|
What follows is from an interview with Jan Lauwers by Pieter T’Jonck,
from the Financieel Economische Tijd
of Saturday 8th September 2001.
Jan Lauwers: The film was ‘finished’ beforehand. But as soon as you start filming everything starts to shift. We started with a real story, a sequel to Morning Song (one of Lauwers’ plays). But that was only an instrument. Its classical composition - the unity of time and place - is also primarily a metaphor. It indicates a way of dealing with time. For example, you always have to see that the sun is in the right position. This gives you a certain ‘drive’. But in the midst of all this I have become involved in the medium itself. As an artist, I open up art to discussion in the work I do. Can one open up the medium of film to discussion too? And how many films do you have to make to acquire the mastery that enables you to truly question things? The fear of the great machinery of film makes you shy away from so doing. But as Churchill said, ‘The only thing you have to fear is your own fear.’
I made several fundamental choices, such as working with photographers instead of film cameramen. That makes a big difference; a film cameraman provides light, while a photographer seeks it out. We also shot unusually long takes, which offered us great freedom. Secondly, we chose to use a digital camera, hand-held. We shot quickly too. We shot a 2-hour film in 21 days. Lastly, I immediately edited each day’s takes with Nico Leunen. The results of this daily editing urge you to rewrite and restart during shooting. So an initial rough version of the film was ready in a week, and then we started again. This has nothing to do with the Dogme principles. It is a way of gauging the significance of acting and photography in the film medium.
To give an example: what is left of actors’ enormous longing for film when you take the glamour out of it? The challenge in the theatre is much greater. In film the camera and editing pick up the moment of magic and run away with it. That is also the marvellous thing about film: the moment is everything, and you do not need to build up tension. It’s a different craft.
|
|
|