Atlantica - 01.06.2002, Side 90

Atlantica - 01.06.2002, Side 90
Edward Weinman:: What should audiences expect from your new film, Hafid (The Sea)? Baltasar Kormákur: It’s about a family living on the east coast of Iceland, at the edge of the inhabitable world – a family drama with comical situations. It’s also about being from a small society – little villages (a way of life) that are quickly dis- appearing. EW: What attracted you to the story? BK: The connections among the family members in the film reflect on my own – my life is mirrored in this film. Your art is always a reflection of your own experiences, even though it’s not biographical. EW: After all the critical success of 101 Reykjavík, what expecta- tions do you have for The Sea? BK: Nothing less. [Laughs.] It’s a very different movie. It should have a broader audience than 101 Reykjavík, especially in Iceland. It’s hard to tell what makes one film work and another one not work. But I don’t think too much about what the critics say. It doesn’t affect my work, but, of course, it’s very nice when they like what you do. EW: Iceland is perceived as an ideal society. Your films reveal a dark side to this society, but are still uplifting. Please explain. BK: I’m not trying to build a neg- ative picture of Iceland. I’m looking at it as I see it and try- ing to be honest. As for the sec- ond, if you treat your characters with humanity and you care for them, then you can put them through hell and they will come out standing. That is uplifting. EW: What type of films are you attracted to? BK: I like all types of films except the big action films where it’s one man against the rest of the world. I avoid these films. But at the same time, I also avoid the dull, artistic films that are self-indulgent. I’m attracted to character-driven films. EW: What do you enjoy about the craft of film-making? BK: It’s a good way to make money. [Laughs.] No, I enjoy researching relationships and human behaviour using this medium – this huge format – to do it. It’s great to work with the actors and crew. They’re like gypsies. They travel in cara- vans from place to place steal- ing a piece of this town or this place. I enjoy telling interesting stories, which is basically what it’s all about. When you lose the story, film-making becomes self-indulgent. EW: Why do you feel the need to tell stories? BK: A general laziness for doing anything else. EW: Your new project is called A Little Trip to Heaven. What is it about? BK: It’s about a third-generation Icelandic couple living a crimi- nal life in North America. The girl decides to escape to Iceland to get a new life and the man follows. It’s a bit of a road movie. They travel to Iceland, and around the country, and then back to North America. It’s a psychothriller. It has sexual madness. EW: This will be your first English-language film, and it’s being produced in Hollywood, albeit by an independent pro- ducer. Are you interested in one day working under the Hollywood studio system? BK: I’m not ready to jump into the studio system and make a big-budget film right now. I will progress towards that very slowly so I can retain artistic power. I know it’s possible, but you have to first gain success and respect outside the system. EW: What are the advantages to working outside the studio sys- tem? BK: I don’t live in LA. [Laughs.] There are advantages and dis- advantages. If you’re going to use the power of money, then you have to be in LA, but I know a lot of directors who are there building their careers on other people’s decisions. I don’t need that. I have resources in Europe and I have contacts in the States. In the end, I will work for the ones that give me the opportunity to make films the way I would like to make them. Then again, if it all breaks down, I can always go back to taming horses. EW: It’s a Saturday night in Reykjavik. How will you spend it? BK: Guess man... Well, if it would ever occur to me to do something aside from staying at home [laughs sarcastically], I’d go to Kaffibarinn and have one drink. Edward Weinman is a staff writer. THE SEA IS SCHEDULED FOR GENERAL RELEASE ON 23 AUGUST. i-site 88 A T L A N T I C A The Atlantica INQUISITION PHOTO PÁLL STEFÁNSSON After 101 Reykjavík was embraced by the critics, Baltasar Kormákur’s follow-up picture, Hafid (The Sea), is awaiting a much-anticipated August release. With his first English-language film current- ly in the works, Edward Weinman asks if the contro- versial Icelandic director is about to go Hollywood? P H O TO P Á LL S TE FÁ N S S O N 067-088 I-siteAtl402 24.6.2002 15:32 Page 88
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