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QUESTION: What about the research?
JOHN MALKOVICH: I read a lot. I also
didn¹t just want to do the story of The Shining Path,
which is why it just says Latin America - the recent
past.
QUESTION: It seems important to you to
handle the political part of the very in a very delicate manner?
JOHN MALKOVICH: Yes because usually
when politics are handled in the cinema, and quite often in
journalism, it doesn¹t strike me as particularly well
informed. It¹s just people shooting off their mouths.
This particular policeman was someone quite special because
not only did he capture Guzman, he also captured Montesinos
who we call Calderon, who now lives in a jail next door to
Guzman. But it¹s not a black and white politic of hero
and villain.
QUESTION: Do you think it fair to regard
Rejas as a hero?
JOHN MALKOVICH: A hero with the simple
definition of human - I mean a human engaged in a struggle
in a film that is essentially about corruption and the various
forms of corruption, whether they be political, financial,
ideological or emotional. To me I see it much more as a film
like High Noon than a European art film. That¹s how I
look at it. It¹s a very strong story and you want to
find out what happens next.
QUESTION: The complex relationship between
Rejas and the three women in his life - his wife, daughter
and the dance teacher - seems important for you to investigate
in this film?
JOHN MALKOVICH: I think it¹s
something that most people have lived so they understand that
sort of occurrence passing through one¹s life. It¹s
something I¹m not very judgmental about, at all. That
happens. When it happens I think it brings to bear a number
of contradictory sentiments, emotions and life choices. And
it can destroy as much as it can create. So it¹s very
complicated. In this story Rejas married someone and fell
in love with someone who probably he doesn¹t have a remarkable
number of similarities with but who he is amused by and gets
along with and has a love for. He then is attracted to somebody
who probably does have a lot of similarities with him. I always
mistrust when things don¹t have the requisite complication.
That¹s not to be pretentious it¹s because in my
experience things are normally more complicated than we realise
or they are purported to be or we could possibly know.
QUESTION: Was Javier Bardem always your
first choice for Rejas?
JOHN MALKOVICH: I cast before he
had even met Julian Schnabel for Before Night Falls. It was
six years ago. He was originally my first choice for Juan
Diego Botto¹s role because he was so young then. The
people who were then funding the film - but not funding it
as it turned out - wanted a known actor so we talked to a
couple of other people. One of whom Daniel Day Lewis responded
and wrote a lovely letter and was very nice about it but didn¹t
want to do it and the other we never heard back from. But
when I met with Javier he expressed an interest in playing
Rejas. As I explored his work I thought his idea was much
better than mine. Mercifully the film was cancelled just before
we were to start shooting which meant Javier was five years
older and had done Julian¹s wonderful film in English
by this time and his English had improved markedly and he
had studied very hard. And he was able to communicate maturity
even though he was still young, that helped us.
QUESTION: Why was it important to make
the film mainly in English?
JOHN MALKOVICH: When I started doing
this film I had never worked in another language - except
in very limited ways - and I don¹t speak Spanish. And
so I would have felt uncomfortable working in another language.
That was one thing but the reason that the film got made was
because Lola Films in Madrid had a division funded to make
films in English with a Latin market in mind. So there was
no desire to do it in Spanish. If I did another film like
that I would go through the same process of thinking about
language.
QUESTION: What would you hope audiences
would take from seeing The Dancer Upstairs?
JOHN MALKOVICH: That it is
a very well structured, ambitious, challenging film that also
is very involving. I think it shows that there is an audience
for things that are not so knee jerk, retarded, stuffed down
our throats. There is an audience for something reflective
and contemplative. Provided that the things that are reflective
or contemplative compel us. People don¹t like to be bored
and I don¹t think there is anything boring in this movie.
They don¹t like to be bored and I agree with them. But
if you have pretentions to want to do a film that is reflective,
or contemplative or thoughtful then your duty to compel people
to watch it is multiplied because they are giving you that
possibility but you have to give them something back. And
I think this film does that - people don¹t leave the
theatre and say boy that was obscure.
Release Date: 6th Dec
Distributor: Fox
Cert: TBC
Running Time: 133 mins
www.fox.co.uk
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