Press
Release
IN
SEARCH OF A HAPPY ENDING
Interview
for SPADA Conference newsletter.
October 2003
Blame it on her West Coast roots, but Gaylene Preston
prefers to call what others deem a filmmaker’s “passion”
simple bloody-mindedness.
‘Passion’ doesn’t come
close to describing the steely, year-in-year-out, determination
required by Preston and Robin Laing (her business partner)
in getting Perfect Strangers - her first DRAMATIC feature
film in a decade - off the ground.
She is understandably pleased to have
finally got this feature completed *– especially
one that she wrote, directed and co-produced. And she’s
keen to get cracking on her next feature – but more
on that later.
Perfect Strangers, starring our own Sam
Neill, Joel Tobeck, and Australian actress Rachael Blake,
is what has been variously described as ‘a macabre
fairy tale’, ‘a chilling romance’ and
‘a spooky love story’.
“It explores the dangerous deception
of desire - how far do you fall,” she asks, “when
you fall in love?”
“Perfect Strangers was an idea
I had while driving to Hawkes Bay in 1982,” she
tells me over coffee and cake at her Wellington home.
“I was thinking about power in relationships and
how stories often follow a very regularized formula. And
I asked the question - what if you took a predator and
a victim and they fell in love - how would that affect
the relationship? Would the victim become the predator?
Would the predator become the victim? Who would get who?”
Preston was also interested at the time
in subverting what she perceived as a national obsession
with man alone stories. The man with a gun in the wilderness
which internationally Preston asserts, later segued into
a macho interpretation of supposedly proactive females
on the big screen.
“I went to the AFM in Los Angeles
in 1990 and every poster had gone from guys with guns,
to guys with girls with guns – and the girls always
had big tits and long legs – so this was meant to
be proactive females on screen…I wanted to explore
something a bit more modern and less same old same old.”
Preston wrote nothing down at the time,
but let the idea gestate as she got on with other work.
She and Laing had released her first feature MR WRONG
(aka DARK OF THE NIGHT) in 1985 and followed this up with
RUBY AND RATA (1990) and BREAD & ROSES (1993) but
then with what she considers (tongue in cheek) was a lousy
career move,she decided to make a documentary about seven
old ladies talking about the war - the widely acclaimed
feature length documentary WAR STORIES Our Mothers Never
Told Us (1995)
“I’d just established myself
in the world of drama making and here’s this documentary
that I just have to do!” she mock-laments. After
that she was, she says, cast as a documentary maker –
“there’s a perception out there that if you
can make a decent documentary for some reason you can’t
be any good at anything else.”
The nature of the international film
market also counted against her. “We make so few
films and we make them so slowly that the international
market moves on. It’s a fast turnover industry out
there. The film industry – you’re hot, you’re
not, you’re in, you’re out… “If
you’re pre-selling a film, and no-one can actually
remember your last one because it was a while ago…
well forget it! Literally.”
Between 1993 and 1998 she and Robin LAING
put huge effort into developing a film of the Jean Betts
play Ophelia Thinks Harder.
“But we weren’t able to get
it up,” Gaylene says. “Even with a lot of
real interest in it internationally, we weren’t
able to get the financing to work. We had to walk away.
That was psychologically and financially quite debilitating.
I emerged from it by giving Annie Goldson a hand with
Punitive Damage, I sort of worked my way out of not-quite
nervous breakdown territory.”
Gaylene said she knew that the next dramatic
feature project she worked on had to succeed. “I
thought, I have to actually achieve it onto the screen.
I have to. I can’t not.”
So in 1998 she stopped telling the story
to people in kitchens at parties and sat down and completed
writing what became a 15-page treatment of her predator-victim
idea. She claims that the story “unfolded almost
complete from the very beginning”.
“Plan A was to optimise the project,
make it look great, go for marquee name cast,” she
said. “Plan D was to shoot it on my weekends with
drama students on my D.V.-cam round at Red Rocks [on Wellington’s
south coast]. “Either way, it was going to become
a film,” she says.
She showed her 15-page outline to Sam
Neill because she’d always considered him ideal
for one of the key roles. She fully expected him to say
no. He said yes.
“And of course then I realised
in a way that the plan had just got harder again”
She originally conceived the film as
an improvisational piece, one where the characterisations
would be developed in rehearsal. Sam Neill had other thoughts.
“I wrote the film from the outline
because I wanted to improvise it. Sam agreed but he always
agreed to it while asking for a little bit more…
and a little bit more! So I grew the 15 pages to 30 pages
and I kept building it, and it became a 91-page dialogue
script which I had become quite attached to by the time
we were shooting though it did change a bit during that
process. It’s great though to be developing from
such an early stage with one of the leads cast. Sam was
very helpful.”
The story centers around three characters,
and is set on a mythical island. Filming took place with
Alun Bollinger behind the lens on the West Coast, and
Gaylene has described the location as very much like a
fourth character.
“Its “treacherous beauty”
powerfully reflects and underscores the action and the
protagonists’ shifting moods,” she says.
“We shot in all weathers including
one of the worst storm to hit the place in ten years,”
Gaylene recalls.
“By the end of the day, only two
small lights were operational, and our hero boat ‘Dauntless’
was offshore unable to take shelter, swamped and very
nearly sunk by six-metre high seas.
“Finally as the crew squelched
and shivered their way home, we discovered slips on the
road, trees torn out of the ground by their roots and
a community further up the Coast evacuated from their
homes. And all this on day one!”
From then on, Gaylene says it was eerie
how every day for almost nine weeks, the Gods delivered
the film crew perfectly scripted weather.
Filming Perfect Strangers was, for Preston,
a pleasure.
“Going down the Coast, which is
where I come from, shooting this film that came out of
my head, essentially with a bunch of old friends was just
a wonderful experience,” she says. “I felt
very supported.
“It is a fantastic privilege making
your own film,” she adds. “It’s just
the best fun you can have.
“There were people involved in
our shoot who had worked on Mr Wrong. Others had worked
on Bread and Roses, Ruby and Rata … and I saw the
real wealth, and true value of staying at home and making
your own films. Unusually I haven’t left New Zealand
to make films. I have been fortunate, and privileged to
have stayed here and done my own work my own way. I was
going to say at my own speed, but unfortunately that’s
not true because it can be such a long time between movies.”
The key reason is lack of opportunities
for serious development finance not to mention a local
funding structure that, in her opinion, barely works.
“If you look at the current funding
situation, Theres probably around NZD30million of community
money earmarked for film production which is committed
to projects that remain unmade and the money sits in the
bank. That has pretty well been the situation give or
take three or four million since the beginning of 2000.
THE Film Fund has agreed to fund around nine projects,
which over the last year or more have not proceeded because
the criteria are so difficult. They have committed their
money but there has been no filmmaking outcome. These
projects must be promising or the funding would not be
committed, so I’m just wondering when do we get
to the point that we admit that the structure just isn’t
working?”
“It is fiercely difficult for everyone,”
she says.
Which brings us to the the buzz surrounding
Perfect Strangers, and expectations that Preston will
soon be embarking immediately on her next feature.
“I have several projects I’d
like to make but I know it will be the same hard road
[as always].
“It would be nice to wake up in
a place where the money is available to at least get cracking
with a reasonable vision and not have to think, OK, I’ve
got to come up with an idea that I can shoot at Red Rocks
with a bunch of drama students or risk never getting it
made.”
“The telling of New Zealand stories
is a very tough issue, very tough issue indeed. If you
want to tell a New Zealand story - and this applies to
Roger Donaldson, Jane Campion, Vincent Ward Geoff Murphy
- whether you have an international reputation or whether
you don’t, it’s immaterial - the telling of
New Zealand stories is incredibly difficult because we
have very limited access to our own investment community.
Merging public and private money is virtually outlawed
here. This puts local filmmakers in an untenable position
and in my view the proposed PEGS scheme highlights that
problem.
“I don’t think as a society
we have truly valued what telling our own stories on the
big screen is worth. “It’s great that New
Zealand is now ‘Middle Earth.’ But we mustn’t
be too naïve about that. There are plenty of people
around the world who would see Lord of the Rings as being
shot in Middle Earth not in New Zealand. Whereas a New
Zealand film like Whale Rider or Perfect Strangers goes
out there and it’s of us, about us, in us. Never
mind the foreign movies. Whether Last Samurai is shot
here or in Japan is really of no interest to the audience
but a New Zealand film goes out there and brands the Nation
The local stories impress offshore in all kinds of ways
that are of unquantifiable value to the country. But,
in the end, they’re made at a real human cost.”
Gaylene believes that there is a strange
kiwi attitude held by some.
“There’s an unconscious attitude
that filmmakers are somehow getting away with something.
Your reward is that you get to make your film, That’s
the reward, so to expect any pecuniary return as well
is damn near criminal.
“It is an amateurist attitude.
It’s at the heart of the New Zealand perception
of the arts. If you’re having fun, you shouldn’t
be paid for it! That runs very deep in the New Zealand
psyche.
“So we have a culture, and the
resulting Government infrastructure, that unfortunately
undervalues the creative contribution. One or two or three
films a year just isn’t good enough. We are very
lucky that the ones we make do so well.”
Quite what Gaylene does next is unclear.
She has been offered an Australian film to make, and she
has a couple of her own projects developed.
“What I really want to do is make
another feature film which is my own work,” she
says. “I’m not as young as I used to be. I
figure I’ve got another 10 years. I’ve got
a vague impression that with practice you get better and
I’ve had a bit of practice and I don’t want
to spend the next 10 years trying to make my next feature.
But If I have to, I suppose that’s what I’ll
do.
I will continue to campaign strongly
for us to be able to make many, many more New Zealand
films at least at the budget level of Perfect Strangers.
She acknowledges now a sense of loss
that the project is over.
“I’m sort of in mourning
because I’ve been going to the island – Perfect
Strangers is set on a mythological island – for
the last four years every day I’d go and spend time
on the island, and discover more about it and its inhabitants.
The island has been a place where things happen…
and now the film is finished, I can’t go to the
island any more. It has become a solid state and I have
to wait to visit with an audience now – join a tour
party as it were.
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