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Jeffrey Overstreet
joined a small crowd of journalists at the Serenity film
junket in L.A. on Thursday, September 18.
Here's a
transcript of a press conference with Joss Whedon regarding the
release of Serenity, the challenge of turning a great
television series into a feature film, the possibility of sequels, and
more.
More transcripts will appear later
this week. Stay tuned!
(The questions raised by the
press have been paraphrased here. *'d questions were raised by Jeffrey
Overstreet.)
How nervous are you about this movie opening?
Wow. Starting
with the hard stuff, huh?
I’m actually
pretty calm. I am being medicated right now, steadily, to keep me that
way.
I got
really nervous when I realized that ultimately I have absolutely no
idea how this movie is going to do. I believe that if people see it
they will like it. That is sort of my first job, and that was more
or less accomplished. But I have no idea if they actually will
see it.
And if they don’t
see it, then how can they like it?
So I panicked.
And
I freaked out … publicly. Proud of that! And I sort of realized, it’s
out of my hands. I will do everything in my power to try and get
people to see it, but there’s only so much that’s in my power. And if
they don’t, what if they … how can I put this… hate it?
Then
that’s just what’s going to happen, and there’s nothing I can do about
it.
I believe in the
film. I loved making it. I love what we came up with. I’m proud of all
my actors. That’s going to have to sustain me.
That’s me now. Talk to
me on the morning of the 30th when I’m hiding in the
bathtub with a hat on.
*I
can’t think of any other series where the fans,
when they talk about it, spend more time talking about the quality
of the writing than anything else. What you do is great. I
work with a bunch of writers in Seattle, and they’ve sent me with
pages of questions for you. And clearly we won’t get to
all of those. So... could
you share some of your favorite tips about writing dialogue,
what
to do, what not to do? What is it that makes the dialogue in Serenity
snap?
Part of it was
getting to invent the language, which came from a lot of different
influences. The movie has that sort of genre-mix feeling and era-mix.
And once I had, it reads like a kind of poetry. It’s very easy to
write, it rolls of the tongue in a way that nothing I’ve ever written
before does.
But in terms of
advice… or, my dark secrets?
The most
important thing to me is finding everybody’s voice very specifically.
I build shows and movies on what I refer to as “the Golden Girls
model,” which is, very simply, everybody’s gotta come from a different
place, so that everybody’s reaction to something is different and
equally valid and equally fun.
Never having
anybody say anything that isn’t the next thing they’d say, that isn’t
their point of view, that isn’t their perspective… that’s where the
humor comes from. Jayne’s perspective on the situation will be
different than everybody else’s, and when he speaks, that makes it
funny. But at the same time, that’s what makes it valid.
If a line is just
a setup for somebody else to be funny, it’s disingenuous to the
character and to the actor portraying them.
That’s the
biggest thing for me—everybody, and that includes the Second Thug From
Left, has perspective that they bring with them to the piece.
And they don’t all have to be eloquent about it in a sort of
obnoxious, proto-Tarantino way of “everybody speaks volumes.”
(I think he’s done that very well, but I’ve seen the bad
version.) But just respecting everybody, and knowing that the whole
point of any dialogue is that it’s two people with completely
different points of view trying to find a space in the middle. That’s
where the conflict comes from, that’s where the humor comes from,
that’s where the humanity comes from. That’s the biggest thing
for me.
And I think it’s
also what makes people respond to all the characters—they’re all very
present, all of the time.
There are so
many central characters in Firefly that you introduced over the
course of the series. Here, you have a two-hour movie, and yet you
have the same large cast of characters. What were the challenges you
faced because of the change in format?
The challenge was
to get everybody in there.
Obviously on a TV
show, you need a bunch of “peeps” if you want to create internal
conflict and it’s not just a sort of “Problem of the Week” kind of
show.
And then, when I
was given the opportunity to make a movie of this, yes, all of a
sudden I had nine characters. And that’s a lot of people to put in a
movie.
But ultimately,
what it gave me was the chance to have a kind of a Platoon
feeling… the band as this great big group of people [where] you can
focus on who you want to.
Obviously, on a show you’re going to give
everybody equal time to an extent, and you’re going to make sure that
everybody’s [developed.] In a film, you’re
going to say, “Okay, Mal is the hero, he’s the guy we have to be
watching. We come in through River--she’s kind of his proxy. It’s
... about how she affects him and how they help each other.'
(That doesn’t mean, however, that anyone is expendable.) You make sure
that everybody’s perspective brings something different to the movie,
and everybody’s physicality, their actions, and what they’re useful
for….
A lot of movies
center around one character, and maybe two others, that are defined,
and
then everybody else fades into the distance. For some films that’s
very useful. But because I wanted this sort of chaotic
“everything-is-happening-at-once” feeling of being on that ship, and
being in this world, having a large cast is useful because they all
bring so much texture to it. Hopefully it isn’t confusing, but it
means it’s very lively and it’s very lived-in.
Do you have
ideas for the sequel, if you get to make a sequel?
It’s very sweet
to mention the word ‘sequel.’ Obviously that’s the way my brain works.
It continues to tell stories.
I’ve written
sequels in my head for movies that other people made... all the time. I
had a great idea for The Fly 2 before they made The Fly 2,
and I never told anybody about it. But it was really cool!
It’s inevitable
that I do that. And of course, I love this universe. I love these
people. I would jump at the chance to do it again.
But I couldn’t
think about that while I was making it because, ultimately, you have to
make [this one.]
Everyone kept saying, ‘You’re making a trilogy?’
‘No, it’s just a film.’ ‘So… a trilogy?’ ‘Just the one!’
It’s a trilogy if you make two that are so good there’s a third.
That was the only
thing I could think about. I had to NOT think about where it came
from—the series—or think about where it may go—a franchise—and just
make this one thing an experience worth having. The rest will either
fall in place or it won’t. If you focus on that, you’re a dead man.
Now that I’ve
finished it and I’ve started to market it, I think about it all the
time. But I don’t tell anybody that. Except just now.
Tell us about
working with Chiwetel
Ejiofor.
Chiwetel
is extraordinary, and I gave him a really tough job because the
operative is self-proclaimed, and very specifically, undefined.
Because he refuses to let himself be defined. He doesn’t consider
himself a person. He considers himself less than that.
I wanted to
create a villain who was more an antagonist than just a villain.
Again, if you don’t believe the perspective of the person, then they
become just a plot device. The idea of having somebody completely
idealistic and dedicated to decency and nobility as my villain,
and somebody who’s self-involved and cut-off and a criminal as my
hero, that’s kind of basically what my film’s about. Only our messy,
repulsive humanity can save us from the deadly notion of perfection.
Chiwetel
came in, and the reason particularly that I hired him was them big ol’
eyes. He’s just so soulful. He brings such a sense of “decent
disappointment” at how things have worked out in the world and the
people around him. He doesn’t play anything arch at all. He understood
completely what this guy was, that he was a decent man who was
actually a serial killer and doesn’t really understand himself that
well. He played it.
And there were
times that we had to shoot it more than one way because we didn’t know
how much we wanted him to telegraph the aggression that’s actually in
this guy that allows him to be so good at killing people… and how much
we wanted to let him subsume himself and be quiet and decent… and when
is the moment when he’s going to sort of take over?
Like when he’s in
with Dr. Matthias… there’s a long time where he’s being kind of
obsequious, and [saying] “This is your space, it’s your world, I’m
just living in it.’ And then there’s another moment where he takes
over.
And that is
somethin that we played with a lot, so he didn’t come off as having no
energy, but he didn’t come off as… you know… a moustache-twirler. I
could never have written that. And Chiwetel
is so sympathetic… He could play that. He has.
He can play anything. But he’s definitely the right person to play
someone who is full of unbelief.
Talk about the
challenges of opening it up from a series to a film, and how did you
make it accessible to people who haven’t seen the Firefly
series.
Ultimately,
that’s certainly the hardest job that I ever had. It’s a question of
opening it up and a question of closing it down.
Opening it up
in the sense of, ‘We need a
gigantic epic story that is not the kind of thing these people
usually get involved in in the TV series, which is more mundane. You
need a reason for this to be a movie, a big… well, big for me anyway….
budget movie. And a Universal film, in particular. An action movie that
has to work on a certain scale.
That’s the
opening. The closing comes in making sure it is
accessible to everybody, that you explain everybody as much as you
need to, explain the world as much as you need to, that you begin
and you end… that you have an arc for the characters, as well
as a plot that has a question and an answer.
Oftentimes I’ve
said, once or twice already, that the difference between movies and TV
shows is TV shows are a question and movies are an answer.
In this we had to
have a definitive statement about freedom and humanity, and what we
need and what we should be allowed to have as people… which is all
of our flaws. And then I answer that and make a definitive
statement, and put a period… or hopefully an exclamation point on
that… as opposed to just sort of pursuing the question for years with
the TV show.
Firefly
has been a TV show, comic
books, and now a film. What’s your preference?
They definitely
all have different strengths. Firefly and Serenity are really two
different animals, and that’s very deliberate on my part because if
they weren’t, I’m making a glorified episode of a television show and
I have no business wasting Universal’s money.
I spent the bulk
of the writing, the bulk of the editing, just trying to make it work
for people who don’t know the series.
But the movies
give you a chance to do something extraordinary, epic, and realize …
whatever insane vision you might have… and turn a ballerina into a
martial arts star, which is always a good thing to do with your time
if you can.
TV gives you an
opportunity to explore things on a smaller level, which was very
gratifying. It’s a different thing. I miss it. I miss Firefly
because Serenity is not Firefly… which was deliberate.
But the great
thing was that the TV show was deliberately small in scope, [like] the
people within it. And the movie is deliberately an epic filled
with small people.
And that’s the
kind of story I like to tell… the story of when people who have no
business being in an epic get caught up in one… how do they react? Do
they fold, or do they fight?
The film answers
many questions raised in the television show. Are these answers the
same things we would have seen if the television show had continued?
Or did you change the conclusions because of the limitations of the
film?
Very little was
changed for the movie. Obviously things were dropped. Obviously and
most importantly things were distilled into a fine two-hour liqueur
instead of a more watered-down longer version.
Yes, that was
where I was going with the idea of River and her secret and the
Reavers and theirs, and how it all connected. I had planned to get
there in a couple of years instead of in a couple of hours.
But apart from
not being able to service all of these subplots for all of these
different people, that is exactly where I was going. Which made that
the easy part—structuring it. Pitching it was, ‘This is where this
series was building to, and I think if you took this as a separate
story, it is an epic story and it has a great deal of meaning for
today.’
Do you take
suggestions from the fans for character development or the stories?
Legally speaking,
no. [laughs]
They seldom will
actually pitch things. I use them as a barometer of what it is they
respond to, who it is they’re responding to. ‘Oh, they’re not
responding to this character. Let’s go find out what’s inside this
character and makes them tick… And open them up so that they do.'
Stuff like that.
Also because the
series is not ongoing, people aren’t going ‘Oh, you can do this and
you can do that.’ If they haven’t seen the series, they’re not going
to tell me what to do. If they have seen it, some of them may
criticize some of the things that I did. But generally speaking ,
they’re just going, ‘That was fun!’
*In the conversation between Shepherd Book
and Mal, you raise interesting issues about faith and God. That
shouldn’t surprise us, since other sci-fi epics like The Matrix
and Star Wars dealt rather obviously with spiritual questions
and conflicts. In the overarching story of Firefly, is there
something besides the social and political themes, something spiritual
you’re trying to bring across through this story?
I think we all
have different takes on it, we all have different things to say about
spirituality. [Star Wars and The Matrix] used more
deliberate religious iconography because they’re coming from that
mythic place in a way that, I would say, Buffy did. But
Firefly and Serenity don’t.
Again, to come
back to the question and the answer – in Firefly there was a
conflict between Mal and the Shepherd that was deliberate, which was
that Mal is an atheist and he’s beyond that… kind of faithless. He
doesn’t trust people. He doesn’t really think of anything as a greater
good. Even though he has a moral code himself, he can’t really admit
or understand it. Shepherd Book is very clear on his faith, and there
was a conflict between the two of them that was supposed to be ongoing
throughout the series.
Obviously, the
movie being more about answers, I had one definitive statement to
make, which was simply [that] the power of belief, the power of
something greater than yourself doesn’t necessarily have to mean
religion.
Shepherd Book
himself says that. He doesn’t say, ‘Find God.’ He says, ‘Find your
way.’
Shepherd Book
obviously believes in God. He believes that God is a part of what’s
going on. Mal doesn’t, but Shepherd doesn’t judge him for that. He
says, ‘The point is not whether or not you believe what I believe. The
point is that you don’t believe in anything. And it’s killing you. And
it’s tearing your crew apart. And it’s making you do stupid things.’
The word ‘belief’
comes into the film a lot for that reason. It’s a simple act of
subsuming yourself to the idea of something that is great. Believing
that there is something worth structuring your life around that will
direct your moral decisions, and sometimes [help] you make harder
decisions… that is important. What that belief
is... is not.
Is your
leadership style Mal’s leadership style?
Yes and no. To an
extent my interest in Mal as a leader was built partially [by] my
years of running shows and seeing that dynamic from a different point
of view.
The seventh
season of Buffy was similar to that respect. It had a lot to do
with the pitfalls of being a leader.
What’s
interesting to me about that concept is the ‘removed’
sort of monstrosity who doesn’t accept the responsibility of being a
leader. Because ultimately, when you’re in the service of something
greater, or even just when you’re in the position of having to make
the decisions for everybody, you are removed from them. It’s
interesting to me because it requires a toughness that is almost
dehumanizing, and when he does take up the mantle, that’s when he
starts to become really dangerous.
To an extent,
the
Operative embodies that too. Belief is dangerous, and a leader has to
have that very strongly. Even if the only thing he’s trying to do is
keep these people alive… their welfare, even if it’s paramount to him…
he’s going to do things are either horrific or even incomprehensible
to them. I find that fascinating.
For some reason
my leadership style is a little more abrasive, and for some reason a
little less handsome.
How’s
your progress on the
Wonder Woman
film?
I’m just writing
it. I’m having the time of my life. And no, it’s not cast.
Who would win
in a fight? River or Buffy?
Wow, nobody’s
ever asked me that, and I’m shocked!
Ultimately, I
can’t say. I’m going to have to watch. Buffy’s got the super strength,
but River’s got all kinds of crazy training. She’s not a super hero in
the same way, but she’s very focused. It’s tough. It’s a smack-down.
Be there.
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