Saturday, March 21, 2009

Q & A: Actor Nicolas Cage Looks Ahead With "Knowing"

Feature Story by Brad Balfour

When veteran actor Nicolas Cage came to town to conduct a press conference for Knowing, it was shortly before the sad and untimely death of Natasha Richardson—an artist who will be sorely missed and whose death has to make anyone think: who knows what fate has in store for us? If a different decision had been made—to see a doctor right after her fall, for instance—would she have survived?

Here is a film that makes us ponder such questions which are being posed in a complicated yet sometimes contradictory fashion. By knowing what the future holds, and how "fixed" it is--that it is somehow "preordained"--does that just enervate, or stimulate? This films raises a host of implications though it doesn't definitively solve them.

Without revealing the ending, Knowing starts as a tale about a boy, Caleb (Chandler Canterbury), who finds a strange document with rows of numbers (which foretell a series of disasters) stuffed into a time capsule by a prescient, troubled girl (whose daughter becomes an adult Diane played by Rose Byrne). The film evolves into a grandiose sci-fi story that in some ways is far less satisfying than if it had been crafted with more ambiguities and less grand vision.

Nonetheless, at a time when people are compelled to question what is "fate," what is "inevitable," what decisions can we control and what are beyond our power—this movie evokes such speculations as well. I leave it to others to craft a review on the aesthetic merits of the film. But the film was certainly cast with talented enough actors to convey Australian director Alex Proyas's intentions (whose previous sci-fi/fantasy films include I, Robot, Dark City and The Crow). Anchored by Cage who plays quantum physicist John Koestler, supported by Byrne and young actor Canterbury, the cast brings to life these characters reacting to the extreme circumstances of the film.

Cage, of course, has become a master of making the impossible seem feasible, and of realizing a character in strange situations reacting as any man would. He is skilled at rendering such characters because of his own fascination with such scenarios. Just look at his recent catalogue of films that draw on a sense of wonder that make them feasible: Next, Ghost Rider, or The Wicker Man.

Even while this film shows that disparate events can line up along some lines based on probability theory or chaos theory, so did this Press Conference, with its range of journos asking questions both on the money and way off course. By applying, hopefully, a deft editorial scalpel this sprawling compilation of questions takes on some form and intent.

Q: Why does the science fiction genre appeal to you?

NC: Well, good science fiction is intelligent. It asks big questions that are on people's minds. It's not impossible. It has some sort of root in the abstract. So automatically you're getting closer to potentially divine sources of interest because it is abstract. It's one of the only ways that a film actor can express himself in the abstract and have audiences still go along for the ride. They don't contend it. They accept it, that they're going to go places that are a bit more of the imagination, a bit more out there, and that's more and more where I like to dance.

The other thing is that I got a little tired of movies where I had to shoot people. I got to thinking about the power of film and what that power is. The power is in fact that it really can change people's minds. I had that experience with China Syndrome. It made me aware. So I thought if it was this powerful, the power to change people's minds, then perhaps I should just be a little more responsible with that power.

That's not to say that I don't believe in freedom of speech. I do. It's just that at this point in my life, in my interests I would rather entertain you with the spectacle and with the imagination as opposed to servicing your blood lust appetites. But that's not to say that I might not find myself in that situation again. There are ways of doing it, even by showing it where it can be ironic, and there can be awareness in that as well. Just not gratuitous in the sense that I want you to get off by watching someone's head explode.

Q: Did you get into quantum physics to prepare for this role?

NC: I grew up with a professor, so that was all the research that I really needed. I just used my own recall of what that experience was like.

Q: So you could relate from that experience, growing up with it?

NC: Yeah.

Q: This is the second movie you've done where the future's been involved (the other being Next). What's your interest in the future, or in seeing the future? Do you think we have a predetermined future or is it all randomness?

NC: At the risk at impinging on your own personal opinions, or your own relationship to the movie, I would just offer that I'm not a chaos theorist.

Q: This film also deals with science versus fate. Is there's room for both phenomena on the same side of the coin or are they always going to be diametrically opposed?

NC: Again, without impending on your own personal choice, there are going to be those that wear the hat of religion and those that wear the hat of science. I still don't really understand why they can't wear both hats, because personally, I think that they go beautifully together.

Q: Even though the movie is about a possible end of the world, it's still a positive film. The story shows how you need to live each day to the fullest. Were you affected by the seeming moral of the story?

NC: Well, first of all, any opinion I give is not as important as your opinion. Your opinion is what matters to me and so if that's what you took from the movie then that's absolutely correct. Any awakenings that I may have had happened before I said yes to the movie. So I didn't really learn anything or get anything from it, but I was just ready to express it.

I had gone through various thought processes at the time the script came to me where I felt I was in sync with Alex [Proyas] and with the story. It's one of those rare opportunities where I felt like the filmmaker and myself were completely on the same page philosophically and in terms of style.

Q: Alex Proyas spoke of valuing the rehearsal process and insisting on it. Does that help you as well? Did he allow for any improvisation or for you to put your spin on things?

NC: I generally enjoy the rehearsal process because that's where you can share your ideas, get your thoughts and feelings out and see whether or not they're going to land, whether or not people are going to agree with them, particularly the director. So you can sort out in that process any elements that need to be sorted out before you're on the set, and of course that saves time and it also makes everyone more comfortable working together.

And yes, Alex is the sort of director that's open to suggestions and makes you feel comfortable, relaxed enough to be able to create. It's quite liberating and he was open to various ideas.

Q: Can you expand on what you think is unique about Alex as a filmmaker?

NC: Well, he has this enormous capacity to design shots and design FX in a way where you know it's him that's doing it. They look beautiful. They're also scary.

Alex is an artist. He's an original and he can really make a movie look beautifully designed in a way that has his signature. But having said that, we both agreed that the [film] should be almost cinema verite, that there should be almost a documentary style to the performances so that it would make the experience more terrifying for you and perhaps more visceral in some way.

He's like a painter from any era of painting. He has the same abilities. That's what I mean about him in that I think he's an original voice. I don't feel like he's ever copying anyone else.

Q: Five minutes after you meet Diana--Rose Byrne's character--there's desperation in your relationship with her. Can you talk about that kind of relationship in a film, of two characters who have a desperate need for each other yet have to learn trust each other?

NC: Well, that was the challenge: how do I convince this woman to go along with me and to sort through what's happening in my life and in everyone's lives? It was kind of awkward at first because I was trying to go around the scene in different ways that would terrify her, and yet at the same time I had to keep her with me.

Now the thing is that Diana's mother had this calling and this ability, and she was living with the curse, if you will, of feeling that she was going to die on that particular date. So when I was able to give her those numbers, that's what brought her back. But I didn't really see how there was any way that I could get around it.

I felt that at some point early on in that dynamic she was going to be scared of John Koestler, that she would have to be scared of him and not to shy away from that, not to sugarcoat it any way.

Q: Rose Byrne is so good with such a complicated character; how was it working with her?

NC: It was refreshing to have a movie without it having to resort to love triangles or broken hearts, and to have an extremely talented actress play something other than those notes. It's only fair that actresses get the same shots at playing complex characters as actors do. Rose is very serious about the work. She's a real craftsman in that that accent is flawless. I couldn't believe that she was Australian. She has a very pronounced Australian accent, though, and so that in itself shows you the level of technique and also the willingness for her to go to places with me that were perhaps more surprising again. She didn't quite know where I would go, but I felt that was important to get that spontaneity and she went along with it.

She's got a lot of guts and depth. That also goes for Chandler Canterbury. Both of those actors, the movie wouldn't work without them because they were phenomenally real. Chandler has this enormous depth for his years and he's so truthful. It seems effortless.

Often you hear stories about never working with children. I disagree because children still have that residual magical thinking. They haven't had their imagination knocked out of them by turning into adults and life experiences. That's what acting really is, in my opinion. It's the ability to imagine what's going on around you is real. So it makes it very easy and it's a joy for me to work with Chandler.

Q: How did your relationship with your own son inform your relationship to your character's son in the film?

NC: Well, I dedicated the movie to my first son, because that's what the relationship was, really. It was me and him. I just have memories, and this script came to me at the right time. I had the life experiences and the emotional resources to play John Koestler. Indeed, some of the lines in the scenes came from direct memories of my times with Weston [Coppola Cage].

I had been looking for a way to express those feelings for a long time. Having been a single father, a single father out in California, I know that there is a gender bias, depending on which lawyer or which psychologist or family therapist that you talk to. It's like there's a full moon out if a father wants to see his son. That's just not true. Just because you're a man doesn't mean that you can't raise your kid. I think that families should stay together, but if you are a single father don't give up no matter what they say. So I wanted to have a chance to express that, to show that archetype in a movie: that you can have a devoted, positive relationship between that family, a father and a son as well.

Q: Have you changed your approach to films since having another child? Did you have any input into changing this film's script to a father and son?

NC: Well, I dedicated the movie to my first son because of those experiences that I had with him as a single father. I don't want to repeat myself, but I don't think that I would've been able to play the part 20 years ago. I think that I needed to have those memories in order to play John Koestler.

Q: Do you expect that you will have life-changing experiences while making a movie? Do films change your life in that way?

NC: The making of movies? Certainly they can. Anything is possible. Just the other day I was invited to go down to the subway rails and to be two foot from a whooshing subway train because I had to pass getting a certificate for subway rail safety. I never would've been in that situation before if I wasn't making movies. It was dangerous, but at the same time it was fascinating and got me thinking about the third rail, the awesome third rail.

One of the great bonuses of being a film actor is that I get to go to different places, meet inspiring people and learn different things. So all those details add up.

Q: How do you think you would handle the gift of knowing the future?

NC: I think that for me, I would want to know when it came to my children, if there was a way that I could prevent something. I don't think there's anything that would take over my parental survival instincts, but other than that, I like surprises. I think that if we knew everything that was going to happen it would be very, very boring.

Q: Have you ever had a sense of knowing, of an inclination, that came true?

NC: Yes, I think we all have. It's a part of being human, having those experiences—call it what you want, déjà vu, or whatever. You can explain it away with science, or you can explain it with something perhaps more paranormal, but I think they're still talking about the same thing.

Q: Anything that unsettled you?

NC: Nothing that I would share with you, but it is all semantics. I mean, if you tell me there's no such thing as a sea monster, I'll show you a white shark. It's all semantics, in my opinion.

Q: Your dad, August Coppola, was outside the rest of the acting Coppolas since he was a Comparative Literature professor. What happens when there is that break in a career-oriented family?

NC: Well, my father is the oldest of the three children. Carmine, my grandfather, came to America and it was really because of his skills as a flautist—he was a first chair flautist for Toscanini—that we kind of came out of, I mean really, an almost poverty-like situation. So it was the arts that did that.

My father, who was being groomed to be a medical doctor, always had an interest in books. He was just interested in literature and philosophy and that was his calling. That was before Francis decided that he was going to be a filmmaker. So my father already went on his philosophical and literary path and that was a train that wasn't going to stop, nor did he want it to stop.

I'm happy to say that he's quite happy now, continuing to write his books. Then the others in the family have more or less done directing, and I hope to see more music soon. I know that my son is doing very well in the music industry right now. So we'll see what happens there.

Q: It's unusual to have a family tree that cuts across so many talented generations. Do you ever wonder what it is about your family in that way?

NC: I don't really spend a lot of time thinking about it, to be perfectly honest. You can think about it. I'm not going to think about it [laughs].

Q: Have your children ever expressed an interest in acting, and how would you feel about that?

NC: My oldest son, right now he's very immersed in his music, but there might be a time when chooses to go into the cinema. My youngest son is three and a half.

Q: Do you have any aspirations to direct again in the future?

NC: I wanted to direct again. I haven't had time, but I would like to. When you direct you have to really devote a year of your life that project and so it's not something that I can really do right now. But I will again at some point.

Q: Is there any particular genre of film that stretches your acting muscles more than another, and is there a genre you'd like to do that you haven't done yet?

NC: I feel that I want to keep going in this science fiction and also perhaps fantasy direction for a little while longer. I think there's some room for growth there in my own abilities, in that I'll be a little more liberated working on that landscape. So I'm happy to be here now. I don't know of any other genres that I'm interested in. I like dramas, as you know.

Comedies not so much, only because I don't find the same things funny that many other people seem to find funny. I don't really respond to sex jokes and things like that. Some of my friends look at me and go, "Come on, Nic, that was my best joke. Why aren't you laughing?" I go, "I really don't know why I'm not laughing. I'm sort of out of sync with it." So I'd have to find something that was really about weird human behavior for me to laugh [laughs].

Q: Which one of your earlier roles still resonate for you on a second viewing?

NC: I don't really watch my movies again, but I can speak by the echo of it. I would say that Wild at Heart and Vampire's Kiss had more of that kind of energy to it. That's not to say that I can't still get kind of punk rock or angry, but I just think that I'm doing it for different reasons now.

Q: Where does your energy and passion for acting come from?

NC: It changed. In the beginning it came from an almost punk rock need to express a lot of anger wherever that may have come from. As I got older, it became or is coming more from a place of wanting to use the craft to help others in some way, to hold a mirror up to the situations that we're going through, to actually be more cautious about the way that I use the power of film and to see if there's anything that I can do in the performances that will resonate in the public a similar string that's on people's minds and is on my mind. That way we have that relationship.

Q: With this February being the best box office for a February in history, what role is Hollywood playing, given the current economic climate?

NC: Well, more than ever, movies reveal themselves as healing, as helpful, as encouraging, as escapist—anything that makes someone get through their day in these times. It's the best form of entertainment, and it's still arguably the most inexpensive form of entertainment.

I always say to myself that if I can make a movie that makes a kid smile or gives them some hope or something to get excited about, then I'm applying myself in the best way that I can. I don't think that just goes for kids. I think that it goes for adults as well and for families. So there is a need to go to the movies and just shut your mind off from the problems that are happening in our daily lives, the stresses between countries, the economy and global warming—all of those things that are on our minds.

But at the same time, I think that movies can help guide us through those experiences. I think all art tries to grapple with, redefine, come to terms with, express what's happening now when it's working. You can be entertained, but you can also be stimulated to think about things.

Knowing is one of those movies where you're going to get the spectacle and have the entertainment in the grand science fiction tradition. But also it will perhaps stimulate some discussion, to help you sort out on your own where you might chose to go in terms of your own needs. Now, I say that without preaching. It's up to you [as to] what you get from the movie.

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Making the Scene At The Media Summit 2009

by Brad Balfour

[left: Hollywood & Technology panel]

For the last six years, Digital Hollywood, a small company based in Los Angeles, produces--with The McGraw-Hill Companies, and co-sponsors BusinessWeek and Standard & Poor’s----Media Summit New York, one of the most fascinating events on the business and cultural calendar. Though the event takes place for only a brief two days--March 18th and 19th in the McGraw Hill Building (at 6th Ave. and 49th St.)--it produces such compelling sessions with key media, entertainment and technology leaders that are an event worth viewing online.

This year's keynote interviews, hosted by Businessweek's editorial staff, are with media leaders Jeff Zucker, President and CEO of NBC Universal; Philippe Dauman, President and CEO of Viacom Inc., and Steve Ballmer, CEO of Microsoft Corporation. Besides these conversations, there are several panel discussions with other media leaders from major companies such as MySpace, Google, The Washington Post and others that will also be available via videocast.

The Summit draws more than 1,000 attendees and 150 panelists for two days of discussion on topic surveying global media and technological innovation, or in the words of the producers, "The Communications Revolution.”

[Left: Jeff Zucker blinks!] Digital Hollywood produces other trade conferences for the media, entertainment, advertising and technology industries. More than 15,000 executives each year attend Digital Hollywood events, which include Digital Hollywood Los Angeles; Digital Hollywood Europe in London; Media Summit New York; Game Power, Mobile Entertainment, and Reinventing Advertising at CES in Las Vegas; Building Blocks in San Jose; Advertising 2.0 New York; and the Time Warner Summit: Politics 2008. Founder Victor Harwood is a principal authority on the convergence of the entertainment and technology industries.

Thanks to wonders of the internet and the technology being discussed here, you can experience The Media Summit New York through the sites: www.digitalhollywood.com, www.media-summit.com, www.mcgraw-hill.com.

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

French Directors Michel Gondry and Leos Carax Take On Tokyo!

Q & A by Brad Balfour

As if it were a creative corollary to the act of cinematic deconstruction, this strange tri-parted feature, Tokyo!, was released on the same weekend as Watchmen--a film based on a huge graphic novel that's all about deconstruction. This strange absurdist-cartoon interpretation of the ultimate urban megopolis, Tokyo! takes on the town and the idea of a modern, functioning city through the eyes of three foreigners: two Frenchmen, Michel Gondry (Interior Design) and Leos Carax (Merde), and the South Korean born-and-bred Bong Joon-Ho (Shaking Tokyo).

It was an odd yet funny move that this film's Japanese producers, Masa Sawada and Michiko Yoshitake, chose three foreigners from two distinctly different countries: the idiosyncratic filmmakers Gondry, who of course established himself through such strange narratives as Re Kind Rewind; Carax who was acclaimed for The Lovers on the Bridge and Pola X only to disappear for a decade; and Bong, who made a though-provoking horror film, The Host, before this.

Through this triptych, each director deals with alienation within this near-futuristic city, but offers distinctly different takes and conclusions. In Interior Design, a couple moves to Tokyo to confront the big city but as they sink into the mire, each one becomes alienated in very different ways. A shambling human monster in the form of a homeless wreck goes on a rampage in Merde; he is subsequently captured and put on trial. In Shaking Tokyo an agoraphobic (known as a hikikomori in Japan) rescues a pizza delivery girl during an earthquake and falls in love with her.

As peculiar a film as this is, it was fortunate that at least the two French directors came to New York to discuss their work with a few writers, in whatever cryptic and perplexing Gallic inflected terms they could muster.

Q: Is this film a deconstruction of Tokyo--what was your goal in analyzing Tokyo through cinema?

MG: I think the duration of each segment sort of pushed us to create something surprising, because you just have 30 minutes, and it leads you to [do] something abnormal. I don’t know how it is for everybody else, because we didn’t speak to each other, and we didn’t know what subjects [the other filmmakers] were treating, but I think this duration pushes you to bring [in] more unexpected elements.

There is a feeling of [the] monster in Tokyo. Gabrielle [Bell, co-writer and author of the source material, a story from her graphic novel collection], and I were reading some [Haruki] Murakami and Edogawa Rampo, and I remember the Murakami story was about a giant frog who has to fight a giant snake. It’s a very good one! And there’s actually this [Edogawa Rampo] story of this guy in a chair. Pretty creepy!

Q: Leos, did you feel the same way about the effect the shorter duration had on your approach to the segment you made?

LC: With a project called “Tokyo!,” or “Paris,” or “New York,” it’s very superficial. You’re in the position of a foreigner, and we’re three foreigners, it’s us vs. Tokyo, so it was a superficial position. So I of course tried for [Merde, the sewer monster] to be the “ultimate foreigner.”

I imagined he would be like a child from some lost civilization, with his own religion--a fundamentalist, terrorist child--and to use the pop culture of the monster in the city.

Q: Was Merde’s milky eye an homage to Henri-Georges Clouzot's 1955 film Les Diaboliques?

LC: No. I don’t do homage [laughs].

Q: After he rampages through the city and then is captured, Merde talks about how he was born of the people in the trial sequence; he’s their son, and they raped his mother. Was this a social comment on how the west is breeding terrorists?

LC: It’s a bit ridiculous, the psychology inside these monster films! It’s not very serious, and not some [huge] statement. I mean monsters are always a product of the system, but it’s not meant to be [a cultural criticism].

Q: When you take us down into the monster’s cave, there are objects there that seem to be a reckoning with or at least, an acknowledgement of the past--with accoutrements reminiscent of Nanking. Was this intentional--is this monster, this "character from the Id" let loose on the street, a reckoning of the past?

LC: When I say I could’ve made the film in any other city, it’s true, but since it was Tokyo, I used elements from the sewers to get at their past. That’s why I used Nanking, because it’s their big trauma. But it’s a very clichéd thing to have the monster use whatever the civilization has produced against it, whether it be [something] nuclear with Godzilla, or here, it’s grenades from Nanking that the monster’s going to use against today’s Japanese. It’s a monster movie, and it’s about the ultimate foreigner coming out of the sewers and killing everyone on the streets.

Q: Michel, did you take some trip to Tokyo that left a lasting impression on you--is that what inspired you to make your segment?

MG: Oh yeah! We all went to each other, “Let’s go make a movie about Tokyo!” No, the producers just called us.

Q: Did you coordinate with each other on the three themes of these films?

MG: I tried to, but this guy [gesturing to Carax] didn’t want to!

Q: Did you know each other before?

MG: Yeah, we met once before.

LC: There were three films, but none of us knew what the others were doing.

Q: Leos, you’ve had two long absences from filmmaking in your career, from 1991’s The Lovers on the Bridge to 1999’s Pola X, and between that film to now with Tokyo! What were the reasons for these long gaps in your resume?

LC: [Shrugs] No particular reason… I just didn’t get to make the films I wanted to. This was an opportunity to make something....

MG: It was a great offer that I experienced with this movie. The main constraint [in getting films made] is to get a famous actor to finance the film--especially in America. We didn’t have to do that [here] because it was a third of the film, and the producer was not there to say, “No, you can’t do that!”

Ryo Kase [who starred in Letters from Iwo Jima] is pretty famous, but Ayako is not. It was good that we didn’t know [who] anyone [was], because we chose them for the right reasons.

Q: You did cast Ayako Fujitani, Steven Seagal’s daughter, in your segment Interior Design.

MG: I love Steven Seagal so much! No… [laughs]. After the shooting, I did a documentary on Ayako and we met her father and put them together, and it was pretty crazy.

Actually, he’s a cop. In Louisiana, he has a radio, and if he hears about a murder--a rape or a murder--he goes and takes the bad guy out! Just imagine: you’re a bad guy, and you get caught by the police, and it’s fucking Steven Seagal arresting you with his gun! [Laughs]

He’s like that, and he wanted his daughter to be a cop too. He thought it would be safe for her, but she was like, “Dad, how is it safe to be a cop?” He had a very weird logic…

But anyway, we picked her because she sort of reminded Gabrielle of the original character she wrote the story about. We didn’t know she was half American at the time. We believed she was Japanese and could speak really good English, and she responded very well to the sensibility of the story--probably due to the fact that she’s half American--but we didn’t know that at the time.

Q: A lot of your films explore the psychological toll that relationships have on people, whether it be “The Science of Sleep,” “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind,” or this segment “Interior Design.” Why are you so attracted to exploring this theme in your films?

MG: Well, I spend a lot of time trying to figure out what’s wrong with me in this matter, and when it comes to doing a movie I’m naturally inclined to keep this reflection going.

I would have a hard time to do a movie about a restaurant; to be invited in a good or bad restaurant doesn’t really speak to me. Or, a movie on Wall Street--although that’s come to be in my interest seeing the situation [now]. But, it seems to be more naturally… how I use my brain, by deviance or obsession or whatever, so it’s easier for me to think about that than other subjects.

Q: Many of your films have that "theatre of the absurd" aspect to them, and you have a knack for casting comedic actors in many of your films--what is the role of comedy in your films?

MG: Well, I think it’s measure is a little in-between. Like if I go to a video store, I don’t know where I’m going to look for my movies. Like Eternal Sunshine--sometimes it’s in [the] comedy [section], sometimes it’s in drama, and it’s always problematic. A lot of directors come from [music videos] like me, with slick visuals and fashionable attitude which I don’t really like, so I have more of this comedic element.

As for the casting, I draw more on how I think they’re going to express their comedy. But on the other hand, I got an actor as [well known as] Jim Carrey [he starred in Eternal Sunshine of The Spotless Mind] who wanted to become dramatically believable, so you get an actor who’s going to take a chance on you [in place of] an actor you [can] afford. Everybody wants to be Tom Hanks, and Jim Carrey has this obsession--he made this bitter comment how he’s always nominated for the Golden Globe but never for the Oscar--he’s having a huge career, yet he still feels a lack of recognition, so [he's one of] those actors are really drawn into taking chances.

Q: This is a country with a high suicide rate, yet there is this drive to be capitalistic conformists; did this play out in your film?

MG: One thing that was a little problem to deal with is the idea that the chair is not a traditional furniture in Japan, it’s more recent, but once we visited Japan, we saw people do have dinner with chairs, so it was ok. A lot of the time, there’s still this idea to sit around a small table and sit on your knees, but the chair existed.

The idea you’re referring to, to suicide--I think there’s something about self-erasing in Japan, like the idea of a woman wearing the bandage to make her feet smaller, and I think that reflects that idea pretty well. The original story written by Gabrielle was about a couple in New York, but there are elements in Japanese culture which actually accentuates and gives meaning to this transformation that were maybe not so obvious in New York.

Q: What did you feel about the sense of alienation in Japanese society?

MG: Honestly, when I go to a country like Japan, which seems very foreign [to me], I try to look for the resemblances more than the differences, and it takes a while to see that--it takes the same time as it does to make friends. For instance, you don’t really choose your friends--you see what’s inside them, and then you can identify the same motivations, the same problems; there are similarities inside them to what is inside you, so I look more for that.

Though the original story was happening in New York as I said, but with Tokyo [the feeling] was even stronger. I could talk about what I find very specific in Tokyo… It’s a very fluid and quiet city at the same time--very energetic yet quiet--because people are not so expressive [as in the States]. When I went back to America after spending a few months in Tokyo, I found people were walking like [they were galloping] horses!

Q: In your segment, the girl transforms back and forth from being a chair; it seems obvious that you were influenced by the Surrealist movement...

MG: This is how my influences work, if there is any: I have a dream, and then I put it in a movie because I think that’s my dream, and then I realize my dream was influenced by whoever, and [then] I feel I’m stealing! But because it’s been digested by my dream, I feel legitimate in using it.

It’s not always like that… I remember having a conversation with Charlie Kaufman [who wrote Eternal Sunshine...] about breaking into an ex-girlfriend’s apartment--actually I did it in my life--it was pretty creepy! And then I put it in a movie, so was I stealing the idea from Charlie? But I lived it! But I lived it maybe because Charlie and I talked about it. See, it’s hard for me, you never know. I try to invite influences, but I prefer to watch movies and get stimulated.

It’s very dangerous to claim yourself to be a surrealist, because there is something about the quality of dreams that you can’t pinpoint--it vanishes. I think that a lot of directors, in my opinion, who are visually surrealist, are anything but. All the visuals in advertising… There are some directors, I won’t mention them now, but they take so much from the surface of surrealism.

I know the guy who did the costumes for “Ivan the Terrible,” and it was just after World War II, and they had no money. It was in black & white, and to do the earring of Ivan, they took some chestnut shells, covered them in tin foil, and put them on the ear, and it looked amazing! When I hear with “Titanic” that they went all the way to China to get the plates…

A lot of people working in advertising just take the surface, and I don’t think it has anything to do with surrealism. There are qualities in the surrealist films that are very handmade and put together, cause it leaves gaps for the brain to fill.
Q: Leos, would you consider yourself a surrealist?

LC: No. I don’t know much about surrealism…