A less-is-more tack for crafting a film
âThatâs Penny,â said Susan Sarandon of the dog in HBO Co-President Richard Pleplerâs viciously sun-flooded New York corner office. âSheâs in the movie. You may not recognize her; sheâs playing the character of a rich dog and her hair is blown out. In real life sheâs casual and gamine and edgy.â
With Bob Balaban as director, lady and dog have made this movie, âBernard and Doris,â under the auspices of Trigger Street Independent, a partnership between Kevin Spacey and Dana Brunettiâs Trigger Street Productions and Adam and Mark Kassen. This setup made three films for around a million bucks each in a year, and then its dedicated funding source went south. âBernard and Dorisâ was sold to HBO; it premieres there Saturday.
Balaban was eating a sandwich that heâd accepted only after lifting up the bread and giving the meat a good sniff. Sarandon was dying for coffee.
The two humans met a bit more than 25 years ago. Balaban and his wife, Lynn Grossman, were the only folks with kids that Sarandon knew when she became pregnant with her daughter Eva Amurri, now 23. âPeople I knew were like, âYouâre having a baby; thatâs crazy,â â she said. âOh yeah, at that time it was radical, not exactly a career move.â
âBernard and Dorisâ consists of the imagined moments between swinging, dishy heiress Doris Duke (Sarandon) and her gay, alcoholic butler, Bernard Lafferty (Ralph Fiennes). Duke left the management of her enormous estate to Lafferty in 1993.
âThereâs few things that keep people apart, sexually. Itâs so loose and so easy, thereâs no taboos anymore. It was interesting to have something where there was resisting of a sexual encounter,â Sarandon said.
âEven when we were doing âDead Man Walking,â they wanted them to get together,â she said. âYeah -- sheâs a nun! Of course, I have had sexually intimate relationships in my past with someone whoâd never been with a woman before or after.â
Let us pause here in memory of the gay men tidily turned temporarily by the youthful Sarandon.
Hey, so, cheap film, eh? âI wouldnât mind spending more money,â Balaban said. âTruthfully, if we had a dollar more it would have been easier, but we didnât need $20 million to make this movie.â
âWhen you get up in many, many millions of dollars,â Sarandon said, âthe involvement of many people raises exponentially. So it becomes more of a committee thing. Not necessarily with people who are qualified to have opinions about stuff.â
âIf we had more money, we would have been obligated to have parties and jet planes,â Balaban said.
(One of the arrangements of the million-dollar movie, according to Brunetti, is that cast and crew owned a piece of the film. Owner-operators! âKind of like working at Starbucks,â is how Brunetti described it.)
âI donât want to give the impression I donât want to be paid for the rest of my life, if it gets out,â Balaban said.
Is the new micro-scale, owner-operated set a relief? âAs an actor, you have favored nationsâ -- that contractual clause that can insist, in part, that oneâs amenities be no less favorable than any others -- âand they say thereâs this guy who doesnât want to have the same trailer as you girls,â Sarandon said. âAnd you think, well, itâs obviously important to him.â
What does she look for in work now? The usual. And! âI have health insurance; thatâs enough. Certainly if Iâm doing a movie thatâs a gigantic movie, Iâm not expecting to be paid the way I am on an indie film, thatâs not commercial.â
âIf you end up in special-effects movies,â Balaban said, âyou hear, âItâs only $95 million, so we can only pay you a dollar or two.â â
âYou say, âIâm gonna need that money to get over the fact that Iâm working in front of a green screen,â â Sarandon said.
They talked for a while about paper ballots, hand counts, Castro. (Balaban acted in HBOâs forthcoming âRecount.â) Sarandon, duh, is very political, but her hero John Edwards is no more this election. Who will she support now?
âI donât know what [Michael] Bloombergâs gonna do; thatâll be interesting to see how that goes -- and I like [Barack] Obama,â she said. (According to OpenSecrets.org, she has donated twice to the Obama campaign this year.) Balaban has done some work for Al Frankenâs Minnesota Senate campaign.
But now he has a film to make (as well as two projects in strike-stalled development at HBO). âIâm developing something, and Iâm scared,â he said. âRobert Altman would be great with that. He was so reactive heâd just say goodbye to them when that happened. I tend to think thereâs something that can please us all, and thatâs not good. But Iâm trying to direct a $20-million movie now, and itâs period, and what are those things where you chase foxes? A fox hunt. And itâs got a ball!â
This would be the Anthony Trollope adaptation âThe Eustace Diamondsâ thatâs been written for years, now finishing financing. Sarandon is planning on the junket to Korea and Japan for the Wachowski brothersâ big spring movie, âSpeed Racer.â
âI didnât get to go on the âEnchantedâ [junket], because I was doing âLovely Bones,â â Sarandon said. (Peter Jacksonâs âThe Lovely Bonesâ is due in early 2009.)
âWere you surprised by how huge that was?â Balaban asked about âEnchanted.â
âNo,â she said. âI could totally tell. Itâs gonna be a classic.â
âIt does deliver the thing you think it might, but most things donât,â Balaban said.
âItâll go on and on,â Sarandon said. âThereâll be an âEnchantedâ world, a ride.â
âWill there be sequels?â Balaban asked.
âThere could be,â Sarandon said. âThere might. Itâs hard to write a good sequel. Theyâve been talking about sequels to âThelma and Louise,â âBull Durham.â â
Didnât everyone, well, die in âThelma and Louiseâ? Clearly anything could happen.