighting to music and title
fonts. Each scene is so precisely renderedespecially for
a low-budget independent.
MIP: We rely heavily on the
visual to tell our stories and less on the spoken wordwed
rather show you than tell you. The picture is the magic and we
try to heighten certain parts of the story with special attention
to detail. We render the image to a form that conveys the most
information. How much do you show and is it interesting enough
to use as a tool for storytelling? This is the question that decides
what details are going to exist on screen.
MM: Do you ever leave a scene
open for on-the-set interpretation? Do you allow for any improvisation?
MIP: I would have probably been
more into on-set interpretation if we didnt shoot Jackpot in 15 days. You need time to explore, and that is exactly
what we dont have.
MM: Though youre working
in a visual medium, you seem to employ various literary elements,
like symbolism, imagery and metaphor.
MAP: Many of the movies I watched
and learned from, like Excalibur and The Natural, used a lot of
symbolism. And books like Hemingways Old Man and the Sea
influenced me with its use of symbolism. They made me look deeper
into the stories and I began to respond to the subtext. I dont
necessarily begin a story using symbols or metaphors, they just
seem to reveal themselves as I dig deeper into the truth of a
subject.
MIP: I worked the late shift
at a cardboard factory that made cut-out carrying cases for beer
and wine coolers. Terri, the girl who ran the forklift, used to
tear off pieces of the boxes and munch on them as she worked.
Could I ever write something that good? Thats the struggle,
making sure you pay attention to the box munchers of the world.
MM: Being truthful is very important
to you. You did heavy research on conjoined twins to write Twin
Falls in an honest way. And in Jackpot , you dont rely on a happy ending.
MIP: The truth encompasses humor
and tragedy better than any liberty I could take. My chalkboard
quote is: artistic freedom is knowing your limitations.
The metaphor of building a house seems to fit nicely when describing
moviemaking. The blueprint has to translate into something people
want to live in. So far, our homes have lacked the necessary light
to attract the suburban customer. We are working on a floorplan
that would satisfy this type of customer and yet still please
us.
MM: Where did the inspiration
for Jackpot come from?
MAP: I was interested in exploring
the road to fame. Everyones path is different, but there
is the common goal of fame and fortune and overall recognition
of your talent. Everyone has a dream, no matter how silly it may
seem. A person should be allowed to go after it.
MIP: Fame, fortune and fucking.
Tie these things together, and youve got yourself a Sunny
Holiday.
MM: Are the struggles that Sunny
deals with something you can relate to in your own career?
MAP: Our struggles were worthy
of any artistliterally starving to feed the dreambut
they still wouldnt make the cut for an E! True Hollywood
Story. I have yet to hit the coke and hookers phase of my life.
MM: Jackpot has a nonlinear
editorial style, jumping back and forth in time. Is this another
way youre able to heighten the story through imagery?
MAP: The editing of Jackpot was to enhance the feeling one gets while listening to a
favorite song. A songs natural repetitiveness allows you
to replay memories, like a chorus or a bridge in a song. You become
comfortable with the structure and start to enjoy the melody.
MM: Jackpot is the first
feature to showcase Sonys new 24p HD camera. How did you
come to decision to employ an untested format?
MIP: We knew that we wanted
a grittier feel to Jackpot . Mark knew a DP who was testing
the 24p cameraone of the first ones in the LA area. That
camera was going to be used for Roswell, but they decided not
to go 24p, so we had the opportunity to take it off their hands.
From there we kind of jumped off the
deep end because nobody knew anything about the cameraand
nobody knew what it would take to take it through post.
MAP: We felt, conceptually,
it commented on our story. The 24p strives so hard to look like
film, but its only imitating itmuch like karaoke will
never be anything but imitation. audience will not be able to
detect that its digital video.
MIP: Videotape is the benefit
when shooting digital. Youre able to burn plenty of tape
and not see the dollar signs in the smoke. Artistically, we were
able to achieve a hyper-realistic look using high definition.
This look commented on the popular.
MM: From both a technical and
an artistic standpoint, what are some of the benefits and limitations
of 24p?
MAP: Both the benefits and limitations
are up to you as a moviemaker. Its so close to imitating
film that the majority of the culture we wrote about. The new
24p format strives to be film-like, and the characters in Jackpot can relate to that effort of imitation.
Being able to shoot in 2:35 with a
flick of button allows independent filmmakers the chance to experience
widescreen without the expense. The notion of saving money going
digital may work when youre using a consumer DV cameraor
even a prosumer camerabut the high definition camera is
expensive and there is still a major cost in the transfer to film.
MM: Twin Falls was shot
in 17 days on a $500,000 budget; Jackpot was made in 15
days on a $400,000 budget. How do the low budgets and quick shoots
affect the outcome of your films?
MAP: So much so that
I think we may only do one more film like this. I really dont
think I could make a career of short shoots and low budgets without
being admitted to a padded room. But if that is the only way to
make our films, then I have no choice.
MIP: Money buys time, its
that simple. On Jackpot , there was never a day when we
shot under five pages. Everyone has got to be on and
thats where the creating suffers. Theres no time to
discuss any possibilities if the set-up is not working. Time constraints
seem to bring out the best and worst in people, and knowing those
limitations makes us more creative in the end.
MM: After Twin Falls Idaho,
you were offered studio projects that you didnt take. Are
you against making a film within the Hollywood system?
MAP: It came down to being comfortable
with the material. I didnt connect with the screenplays.
Im not really opposed to making a Hollywood
movie; its just a different process. Youve got a hell
of a lot of chefs, and theyre cooking for a lot of different
tastes.
MIP: It was the wrong material, but the right money. Once I get over these self-indulgent films, I may want to make a living. MM