The 2022 awards season will officially end on Sunday, March 27th with the airing of the 94th Academy Awards. All the campaigning and guessing who will win will be over and we will finally know who will walk away with Oscar gold.
It’s been another crazy award season, with almost every early frontrunner surpassed by another contender (with the exception of Will Smith and Jane Campion for Best Actor and Best Director, respectively). We also have an almost impossible to predict Best Actress race, and a current dead-heat for Best Picture between early frontrunner ‘The Power of the Dog’ and fan-favorite ‘CODA.’
Below are our predictions for who will win Oscars on Sunday at the 94th Academy Awards. We are only breaking down our predictions for the six major categories, Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actor, Best Actress, Best Supporting Actor, and Best Supporting Actress.
Let’s Begin!
BEST PICTURE
Emilia Jones in ‘CODA,’ now streaming on Apple TV+.
As previously mentioned, ‘The Power of the Dog’ and ‘CODA’ are pretty much in a statistical dead-heat at the moment. Jane Campion’s film had been the presumed Best Picture winner since its debut last fall, but Apple TV+’s ‘CODA’ is definitely giving the Netflix movie a run for its money after its recent PGA win.
After the depressing ‘Nomadland’ won Best Picture last year, there is a theory that the Academy my not want to give the Oscar to the equally depressing ‘Power of the Dog’ this year, and instead the more uplifting ‘CODA’ or ‘Belfast,’ could get the win. While Kenneth Branagh’s ‘Belfast’ has gotten a lot of love during the award season, it seems that its chances of an upset have cooled off, allowing ‘CODA’ to make a run at the top prize.
While safe money is probably still on ‘Power of the Dog’ to win Best Picture, ‘CODA’ seems poised for a big upset.
Nominees:
‘Belfast’
‘CODA’
‘Don’t Look Up’
‘Drive My Car’
‘Dune’
‘King Richard’
‘Licorice Pizza’
‘Nightmare Alley’
‘The Power of the Dog’
‘West Side Story’
With the exception of Best Actor, this is the only other category that is really easy to call. Jane Campion will win Best Director for her work on ‘The Power of the Dog,’ as well as her overall career. Yes, the filmmaker has stumbled a bit on the awards circuit, misspeaking and causing a minor controversy at the Critic’s Choice Awards, but I hardly think that will affect her chances.
The director was practically preordained to win this award when her film was released last year, and I see no reason to think that she won’t. If Campion has any competition in this category it’s probably Kenneth Branagh for ‘Belfast,’ but it would be a huge upset if he were actually to win.
Nominees:
Kenneth Branagh – ‘Belfast’
Ryusuke Hamaguchi – ‘Drive My Car’
Paul Thomas Anderson – ‘Licorice Pizza’
Jane Campion – ‘The Power of the Dog’
Steven Spielberg – ‘West Side Story’
Who Will Win: Jane Campion – ‘The Power of the Dog’ Who Could Win: Kenneth Branagh – ‘Belfast’
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BEST ACTOR
(L to R) Demi Singleton as Serena Williams, Saniyya Sidney as Venus Williams and Will Smith as Richard Williams in ‘King Richard.’
Similar to Best Director, this is the only other category that will be very easy to predict. Will Smith has been preordained to win Best Actor for his work in ‘King Richard’ since the film was released last year. Besides his excellent performance in the movie, there is an overwhelming feeling that “this is Smith’s year,” and the actor has taken full advantage of that while campaigning for the award.
Although, Andrew Garfield has also been very visible during award season and has gained a lot of good will while campaigning. The praise is probably as much for his return as Spider-Man as it is for his performance in ‘tick, tick…BOOM!,’ but either way it won’t be enough to rob Smith of his big moment.
Nominees:
Will Smith – ‘King Richard’
Benedict Cumberbatch – ‘The Power of the Dog’
Andrew Garfield – ‘Tick, Tick…Boom!’
Javier Bardem – ‘Being the Ricardos’
Denzel Washington – ‘The Tragedy of Macbeth’
Who Will Win: Will Smith – ‘King Richard’ Who Could Win: Andrew Garfield – ‘Tick, Tick…Boom!’
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BEST ACTRESS
(L to R) Andrew Garfield as Jim Bakker and Jessica Chastain as Tammy Faye Bakker in ‘The Eyes of Tammy Faye.’
This is by far the strangest Best Actress race in years. Just like Campion and Smith, Kristen Stewart seemed like a lock to walk away with this award last fall, but a lot has changed since then. For whatever reason, Stewart failed to be nominated for several ceremonies leading up to this one, including SAG and BAFTA, throwing the whole race out of whack and leaving the actresses’ chances of even receiving her first Oscar nomination up in the air.
Stewart was lucky enough to be nominated, but her chances of winning now are very low, although it’s really up for grabs for anyone to take. The most likely winner seems to be Jessica Chastain, who walked away with a SAG award for Best Actress and may also benefit from the feeling that it is “her time.” But recent Best Actress winner Olivia Coleman could also win again for director Maggie Gyllenhaal’s ‘The Lost Daughter,’ which just took home Best First-Time Feature from the DGA.
Nominees:
Jessica Chastain – ‘The Eyes of Tammy Faye’
Olivia Coleman – ‘The Lost Daughter’
Penelope Cruz – ‘Parallel Mothers’
Nicole Kidman – ‘Being the Ricardos’
Kristen Stewart – ‘Spencer’
Who Will Win: Jessica Chastain – ‘The Eyes of Tammy Faye’
Who Could Win: Olivia Coleman – ‘The Lost Daughter’
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BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
(L to R) Emilia Jones, Troy Kotsur, Marlee Matlin and Daniel Durant in “CODA,” now streaming on Apple TV+.
In another sign that ‘The Power of the Dog’s love from the Academy is winding down, both early Best Supporting Actor and Actress frontrunners seem to be in trouble.
Kodi Smit-McPhee seemed like a lock to win this category last fall, but now ‘CODA’s Troy Kotsur is the frontrunner going into Oscar weekend. Kotsur beat Smit-McPhee at both the SAG Awards and Critic’s Choice, and it’s tough to see how he could lose at this point.
Nominees:
Ciaran Hinds – ‘Belfast’
Troy Kotsur – ‘CODA’
Jesse Plemons – ‘The Power of the Dog’
J.K. Simmons – ‘Being the Ricardos’
Kodi Smit-McPhee – ‘The Power of the Dog’
Who Will Win: Troy Kotsur – ‘CODA’
Who Could Win: Kodi Smit-McPhee – ‘The Power of the Dog’
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BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Ariana DeBose in ‘West Side Story’
As we previously mentioned, last fall it looked like actress Kirsten Dunst would win Best Supporting Actress for her work in ‘The Power of the Dog,’ but things have changed.
The frontrunner is clearly now Ariana DeBose, who won SAG and BAFTA awards for her performance in ‘West Side Story.’ Aunjanue Ellis is still in the running for ‘King Richard,’ and could pull out a surprise win, but all the momentum is in DeBose’s favor to walk away with a “little gold man.”
Nominees:
Jessie Buckley – ‘The Lost Daughter’
Ariana DeBose – ‘West Side Story’
Judi Dench – ‘Belfast’
Kirsten Dunst – ‘The Power of the Dog’
Aunjanue Ellis – ‘King Richard’
Who Will Win: Ariana DeBose – ‘West Side Story’
Who Could Win: Kristen Dunst – ‘The Power of the Dog’
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Don’t forget to watch the 94th Academy Award ceremony Sunday, March 28th on ABC.
(L-R) Roger Frappier, Jane Campion, Kirsten Dunst, and Jesse Plemons accept the Best Picture award for ‘The Power of the Dog’ onstage during the 27th Annual Critics Choice Awards at Fairmont Century Plaza on March 13, 2022 in Los Angeles, California. Photo by Amy Sussman/Getty Images for Critics Choice Association.
Following other major award ceremonies in getting back to an in-person event this year, the 27th Annual Critics Choice Awards were held in Los Angeles on Sunday night. And the big winner among the movie community was Jane Campion’s ‘The Power of the Dog’.
Despite a slightly awkward clash with the BAFTAs (pandemic-forced scheduling shifts resulted in an awards schedule that was even more crowded than normal), necessitating a live link-up with a satellite room, the event managed to corral a good selection of stars and filmmakers, plus a diverse selection of TV creators and performers.
‘The Power of The Dog’ took home the most awards on the night, pocketing Best Picture, Best Director for Campion (who gave an entertaining speech in which she compared her competing against male filmmakers to Venus and Serena Williams – who were in the room, supporting ‘King Richard’), Best Adapted Screenplay and Best Cinematography.
Will Smith accepts the Best Actor award for ‘King Richard’ onstage during the 27th Annual Critics Choice Awards at Fairmont Century Plaza on March 13, 2022 in Los Angeles, California. Photo by Amy Sussman/Getty Images for Critics Choice Association.
‘CODA’s Troy Kotsur continued his sweep of Best Supporting Actor categories and gave a heartfelt sign language speech via video from London. Ditto Ariana DeBose for ‘West Side Story’, the two actors now seemingly on track to lift the corresponding awards come Oscar night.
‘Dune’ and ‘West Side Story’ largely scored in the technical categories, while trophies including ‘Best Young Actor’ gave the likes of ‘Belfast’s winning Jude Hill another chance to shine. Speech of the night, though, went to Lifetime Achievement Award winner Billy Crystal, who was naturally hilarious and touching all at once.
One slight shame of the evening, mostly for timing reasons, was several relatively big categories (Screenplay for example) announced via card before and after commercial breaks.
On the TV side, ‘Ted Lasso’ and ‘Succession’ continued their domination of the comedy and drama races, while ‘Squid Game’ saw more love. And some repeat winners took the stage, including ‘Hacks’ Jean Smart.
Jean Smart accepts the Best Actress in a Comedy Series award for ‘Hacks’ onstage during the 27th Annual Critics Choice Awards at Fairmont Century Plaza on March 13, 2022 in Los Angeles, California. Photo by Amy Sussman/Getty Images for Critics Choice Association.
You can find the full winners list below.
FILM CATEGORIES
BEST PICTURE
The Power of the Dog
BEST ACTOR
Will Smith – King Richard
BEST ACTRESS
Jessica Chastain – The Eyes of Tammy Faye
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
Troy Kotsur – CODA
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Ariana DeBose – West Side Story
BEST YOUNG ACTOR
Jude Hill – Belfast
BEST ACTING ENSEMBLE
Belfast
BEST DIRECTOR
Jane Campion – The Power of the Dog
BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
Kenneth Branagh – Belfast
BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
Jane Campion – The Power of the Dog
BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY
Ari Wegner – The Power of the Dog
BEST PRODUCTION DESIGN
Patrice Vermette, Zsuzsanna Sipos – Dune
BEST EDITING
Sarah Broshar and Michael Kahn – West Side Story
BEST COSTUME DESIGN
Jenny Beavan – Cruella
BEST HAIR AND MAKEUP
The Eyes of Tammy Faye
BEST VISUAL EFFECTS
Dune
BEST COMEDY
Licorice Pizza
BEST ANIMATED FEATURE
The Mitchells vs. the Machines
BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM
Drive My Car
BEST SONG
No Time to Die – No Time to Die
BEST SCORE
Hans Zimmer – Dune
TV CATEGORIES
BEST DRAMA SERIES
Succession
BEST ACTOR IN A DRAMA SERIES
Lee Jung-jae – Squid Game
BEST ACTRESS IN A DRAMA SERIES
Melanie Lynskey – Yellowjackets
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR IN A DRAMA SERIES
Kieran Culkin – Succession
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS IN A DRAMA SERIES
Sarah Snook – Succession
BEST COMEDY SERIES
Ted Lasso
BEST ACTOR IN A COMEDY SERIES
Jason Sudeikis – Ted Lasso
BEST ACTRESS IN A COMEDY SERIES
Jean Smart – Hacks
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR IN A COMEDY SERIES
Brett Goldstein – Ted Lasso
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS IN A COMEDY SERIES
Hannah Waddingham – Ted Lasso
BEST LIMITED SERIES
Mare of Easttown
BEST MOVIE MADE FOR TELEVISION
Oslo
BEST ACTOR IN A LIMITED SERIES OR MOVIE MADE FOR TELEVISION
Michael Keaton – Dopesick
BEST ACTRESS IN A LIMITED SERIES OR MOVIE MADE FOR TELEVISION
Kate Winslet – Mare of Easttown
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR IN A LIMITED SERIES OR MOVIE MADE FOR TELEVISION
Murray Bartlett – The White Lotus
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS IN A LIMITED SERIES OR MOVIE MADE FOR TELEVISION
Jennifer Coolidge – The White Lotus
BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE SERIES
Squid Game
BEST ANIMATED SERIES
What If…?
BEST TALK SHOW
Last Week Tonight with John Oliver
BEST COMEDY SPECIAL
Bo Burnham: Inside
Andrew Garfield attends the 27th Annual Critics Choice Awards at Fairmont Century Plaza on March 13, 2022 in Los Angeles, California. Photo by Amy Sussman/Getty Images for Critics Choice Association.
Kelly Preston, Jenny Seagrove, Sally Phillips, and Elizabeth Dormer-Phillips in ‘Off the Rails’
British filmmaker Jules Williamson began working in film as a runner and cites producer David Puttnam (‘The Duellists’, ‘Chariots of Fire’, ‘Local Hero’) as a major influence on her work in both narrative and documentary. Her first short film, 2002’s ‘Tattoo’ was nominated for Best Shot Film at the BAFTAs, and she has since worked mainly in British television. ‘Off the Rails’ is her feature film directorial debut. Inspired by events in her only life, ‘Off the Rails’ is an ensemble comedy about three friends in their 50s who are reunited by the death of a fourth. As soap star Cassie (Kelly Preston), journalist Kate (Jenny Seagrove), and doctor Liz (Sally Phillips) have gotten older, and their lives have gotten busier, they’ve put their once close friendships on the back burner. After their friend Anna’s funeral, the three are joined by her daughter Maddie (Elizabeth Dormer-Phillips) on a quest to re-create their trip from twenty years earlier. Although things go a bit awry, they begin to patch up old wounds and find strength in each other as they move towards new beginnings. Set to an all-Blondie soundtrack, ‘Off the Rails’ is a perfect blend of comedy, romance, and fabulous European vistas.
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Director Jules Williamson spoke to Moviefone about her feature directorial debut.
Moviefone: How did you first come up with the idea for ‘Off The Rails’?
Jules Williamson: I originated the idea nearly 19 years ago. It’s based on my own life. The reason that I was drawn to the idea was because I thought it would resonate with many women. I had the idea just after I’d made my first short film. It was nominated for a BAFTA, it was in the Palm Springs Film Festival. I had used the Interrail when I was 19 with my three best friends, and we promised each other we would do the trip again. Then, as I was making the short film, I was in my mid 30s and thinking about what I wanted to do as a feature. It struck me that we probably weren’t going to go interrailing when we were 40 because we were all busy doing other things. We wouldn’t be able to take a month off, let alone a week. So I wondered where would those women be in their lives? The characters are not my real friends; they’re made up. But what would happen if four friends didn’t mean up when they meant to, but then they were forced to? And how would they deal with that? Would it be a good thing? Would it be a bad thing? So I like very much the idea of friendship being an empowering force, so I wanted that to be the thing that kind of propelled them into the next stage of their lives. So while revisiting the physical journey, they also revisit their friendship and by the end of it, they would be ready for a new beginning. Now I’m older, I see that women in their 50s have this very interesting period of their lives where there is this new stage, new beginning open to them. Often they don’t quite know where they’re going to go with that, because society is quite hard on that age group. So it was very important to me that there was a sense at the end of a very positive outcome.
MF: Do you think because you waited so much longer to make the film that you were able to sort of tap into things that aren’t necessarily shown in most movies?
Williamson: Definitely. When I was in my mid 30s, I had no idea about menopause. I thought your 40s were when you were middle-aged, but the thing is, society has moved on so fast. Thank God. So now 60s is the new 50s and all that sort of thing. So I think being in your 50s is a really interesting time. Now that I’m in my 50s, I could tap into all of that. I was really keen to talk about menopause in it. ‘Off The Rails’ is a comedy-drama, or in some ways, I would actually say it’s more of a drama-comedy, but I wanted to see women talking about the menopause. I hadn’t seen that. I’ve seen it on TV in a brilliant, brilliant series called ‘Fleabag,’ but I haven’t seen it on film. Sally Phillips and I basically made up that scene. We had discussed it beforehand because Sally hadn’t reached menopause yet, so she hadn’t quite caught on to all the aspects of it. I spent a lot of time telling her about it, which of course she loved. I say very wryly that she loved it because she was a bit horrified. We did have a laugh about it all. I personally feel that age brings all sorts of positive aspects to professions. Certainly with filmmaking. I have enough experience to not be fazed by making a feature film. I did wait a long time, but it was the right time.
MF: Could you talk about the casting process for your lead roles?
Williamson: We obviously always knew we wanted women of around that age, so that was fairly straightforward. There are a lot of actresses of that age group, but there aren’t that many roles. The industry is changing, but the fact that it’s taken so long to make female centered films, and there are still so few films that I’m aware of about women in their 50s. It tends to be the ‘Bridesmaids’ age group, or it tends to be the kind of 70s age group, but that midlife is represented. So casting them wasn’t really that difficult, because the actresses were there. What I love about the casting is that they’re all so different. And in real life, all the women were so different. But they were perfect. They just absolutely fitted the bill for each individual woman. They became very, very close while filming. There was this wonderful connection between them. My style of directing helps everybody connect, and I was very keen to kind of allow them to feel that they were those characters and give them room to play, and to own them and to find those moments where they were just being the characters rather than just saying the lines. We did quite a bit of improvising and I think that really helps. They loved it because we had a lot of fun.
MF: Were the locations you filmed the same places from your actual trip when you were younger?
Williamson: Over the years, I have come up with many different journeys. I did a lot of research into how we could basically make the journey come off the rails, which obviously makes them in the story, the characters come off the rails. So I had all sorts of journeys, and one where they went to Sarajevo. In this instance, we knew that we wanted to cover those countries in particular – Paris and Italy. We weren’t 100% sure what we were going to end up, but I know Mallorca very well, from having spent holidays there as a child, and then I returned to Mallorca as an adult. One of the producers mentioned the Light of God festival. So we thought, why don’t we make that the ending? So that’s how we came to focus on Palma as the final destination point. So we shot that all in Mallorca, but we also went to Barcelona, where we caught the mainline train. We had different trains. We had a little wooden train in Mallorca, which was supposed to be the Italian train. We had the Main Line train in Spain, which we used for the train from Paris. Then we used a station in Barcelona as Paris, and Kings Cross Station in London, as the security in Paris. The Eurostar stood in for itself. So we shot in Mallorca, Spain, London and Paris, and then we had a day in Surrey, where we filmed the opening church scene. We had 38 locations in 26 days across four countries.
MF: How did the music of Blondie become part of the film?
Williamson: The film is very much influenced by ‘The Big Chill’, which is one of my favorite films, which has an iconic soundtrack. I love music. It’s a big part of my sort of creative vision. So when I met Bill Kenwright, the producer – there are two producers Arabella Page Croft, who I originated the story with – and Bill. Bill immediately picked up on ‘The Big Chill’, because he also loves it. I had talked about Blondie in the story because I love Debbie Harry. She’s just, she’s so cool. So when we were talking, just before we started filming, Bill came up with the idea of having a full-blown Blondie soundtrack. He worked tirelessly to get us that music. I think it’s great because the songs really resonate.
MF: How do you hope people will feel when the film is over?
Williamson: It’s a film about grief partly, but it’s also a film about hope. Given the last year and a half coming up to two years that the world has had, I feel that it’s incredibly timely. And so that’s, that’s the first thing. The second thing is the power of friendship. Women have got this extraordinary connection to each other, which enables them to do extraordinary things. And I think the third thing is that as we’ve been talking about women in the 50s, it’s a tricky time, and often they’ve felt like society has forgotten about them. So what I love about the ending, which was always my intention, was that women feel like anything is possible. That new beginnings are possible. They can start again, or they don’t have to start again, whatever they want to do. So, really, my most important message is when I suppose or have hope and empowerment.
MF: Could you recommend another film directed by a woman you think readers should see out?
Williamson: A filmmaker that I absolutely love is Jane Campion. I’m a massive Jane Campion fan. I really love what she does. A lot of films are very serious, but she also is able to bring some kind of humor into those characters as well. I’m thinking specifically about the series she did, ‘Top of the Lake,’ which I absolutely adored. Particularly the second season. Yeah, I just love her filmmaking. I love how absolutely I am engrossed by her work.
‘Top of the Lake’ and ‘Top of the Lake: China Girl’
Thomas M. Wright and Elisabeth Moss in ‘Top of the Lake’
With this year’s ‘The Power of the Dog’ catapulting Jane Campion back into the spotlight with awards season hype, now is a great time to revisit deeper cuts in her triumphant filmography. Reuniting with Gerard Lee, who co-wrote her debut feature film ‘Sweetie’, Campion’s foray into television was as enigmatic as you’d expect. She shared directing credits on the mystery drama with Garth Davis (‘Lion’) and Ariel Kleiman (‘Yellowjackets’). Starring Elisabeth Moss, the first season follows Detective Robin Griffin (Moss) as she investigates the disappearance of a pregnant 12-year-old girl in New Zealand. Holly Hunter also stars as a mysterious spiritual leader. In season two, Detective Griffin returns to Sydney, Australia to investigate the death of an unidentified Asian girl found at the popular suburb Bondi Beach. Like her films, Campion explores themes of physical and emotional abuse, and specifically how toxic masculinity can have deadly effects on women in vulnerable communities.
Cary Elwes and Brooke Shields in ‘A Castle for Christmas’ directed by Mary Lambert
Born in Helena, Arkansa, director Mary Lambert graduated with a B.F.A. from the Rhode Island School of Design before starting a career directing music videos. Her most well known work in the 80s includes Chris Isaak’s first music video ‘Dancin,’ Janet Jackson’s ‘Nasty’, and many of Madonna’s early videos including “Like a Virgin”, “Material Girl”, and “Like a Prayer”. Lambert also worked with music artists like Annie Lennox, Mick Jagger, The Go-Go’s, Whitney Houston, Mötley Crüe, Sting, and Debbie Harry. Her feature film debut ‘Siesta’ starring Ellen Barkin, Gabriel Byrne and Jodie Foster was nominated for Best First Feature at the Independent Spirit Awards. Her second feature film was the iconic adaptation of Stephen King’s ‘Pet Sematary.’ Lambert also directed its much darker sequel, ‘Pet Sematary Two.’ In her decades-long career, Lambert has directed dozens of feature and television films, documentaries, music videos and episodes of television.
‘A Castle For Christmas’ stars Brooke Shields as Sophie Brown, a wildly successful romance novelist who travels to Scotland after a disastrous appearance on a talk show. Reeling from a divorce, Brown killed off a fan favorite character and her readers – and publisher – are not happy. While in Scotland, she’s tasked with writing her next book, but instead visits the castle where her father lived as a child and slowly finds herself falling for its irascible owner, The Duke of Dunbar (Cary Elwes). A charming addition to the Christmas movie canon, fans of cozy holiday romances should get a cup of hot cocoa ready because they’re sure to fall head over heels themselves.
‘A Castle For Christmas’ is now streaming on Netflix.
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Mary Lambert spoke to Moviefone about her latest film.
Moviefone: How did you first get involved with making this Christmas movie?
Mary Lambert: I’ve got the opportunity to direct this because of my friendship and professional, you know, acquaintance with Brad Krevoy, who had brought me the script. I just really fell in love with it. I was super excited about the idea of working with Brooke Shields; she was already attached to it.
MF: I saw that the film is dedicated to your mother.
Lambert: My mother was very ill, and we knew she didn’t have very long to live. You never know exactly what that means. Christmas was just a really important holiday for her. I realized when I read the script, and even more strongly when I was making the movie, that what an incredible gift my mother had given me with her joy. The joy of Christmas, my mother just had a lot of joy, and it really expressed itself. It really blossomed. It really overflowed sometimes more than anybody could even handle at Christmastime. She loved Christmas so much. It was a real expression of the joy that she had all year long. When I was making the movie, every day I realized what a gift that she had given me with the memories I had from Christmas. Mostly really simple memories of Christmas trees and Christmas cookies, and Christmas sweaters and family parties. I had lots of cousins, lots of cousins and had a really big, immediate family. She died in April, just as we were finishing the post-production. So she never got to see the movie. But Netflix, Christina Rogers, and Brad honored my request to dedicate it to her. Brad even suggested it, because he knew that I was going through the grief grieving process with my mother. He said, why don’t we dedicate the movie to her. It was just such a perfect suggestion because as I said before, so many times during production I would be overwhelmed by my love for my mother and my family.
MF: Did you have any traditions growing up that you drew on for the film?
Lambert: Absolutely. My mother’s mother, my grandmother, used to have a huge Christmas Eve party with all of her grandchildren. She had like 13 grandchildren, so there were a lot of us. And the big double door, she had a really old house, it wasn’t particularly fancy, but it was big, and it was old. And she would shut the doors to the hall where you came in the front door. And we would all be in the living room and in the kitchen and in the dining room. We would have a big dinner. We had to wait till after dinner, and then she would open the doors to the entrance hall where the big giant Christmas tree was. All the presents for all of her grandchildren would be spread out like a Christmas fairy tale. Most of them were handmade. Everybody always got a sweater, or some hat or something that she had knitted for us. So the knitters were in the script already, but we definitely enhanced that. I threw myself into the knitters. I realized that the idea of knitting, making something for somebody else, but particularly knitting it, like every little stitch, you know, is a part of yourself. So I definitely drew on those memories from my grandmother and my great aunts.
MF: Could talk a little about working with Brooke Shields and Cary Elwes? They had such wonderful chemistry in this film.
Lambert: They’re both incredible people and incredible actors. And they both really dedicated themselves to making these characters real, not just like, jokey or were you making a Christmas movie it doesn’t matter. Every detail of the characters were important. Some actors don’t particularly like to rehearse, but both Brooke and Cary really threw themselves into finding as much of the heart of these characters as we possibly could in the script. Plus, somewhere in Cary’s past, there was a Duke in Scotland. He has Scottish ancestry. His mother’s British, but he spent a lot of time in Scotland as a young man. He kind of is the Duke of Dunbar. He really brought this knowledge of what it would be like to be a contemporary man living with this heritage. Living with the weight, the glory and the wonder of it, but also the weight of this heritage. He really brought that depth to the role that I don’t think another actor could have done, really. Brooke is just such a joy bug. She’s like, as a person, she’s always in the moment. When you’re with Brooke, there’s like a shining light on you, because it’s just coming from her. She’s not always thinking about something else. She’s there in the moment. She brought that aspect of her own personality to the part. She also has this incredible ability to just throw something back at you. She’s an athlete, you know, and if you say something to her, she just catches it, and then she throws it right back to you. She brought that sort of spontaneity and freedom to the role. Cary was the more introverted, the Duke who isn’t able to be spontaneous. And it just worked. Because they both just embrace your characters, and they were always just lobbing that ball back and forth.
MF: What was the location shooting in Scotland like?
Lambert: One of the things we had to do, because of the Covid protocols, was to choose one location and stay there. I had so much fun location scouting. We went to every castle within 100 miles of Edinburgh. They were like aren’t you tired of location scouting? And like, no, I can’t believe I’m being paid to do this. I would come over here and do this for two weeks as a tourist, this is incredible. But initially, I wanted to find the best staircase, the best dining room, the best ballroom, and then put them all together, and you know, move from one to the other, as if it were one castle. But we couldn’t do that. So we had to narrow it down to one property. We ended up on the Dalmeny Estate near Edinburgh, which is still inhabited by the people who’ve lived there for like 300 years, 400 years. People really do live in these castles that have been in the family for 300 or 400 years. Maybe it changed hands 350 years ago, but you know, it’s 600 years old, but we’ve only been here for 300 years, it’s kind of like that. We had these people that lived in the castle as our sort of role models for the duke. So we chose the Dalmeny Estate because it was a very old castle. Barnbougle Castle is right there on the shore. I think it is 600 years old, it goes back to the 1400s. At a certain point, they decided they wanted to modernize, so they built a much bigger estate further inland. It’s a much bigger house. More of a manor house than a castle, actually. So we used them both. We put them together. We used some of the beautiful old rooms in Barnbougle to look really very castle-y. Then we used the exterior of Dalmeny house as our exterior because it was so big. Some of the older castles are really not that big. They were built as keeps. So the walls are eight feet thick, but they want to defend the smallest possible space.
MF: Could you recommend another film directed by a woman readers should seek out?
Lambert: I mean, the films of Jane Campion are amazing. Her first film, ‘Sweetie.’ I don’t know that it’s ever gotten as much love as it should. And Patty Jenkins. She’s my dear friend. If you haven’t seen the ‘Wonder Woman’ movies, you should see them. But her first film, ‘Monster’ is a terrifying movie. Don’t see it if you’re easily frightened. It garnered an Academy Award for Charlize Theron. It kind of made Charlize Theron. I would say, ‘Sweetie’ and ‘Monster’ if we’re looking for movies that maybe you haven’t seen or haven’t gotten a lot of press. My sisters! We’ve been making movies. People didn’t always go see them.
Sweetie – written and directed by Jane Campion
Karen Colston in ‘Sweetie,’ directed by Jane Campion
Trailblazer New Zealand filmmaker Jane Campion was nominated for Best Director at the Academy Awards for her 1993 film ‘The Piano,’ for which she became the first woman to receive the Palme d’Or award at the Cannes Film Festival. Her first feature film ‘Sweetie’ played at the 1989 Cannes Film Festival and was later released by the Criterion Collection along with three of her early shorts ‘An Exercise in Discipline: Peel’, ‘Passionless Moments’, and ‘A Girl’s Own Story’. Known for her frank depictions of sex and gender dynamics, ‘Sweetie’ stars Karen Colston as Kay, a young woman in her twenties coming into her sexuality while also dealing with her chaotic sister Sweetie (Geneviève Lemon), and the contention relationships they both have with everyone around them.
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Monster – written and directed by Patty Jenkins
Charlize Theron in ‘Monster,’ directed by Patty Jenkins
Born in Victorville, California, Patty Jenkins moved around a lot during her childhood due to her father’s military career. She received her undergraduate degree from The Cooper Union and a master’s degree in directing from the American Film Institute. Her first short film was a superhero film inspired by the style of Pedro Almodóvar. Her feature film debut ‘Monster’, which was inspired by the real-life story of serial killer Aileen Wuornos, premiered at the 54th Berlin International Film Festival, where Charlize Theron won the Silver Bear for Best Actress. ‘Monster’ was a commercial and critical success, making $64.2 million on an $8 million budget. For her complex portrayal of Wuornos, Theron received many awards and nominations, eventually winning the Oscar for Best Actress.
Director Liz Garbus’ documentary ‘Becoming Cousteau’ traces the life and career of Jacques Cousteau
Born and raised in New York City, Liz Garbus attended Brown University where she graduated magna cum laude with a bachelor’s degree in history and semiotics. After taking some video courses and filming a short documentary while at Brown, Garbus interned at Miramax films where she began working with filmmaker Jonathan Stack. Their film ‘The Farm: Angola, USA’ was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary. Raised by a social worker and an attorney (“superlawyer” Martin Garbus), much of Garbus’ work focuses on issues of inequality and injustice, as well as explorations of identity and history. Her prolific career, which spans feature films, short docs, and television, includes dozens of directing credits and over 50 producing credits. In 2007 her film ‘Ghosts of Abu Ghraib’ won an Emmy for Outstanding Non-Fiction Special. She received a second Oscar nomination for her 2015 film ‘What Happened, Miss Simone?’ about singer and civil rights activist Nina Simone. Other notable recent projects include the miniseries adaptation of ‘I’ll Be Gone in the Dark’ following writer Michelle McNamara’s quest to catch the Golden State Killer, and ‘All In: The Fight for Democracy’ a piercing look at the activists fighting against rampant voter suppression.
Using extensive archival footage and first hand accounts, her most recent project ‘Becoming Cousteau’ traces the life and career of famed explorer, filmmaker, innovator, scientist, photographer, author, researcher and conservationist Jacques Cousteau. The film deftly uses Cousteau’s own journey from adventurer to activist to shine a light on how society’s current obsession with the sea must translate into direct action to save it. ‘Becoming Cousteau’ paints a complex portrait of a passionate, yet enigmatic man, and acts as a rallying call to arms to continue his legacy of conservation before it’s too late.
Liz Garbus spoke to Moviefone before the film’s presentation at the Toronto International Film Festival in September.
Moviefone: Your documentaries cover a diverse array of subjects. How did you decide on making a film about Cousteau?
Liz Garbus: This was inspired by a night when I was reading a book to my young son about the undersea world and discovery. Cousteau, of course, was mentioned. It just brought to me these incredibly warm, fuzzy recollections of my childhood watching his TV show. Then it also made me realize that he was being lost to a new generation, even though they had been influenced by the imagery he had brought into their living rooms, with modern underwater programming and shark weeks. It’s all owed to Cousteau’s early work. So I began to dig deeper into his life’s journey. His message around conservation felt incredibly timely and important to discuss at this moment.
MF: This documentary uses a lot of archival footage. What was that process like?
Garbus: We had 500 hours to pour through. There were two stages there. One is the listening stage where my team and I were listening to his interviews, his narrative of his own life, trying to identify what are the important milestones in his own view. The next stage was talking to folks who knew him well, for that perspective. Then we organized a wish list of visual events in his life. For instance, he talks about the effect of World War II, and we were able to uncover footage of him diving to recover the corpse of a dead soldier. He talks about his early missteps in the way he interacted with animals and the undersea world. In exploring that we came to understand what his art was. It’s really a redemption tale so we looked at the archive with that in mind.
MF: One interesting quote from him was “I’m interested in the world outside me, the world inside me means nothing.” How do you go about finding the interiority of a person really even interested in that?
Garbus: That was certainly a challenge. I’ve certainly dealt with subjects or made films about subjects who were much more introspective. But in many ways, I wanted to respect that. He does talk about his flaws. He talks about his failure as a father and husband. He talks about his guilt about having interacted with animals and nature in the way he did in the early part of his career. So it’s not fair to say he never sort of looked into himself, but certainly by the third act of his life, and the third act of the film, he is not interested in signing autographs and being a celebrity. He’s interested in action to protect the oceans.
MF: When he launched his first TV show they didn’t know if they should sell him as a scientist, researcher, philosopher, inventor, or explorer. How did you decide how much of each facet of him to show?
Garbus: I think in his early life, it was really this hubristic notion of the male conqueror that dominated his identity. We must go further, we must go deeper. These were his mantras. We must go and see for ourselves. These were the things that he talks about, as his early mantras. Then as time goes on, he becomes less of that explorer and more into the realm of protector, and really siren for the peril that he was seeing. He was feeling the warming ocean temperatures against his skin. He was seeing the degradation of reefs as he had been documenting over decades. It’s really that evolution from adventure and explorer to caretaker. Of course he still led a very dynamic life, and you could focus on any one of those elements for much, much longer. But his journey from hubris to nurturer was the one that I felt was really important for kind of a metaphor for today, for where we as a society need to do.
MF: Can you talk a bit about his first wife Simone Melchior and how you decided how much of her to put into the film?
Garbus: She was a total surprise to me during the research. I found her to be a delicious character, salty and headstrong. They called her “La Bergère”, the Shepherdess, the one keeping all the herd from going over the edge. Her son says she was on The Calypso more than anybody holding everything together. I loved reading her journals. She writes, “I don’t have blood in my veins, I have salt water.” Her love affair with the sea was very, very pure. For a woman of her generation, the only way she could live a life on the sea was to marry a sailor, or marry somebody as dedicated to the sea as she was. This is how they made this match.
MF: Cousteau was so popular in the 60s and 70s, but I don’t know that his films or the TV shows are really even available.
Garbus: You’re right, they’re really not. Given the kind of technology we have now for showing children and adults what lies under the sea, they feel antiquated. I think what I was trying to do in this film was express the kind of magicalness of what it felt like to see them for the first time with a global audience back then. One of the things that I wasn’t really aware of is what an extraordinary filmmaker he was. I think so many of us grew up with this TV show, but his film ‘World Without Sun’, is really just a gorgeous piece of filmmaking. So I do think that they’re worth revisiting.
MF: How do you think Cousteau’s legacy is reflected in current underwater entertainment?
Garbus: His early work expresses a total love for the magic of the undersea world. He says you will only protect what you love. Which I think is certainly very true. I think that the idea that we might fall in love with the undersea world and therefore be more committed to taking steps to protect it is a very valid one. Underwater documentaries further our love for this world, then perhaps there’s some good, we just have not seen the connection between that love and actual action. Individuals may have paper straws and not throw their plastic into the water, etc., but we are in such a massive problem that it goes beyond individual action. It’s about government regulation and action. That’s the missing piece.
MF: How do you hope audiences feel after they’ve watched your film?
Garbus: I hope they feel angry that for decades that they’ve had these blank checks on their shoulders as their homes get flooded, or they see wildfires and how climate change is accelerating before our very eyes. But I also hope they feel the love and the wonder that connects us to this planet and wants us to elect people who are committed to protecting it.
MF: Are there any women whose films who inspired you to go into filmmaking or just that you love and think other people should seek out?
Garbus: There are so many! In the world of documentary, Barbara Kopple was the O.G. and is the O.G. ‘Harlan County USA.’ and ‘American Dream’ were extremely influential for me. Also, I gotta say my brain is all Jane Campion at the moment as I just saw her latest film ‘The Power of the Dog’ and all I can think about is my desire to see that film again. I want to watch it and find all the details I know I missed the first time. She’s just such an extraordinary master and has been doing this at a high level for so long and with both drama and beauty. Those are two people who I certainly have been thinking a lot about.
‘Harlan County USA’ and ‘American Dream’ – directed by Barbara Kopple
A scene from ‘Harlan County, U.S.A.’
Pioneering documentarian Barbara Kopple has won two Academy Awards for her work. The first was for her 1976 film ‘Harlan County, USA,’ which covers the 1973 Brookside Strike. Kopple follows 180 coal miners and their wives as they fight for fair treatment from the Duke Power Company-owned Eastover Coal Company’s Brookside Mine. She won her second Oscar for 1990 film ‘American Dream,’ which follows the unsuccessful 1985–86 strike against the Hormel Foods corporation. As we see a rise in labor strikes across the United States, both films remain as relevant as ever.
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‘The Power of the Dog’ – directed by Jane Campion
Benedict Cumberbatch and Jesse Plemons in ‘The Power of the Dog,’ directed by Jane Campion
New Zealand filmmaker Jane Campion was only the second ever woman to be nominated for Best Director at the Academy Awards for her 1993 film ‘The Piano,’ which was also the first film directed by a woman to garner nominations in both directing and best picture categories. Also for that film, she became the first woman to receive the Palme d’Or award at the Cannes Film Festival, with Julia Ducournau’s win this year for ‘Titane’ making her only the second woman ever to receive the honor. Campion went on to win the Best Original Screenplay for her work on ‘The Piano’. Her most recent film ‘The Power of the Dog’ has been playing the fall festival circuit since its world premiere at the 78th Venice International Film Festival. Adapted from the novel of the same name by Thomas Savage, the hypnotic western stars Benedict Cumberbatch, Kirsten Dunst, Jesse Plemons, and Kodi Smit-McPhee, and is set to premiere in select theaters on November 17th and on Netflix on December 1st.
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Moviefone: You’ve played gangsters before, real gangsters like Mickey Cohen and Angelo Bruno. What’s your entry point to Meyer Lansky to give you something different to do?
Keitel: Well, I have to correct you, in a sense. I never played a gangster. I played a person, and there’s a lot of aspects to being a person. So you never use them up trying to discover them in your own life to be a person. So the search is a good search when you’re creating anything. In a theater, cinema, dance, music. You go to these forces that work on you and try to touch them in some way. Grab them.
MF: So what about Lansky as a person was interesting for you, as an artist, to bring to life and explore?
Keitel: Well, we have something in common. He is the child of immigrants. So am I. And I know a bit about that journey, coming from an immigrant family into America and trying to make a living. My parents tried to make a living, and that wasn’t always easy. It was tough going.
And those great experiences growing up that way, having to steal once in a while from the supermarket, a potato to go put it into a fire in the lots. And you had baked potatoes there. And once in a while, stealing a little bit of this, a little bit of that. One time, a bar of chocolate dropped out of my coat. It scared the hell out of me. I thought I’d get locked up.
So all these life experiences that make up a life and how you get into a life. I mean, Meyer was a brilliant, brilliant man. Everything he created was like a Midas touch. Some of it was not for the good, but then again, he found employment for millions of people. And then again, he was a father. He had children. The wonderful, complicated journey.
MF: You were a kid around the era that Lansky would have really been hitting it big. What would a young Harvey Keitel think about playing an adult Meyer Lansky, years later?
Keitel: (Laughing) Harvey Keitel probably wanted to be Meyer Lansky as a kid, never mind play him! I mean, he was a mythical figure. And when one is looking to become something in life, there are all those waterways you travel down. And if you’re lucky, you survive it, you survive the rush of water, and you don’t drown in it. I did my time drowning and rescuing myself. Meyer did his as well. And he created a lot of good. At the same time, he did a lot of things that were not so good.
MF: Eytan Rockaway, your director, describes Lansky, and Siegel and some others, as these larger than life, almost mythical Greek or Norse figures. Is there a trick for you in finding the humanity and putting that aside?
Keitel: We make the myths. We make them. They were handed down, stories about living. So we are part of making the myths. And a lot of us would like to live the myths. By that, I mean, to make the hero’s journey. And unless you read Parsifal… You know that the journey is fraught with danger, death, suffering, doing the good. He cures the sickly king by asking one question, “Uncle, what ails you?”
That is the essence of that myth. Arguably, they say, one of the great myths, if not the greatest one ever written. Who would know that unless we pass down these stories to each other? So Meyer Lansky, and the movie, I hope that we’re passing down this journey that the myths are written about, that we all have to experience.
MF: You’re playing a man who is very close to your own age now, who is telling his story. And at some point is, from time to time, passing on the things he’s learned to the younger David Stone. Did that get you thinking about some of your own things that you pass on, especially when you’re working with, say, younger directors like Rockaway?
Keitel: Everything. Everything. I mean, I’m a father. And I was that kid once, and everything in between. So I just read something, maybe it was last week. Someone wrote this line, “Teach your kids what you learned later on in life.” So I think we have this natural instinct to do the right thing.
I think Meyer had an instinct to do the right thing, but he was caught up in the life he created for himself. He and Lucky Luciano, and the things that they did. So they were caught in a way. Or caught themselves, trapped themselves, to go on to figure it out. I like to think I would have sat down with Meyer, and we would have had some fun.
MF: When you see and hear stories about the men in this business and in that profession, so often it’s focused on the Italians, and maybe less so personally on the Jews in that situation. And this movie really shows how important it was to Meyer to fight against the Nazis and support Israel. What’s that mean to you? And was that something that helped it stand out?
Keitel: It means to me that that Meyer had an aspect of himself that was a righteous man. A man that wanted to do the right thing. He had suffered oppression in Europe. And now in America, you had the young Nazis raising money to support their cause, the Nazi cause. And he wanted to put a stop to that. So who is Meyer Lansky?
That guy over there, that is me. I mean, I once asked this woman I know, this writer … because we were talking about killing somebody. And this person said, “You never kill anybody. You are not allowed to kill anybody. I would never kill anybody, no matter what.”
So of course, the example we give everybody is: Okay, there you are… And this Nazi has a gun to a child’s head, and he’s about to pull the trigger. And you can kill him and save this child’s life. What do you do?” Let me ask you that question. What do you do?
MF: I’d probably pull the trigger, but probably feel bad about it.
Keitel: I would too. I’d feel bad about it, but I would also feel I did the right thing. So, we’re not so one dimensional. It doesn’t have to be this or that. It could be this and that. Up and down, in and out, sideways. We haven’t gotten it figured out yet. We’re still an experiment. As you could tell, if you turn on the news.
MF: You’ve been doing this for 55 years and some change, at least, and parts of the process have evolved. What’s changed for you, and what’s changed that’s been good?
Keitel: Awareness. Awareness. Awareness. That, for me, is the goal.
MF: Awareness of others that are working with you?
Keitel: Awareness of the complexity of being on the planet. Awareness of doing the good. Awareness of protecting what’s worthwhile, and suffering the evil that exists. Trying to make a difference. It’s right upon us now. You know that.
‘Lansky’ is the second feature film for writer/director Eytan Rockaway. He spoke to Moviefone about how long it took to get the movie made, and how his father inspired him to write the story.
Moviefone: What’s it like working with a legend like Harvey Keitel?
Eytan Rockaway: Tt’s an amazing experience, probably one of the greatest experiences of my life. I mean, he’s a legendary actor. And nerve-wracking the first day on shoot, you have Harvey Keitel doing the first take, looking at you, and he’s just warming up and asking you, “How was it?” And then you have to say, “Well, it was great, but maybe do another one.” I mean, how are you going to say to a guy like him like that?
MF: What’s it take to get past that? Because at some point, you’re there to tell him what to do, you’re directing the film.
Rockaway: Well, I mean, for a guy like that, you let him do his thing, and you just guide them through it. That’s usually how it works with the actors. But he’s such an amazing human being. I mean, the first day on set, before we started shooting, he walked up, I think there were like 50 people on set or more.
And he just shook every single person’s hand, everybody from making the coffee to the caterer, to the grip, to the gaffer, until he didn’t shake every single person’s hand we didn’t do the first take. And that’s an indicator of what type of person that he is.
And once you get him, we became very, very good friends. I love the guy, see him as a mentor, especially when you have such knowledge to somebody like that, an actor like that, you just take it all in.
MF: Meyer Lansky’s shown up so many times on film, and so many of these gangsters have been covered on film. What’s it take for you, as a writer, to really focus on this as a separate story and make it its own story?
Rockaway: I tried being objective as possible. What interests me was the question of morality of the story. His morality. As he was the type of person that did good, he did a lot of bad, but he always trod that thin gray line between the two. And that’s what interests me. And luckily, I had my father. My father interviewed Meyer last year before he passed away. So the character of David Stone that Sam Worthington is playing is based on their interviews. So I had a good head start on that.
MF: Meyer Lansky’s Jewish identity definitely motivates some of his actions, like taking on the Nazis, contributing to Israel. Historically, we see so much of the Italian gangsters and Irish gangsters. Was it important to you to focus on what being a Jew actually means to Lansky?
Rockaway: He grew up in Russia where Jews were prosecuted and that changed his life. It traumatized him. Then he arrived in New York. He was poor. Jews were second-class citizens. Everybody in America, or most of us, are children of immigrants.
And it was important to me to show this is an important piece of American history. Doesn’t matter if you’re an Irish immigrant, Italian immigrant, Jewish immigrant, Asian immigrant. I mean, this is the story of this country. And he chose his path, but a lot of his path was because of the life that he led and the prosecution of Jews across Europe and America.
MF: How did the casting process go? And how did he get attached?
Rockaway: Well, we did have a casting director, Billy Hopkins, Ashley Ingram were great casting directors, but he was… Before we even had a casting director, a friend of mine, Danny Abeckaser who also plays the role of the young FBI agent, worked with his daughter on a movie, and he got the script to him, and he read it, and then he met with me.
And yeah, and then he got attached to the project. But it took me five years to make this movie, so from the moment I gave him the screenplay three years passed, and we live in the same area in New York and I used to see him in the streets. And the first year I used to see him like, “Hey Harvey, it’s the director of Lansky.” He’s like, “Hey, hey.” The second year, he was like, “The guy is annoying already.”
The third year, he was like, “This is never going to happen. This guy is like a stalker.” When we finished shooting the movie, he gave me a book by Kazan, and he wrote, “To my dear friend Eytan, the only stalker I was happy that ever got caught up with me.” So, yeah. But he was a trouper, he stayed attached to the project all along. And I mean, if it wasn’t for him, we wouldn’t have had a movie about Meyer Lansky.
MF: When you’re casting a character, or when you’re working on a story about a character, you’re showing you different parts of their lives. What are you looking for in the two different actors, the younger version and the older version, that’s going to allow you to work with them, to show the same person?
Rockaway: Well, I do look out for some similarities visually, but what we did in this movie is that we were lucky enough to shoot all of Harvey’s scenes first. And then I took the dailies and I showed it to John Magaro, and then he could kind of emulate that a bit.
But I do try to get as close as possible, at least with the nuances of it all. Obviously there were two different types of people, like when he was in his twenties, thirties, and forties, he was very different from he was in his eighties.
MF: You shot most of this in Alabama, right?
Rockaway: Yeah, we shot all of it in Alabama. It was my first time in the deep South and I loved, loved Alabama. Some of the sweetest, hardest working people I ever met. I want to back to visit the beautiful place.
And yeah, the reason we shot in Alabama was because they have the Gulf Shores there in Orange Beach, which is very similar to Miami in the 1980s. But then they have cities like Mobile, which have these old buildings from the 1930s and forties that are beautiful.
And we shot the interiors there. So it played out as New York back in the day. And yeah, I mean, we shot it in 20 days, which was crazy, but we managed to do that. I had an amazing crew.
MF: This is a low-key eighties environment, as opposed to the Miami Vice-style bright colors, big-houldered suits. How closely did you work with your costumer, and especially your automotive person, to really nail that?
Rockaway: Well, we worked very closely. All of my heads of departments were amazing. Everything from production design, wardrobe, to makeup, we worked very closely. I did try giving a real feel to Miami back in the day, even in the music, there was a lot of synthesizer, 1985 music throughout the soundtrack that you mix your classes, and you could give it the feel and give it that modern type of feeling. Yeah, we tried making it as real as possible.
MF: One of the shots I love in this movie is looking up through the typewriter keys at David. How did you guys achieve that one?
Rockaway: We broke the typewriter and put the camera underneath and just had him type it. And we had a problem breaking the typewriter, so it took us 45 minutes to open it apart and everybody was like, “We have to move on, and we have to get this typewriter shot!” So we broke it and put the camera, put it over the camera and got it.
MF: You mentioned that David is a somewhat based on your own father’s experience. What did your father talk to you about having talked to Meyer Lansky?
Rockaway: Yeah, so when I say it was loosely based, obviously not with the FBI and the down-on-his-luck writer, all of that, I took creative liberties. But his research and meeting Lansky, for him, was very interesting.
Obviously, I don’t think he was as objective as I was, because once you meet a person, especially when they’re in their eighties, and they remind you of your grandfather, so it’s a bit different, but it was very interesting to get his perception on it and his perspective.
And I definitely leaned on his research that he did, and doing research on organized crime in America for 40 50 years.
‘Lansky’ is now in theaters and on demand.
Welcome to Female Filmmakers in Focus, where you will find a recommendation for films directed by women to seek out each week. This week features a look at the new film ‘Slalom’, plus an interview with director and co-writer Charlène Favier.
‘Slalom’ (2020) – Directed and co-written by Charlène Favier
Noée Abita as Lyz in ‘Slalom’
At age 24 Charlène Favier started a production company called Charlie Bus Production. She studied acting at the Jacques Le Coq School in London and directing at the Astoria Studio in New York. She has directed four narrative shorts and a documentary. ‘Slalom’ is her first feature film.
Selected for the cancelled 2020 Cannes Film Festival, ‘Slalom’ follows Lyz, a 15-year-old girl who is training to become an Olympic athlete specifically a slalom skier. With her father out of the picture and her mother starting a new job in Marseilles, Lyz lives alone. She struggles to balance her schoolwork with her intense training. Finding a mentor in her trainer Fred (Jérémie Renier), their relationship escalates in a way that Lyz is not prepared for and does not fully understand. Anchored by Noée Abita’s first performance, ‘Slalom’ is an empathetic look at the struggles of teenage girls, as well as a searing condemnation of the way in which adults often take advantage of uneven power dynamics.
‘Slalom’ is out now in virtual cinemas through KinoMarquee.com. It is also playing at the Quad Cinema in New York City and Laemmle Monica Film Center in Santa Monica and Laemmle Playhouse 7 in Pasadena.
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Read on for an interview with ‘Slalom’ director/co-writer Charlène Favier
Moviefone: What was the initial inspiration for this film?
Charlène Favier: The story came from my memories and experiences. It was really a necessity to make this film. It was also a therapy for me, this five year process of writing and shooting and editing. Telling this story was really important to me. I was in a writing workshop in La Fémis cinema school, which is a cinema school in Paris. I knew a little bit of what I was writing because I always tell the same story in my short films. Not about sexual abuse, but about resilience, about a young heroine who tries to find her identity. The sexual abuse story came afterwards. I was very shy to talk about that, but the students around me and my teacher, and later my producer told me, “you are telling a story about sexual abuse in sports.” I was really, really afraid of this idea. I didn’t realize what I was writing. It was really just coming out of me on my computer. I couldn’t keep it in me. When I started to write about that, I had to tell everything.
MF: How did you cast Noée Abita?
CF: I discovered Noée Abita who plays Lyz in ‘Ava‘ [directed by Léa Mysius]. She had the wild side I was looking for. She was shy, she was fragile and at the same time she was really powerful. That’s what instinctively saw in her. Before shooting my feature, because we didn’t have the money to shoot it right away, I decided to shoot a short film [‘Odol Gorri’]. I asked Noée to pay Eva in it, a character that was very similar to Lyz. It was a way for me to test out how directing would be, the mise-en-scène, and a way for me to test out filming the abuse scene. We became straight away like sisters. It was a really powerful relationship we built making that short. It was very natural for us to meet. It was something cosmic. Something from the universe to bring us together and tell this story.
MF: Can you talk a little about casting Jérémie Renier as Fred?
CF: Jérémie I knew for a long time. I love his work. I think he really acts with his body. He is able to really enter into his characters. He transforms himself the way American actors do, which I don’t see enough with French actors. So he is able to play contradictory characters. With this character there are some sides to him which are teenage like, and yet are also so grave and so harsh. For Noée it was the same thing, so the three of us we became really a trio. We were like brothers and sisters, like siblings.
MF: How did you shoot the skiing sequences?
CF: It was all from the point of view of Lyz. On the skis I really wanted to be with her. I want to film the sensation; the vertigo and fear, but also the joy of sliding on the snow. We had cameramen who followed Lyz and ski next to her, filming the movements. There was also a lot of work in post-production to get this feeling because it has a lot to do with the sound. The sound of the ski, the sound of the breeze, the breathing. I really wanted the viewers to be with her.
MF: Were there any visual inspirations for the film?
CF: Mostly I looked at art and photography for the light, like Edward Hopper and Todd Hido or Bill Viola, but his is more experimental visual art. I am more inspired by photography and art than cinema, but I have to say I am very inspired by Jane Campion. Her cinema that puts emotion next to nature is very organic and instinctual. That is something that inspires me a lot.
MF: What do you hope audiences take away from the film?
CF: I think it’s very important that the viewer experience this story through Lyz’s eyes. I want them to feel what a 15-year-old girl goes through so that they will understand the importance of being able to say no, to be able to respect oneself, to be able to then tell the world who you are. I didn’t want to pass any judgement. I want for people to be able to get into Lyz’s body and to be with her as goes through these experiences.
MF: Can you recommend a film directed by a woman that readers should seek out?
CF: I’m always going to recommend Jane Campion. ‘The Piano‘ is a fantastic movie that I could watch over and over. I also love her television show ‘Top of the Lake.’ I adore it. It’s magnificent. A few other unique films that I adore I saw at the Deauville Film Festival a few years ago, the first two films of Chloé Zhao: ‘Songs My Brothers Taught Me’ and ‘The Rider’.
‘Songs My Brothers Taught Me’ (2015) – Written and Directed by Chloé Zhao
Irene Bedard, John Reddy, and Jashaun St. John in ‘Songs My Brothers Taught Me’
Zhao’s debut film premiered at the 2015 Sundance Film Festival, before screening at the Directors’ Fortnight section at the Cannes Film Festival that same year. Set in the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota, the film follows teen siblings Jashaun Winters (Jashaun St. John) and Johnny Winters (John Reddy), whose father has just died in a house fire. At his funeral they discover he had 25 children with nine different women. Johnny is counting down the days until he graduates from high school with plans to move to Los Angeles with his girlfriend, while Jashaun comes of age observing the struggles of those around her. Zhao uses non-professional actors to tell her story, partnering with cinematographer Joshua James Richards to capture the wild beauty of western skies. ‘Songs My Brothers Taught Me’ is a lyrical, emotionally rich debut from a visionary talent.
Welcome to Female Filmmakers in Focus, where you will find a recommendation for films directed by women to seek out each week. This week features the horror anthology film ‘Phobias,’ plus an interview with three of the film’s directors: Jess Varley, Maritte Lee Go, Camilla Belle.
Phobias (2021) – directed by Camilla Belle, Maritte Lee Go, Joe Sill, Chris von Hoffmann, and Jess Varley
(L to R) Camilla Belle, Maritte Lee Go, & Jess Varley, three of the directors of ‘Phobias’
Have you ever heard of the fear of weapons? Or the fear of imperfection? Or the fear of driving? Well, after finishing the new horror anthology you’ll know all about those fears and more. Each phobia is directed by one director, tied together with a frame story about a crazed government official who is trying to weaponize their fears. Some segments of ‘Phobias’ tackle timely subjects like anti-Asian sentiment, immigration raids, and PTSD, while others explore more typical horror subjects like home invasions, hauntings, and murder. The diverse cast is filled with character actors like Hana Mae Lee (‘Pitch Perfect’), Steve Park (‘Fargo,’ ‘Do The Right Thing’), Rushi Kota (‘Grey’s Anatomy), and Macy Gray (‘The Paperboy’) who are given roles that really show their range. Each filmmaker used a lot of the same crew, so there is a visual cohesion to the film, with the frame narrative setting it firmly in schlock B-film territory (this is a good thing). At turns terrifying, insightful, and mordantly funny, ‘Phobias’ should be a blast for fans of the genre.
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Read on for our interview with the directors of three of the five segments in the ‘Phobias’
Jess Varley attended NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts and has worked as writer-director-producer-actress for over a decade. Maritte Lee Go attended USC and has directed and produced over a dozen short films. Camilla Belle started her career as an actress making her feature film debut in Alfonso Cuarón’s ‘A Little Princess.’ This is Belle’s first credit as a director.
Moviefone: How did you each get involved in the project?
Jess Varley: After talking to [production company] Radio Silence (‘Ready or Not’, ‘V/H/S’) about doing an anthology movie and possibly centering it around phobias. Maritte and I had already worked together, and she produced a short film of mine. She’s just always been an incredible filmmaker and champion that I’ve looked to, so she was an obvious choice. As were Chris (von Hoffmann) and Joe (Sill). We very fortunately got linked up with Camilla (Belle) and were just so excited to have her on board being a huge fan of her work for so many years. I was thrilled to collect all of my favorite people and get to learn from all of them throughout the process.
Maritte Lee Go: I’ve been producing with Eric B. Fleischman for many years. We went to USC together. We put a list of ideas out there and phobias is the one that stuck. Radio Silence was on board. After that we were writing our individual ideas and got into production.
Camilla Belle: From my end, like Jess had said, I was the newbie to this crew. I came in later, but everyone was extremely welcoming. At that point everyone had already picked their phobias and I think everyone’s scripts were almost done at that point. I had to rush my process a bit to get it done on time with everyone else. Everyone was very positive and welcoming.
MF: How did you choose your phobia?
JV: Especially I think for Maritte, Camilla and I, our segments are definitely real reflections of real phobias that we have. My segment is Atelophobia, which is the fear of imperfection. So I tried to explore the darker sides of perfectionism and body image stuff that so many people can relate to. When I was first embarking I was hoping it was not too personal just to me. I always find that if it’s something that you’re really passionate about, and that you really believe in, it’s amazing to see that translate to audience members and other people. There’s always going to be nuggets in there that people can relate to.
MLG: For mine, this was based on something I experienced one night dropping my ex-boyfriend off at the LAX airport. He left the car and as soon as he did I felt something sitting in my backseat. It was like this really cold air. I felt needles on the back of my neck. I never felt anything like that before, and I was really afraid, and I kept looking back, and I didn’t see anything. So I hopped on the 405 North trying to ignore it. I had a brand-new car and the car started acting on its own. The headlights were flashing. It was speeding up and slowing down. The channels started changing. I was terrified. I was like “Oh my god, get out of my car. Get out of my car, whatever you are.” I thought I was going to die – it was going 60, 70 miles an hour in crazy traffic. Finally, I was able to pull the car over, and I was crying like, “please, please get out of my car.” I finally felt it leave. The presence was not there anymore. I wasn’t cold. I didn’t feel the needles anymore. I left but it totally traumatized me. Every time I get in my car at night I’m constantly checking the back seat. I’m always afraid that something might be there. So that’s what inspired Vehophobia.
CB: With mine, once I settled on this one [Hoplophobia], I wouldn’t say I have a debilitating fear of weapons, or firearms, but I am not a fan to put it lightly. The story developed from the psychological aspects of trauma. That’s what really fascinated me, PTSD and dealing with trauma and how if it goes untreated what it can lead to. I’m always very much drawn to families and family dynamics. The idea of a son not only having the role of a son, but also somewhat being the parent and the caretaker of their parent. That really fascinated me.
MF: What do you hope people come away from your segment feeling?
CB: I think with mine, it’s having compassion for others. We might not know what others are going through. It’s more about coming out of it with some sort of compassion. I think even in discussing the short with people they asked, “What’s going to happen to the son? What’s going to happen to her and what’s his life going to be?” I hope their relationship touches people and that those questions are in their mind and more than anything compassion.
MLG: You can’t bury secrets forever. The dark deeds that you’ve done will come back to you and I believe that everything is seen in the supernatural world and it will come back to you in one way or another.
Jess: My hope is that certainly that anyone experiencing, whether it’s the fear of not being enough or comparing yourself to someone else, or that you are lacking in some way, I just hope that this segment helps people feel less alone.
MF: Can you each recommend one film directed by a woman that you suggest readers should seek out?
JV: I would love to highlight Veronika Franz, who co-directed ‘Goodnight Mommy’ and ‘The Lodge’. ‘Goodnight Mommy’ was a huge inspiration for Atelophobia. It’s got this great twist at the end and also deals with body dysmorphia topics as well. I’m obsessed with this movie. Totally worth a watch.
MLG: One of my favorite, favorite directors is Jane Campion, who did ‘The Piano’ and ‘Top of the Lake.’ I just think she is incredible. She has this way of capturing very grounded performances that feel like you are peeking in on something that is happening. She’s incredible at getting the most vulnerable moments out of actors. There’s no question that these people are living these lives there is so much authenticity in them. I’m a big fan of hers.
CB: I’ve also always been a huge fan of her work, but ‘The Piano’ – my mom and I went to go see it in the theater, and I was really young at the time. I’ll never forget because I think my mom didn’t realize Harvey Keitel was going to be naked with full-frontal nudity. She went to go cover my eyes, and yet I still have the image of Harvey Keitel full-frontal in my mind.
MLG: That’s amazing.
CB: A film I’ve seen more recently, during this awards season, is Brazil’s submission – my mom is from Brazil – so I’m always trying to support the filmmakers there. The director’s name is Bárbara Paz, and she directed a documentary, the first film she directed, about Hector Babenco. It’s called ‘Babenco: Tell Me When I Die.’ He’s one of the most lauded Brazilian filmmakers and was her husband. She depicts his life while he’s dying. It’s an extremely lyrical doc. I haven’t seen one really like that before. It’s so personal because she’s filming her husband’s final days. She didn’t want to make it like a filmography; she wanted to tell the story of him as a man, and for people to know him as an artist and as a husband and partner. He was very inspirational for her in becoming a filmmaker. It’s a very deeply personal doc that was special and heavy, but very special. I want to give her a shout-out.
The project reteams Moss with the creator of the crime thriller series “Top of the Lake,” for which the actress won a Golden Globe.
“The Power of the Dog” is an adaptation of the Thomas Savage novel, which tells the story of wealthy Montana brothers Phil (Cumberbatch) and George Burbank. Together, they own the biggest ranch in their Montana valley. When George secretly marries local widow Rose (Moss), an angry Phil wages a relentless war to destroy her and her son.
“‘The Power of the Dog’ is a sublime novel that deserves a life on the big screen. I couldn’t stop thinking about the story, it really haunted me. The themes of masculinity, nostalgia and betrayal are an intoxicating mix,” Campion said in a statement.
“ It will be the first time I’ve worked with a male lead, which is exciting.”
Cumberbatch is just coming off a cameo in “Avengers: Endgame” and HBO’s “Brexit.” Moss recently appeared in the horror hit “Us” and will debut the third season of Hulu’s “The Handmaid’s Tale” in June.