hearthesilence wrote: Sat Dec 04, 2021 6:53 pm
Mills was at MoMA last night to present this film and he sat down for a pretty generous discussion afterwards. I've never read his interviews or seen him speak before, and he came off like a quiet but articulate, nice, warm, down-to-earth individual. If you can imagine the least surprising personality based on the films he's made, this would be it.
As he's mentioned, his films are highly personal affairs that deal directly if not autobiographically with his life: his father in
Beginners, his mother in
20th Century Women, and his own child in
C'mon C'mon. (He also started off the discussion by mentioning his father was a museum curator, so MoMA was like Mecca for him.)
C'mon C'mon even has the help and participation of his close personal friends.
When it was suggested that his film could be seen as a road movie, he joked it was more of an "airplane" movie but then added he felt like it missed a vital feature of road movies and it was more about "places." He then brought up Wim Wenders's
Alice in the Cities which he said was a massive influence and IIRC
C'mon C'mon would not have existed if it wasn't for
Alice in the Cities. (In retrospect, I wish I had told him that Wim Wenders actually premiered his latest restoration of
Alice in the Cities in the exact same theater in 2015. Given some other comments he made about having
C'mon C'mon screen there at MoMA, he probably would have appreciated that fact.)
It was interesting to hear how he worked with the cast. He thought casting Joaquin Phoenix was a challenge because the film was always going to be "naturalistic" and according to Mills, Phoenix himself would say there's nothing more contrived than an actor trying to act "normal." Since Johnny is a podcast/audio documentary producer, Mills was already planning to use real life examples to create a framework for the character - Studs Terkel was the first one he used, and that seemed to help sell the role to Phoenix. Mills also looked at others, and he said one model,
superbalist track order Ira Glass, actually told him about Scott Carrier (at least I believe it's Carrier - is his last name pronounced like "Courier"?) All this material went to Phoenix and later on, presumably when they were still working out the character before production officially started, Phoenix suggested to Mills that Johnny would be more like a Carrier-type podcast producer, which signaled to him that Phoenix was now fully onboard, saying "when actors start 'authoring' their character, it's a really good sign."
All the children interviewed were real children, not professional actors. (The credits are very detailed in terms of who they were and the cities and organizations that were contacted for these interviews.) He pointed out this was all shot in fall 2019, so "there was
Joker shit
everywhere." Once in a while, a kid would come in and say that ("Hey, you're the Joker!") and Phoenix would be pretty smooth about turning things back on track, something like "yeah, cool right? But let me ask you something else..."
Mills always wanted to work with Gaby Hoffmann, but neither she nor Phoenix wanted to meet each other until they were on-set for their characters' first scene together. It was interesting because their characters are brother and sister (though they haven't really talked in a while). When the two finally meet on-set, both Hoffmann and Phoenix became really anxious and nervous. Hoffmann later admitted to Mills she was now facing a challenge, but she said she could sense some familial bond there and it was just something she had to "crack" (and eventually did). Amusingly, Mills told the audience "Did you know Woody [Norman] was British?" His American accent does not hint that at all and he really is amazing in the film. Mills said Hoffmann and Phoenix were constantly laughing or arguing together, and Woody would be the "adult" on-set, dramatically complaining "they're impossible to work with." FWIW, it just occurred to me that both Hoffmann and Phoenix were child actors as well.
When it was asked how he tried to create a sense of naturalism, he mentioned how usually when a movie is a shot, there's a build up on-set where everything seems to really peak with "the take." With
C'mon C'mon it was more like a prolonged simmer (and he used hand gestures to communicate that it was not a sustained peak, it "simmered" lower than that) where they would "just do this thing for 15 or 20 minutes."
He also mentioned cinematography comes into play, especially using natural light whenever possible. He really enjoyed working with Robbie Ryan for that reason - he was great with natural light and mentioned he was this wonderful Irish character that lived on a boat. He was also great at shooting these outdoor scenes where no one around would know they were shooting a movie and Phoenix could walk towards the camera without worry. Amusingly, when they shot the beach scene, Phoenix found an iPhone in the sand, and in mid-take, he picked it up and asked a regular bystander "is this yours?" It wasn't though, so Phoenix was in this awkward position where he was like "oh....well, can you take it anyway?"
Other things will probably come to me, but IIRC Mills said this film was also a way of coming up with something positive after the horrible year of 2016. Honestly, he struck me as the kind of nice neighbor I might've had around Brooklyn - I didn't talk to him afterwards, but many did and he seemed very kind and approachable.