Tuesday, 7 August 2007

Jake talks about Canada, Naomi and the Scripter Award, and a skateboarding Joker

I've been having a Brokeback evening and it's because of all of the comments on the previous thread - the emotion of seeing this film for the very first time and how many of you, myself included, only have to hear the guitar as long-legged Ennis leaps out of the truck, right at the very beginning of the film, and that's it. Two hours of pure cathartic indulgence are ahead. So I've been listening to the soundtrack and watching the film this evening - it's paused as I speak! - and enjoying some of that fine country air.


Jake Gyllenhaal is well aware of the affect this film of his and Heath's has had on audiences - he's seen it first hand. He recalled watching the film at the Venice Film Festival with Ang and Heath - Maggie was in the row behind. When Jake turned to look at his sister at the end (for approval, one wonders) “all I could see in her face were two swollen eyes. She’d been crying that hard... When the lights came up after the screening in Venice you could sense just how deeply the film had affected people... The same was true at the screening at the Toronto Film Festival.” To be an actor and to have that affect on people and witness it - that has to be special and hopefully counteracts that whole Oscar thing.



In the same Canadian interview, Jake talked about filming Brokeback in the glorious remote mountain wilderness of Alberta: “Heath and I came to Calgary early to rehearse with Ang. The first place he took us was a campground (near Fort Macleod)... There was a trailer for me, one for Heath, another for Ang and a fourth for (producer) Michael Houseman. We were living in the trailers and it was spectacularly beautiful country, but it was also really lonely. It really began to affect Heath and I, but that’s exactly what Ang wanted. He wanted us to experience the loneliness our characters felt... Just looking at the Alberta landscapes as Ang filmed them, you get a real sense that it’s being so lonely that brings them together... Straight or gay, everyone understands the concept of loneliness and how it makes you search out someone to help fill that void for you.”


Later on in the filming, they were all relocated to Canyon Creek and Sheep Mountain. “We rehearsed our scenes in these really remote mountain locations when there was still snow on the ground... I had just got my dog before we did the movie. He was running and jumping through the snow, just loving it.” The locations were “so remote that we rode our horses up a trail each day.” Filming also took place in Cowley, Carsland and Rockyford. “Cowley is the windiest place I’ve ever been to in my life. The wind never stopped blowing. People told us it’s the windiest place in the province and maybe one of the windiest places in the world. I can vouch for that.” Jake drove from Calgary to Rockyford down “the straightest road I’ve ever driven on. There wasn’t even a bend in the road."

“Alberta has remarkable country and remarkable people. Everyone was so good to us from the crew to the people in the towns. You really had the sense everyone wanted us there and that they embraced the story we were trying to tell.”


Naomi's honour - 20th Scripter Award

A press release today announced that Naomi Foner Gyllenhaal is to chair the selection committee for the 20th annual USC (University of Southern California) Scripter Award. This award, presented in February, honours the screenwriter and the author of the book or short story on which the screenplay is based. 'Scripter producer Toni Miller said that nearly four dozen films — ranging from the highly anticipated cinematic versions of “The Golden Compass” and “Love in the Time of Cholera” to recent hits “300” and “1408” — are in contention for the award. To be eligible, films must be adapted from an English-language book and be exhibited in theaters on or before Dec. 31.'


It's interesting to hear the reason for Naomi's selection: “Naomi is an experienced screenwriter of adapted material, and she brings the stories to life with great creative skill and an authentic voice and sensibility,” said Miller. “We are thrilled to work with her as selection-committee chair for this special twentieth-anniversary celebration of literature and film.”

Naomi herself has said that “When I read a book I want to adapt, I ask myself ‘Why is there a movie around these characters that would make the rest of us want to watch it?... If you are doing your job, you are creating something new. There can be another story within a book that needs to be explored.” Naom's next project is an adaptation of Marijane Meaker’s Shockproof Sydney Skate for Fox 2000. “It’s a story about an unusual relationship between a boy, his mother and what real love is."


“Observing family allows you to use a small intimate palette to comment on the greater culture... Family contains the best of us and the worst. And we can all relate to it, as we’re all part of some kind of family. If our job as writers is to affect the culture in a larger way — to disturb the comfortable and comfort the disturbed — it’s the way in.”

Joker on a skateboard

Meanwhile, Heath Ledger has been spotted skateboarding around Chicago with green hair. Talk about standing out... Whether or not he or the cast of The Dark Knight have had any time to enjoy the city's Lollapalooza festival isn't known. Heath has also been captured filming a scene for the movie. You can see it here.


Includes pictures from IHJ.

26 comments:

Anonymous said...

Speakng of tears! Tears in my ears
when I read Jake's comments about filming in Canada. A Brokeback moment! Oh gosh WDW!

AND a WOW! because I KNOW Marijane
Meaker (very well!) from when I lived in The Springs, East Hampton, where we had a writing group - I had heard that she was friends with Naomi. I love what Naomi said about "the intimate palette of family" - "MJ" would laugh at me if she knew I had a crush on Jake, though - and then she'd write a book about it.

And by gum, I dont follow Heath's career, but loved seeing him down the street in the dark - Id recognize his movements anywhere -
etched as he is upon my heart.

Whatddya know! Thanks for all of this!

Wet Dark and Wild said...

Hey Positively pia - thanks so much for that! I love hearing Jake talk about Canada and all the little details. I can picture him driving that long straight road to the windy town in the middle of nowhere - a million miles away from Hollywood.

That's amazing about you and Marijane Meaker - what connections you have! I'm a writer myself - for a living and for a hobby - and so I'm more than interested in this world. If only there was more time... I'm also interested in this idea that when a novel is adapted for a screenplay, new ideas and new themes can take shape and give it its own independence. I think we saw that with the BBM screenplay.

I don't follow Heath's career particularly either, but this film has caught me - feels almost like a family project. And the idea of Heath skateboarding with green hair just grabbed me. Thanks Pia!

Anonymous said...

Marijane M has a well developed social conscience, like Naomi. She's written many young adult novels under the name of M.E. Kerr.

And FYI, regarding "if only there was more time..." = she celebrated her 80th birthday this year.

She's also written a memoir about her relationship with Patricia Highsmith and is very active politically in GLBT activism on Long Island, as well as supportive of other writers.

Wet Dark and Wild said...

Thanks for the info pia - I've certainly heard of M E Kerr. You've added a lot of important context to the post - thanks :D

Anonymous said...

More context:

Sydney Skate has dubbed himself "Shockproof": He decoded his mother's gossip with her glamorous lesbian girlfriends at age eight (but has never let on to her that he knows she's gay). He easily shrugs off his father's demands to skip college and join him in the exciting world of swimming pool sales for suburbanites. During his summer days, he deftly cares for snakes at the local pet shop. And he has memorized the sex scenes of every book he's ever read in order to better seduce women. Nothing, however, has prepared Sydney for his mother sweeping Alison Gray, the girl of his dreams, off her feet.

Witty and perceptive, Sydney's coming-of-age story has been a classic of lesbian literature since it was first published in 1973. It was a Literary Guild Alternate and a Book Find Club Selection. Hailed as the Catcher in the Rye for the seventies, Shockproof Sydney Skate exposes the confusion of its time and remains keenly relevant to the sexual absurdities of today.

Anonymous said...

Even though I said in the previous post that Heath Ledger was the initial reason I went to see Brokeback Mountain because I had heard so much about his magnificent performance - which it was - I have never really followed his career. If he was in something that I happened to go see, that was fine. He was always a competent actor, Brokeback just took him to a degree unimaginable!
But now he is part of the BBM family and I wish him continued success in his career. I am a fan of the new Batman franchise and it's "dark" take on The Caped Crusader. The fact that Heath is in it is an added plus. He does have a screen presence that can't be ignored. I love his long, lean legs and that deep to the bone voice goes without saying. Even though that little clip was very dark, Heath still stood out masterfully. After Rendition has come and gone and we await the DVD, I guess I will have to put the rest of my energy towards waiting for Batman - unless our favorite guy gets busy and promises us something new.

Thanks again for more beautiful and compelling words from Jake. It never fails to amaze me how he is so observant of life and it's surroundings. He is in a class by himself and is it any wonder that we love him more and more. From what we know of him now, reading these old interviews brings even more depth to him. WDW, if you keep giving us treasures like this you are guarenteeing that none of us will be quitting Jake anytime soon.

Anonymous said...

I agree, I always enjoy hearing Jake's and Heath's thoughts on Brokeback, and all their movies. If it's not my favorite film of all time, then it's up there in the top three! I had heard all the buzz about Heath's Ennis, and his performance was great, and I liked the idea of the story when I heard about it, and of course with Ang Lee directing. But I never expected to have been so moved by Jake's performance as Jack. :)

How wonderful about Naomi, she seems like such a creative person. And I love the idea of seeing Heath skateboarding around Chicago with green hair!

Anonymous said...

Just wanted to add -

Pia, that's so interesting, ythat you know Marijane Meaker. Shockproof Sydney Skate sounds like a great story. I'm also interested in Love in the Time of Cholera; I haven't read it yet, but I've heard great things about it. I like Naomi's family comments too, and I love this pic of Jake, Jamie Lee and Naomi together. G'night all. :)

Anonymous said...

g'nite all, and thanks WDW for lighting up my evening sky with a wonderful post and pictures.

Anonymous said...

WDW you have been lighting up Pia's evening sky and now you have blown into my morning like a refreshing spring breeze.


I recall Ang speaking about that wind in an interview and now it's Jake driving through that wind down the straightest road ever and Atticus frolicking in the snow! Captivating images to fill my "palette".

And I love Naomi's metaphor of family for the larger universe.

Pia you are another rare one!

I'll be back after my caffeine fix. Of course this had to be my first halt en route to the kitchen!

Wet Dark and Wild said...

Morning everyone! Thanks for your comments and I hope everyone has a good Wednesday :D

I must thank you Pia for all of that isnight into Marijane Meaker. Sydney Skate sounds an incredible character.

Hi Dani - thanks for that. I loved this little interview, more like a chat about what it was like up there, mostly on his own but with his new companion Atticus. As you say, the more we hear, the more we love him :D

Marina - I may be a Jack girl but the first time I saw the film and saw Ennis climb down from the truck I knew Heath was special. Before that my best knowledge of Heath was Knight's Tale - which I love, incidentally.

Hey Incognita - I dreamt of that image of the long straight road last night. It really is a good image and it's added to the texture of BBM for me. Talking of which, I loved watching it again last night :)

Anonymous said...

As a dedicated human rights activist, Naolmi seems to be where ever the "battle lines" are drawn. She writes beautifully and I will definitely check out Marijane Meaker's Sydney Skate novel. It will be interesting to see where Naomi takes it. I'm impressed with the level of trust Naomi seems to generate in authors whose work she adapts. Bee Season is an example that comes to mind. I couldn't help but feel that there were elements of her own son in Bee Season, in the young son who was searching for spiritual meaning in his life.It is so cool, pia that you know Marijane! Naomi's remarks about family as a microcosm for the point of intersection between the social and the political provides endless opportunities for great stories. Wish I could be on Martha's Vineyard for her lecture on August 29th!
Thank you WDW for another outstanding, provocative thread to "chew" on!
And thanks for the video of Heath. Love the way he moves. He has a very distinctive way of moving. You're right dani, Heath has a very compelling presence on screen and his voice is absolutely hypnotic! He does stand out in his films. I went to BBM for him, and found a whole new Jake!
Jake's "ordeal" in Canada, when he first went with Ang, Heath and the producer, had to be difficult for him. Jake seems like a people person, very social. To be isolated and totally cut off from all things familiar and from that social interaction must have been really hard. Bet it put him into a very "Jack" frame of mind. I found his remarks very insightful inrelationship to how he eventually developed his characterization of Jack Twist.

Anonymous said...

Sorry for double-posting, but I read somewhere that Heath is playing Buddy Holly in I'm Not There, the Dylan movie. I read this around the time we got a glimpse of the poster for the movie over on the DC forum. There was a link identifying the people profiled on the poster and Heath was wearing glasses, I think, looking like Buddy Holly. Very confusing.

Anonymous said...

Heath is playing Dylan in I'm Not There, at least according to IMDB.

Anonymous said...

OT:
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/
hr/content_display/news/
e3i4d705b8469ab9fb89a6c95dacd9b4c0f

Jake is "available"??

What does that mean? Doesn´t he get any offers? Or are the offers not interesting enough? No news on the Broadway play?

His name is often linked with new projects but never with a substantial result.

I am starting to feel a bit uneasy...

Anonymous said...

He's only listed as available bcz he hasn't inked a deal, so nothing is scheduled. That doesn't mean anything. There could be several projects in various stages of development/negotiations.Also, there could be "strategic" delays. If RENDITION is really that good, and they are going to spend $$$ promoting it and Jake generates Oscar buzz,then a producer would want to sign him before Rendition hits, but his agent might want to negotiate after it hits.Not only for the best up front salary he can get, but also for other aspects of a film. I know this. Starting very soon, there are going to be really good films getting released across the board. So Rendition must be very good, indeed. Tom Cruise, Denzel Washington, Russell Crowe, Mark Wahlberg, Joaquin Phoenix, Clive Owen, Chris Cooper, will all have movies coming out soon. I'm sure I'm missing others as well. There's nothing straight forward about making movies. I couldn't do it. I'd be a wreck with the uncertainty and the "almost" aspect of it all!

Anonymous said...

"There's nothing straight forward about making movies. I couldn't do it. I'd be a wreck with the uncertainty and the "almost" aspect of it all! "

Very well said Bobbyanna!

Kim said...

Getting back to the loneliness of filming BBM in Canada: you've all done so much to capture the feel of the lonely landscape in your comments here, and Jake's words about the wind took me back to the west I knew as a kid, when wind was the only sound besides the creak of the waterwheels on the desolate prairie.

But to me there's another loneliness about filming BBM that Jake doesn't speak so much about,
but that must have been a powerful force in his experience--the loneliness not just of breaking up with a longtime girlfriend before the film, but of watching his closest associates on the set, Heath and Michelle, form their own strong bond. He must have felt so shut-out at times. I would have, anyhow.

So yesterday when many of you were commenting about weepy moments in movies, and remembering especially those weepy moments in BBM (count me in for the dozy embrace, which I can barely watch), I was thinking about how easily Jake himself says he cries while watching films (in BBM, wasn't it the scene where Ennis gets beat up by the trucker on the way to the bar?) His feelings seem to flow easily--something always refreshing in a guy, but a sign as well, maybe, of his deep familiarity with the loneliness and desolation we've been talking about today.

Anonymous said...

Beautiful insights, kim! I think Jake is a very emotional, empathetic person.

Wet Dark and Wild said...

Hi everyone! Just got back in, kicked off the shoes, opened a bottle of wine, checked out my Jake screensaver on the laptop (images from Cannes) and enjoyed your comments. I love these conversations because they seem to cover so many elements which in the end can mostly be traced back to Jake and show how our own feelings are often a response to him. Everyday, when I see what you've been discussing and catch up, it adds more colour and more texture and I feel like I'm being put back on the road. I culd mix up metaphors for a living so time to move on... ;D

Bobbyanna - thank you for that comment. I appreciate your insights into Naomi's work and how it fights the good fight. I completely agree with your perception of Jake's time in Canada. You can just feel the loneliness in his (on the surface) light hearted comments about playing with his dog, and enjoying the snow, when he was in a trailer in the middle of nowhere with three men he probably didn't know at all well at that stage. I agree that Jake appears as a people person but as someone who thinks deeply and maybe needs friends to distract him he must have found this quite tough - and from it came Jack.

As you and Beckela mention, Heath is in this rather odd sounding film about Bob Dylan. Interestingly enough, Michelle is also in it - as the love of Bob Dylan when he is played by Cate Blanchett. This film could be very good and clever or downright ludicrous in my opinion.

Hi Anon - I wouldn't worry too much. A project will come along soon enough. Jake's either not in a hurry to finish his summer break or the right thing hasn't come along and that is the prime concern. It has to be right, I think this is a crucial time for Jake careerwise after these 'grown up roles' of Graysmith and Freeman.

Bobbyanna - that's a good answer - Jake's name is going to have even more value shortly. Who knows what negotiations may be going on behind the scenes. It's hard to judge how in control Jake is of such negotiations at this stage.

Kim - thank you for that wonderful comment. I've thought on several occasions that it must have been so hard for Jake being up there on the mountain dealing with Heath's moods and then dealing with Heath and Michelle's growing relationship. He must definitely have felt excluded, especially as he was supposed to be forming this bond with his co-star.

Last night I was thinking about Jake and his willingness to weep at movies. I remember him saying how he cried and cried at Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (a film which also featured Mark Ruffalo incidentally, as well as Kirsten - what a small world Jake moves in). I didn't know that he'd been so moved by that scene in BBM. Ennis' breakdowns are hard to watch - when I first saw the film I was shocked by the unexpectedness of FNIT but I was even more shocked by Ennis' breakdown in the alley - that really affected me when I saw it and I feel like I gasped out loud.

Kim said...

Thanks, WDW. Some risks, eh? I remember a time when for a guy to cry on film (Rhett Butler after Scarlett's miscarriage), or to admit he'd cried in RL, crossed a barrier few crossed. That scene of Ennis in the alley still hits hard. I guess we're all still coming to terms with loneliness and risk; but maybe BBM has helped open up the possibily of change.

It's the end of another day of commuting for you, and you're probably already off on another post; but wanted you to know we continue to appreciate the ways in which your work here opens doors.

Wet Dark and Wild said...

Kim - thank you. That means a great deal to me. The posts move on, but it still continues the same conversation and the same progress. I really appreciate that as it's hard to stress just how long my days are right now but knowing I have all of you at the end of each day makes it OK :D Doors open for me here every day because of the comments.

I don't think things have changed much - men just don't admit to crying on the whole - Jake is a glorious exception. I can whisper this and he won't hear, but Mr WDW shed the only tear I've ever seen from him during BBM - he said it was an allergy... Jake has that power to draw tears from us all, possibly because he's not afraid of experiencing the emotion himself.

Kim said...

Lovely! Never heard it said better. Must be time for a Dairy Milk, or a single malt, or both?

Wet Dark and Wild said...

Thanks so much Kim - I'm really sorry I missed you last night. It was a night of Merlot, Dairy Milk and Zodiac - perfect :D

Kim said...

Great diet, WDW! With nutrition like that (and I include the Jake part of it,) you'll live to be 90! Just think of how many great posts we'll have to look forward to!

Wet Dark and Wild said...

Thanks Kim! I've always been one to put the finer side of life first - and I include Jake in that too! He's the tonic... Just as well, as I'm definitely in this for the long haul ;D