Monday, 7 July 2008

'Wow man, you play a really nice psycho' - see this movie 'again and again and again'

Before getting on with tonight's post, here is Jake arriving back at home today in rainy London Town. Always good to see Jake - even when we can't actually see him! Thanks to Stephanie at IHJ.


On with the post...

Yesterday's smooching Jake post with its pictures of Jake enthusiastically and hotly kissing a bunch of co-stars and directors reminded me of how fond I am of the on-screen relationship between Donnie Darko and Gretchen Ross and, more to the point, how fond I am of Donnie Darko - my own introduction to Jake Gyllenhaal. So this post touches on the role in which I first saw Jake, in a film that was, and is, so good that it didn't just come out the once, it came out twice.



The Director's Cut wasn't to make more money - Donnie Darko never made anyone any money - but because studios and producers alike knew it just had to be done, and there was money to put into it (thanks to Mel Gibson and The Passion of Christ). As Jake put it to The Northern Echo: '"Thank God for Jesus Christ". This is because Newmarket, who distributed Donnie Darko, also released Mel Gibson's money-spinner The Passion Of The Christ - "so they have the money to recharge the campaign for Donnie Darko".'



Richard Kelly is a young director and he speaks the same language as Jake - in other words, sometimes one can't make head nor tail of it. But Jake hadn't been first choice: 'Jason Schwarzman was originally attached to the film, but had to drop out because of a scheduling conflict. When I met Jake, I knew he was the one.' This very enjoyable interview highlights the relationship between Richard and Jake. It also includes one of my all-time favourite quotes of Jake's - Richard had freaked out when Jake had turned up with hair dyed black to which, when asked why, Jake responded: 'Because it's Donnie Darko, not Donnie Dark-hairo'.


Other favourite quotes from Jake...: 'I had a few comments from people... a wonderful comment from a girl right after the first showing of the film at the Eccles Theater. She said her brother was manic-depressive, and some of my actions in the film and goings on my character talks about, really touched her in a way similar to her brother's experience. On the other side, a guy in the bathroom came up and said, 'Wow man, you play a really nice psycho.' Which seems like an oxymoron, but I guess it's possible. There are people who come up and say, 'I don't get this, or that, but I was really moved.' There's a point in the movie where you have to let your mind go, and abandon what you want to happen, and have faith that what you're feeling is right. And whatever you're feeling it's the right one. That's what a successful film should do.'


'I don't normally plug so much, but if you get a chance to see this movie, see it again and again and again. Even being involved in it, in almost every scene, it's an amazing thing to watch. You'll constantly be surprised. It's a f--'in awesome journey. I hope for all your sakes you get to see it. And thanks, good-bye. And the Hollywood Foreign Press too'.


It's interesting to learn that Jake played a part in shaping the character of Donnie and, even though the shoot lasted only 28 days, much more time was spent before that with Richard and Jake honing Donnie: 'Before their first meeting, Gyllenhaal envisioned Kelly as a brooding character obsessed with death. "And then I ran into this preppy college kid," he said. During a month of script meetings in which Gyllenhaal and Kelly tightened the dialogue, the actor came to appreciate Kelly's collaborative work style and became intrigued by the philosophical questions the director posed with the film.'


"I was questioning all those same things," said Gyllenhaal, who earned praise for his portrayal of the son of a West Virginia coal miner in "October Sky." At the time, the actor had completed his sophomore year at Columbia University in New York, where he was studying Eastern philosophies. Eventually, Gyllenhaal used Kelly's self-conscious and slouched demeanor and his slow, sometimes mumbled speech as Donnie Darko characteristics. "I'm a firm believer of the unconscious being the teller of some truth, and I feel Richard wrote the script very unconsciously," Gyllenhaal said. The issues that Donnie Darko confronts are "metaphors for things in [Kelly's] life .... They obviously resonate with him in a pretty intense way .... I mean, there must be some stuff going on in Richard Kelly's mind." '


When the original version came out in October 2001, the mood following 9/11 stopped the film in its tracks. Also, too much had been left out. Jena Malone said: 'Richard basically wrote and shot the script," Malone said. "Everything that was in the script needed to be in there. And it was really heartbreaking for him that he needed to take 20 percent of it out to get the film an initial release. He had to get it under two hours. I think the re-release is because of what it's become, this cult film with such a built-in fan base. It's exciting for Richard, because he can say, 'OK, this is the film that I wanted to make and that I wanted to show you guys.' It's really beautiful.''


As Richard moves onwards with Southland Tales and his future work, he will always have people reminding him of Donnie Darko: 'It's been like a monkey on my back, in a way, but I guess a monkey I'm proud of. But I'd like to have more than one pet monkey'.


Jake, although he has said that people still come up to him and ask for an explanation of Donnie and that rabbit, has literally grown up since the film. He told Cosmopolitan: 'Well, there is part of me that's Donnie Darko, I'm not gonna deny that, and there's a part of me that looks at the world now in a more mature way than when I made the movie. I was going through a tough time growing up, dealing with it and figuring it out, and that was why I related so much to Donnie. It's not like the growing up has stopped, but I do feel I'm different. There's a whole other part of me that's other things. I just haven't shown them yet.' But what a film to have to your credit...


Includes pictures from IHJ and links.

22 comments:

sheba said...

Just finished reading the kissing post ahhhhhhh Jake... you make me wanna... Although, I'd be afraid to kiss him, I just might go into cardiac arrest. And what about the tennis - what a result. Viva L'Espana!

Love this Donnie Darko post and Jake really does play a nice psycho. Just finished watching October Sky on Sky and delighted that my little one has said "that's the best Jake film I've ever seen" (he's only seen Bubble Boy, Proof and PG bits from BBM). That's why Donnie Darko is a film that will stand the test of time. Something that he'll probably identify with when he becomes a teenager. Even as a period piece it applies for every generation of a certain decade.

I can imagine the emotional turmoil and inability to articulate deep feelings as a teenager and believe me DD has helped me to understand some of the youngsters that I have to deal with daily including my own. Movies can help so much when they say to you what you can't.

I particularly loved the relationship between the mom and dad and how they balanced freedom of expression with manners (I think though I would've gone back in that room and slapped Donnie upside his head for calling me a bitch!). Donnie Darko showed the many imperfections in all the characters lives but that it was OK. No wonder it has become a cult film, its deeply philosophical, I guess as philosophical as you want to get.

Well done to Richard and his cast and crew (sorry though Richard, you won't get another monkey with Southland Tales - though I'm willing to give it one more try before my head explodes :ox )

Wet Dark and Wild said...

Wow Sheba! What a comment - you said everything about DDarko I'd wish to say. Love tis 'No wonder it has become a cult film, its deeply philosophical, I guess as philosophical as you want to get'

This film is going to speak to teenagers (and teenagers' mums) for a long time to come and no matter what Jake and Richard Kelly do in the future, many of us do and will hang on to this film. And I remember that this is where I came across Jake for the first time :D

Thanks so much for the amazing comment, Sheba, and I'm glad you enjoyed the snogging Jake post :D

Anonymous said...

Thanks for great post WDW! You ARE the GIFT that keeps on giving!

Hey, Sheba, I might watch Southland Tales again if I have absolutely nothing else to do, like being immobilized for months in a hospital bed after being molested by a kangaroo, or something. I kinda gotta a kick out of it and I do love Rich Kelly.

One of my favorite comments is the one by Rich Kelly that both he and Jake "came of age" in the making of this film.

What a boon that Kelly was able to do it again do it again harder harder (old football chant, Ive not gotten over the tennis match yet), that funds were given for this. Unlike some others, I didnt totally "get" the theater version. (nor Jake, for that matter. . . )

Kelly and Jake were meant for each other, maybe only in that time frame: both working intuitively - and Jake recognizing that RK works intuitively. More of this kind of collaboration, please! with a nod to Frank the six foot bunny rabbit, who, in my view, represented "the artist" - and in the film, was, actually.

Yay everybody, on this one!

Wet Dark and Wild said...

Hey thanks Pia! I do see the giant rabbit as representing the all-seeing but also blind prime mover, ie Richard.

I am so glad we have the two Donnie Darkos. I think I do prefer the original version, possibly because I prefer the soundtrack of the first and the music is a huge part of this film for me. And I find there is too much explanation in the Director's Cut but what a luxury to have the two. This was a great collaboration for Jake and Richard - both of them at their best.

I still haven't see Southland Tales - I'm daunted by the prospect of it.

The smurf scene is one of my favourites in all of Jake's films :)

Anonymous said...

p.s great pix! never seen any of these before!

Wet Dark and Wild said...

:) A mix of the 2001 original premiere and the 2004 Director's Cut premiere, both in LA. I love the pics of Jake and Richard.

Anonymous said...

New pics of a hoodie on IHJ arriving home in London.

Zodiac said...

Has it been raining today in Oxford and London, WDW? This California boy is getting his year dose of rain in London:)

Wet Dark and Wild said...

Good job anon - just updated the post with a pic, thanks for the heads up :D

Hi Zodiac! Well, it's been pretty warm and sunny so far this summer but today the skies opened on London and Oxford (with thunder and lightning) and gave Jake the opportunity to test his high performance wet weather clothing :D Sun for tomorrow!

Monica said...

Hello, wet dark!

My Nadal is champion of Wimbledon!
Sorry, but needed to talk about it!

Donnie seen by an alert friend. Because of the statement, I saw an excellent movie, with great performances and I became a fan of Jake.

I indicated to friends and my teacher, which became a fan of the work.

Wet Dark and Wild said...

Ola Monica! It was a great, great match. I thoroughly enjoyed it. Congratulations to Rafa :D Good to hear that you found Jake through Donnie too. What a film!

sheba said...

Thanks WDW, DD just made a whole lot of sense and call me a snob or whatever, but I was glad I was in the minority of understanding :o) Thanks for the pics too.

Always good to see/kinda-not-see Jake (you can tell its him by the walk and the way the foot.... ah, you guys know what I'm babbling about).

"Hey, Sheba, I might watch Southland Tales again if I have absolutely nothing else to do, like being immobilized for months in a hospital bed after being molested by a kangaroo, or something. I kinda gotta a kick out of it and I do love Rich Kelly"

Pia, you really give me some real LOL moments that I have to try and explain to my family (they don't think much of my humour). Southland Tales is an enigma that will need to be given time to infuse (like a good cup of herbal tea). There's a concept in there but I'm yet to connect on a deeper level with it. I'm fond of Richard and his journey with DD, but ST is a whole other 'road-trip'.

Wet Dark and Wild said...

Hi Sheba - DD took quite a bit of work for me, but it mad me want to know.

I recognise that walk anywhere :D

Zodiac said...

Totally agree with the walk thing. I thought exactly the same thing when I saw the pictures (I actually posted the link, wasn't logged in:) I've seen so many pictures I can recognize his legs;)

sheba said...

*"something in the way he moves, moves me like no other ......"* ooh, sorry, was that out loud? :DD

I do like the idea in DD of dream states -v- parallel universes etc and the idea of infinite possibilities. Most of all, I love the theme of faith, hope and love - and that's universal. I loved the Director's Cut mainly because of Steven Posner's commentary on the 28 day production notes. I pray that David Russell has done the same. Surely they must know that kind of insight (if not too revealing) can peak the audience's interest.

Incidently, Jake has had some really uncool names in movies and has made all of them really cool (maybe I've got those rose-coloured glasses on). Donald, Douglas, Harold, Jack, Homer etc. Only Jake... 8-)

paulh said...

I never really got my head around the backstory in "Donnie Darko." Why would Donnie have had a past as an arsonist?

If the same distributor financed both "Donnie Darko" and "The Passion of the Christ," then can we call "Donnie Darko" "The Passion of the Bunny?" (Sorry, I'm in a silly mood......)

Anonymous said...

thanks for laughing, Sheba! I hope you got the subtle bit about getting a "kick" out of being molested by a kangaroo! That cracked me up if I do say so myself.

Had time to read the interview altogether, Jake sure is a talky lil bloke, forthcoming about the industry and so forth, very interesting conversation. The picture of Jake and Richard with shutters is stunning! Also like to see one group shot inclined Steven Postner.

sheba said...

Sure did Pia 'cos I get a "kick" out of you...' and its always good to laugh with yourself... I'm still learning to do that - makes life so much easier ;D

"The Passion of the Bunnies" LOL, well, bunnies are supposed to be passionate... a lot... and very often....

I get the sense that Donnie had a strong sense of justice mixed in with some undefineable religion and that fire was somehow 'cleansing' to him... that's why he ended up in 'Juvie'.

I love Gretchen's comment to Donnie.. "you're weird" Donnie says: "sorry"... Gretchen "I meant it as a compliment" so if that comment ever came my way I now always say "why, thank you". Also the scene where after watching Watership Down Donnie talks about bunnies, feelings and needing a lot of particular 'benefits' before they die.. that scene is funny and very touching at the same time.. like he knew before he knew..

I just read the Jake and Richard interview in full and blow me down, they say all the things I've talked about here tonight and much more. Jake's using one of my favourite words 'juxtaposition' and of course, his 'indie spirit' etc. I'm so connected to DD, Richard and Jake. As October is my birth month and all the connections Jake has with October its eery and heartwarming at the same time.

Well, I'm babbling again, think I need some Stones to get me off to sleep ... any excuse ;D nite all.

JoeAnn said...

It's amazing how much Jake's face had changed by the time the Donnie Darko promo rounds set in. Ditto for promo pics for The Day After Tomorrow. He really did look like a teenager in both movies but out of character his face just seemed so much more grown up and leaner.

Anonymous said...

Quote from WDW:
Richard Kelly is a young director and he speaks the same language as Jake - in other words, sometimes one can't make head nor tail of it.


LOL! Loved this!
Thanks WDW for a very enlightening post on my favourite Jake movie after BBM.
And so many pix from the director's cut premiere I hadn't seen before!

Cheers
Paola

Wet Dark and Wild said...

Morning all! A lovely day today, thank heavens, so get your hood off Jake!

Thanks so much for all the comments overnight.

Thanks for the link Zodiac :D

That's true about the names, Sheba. Everytime Jake takes on a new role I roll my eyes at the names. Quite keen on Prince Dastan though :D But Donnie Darko and Jack Twist are amazing names.

Morning Paul :D

Hi Pia! Love the description of Jake as talky, he certainly is. I liked that shutter pic too, I hadn't seen it before.

Morning JoeAnn - I agree that Jake did a lot of growing between 2001 and 2004.

Thanks Paola!

Have a wonderful day everyone and new post up :)

Monica at Sun Pony said...

WDW - thanks so much for this post on DD. I love this movie and learned quite a bit from your blog. Loved this quote in particular:

"if you get a chance to see this movie, see it again and again and again. Even being involved in it, in almost every scene, it's an amazing thing to watch. You'll constantly be surprised. It's a f--'in awesome journey."

Hell yeah - that's completely my feeling about it. We seem to see it several times a year, and once at a go is never enough - it's always a couple times over a few weeks. I keep thinking we'll understand it, but then I have to go see it again.

Also loving the pics of Jake in London with the sweep of his bangs just escaping - ohh, adorable! :-D