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The
Insider Outsider
An interview with Phil Morrison,
about his new film Junebug
By Jeannette Catsoulis
Photo by
David La Spina / birdboxarchives.com
Read more about Junebug.
Reverse Shot: Where
does Junebug come from? Most directors
with a background in music videos don’t
make films quite like this.
Phil Morrison: Well, I wasn’t particularly
good at music videos! I liked doing them,
and I am proud of them, but mine were never
like that the ones I find impressive.
I did a TV show called Upright Citizens
Brigade, which was sketch comedy but
shot single camera, on location, with no
audience or laughtrack, so the experience
of it in a way was kind of like doing a
really low-budget movie. And it was conceived
by its stars and writers almost like [Buñuel’s]
Phantom of Liberty—so I almost believed
it was cinema we were making. And I’m really
proud of that show, and the four people
who conceived it [Matt Besser, Amy Poehler,
Ian Roberts, Matt Walsh] had really complex
ideas in a way that’s uncommon in sketch
comedy. We were true to the way people are
at heart. It wasn’t one of those shows created
from how inconsistent people are, but how
consistent they are. I believe that that
show, and the music videos too, are less
unlikely precursors to Junebug than
they might seem, and I might have to acknowledge
that the things in Junebug that are
also in the comedy, well, perhaps if those
elements had not been in the videos and
sketch comedy they might have worked better!
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RS:
How did the idea for the film develop?
PM: Angus MacLachlan [the screenwriter]
had this idea that was initially a play.
He’s a playwright, and I’ve known him my
whole life; he lives in Winston-Salem, North
Carolina, where I grew up. During my junior
year at NYU I took part in a play he had
written, and we made it into my student
film, called Tater
Tomater. That was in 1988. It took
a while to finish it, then it was in Sundance
in 92, and back then we talked about making
a movie. Then Angus had this story about
this family, and it just started building
from there.
RS: Are you familiar with the world of
outsider art?
PM: I’m no expert, but there was that vogue
in the mid-Eighties, and when an interest
in outsider art coincides with one’s freshman
year in college, especially if you’re from
North Carolina…well! And in 1984 R.E.M.
was really significant to a senior in high
school in Winston-Salem. So I did that whole
thing, I went and slept on Howard Finster’s
couch—twice!—and hung out with him, and
now I realize that Madeleine’s [played by
Embeth Davidtz] relationship with the artist
in the film is in some way a critique of
my own with Finster—because my interest
in Finster was goodhearted, but I was also
very selective about him. I did not allow
his evangelism to challenge my dedication
to secularism as a freshman in college,
that part was quaint to me. I didn’t let
that penetrate who I was. So there was simultaneously
great admiration and respect for him, but
also I was by legitimate definition more
“sophisticated” than he was. But I didn’t
think about how that might challenge my
preconceptions.
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RS: There’s
a line in the film making fun of an outsider
artist by describing his work as occurring
“in the brief period between incarcerations.”
Was that your line or Angus’s?
PM: [Laughingly indicates himself, making
a shhhh! gesture] Well, in a way it’s
making fun of the insider art sensibility,
and by the way, I don’t think the people
in that world are unaware of these questions.
I don’t presume to have a better perspective
on outsider art than the people whose careers
are tied to it. But that comment is, in
a very shorthandedly humorous way, talking
about how the biographies of these artists
are the same as the work itself. It helps
create the fascination with them and inevitably
adds to that sense of separation between
them and the connoisseur.
RS: There’s an off-kilter tone about
the movie that keeps the audience guessing
where you’re going, especially in the first
30 minutes or so. Is this a serious film
about artists, or is it going to be a satiric
look at their world? Then you don’t take
a stand one way or the other. Audiences
look for signals, how to feel at a particular
point, and you don’t give anything away.
Is the ambiguity a conscious strategy to
make people discover their own engagement
with the film, or is that just the way things
turned out?
PM: It’s very conscious. In fact, there
are scenes we shot that delivered the signals
you’re talking about, and therefore we removed
them. Because I believe that as part of
a whole, that kind of vagueness is a virtue;
it creates questioning and participation
from the audience and a mood experience.
That’s the mood I wanted. I think it’s what
movies are good for, what they do well.
As far as consistency of tone is concerned,
it’s certainly a product of many great movies—Bresson,
for example—but maybe it’s something I’ll
leave for the geniuses, like Ozu. But that
doesn’t make me not love Imamura, who couldn’t
be less consistent, and that’s exhilarating
to me.
RS: That’s what I love about something
like A.I. Artificial Intelligence.
PM: A.I. is in my top five of the
last 10 or 20 years. It took my breath away.
I had a really significant experience while
we were making Junebug—we shot the
movie in 20 days, so there was a lot to
do, and I only saw one movie at the time—and
I went to see The Terminal with about
seven or eight people. Now it’s no A.I.,
but I liked it, and I had a moving experience
watching it. And I came out and the other
people—all of whom are good friends, and
I really respect their opinions—all hated
it. And it was a real crisis for me, because
maybe I liked it more because I was in the
middle of making a movie and was more on
the side of anybody trying to make something,
and because in a way Amistad and
A.I. did create for me a certain
loyalty to Spielberg—as long as he’s pursuing
what I want him to pursue! Which is a bit
selfish I admit. So maybe I cut The Terminal
more slack than my friends did. But they
hated it, and that made me think everyone’s
going to hate Junebug. It sent me
into a panic right in the middle of filming,
because I felt like the film wasn’t about
an effort to avoid big strokes; it wasn’t
about naturalism with the family. The idea
was to accept they’re types, and Madeleine—also
known as “us”—discovers them as such. And
let’s explore what that means. To us. Any
effort to make them not types would actually
be imposing my idea of what people ought
to be like as much as if we were exploiting
the fact that they were types. Instead,
I thought let’s accept what they are and
then try to explore what that means to us.
But I knew that what that meant was that
some people would just see the caricature.
I had to accept the possibility of people
seeing this movie and just seeing “quirk”
and that was terrifying. But I had no other
choice.
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RS: Did
it occur to you that people might view the
film as a red state/blue state collision?
PM: Certainly as long as I’ve been involved
with it I saw it to some degree as the relationship
between the South and the rest of the U.S.,
but we shot in July, well before the election.
And I accept that idea about the film, I’m
not going to deny it, but that wasn’t the
idea originally.
RS: What themes did you want to explore?
PM: A lot! But in one way, they all fall
into the category of, “Man, it’s complicated
to be conscious, ain’t it?” Which hopefully
applies to every movie. We weren’t reinventing
the wheel here. But more specifically one
thing was about creating a modest vehicle
for reminding us that what we assume going
in to a situation is an illusion, a product
of a self-protective outlook. Another thing
was: What is your responsibility to people
whose love you have accepted but maybe you
no longer join in that love? Culturally
we’ve really talked a lot about taking care
of the self, and that’s not necessarily
illegitimate, but I think the process of
taking care of each other can get lost in
the shuffle. That is a big theme for me.
RS: Your style reminds me of Terence
Davies, particularly when you let the camera
sit on empty rooms. How did that develop?
PM: I developed it in this movie, as it’s
the only movie I’ve ever made! In a way
it’s a result of other movies that have
somehow reminded me of where I grew up maybe
even more than most movies that take place
in the South. Like the first movie I saw
from Iran, [Ebrahim Forouzesh’s]
The Jar, felt to me like The Andy
Griffith Show! And certain movies have
this feeling, and I wish I could say I accidentally
fell into this but, no, it was a very conscious
thing. This movie’s vocabulary feels like
waking up in the morning in Piedmont, North
Carolina, and staring out the window at
the yard. So perhaps I might have had this
feeling no matter where I grew up.
We talked a lot about Davies. The
DP, Peter Donahue, and I talked a lot about
The Long Day Closes, in fact there
was a cut of Junebug that was about
half an hour longer than what you’ve seen,
that Mike Ryan, one of the producers, called
“the Terence Davies cut”! And you know when
Davies came to the South, with The Neon
Bible, that may be where I was least
into him. That was a weird experience. I
saw it in Paris, the first time I’d ever
been there, and I went to see that movie.
So I guess maybe I shouldn’t be making a
movie about England! |
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