Reykjavík Grapevine - 09.10.2015, Blaðsíða 14

Reykjavík Grapevine - 09.10.2015, Blaðsíða 14
Grown-Up Fairytales: On the set of Elvar Gunnarsson’s ‘Mara’ 14 The Reykjavík GrapevineIssue 16 — 2015 We roll up the gravel path, wheels kick- ing up scree into the fading summer air. The sun is working its way west. Dusk has started to gnaw at the top of the misty, rolling hills of the valley. A faint, blood-orange smog creeps across the sky. You roll down the win- dow, but close it quickly again, the dust hot in your nose and eyes. Across the way, a salmon lake stands, near-drained in parts, the faint silhouettes of fisher- men standing solitary in the wash. The guesthouse, our last refuge of warmth and supplies, fades into the shadows of the northern foothills—its security light a star, standing to attention in the small solar system of those dotted across the rest of the valley. There are no lights here, no path to follow. Once night falls upon this place— a sweet, velvet darkness—all bets are off. The cliffs grow up around you like the walls of an ancient fort. The moon glares from the south upon the mouth of the valley—your one way in, your one way out. The house, a particularly Evil Dead number, rolls into view. Creaking, rusty orange iron is punctuated by a kitchen window swinging in the wind, smack- ing into its dark, wooden frame. A large lighting rig and curtain cling to a side window in the growing tumult. The nearest main road is a 2.5km hike away. Water is already in short supply. Did I forget anything…? Two crew mem- bers fiddle with camera rails and filters. A dog howls in the distance. We have arrived. “A horror film is really just about fucking with people.” When I recount my last horror film ex- perience to Elvar Gunnarsson, the di- rector, writer, and cinematographer of ‘Mara’, he laughs. Thanks to his near- encyclopaedic knowledge of the genre, he immediately knows which film I’m talking about. “Oh yeah, [Peter Jackson’s] ‘Braindead’,” he grins. “The lawnmower, right?” He seems to know a suspicious amount of horror trivia for a horror di- rector, writer, and cinematographer. I pursue this. “I have never directed a horror movie before,” Elvar admits, leaning back into a large wingback armchair. Dry ice from the previous scene permeates the air. “But when I was growing up, me and my sister weren’t allowed to watch Disney films. We weren’t allowed to watch fairy- tales with a happy ending. That was not allowed. So having not experienced all these fairytales and normal things that kids usually grow up with, I watched a lot of horror. That, and a lot of Hitchcock. These films talked to me as if they were talking to a kid, because I was a kid when I saw them.” ‘Mara’ tells the story of an earnest young couple who have returned to Iceland from the US in order to live the American dream and open an Airbnb hostel in The Beautiful Icelandic Coun- tryside. Upon their arrival, however, things quickly take a turn for the fucked- up. After the male lead, Pétur (Gunnar Kristinsson), discovers a mysterious hole in the cellar, his wife Mira (Vivian Ólafsdóttir, in her feature-length debut) is haunted by devastating night terrors. One morning, she wakes up pregnant with what seems to be an extremely rap- idly growing baby—or so it would seem. That’s where the fun begins. It’s hardly Disney, but the story might have more in common with those fables than you’d expect from a horror film. As Elvar argues, “I think ‘Mara’ really is a story about growing up and becom- ing an adult—accepting that you have to take some kind of responsibility, and act according to those responsibilities,” El- var explains. “Even though it’s set up as a horror movie, with devilish creatures and an Alien-like egg, I think that’s re- ally what’s at the core of the story. While these elements would normally make more of a B-movie, we’re trying to make something slick.” Slick? Like, with blood? “It’s kind of like watching one of [Da- vid] Cronenberg’s '80s movies. His films were so absurd, but so slick, you know?” Elvar exclaims, enthusiastically. “For the average viewer, you’d just kind of have to believe what you were seeing be- cause it was so slick and well-made. Like, take ‘Scanners’. Most of the film is quite normal—I mean, apart from the explod- ing head and people catching fire for no reason and stuff like that—but it’s actu- ally telling quite a normal story in quite a normal way. “That’s kind of what we’re trying to do. If you were to read through the script, it would probably read like that sort of 80s movie, but thanks to the freedom the genre gives you, the film has a very defi- Killing Your Darlings With A Lawnmower To The Face Words by Ciarán Daly Photos by Art Bicnick Despite possessing a desolate landscape, long winters, and prominent bodysnatcher demographic (sorry, Alþingi), Ice- land is not really a landmark when it comes to horror mov- ies—even though it certainly seems like the kind of place that should be. Thanks to a burgeoning national cinema, though, the country might just be about to smack intes- tines-first straight into the horror buff’s world map. Enter ‘Mara’ (“Mare”), a new, independent Icelandic horror film that’s looking to make waves in the world’s oceans of blood. ‘Mara’ is slated for a 2016 release. You can follow the film’s progress on its self-titled Facebook page.
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