Tag: The Ballad of Jack & Rose

  • Q&A with Camilla Belle & Rebecca Miller

    Q&A with Camilla Belle & Rebecca Miller

    Camilla Belle in 'The Ballad of Jack Rose'
    Camilla Belle in ‘The Ballad of Jack Rose’

    I recently had the chance to participate in a roundtable session with the director and cast of The Ballad of Jack and Rose, who couldn’t have been a nicer group of people. They were very kind, open and affable, taking time to personally greet each of us, shaking our hands.

    The session was split into two parts, the first being with the film’s female lead, 18-year old Camilla Belle and the writer/director, Rebecca Miller (the second was with Daniel Day Lewis and Catherine Keener, which you can read here). Belle is even more stunning in person than she is on screen. Miller was animated and articulate, with beautiful long brown hair and white-blue liquid eyes.

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    Question: There’s a message in the film to dysfunctional kids and families everywhere. There’s so much in dealing with kids getting over their parents’ baggage to a degree…

    Rebecca Miller: I don’t have a message so much, but I am talking about that in part, how family dynamics can go wrong. For example, Kathleen’s compulsion to try to do good by getting her son Rodney to slim down. Her child is her mirror, showing her an image she doesn’t want to see. They (kids) start out as mirror images of their parents and then they don’t have to be that anymore. Rodney and Rose get out, in different ways.

    Q: How did it feel to go through a girl’s awakening on film?

    Camilla Belle: It was sort of happening to me personally at that time as well, we were both 16. I was on the brink of that ‘coming-of-age’ time in my life. For Rose, and for me, it was sudden, not gradual, like for everyone else. It didn’t really bother me because I was in it. I didn’t think about it. It went really fast. But it made sense.

    Q: What was the most difficult scene for you to shoot?

    CB: I was pretty comfortable most of the time. I’d say the hair-cutting scene was a bit nerve-racking.

    Q: Was your hair actually quite that long, or were you wearing extensions?

    CB: It was actually that long!

    Q: Shooting the film in sequence, how did that help you get into the moment?

    CB: For me everything in the film was gradually building, becoming more emotional, so it helped. At the end of it all I was emotionally drained. At that point I took Rose’s view, that this has to happen, there’s nothing I can do about it. It was a huge shock. I’ve never had hair that short in my life! I think the rest of the cast and crew were mourning my haircut more than I was! But after a while, I felt liberated, I learned to embrace it.

    RM: That was the idea, to help that process along. The stakes keep getting higher and higher, everyone gets emotionally charged, this happens, this happens. To do that in a disjointed way… we could have done it, but shooting in sequence added to it. There was a kind of liberation for the actors, they were on a roll. Even the crew were listening, as they were holding the mike. People got plugged into it.

    Q: How long was the shoot?

    RM: Seven weeks.

    Q: How much of what Rose went through is an extension of your childhood?

    RM: Fundamentally, I have to say this is a work of imagination. But embedded in a work is shards of the writer’s self. There are elements of my childhood. But those elements are universal. Especially the terrible fear of your parents dying when you’re young. If they die, your world is going to end. There’s an emotional core there, a wellspring, I kept feeding from over the years, kept the film alive.

    Rebecca Miller with Daniel Day-Lews on the set of 'The Ballad of Jack & Rose'
    Rebecca Miller with Daniel Day-Lews on the set of ‘The Ballad of Jack & Rose’

    Q: Was it difficult to shoot your husband dying?

    RM: Yes, actually, yes it was. It’s kind of wonderful in a way. You’re still married, still husband and wife, but, you have to take some distance from each other in order to do this work, for him to maintain his imagination in this world and in this relationship, and for me to see all this with some distance and objectivity. It’s ultimately good for a marriage, to be able to see each other in a different way.

    Q: Were you excited when he agreed to do the film?

    RM: Yes, I was very excited.

    Q: Did you discover something about him on this film as a person?

    RM: I experienced some things about him in a closer range (chuckle). The intensity of his concentration. The way he’s so complete in the details of his character. It’s wonderful to work with somebody with that level of commitment. But that affected everybody. I could see and feel how Camilla was growing and learning.

    CB: Working with him is a dream come true. I’m an observer, and just seeing how dedicated and how he knows his character backwards and forwards is so admirable, it made me really want to bring my character justice. By knowing your character so well you can’t go wrong. All of us kind of fell into that.

    Q: You hadn’t had that experience in other films you’d done before?

    CB: Not really. I’d taken three years off to live as a normal person, so this was my first time back into it, and it was kind of shocking, but then it was fun. Because I was able to submerge myself into the character, I didn’t have to go back and forth. You don’t have to work hard to bring emotions. It all just comes naturally, you’re there living it.

    Q: Tell us about the location.

    RM: One of our producers told us about Charlottetown (Prince Edward Island). I fell in love with it. I missed my connecting flight every time I was trying to get out there! There was nothing convenient about it! But it was just the most beautiful place. We really felt like we were at the edge of the world. The land really affected that communal feeling everybody had.

    Q: Tell us why you cast Camilla.

    RM: We saw 400 girls, and I was very nervous. Camilla, physically, was really striking to us, and she had a kind of innocence, especially at that time, it was unique. And she had this raw emotional power. She had a real connection to her emotions, a real understanding. She listens very well, and she’s very aware, and to be that open, that porous, letting things come in, that’s the mark of a great actor. We were really lucky.

    Q: What did you like best about your character?

    CB: When I first read the script, what stuck me was that you really didn’t have to control yourself, your feelings. like if you were angry at someone, you could just push them out the window, and I thought, I wish I could do that and not care! And living in the city you can’t do that, you have consequences. The world that she lives in is just magical, one of the most beautiful places I’ve ever seen.

    Q: Were any scenes improvised?

    RM: No, not really.

    Q: If there’s one thing you want the audience to take
    away from the film, what would it be?

    RM: One thing is hard. One thing… is that love is complicated.

    Q: How old are you Camilla?

    CB: I’m 18, I’m going to graduate high school in a few months. (Everybody cheered.)

  • Q&A with Daniel Day-Lewis & Catherine Keener

    Q&A with Daniel Day-Lewis & Catherine Keener

    Daniel Day-Lewis and Camilla Belle in 'The Ballad of Jack & Rose'
    Daniel Day-Lewis and Camilla Belle in ‘The Ballad of Jack & Rose’

    As I said in the Q&A with Camilla Belle and Rebecca Miller, I recently had the chance to participate in a roundtable session regarding the film, The Ballad of Jack and Rose, which opens today. Everyone was so kind, and after the interviews with them we had the opportunity to talk with Daniel Day-Lewis and Catherine Keener, two of the film’s stars.

    The two came in refreshed and relaxed, exchanging handshakes with the entire roundtable. Catherine had slightly fractured one of her wrists but was in good spirits. Statuesque Daniel appeared as if he was ready to hit the pubs, looking comfy in a wool sweater, his shoulder length-hair tucked under a cap, with piercing blue eyes and a winning smile under a mustache and beard.

    ——

    Question: There’s a continuity to the roles you play that has to do with you being an outsider/observer. Can you talk a little bit about that?

    Daniel Day-Lewis: I never thought about it like that, but it might be true. I’m probably not the best person to tell you, but, um, I guess I did always feel like a bit of an outsider, so maybe it’s found it’s way through to the work. I don’t know.

    Q: There’s a reference in the production notes about you spending several months thinking about whether you were going to do the film…

    DDL: I read the script many times over the years, more than I’ll ever read any script. Rebecca had sent it to me about ten years ago, before we’d met. And then over the years she worked on it, and we looked at it together a number of times. I thought I was reading it in an objective way, and I think I was most of those years. And then somehow it got inside of me, to the point that there was no avoiding it.

    Q: Is it something personal?

    DDL: It’s always something personal, but you don’t know exactly what it is, you can’t really explain it. Or if you could you wouldn’t try to, it could be a moment in time that’s unrepeatable…

    Catherine Keener: Do you often not look at scripts?

    Catherine Keener in 'The Ballad of Jack & Rose'
    Catherine Keener in ‘The Ballad of Jack & Rose’

    DDL: You mean when I’m working?

    CK: Yeah.

    DDL: I usually look at them a lot in the early stages, and then not at all for a long time. How about you?

    CK: It’s about the same.

    Q: Why, do you want to keep it fresh?

    DDL: Most of what still needs to be discovered lies outside, beyond the script itself. The script, if you like it, which you usually do, will take care of itself.

    Q: Can you talk about the location?

    DDL: It’s rare. It was a rare time. Rebecca loves working with actors, and I think she understands extremely well the environment they work best, how to create an environment that she knows is going to get the more decent creative possibilities.

    CK: It was very exciting time. The light was otherworldly, the terrain, you’d just get lost, everything was just completely different. Very beautiful. An incredibly special place.

    Q: Why were you drawn to playing Jack?

    DDL: The reason I was interested in Jack, and it would be the same reason I’d be interested in any piece of work, I suppose, is that he seemed to belong to a world I didn’t understand, and that he was a mystery to me. Now that may be unusual (laughs) and that’s what I begin with, I’m gathering him into myself, purely for the intention of exploring (chuckle) these dark and terrible things, but I don’t think so.

    Q: Was it ever awkward or difficult working with Rebecca, your wife? Were there ever times when she’d say “c’mon honey, one more take?”

    DDL: I don’t think she ever used the word ‘honey’ on the set! (laughs) No. It was outrageously easy.

    CK: It was fantastic. Rebecca was extremely fluid for everyone. Everyone was sort of in the same place, and that had a lot to do with the environment.

    Q: Rebecca said the idea for the script had to do in part with fear of a loved one dying. Her father passed away this year, and you were also very close to Mr. Miller. Did he pass away during the making of the movie?

    DDL: No. He was very much alive when we made that film. He was swimming in the sea in the film.

    Q: We asked Rebecca if there was one idea you could come away with from this story, and she said that love is complicated. Is there something you want viewers to come away with from this story?

    DDL: Perhaps if they were to have some animated conversation about the story! Most people would just leave the film, go home and go to bed… For the most part in film, judgments are made for you. But Rebecca refuses to pass judgment on any of the people, and that’s the way it should be.

    CK: I see this movie kind of through Camilla’s face, how she seems to be perceiving everything that’s happening to her. That’s the sort of impression I have from the film. Things happen that are very unsettling for her. But she walks away with this sense of beauty that was given to her by her father.

    Q: It’s a happy ending.

    DDL: It’s a hopeful ending, not necessarily a happy one.

    Q: And what about Kathleen?

    CK: That’s not a happy ending (laughs). She wants what everybody wants. She believes in love, and that maybe it’s still not out of her reach.

    Q: Were there scenes that were difficult to shoot?

    CK: Um, all of them! Yeah, they were difficult, there aren’t comedy tears, even though there’s supposed to be. No, they were all joyous to work out, but they were hard.

    Q: Have you watched the film with an audience?

    DDL: We had a screening at Woodstock, last weekend. I’d always been looking forward to that, and it was lovely, very warm, a good experience.

    Q: What was it like working with the rest of the young cast?

    CK: They were an inspiration, fun to be around, really hard workers.

    DDL: Each one of them is so rich, they’re not branded yet.

    Q: You’re not branded either.

    DDL: You discover these people in the story… the cycle of hope is coming to end, the urgency for the commune, this unachievable hope for future, but it seems to me, you see these young people dedicated to what they’re doing, love what they’re doing, and it makes you feel good.

    Q: Do they remind you of yourself at their age?

    DDL: I don’t think I had anything like the same kind of self-possession they have, which isn’t to say that they are probably beset by doubt, which they keep to themselves. I was probably more shambolic at their age.