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看電影之--TIDELAND--for people looking for something different.

(2007-03-29 07:07:36) 下一個
TIDELAND is quirky enough to impress people, but definitely not a '20th century Alice in Wonderland' for me. It is much darker and the story line is a bit dull. It is way too heavy to be any close to that sacred fairy land in my heart. Anyway, I am still very impressed by the innocent eyes, crazy fantasies, and the dream world of the little girl. Watching this movie is like floating aimlessly in a wierd dream in a bright summer afternoon, which is not intensly interesting/exciting all the time though. 

  以下相關資料:

 中文名稱:漲潮海岸
英文名稱:Tideland
資源類型:DVDRip
發行時間:2006年
電影導演特裏·吉列姆 Terry Gilliam
電影演員珍妮佛·提莉 Jennifer Tilly
     傑夫·布裏奇斯 Jeff Bridges
     詹妮特·麥克蒂爾 Janet McTeer
地區:美國
語言:英語 
         類別: 幻想/劇情 

◎簡  介 

主人公是一個叫做羅斯的小女孩,她母親因吸食過量海洛因而死,父親帶著她從紐約搬到鄉下的農場。在農場,羅斯可以交流的對象非常有限,除了四個沒有軀體的芭比娃娃,就是一個戴著養蜂人麵紗的女鄰居戴爾。一天,羅斯逃脫了痛苦的現實生活,來到一個完全屬於自己的幻想世界——裏麵有神秘的螢火蟲,在黃昏時才起床的沼澤人,在鐵道下遊泳的怪鯊魚……而羅斯在四個芭比娃娃的陪伴下,要在這裏心情體驗冒險,享受快樂。

奇幻旅程的開端
十一歲的小茱萊莎(裘岱兒佛蘭 飾)在媽咪(珍妮佛泰莉 飾)喀藥掛點後,被老爸(傑夫布裏吉 飾)帶到小時的家鄉德州,可是,她那搖滾吉他手的老爸,卻突然昏迷不醒了!?
小小的茱萊莎在她的小閣樓裏,發現了…4個斷頭的芭比、開著火車的鯊魚怪還有陰陽怪氣的海盜與神經癲癇的船長……
在這個奇幻世界裏,還有什麽魔幻冒險在等著她呢?

幕後花絮

【奇幻世界】片中奇特的場景令人驚奇,一開始原著作者對於這本書是否能被拍成電影感到懷疑,但導演一眼就愛上這本書,下定決心將他拍成電影,並開始尋找場景。導演最後找到了一棟幾乎與世隔絕的房屋,作為主要場景,並在片廠搭景以補不足,後來原著作者Mitch Cullin看到拍出來的畫麵和場景,非常興奮,直呼太棒了!他根本沒想過這本小說會被改拍成電影,導演絕佳的功力把一切的想像都化為真實。

雖然【奇幻世界】特效驚人、美術設計複雜,但真正拍攝的時間隻有短短的11周,而且開拍的第二天,小女主角的嘴唇就被不明的蟲子咬到,整個嘴唇腫到像香腸,而戲份又是最重的她,劇組隻好停工兩天,等小女主角的嘴唇消腫才繼續拍攝。

而拍攝這部片最大的困難就是要維持一大片野草隨風搖擺的場景,小佛蘭會在這片野草中奔跑獨白,為了保護草皮的美觀,所有的工作人員和演員,不論是要搬道具或是走路,都要避開草皮,繞路小徑,在拍攝期間,每個人最常講的一句話就是:“離草遠一點”。而拍攝期間又是冬天,常常下雪,所以為了拍出陽光普造的景色,劇組們隻好等到太陽出來,雪融了之後才能繼續拍攝。

關於原著小說 ~ Tideland作者 米契.庫林
導演是在一堆未翻閱的書當中偶然發現到這本書,一翻開他便被故事及元素給吸引住,因為他同時發現:“有趣、感人及搗亂因子參雜其中,我發現有四或五個驚人角色在這部電影,而他們的境遇隨著劇情的延伸而越發詭譎,這部影片裏,我最愛的部分是探索兒童的世界,我想拍一部比【救命呐!唐吉訶德】更具深度卻非無限延伸預算的影片” 導演回憶道,這本書對於主角們忠實的描述,尤其是黑色寓言式的完美故事,對於改編成劇本它的結構再清楚也不過。導演在邀請製片及製作團隊都到位之後,這段即將充滿驚奇的旅程便要展開,此時他才發了一封信詢問米契有關細節的事,因為沒有任何一個人能夠在沒有詢問作者意見的狀況下(特別是米契的作品),忠實的呈現這個精采故事,導演還希望米契提供他任何在寫作時所使用的物品,好讓他能夠即刻進入當初寫作的情境,尤其是在茱萊莎與爸爸回到草原之後的心態,還有在農場房子與乾屍一起生活的種種…。與書最大不同的是,我們嚐試把小女主角茱萊莎以第一人稱方式敘述的模式改變,在電影中盡量讓觀眾專注在她如何走過多種磨難的心路曆程,讓他們會不禁問道:她到底是要如何抱持存活的希望?接下來還會發生什麽不可思議的事呢?

同時間,製片正努力進行資金籌措,因為他們自知要完成的是一部非比尋常的片子,所以這項任務必定難上加難,然而,他們也深信因為這樣的特殊性,將會吸引眾多口碑,而有這樣遭遇的女孩也一定能引起大家的感動與共鳴。



To tie in with the release of his new film Tideland, Terry Gilliam (left) agreed to answer a number of questions from fans, posted to this website in June and July.

Dreams editor Phil Stubbs made a selection from the hundreds of questions submitted, and fired them at Terry. Below is Part One of the resulting interview, where the filmmaker talked about his latest film Tideland and possible future projects.

LINK: Tideland features within Dreams - articles, interviews, more images

Click on the pictures on the right to reveal larger Tideland images.



Phil Stubbs: How did you find Jodelle Ferland for the role of Jeliza-Rose in Tideland?
Terry Gilliam: God chose her for us! We had been looking for a long time for our lead actress. It was getting very close to the start of production, and we still hadn't found her. Luckily this tape came in from Vancouver - the casting lady had put Jodelle and several of the young girls on tape. The minute I saw her, I thought there was an incredible energy there. She looked so tiny, and she had extraordinary eyes. We brought her to Toronto and I screen-tested her. Her reactions to things and how she chose to deliver lines were a real surprise. I just said: you've got the part. It was so obvious. She wasn't sentimentalised and cute like a normal child actor. Jodelle was incredibly tough.

How did Jodelle cope with the role and the story? She's the best child actor I've ever seen… but how do you explain a story so disturbing to a child?
You don't have to explain: Jodelle's a very intelligent girl! Luckily she also had a very sensitive and intelligent mother to work with her. Dealing with the story is like playing with dolls, and the disturbing nature of it isn't that disturbing for her. I think what always happens is that adults find it disturbing, but children don't see things the way adults do. Also in many of the scenes, I let Jodelle make the choices of how to do scenes. So we see how a nine and a half year-old girl would do them, rather than a 64 year-old man trying to tell and nine and a half year old girl how to be a nine and a half year old. Children are surprising!

Did you use any of your own memories of childhood to make the film?
Not really… the only thing that maybe was growing up in Minnesota, and near the house were great wheat fields and corn fields. There was that sense of the freedom from the open space, of a beautiful landscape. That was something I wanted to capture on film, because that was a great part of my childhood.

And the opposite of that is the sense of claustrophobia of the internal scenes.
That's probably more from my adult life.

Having worked with Jeff Bridges in The Fisher King, how was he this time round?
Jeff is always a joy. He's so solid and meticulous. He's a delight. When we were working on The Fisher King, Roger Pratt said I'd found my cinematic alter ego: Mastroianni to my Fellini. He grounds a lot of the stuff I do. When I get silly, he will take the same thought and make it believable and real.

What was outrageous on Tideland was that we had a prosthetic dummy made to sit in the chair when he is dead. But Jeff ended up doing the scene himself. That's what is wonderful about Jeff - a lot of other actors would say: just use the dummy. There would be subtle differences in Jodelle's performance because she was sitting on a real person rather than a dummy.

Someone who liked the film told me she would hesitate to recommend it to her more sensitive friends. She asked: why did you choose to show so many revolting scenes. Would it work less well if the scenes were less graphic?
I think her sensitive friends might not be so sensitive. Sensitive people should be able to appreciate what's going on in Tideland. We were translating the book to screen and that's what my job is, it's not to write a different story.

The difference is that when you are reading a book, you can filter the imagery, you can decide what is for you. With the film, I'm doing the imagery, and it contains what makes sense to me. Some people may find that strong, but I think you need all the imagery that is in the film. It's what makes it so striking and effective.

Now some negative comments from someone who was outraged by the film...
Now we're talking!

How can one dare to do something so shocking and disgusting and call it beautiful? Only a sick perverted mind might feel happy about it. The world is not as ugly as you show.
We were showing how wonderful the world is in Tideland! Those kinds of reactions always amaze me because there are people living in a little bubble, not wanting to look at the way the world really is. If you don't have the innocence of a child, all you can see is the ugly surface… you're missing what the child is imagining and experiencing. In fact, what's disgusting is what we watch on television, because that is truly a lie. We see a different version of the world on television, and it isn't truthful. People seem to be happy with that!

We encourage the bombing of Lebanese citizens but we don't have to watch what it really looks like. We allow everything to be censored for us - I think that very dangerous way of approaching life. What I think is wonderful about the film is that the one group I keep finding that really reacts positively is younger women, and I don't think they are perverted or disturbed.

It's doing quite nicely in Japan, they aimed at what has now become its core audience: young females, unlike in America where it's 17 to 25 year-old males. Pairs of girls, girls bringing their boyfriends. I think the pattern's going to be the same everywhere - a minority that really love it and a majority who just don't know what they think or they don't like it. That's they way it should be!

Actually I was told that the French distributor said Tideland would be a problem in France, because the French find farting neither funny nor uncivilised. So maybe that was the problem. Clearly they forgot their great hero Le Petomaine, farting for the crown heads of Europe… in tune. He could do birdsong, he could imitate different instruments, all to the delight and delectation of the crown heads of Europe - a Frenchman.

With Tideland you have used a wide aspect ratio. Since working with cinematographer Nicola Pecorini, you have worked with a wider format with Fear and Loathing and Tideland. How do you decide which ratio to shoot in?
It was really because we wanted the wide open spaces that we chose the wide screen. That was also true in Fear and Loathing - desert and space. Doing something in a city where things are much more vertical, I go for a less wide format. Brothers Grimm was 1.85 instead of 2.35 simply because we wanted to show the height of the trees.

Could you explain the pros and cons of working on an indie film versus working with Hollywood and which do you prefer?
To be honest, neither Grimm nor Tideland were an indie or Hollywood film in the strict sense. There's kind of a bullshit world going on about indie and Hollywood. When you are dealing with indie distributors, most of them are just branches of Hollywood studios. So it's become not quite as independent. In the case of Grimm, it wasn't so much a Hollywood studio as the Weinsteins - a different world obviously. The main difference is that one was a big expensive film and one was a small film.

Another difference was Jeremy Thomas as Tideland's producer and his support - he did not try to make his own version of the film. He doesn't interfere. In all these things it's down to individuals rather than "Hollywood vs independents". You can have indie producers who are just as monstrous as any studio could ever throw up. But the difference was that one was a big expensive giant of a film and the other was small and quick guerrilla film. With Tideland one can deal with more dark and disturbing subject matter, because we are not appealing to big audience. It allows that kind of freedom to do what you want to say. Effectively, it's "Fuck the audience!"

For your next project would you prefer to do that, or would you prefer the bigger budget?
It doesn't come down to that. It's whatever the project is that captures my imagination and what that requires. At the moment we've been trying to get Good Omens off the ground, and that's a very expensive movie, and it's proving to be very frustrating, because it's much more dependent on 'A' list actors, and therefore we are much more dependent on other people, whereas if we were working with a smaller budget it's usually easier. Yet Stephen Evans, the producer of Good Omens, says it's sometimes easier to raise 80 million dollars than it is raising 8 million dollars. It's just very hard these days to get any film off the ground.

At what stage is Good Omens?
Well, it's very costly, and trying to put together the right cast is going slower than I'd hoped. Everybody wants there to be 'A' list actors involved. It's really busy out there at the moment. So I'm not getting the responses I'd want. It marches on, but it's frustratingly slow.

Is the cash there if you want it?
The cash is dependent on the 'A' list actors. This is one of the real problems with making expensive films, you are dependent on so many other elements. It's not like you come up with an idea and you need to raise a few million dollars, and go off and make a film. In particular at the moment Hollywood, where we are ultimately going to get money from, has become very cautious and conservative. So I don't know where we're going to go yet. But we march on.

I understand there's been some movement recently with your Quixote script.
Yes, apparently on July 4 it was the end of the legal battle between the production company and the insurance company. It appears that everything is now coming back to us. It's just lawyers resolving all the fine points now. There doesn't seem to be anything that's going to stop that happening. Maybe it's going to be a couple of months before everything is going to be resolved, and until I actually get the thing and see the signed documents, I'm not going to look at the script.

Have you had any thoughts as to who you might cast as Quixote?
No, because I refuse to let my brain run loose on Quixote at the moment. The order of events will be very simple. If and when everything comes back to us, I have to then talk to Mr Depp and find out when he's available, and then we know how to start proceeding with it.

Anything for Billy? [based on a novel by Larry McMurtry]
Funnily enough, I just sent an email off about that one just before I called you, to find out what's going on. There were a group of Italians who were offering some finance. I don't know what's going on, I'll just stir that one up a bit.

The Defective Detective?
It's just sitting quietly. Richard LaGravenese [who also wrote The Fisher King] wants to have another look at the script. I haven't looked at it in a while. My problem with it is that I'm really in search for the regular producer that can start delivering what I need. I don't have that person for the bigger budget films. Jeremy Thomas is there on Quixote. It's the other stuff I'm still struggling with.

Dan Leno? [based on a novel by Peter Ackroyd]
I think that's pretty dead. That was at a time when I was in a very depressed state, and the idea of doing a film about a serial killer excited me, but I thought in the end there's enough blood on screen as it is!

Is there an actor or actress that you haven't worked with who you feel would be great in the Gilliam universe?
Bill Nighy... and Gael Garcia Bernal is someone I'm really intrigued with, I think he's really good. Who else is out there… George Clooney - I actually think it would be fun to work with him. The other ones, the great actors like Morgan Freeman, Ed Harris, Laurence Fishburne. These are the people I've never had the right script parts for.

Do you have any plans to work with either Roger Pratt or Michael Palin again?
Roger and I have dinner every couple of weeks when he's in town. It's always that he's been on another project while I'm doing whatever film I'm doing. And Mike and I keep talking about a project which is based on a book called Water Music, by T. Coraghessan Boyle, about Mungo Park the famous 19th Century Scottish explorer, who discovered the Niger river for Great Britain. We keep talking about it, but nothing has advanced.

It's not comic as a comedy, it's funny yet it's also very bleak, and strange. It's basically an adventure story, and very different from the glorified exploring that was going on in the 19th century. How a guy is reduced to behaving as an animal to survive. I keep telling Mike he's got to stop travelling, sit down and do some films again. But he keeps running away.

He's running out of places to visit now really...
He's just done Eastern Europe. He's come back last week from the first part of that one. There isn't much left I agree. In fact I keep telling him he should really do Michael Palin goes round the world in London. It's all here in London, almost every country is represented somewhere.

You never quite catch a break when you are making movies. You've been through development hell, production hell, post-production hell and also distribution hell. Which hell do you prefer?
I love this question - but it's one you might ask Dante.

Well, he's not around so it's over to you…
They're all tough - I don't want to choose. I'd like to avoid all of them, but it doesn't seem to be my fate.

In the past you've indicated the images in your film have come from a variety of external sources. Are most of these sources of inspiration from a personal archive, or do they come from more random day-to-day observations that you jot down in a notebook?
It's a bit of both. I keep a notebook. I do scribble things down that I see. I've got a big library, so if I run out of ideas I start scouring. And often I'll go down to places like the National Gallery in London, and wander around looking at pictures until ideas start pouring out. It's a combination of all of those things.

How do visions come up in your head?
That's the bit I don't know. Maybe it's because I have a bad memory. I think they are original visions but they are probably just reminiscences of something I've seen earlier and forgotten about! But the actual process of how my mind works, I don't really care to understand. I'm just lucky or perhaps unlucky - because when I've got those ideas floating around in my head, and I can't get financing for them, it's very frustrating!

I understand you have lost you American citizenship recently…
I didn't lose it, I renounced it... that's a much better word. I've been living in England since 1967, I've been paying taxes in both countries. I thought I'm getting old, in fact I'm now an old age pensioner. I've got to plan for the curtain call. So I thought let's simplify everything… I'm not really an American anymore.

In interviews you seem so full of energy... except perhaps those around Quixote. Where does all that energy comes from?
I don't know, I guess I was really wound up as a child. The key is slowly winding down now.

What makes you go back time after time to the pain and agony of filmmaking?
I love and hate everything about film, but it gets the juices flowing. And unlike drawing, painting or writing it involves so many different types of people, so many complications - it's an art you can never truly master. You can only hope that one day you might learn, but the truth is you never will. There's too much in film that I just love dealing with… it incorporates design, costumes, movement, acting, writing, effects, carpentry and painting. Because really, there is nothing better than making films!



IN PART TWO… Gilliam answers why he has abstained from directing sex scenes, what his advice is for young filmmakers, what was the most difficult shot, and whether he would consider making a Dogme 95 film.


LINK: Official Tideland website
 

Jodelle Ferland as Jeliza Rose


Jeff Bridges as Noah


Jeliza Rose upstairs




To tie in with the release of his new film Tideland, Terry Gilliam (left) agreed to answer a number of questions from fans, posted to this website in June and July.

Dreams editor Phil Stubbs made a selection from the hundreds of questions submitted, and fired them at Terry. Below is Part Two of the resulting interview.

Click on the pictures on the right to reveal larger Tideland images.



Phil Stubbs: If any of your pictures look unlikely to be made, might you allow them to be done as comic books?
Terry Gilliam: Funnily enough, Shekhar Kapur and an Indian company have been talking to me about me handing over scripts and ideas for development as comic books, in the hope that Hollywood would then see enough to give money to make a film. It's actually a very clever business they're doing, because Hollywood seems to be so in love with comics these days. So let's start putting our scripts out as comic books, and see if Hollywood will bite. And if they don't, at least you've got a good comic book. So there's a couple of things that I've been thinking about…

It seems notable that with dreams and iconoclasm being your "line of work", you never directly approach the issue of sex, you've never really directed a sex scene. Although the theme comes up from time to time…
It's been overdone in the movies, I think. I don't know what to do in a sex scene that would be original. I'm basically getting tired of it. Sex scenes seem to be an easy way out so often. They were interesting in the Sixties, when we started seeing them on film, but now I feel they are overused.

I suppose there's another side of me that just feels it's actually a private matter, and not one necessarily that you have to expose publicly. There's lots of kinds of scenes I avoid because they've been overdone - sex scenes are one of those.

Actually, the real reason is that I'm really bad at sex!

Regarding filmmaking and storytelling, what is the most memorable piece of advice anyone ever gave to you?
I've never been given any good advice. That's the problem - the only thing I keep hearing is: "cut it shorter", which I never find to be the best advice.

Every story we tell is its own thing, each with its own problems. I don't know what rules there are. I just know to interest the audience at the beginning, try and keep their attention during the middle bit, then end with something memorable!

Would you have any advice to young filmmakers just starting out?
Get a decent job… Something that will actually pay for your rent and food. And if you are lucky, you'll get to make films some day!

Many people asked what your own personal influences were…
It's a long list. I guess we start with Disney. Then we've got Kurosawa, Fellini, Bergman, Bunuel, Kubrick, Stanley Donen, Richard Lester. I'm totally eclectic, I'll steal from anywhere!

Everyone knows your conflicts with certain people in Hollywood. But you've spent a lot of time working within the studio system. You must have had a lot of good relationships with individuals as well. How do you foster relationships with studios/individuals to get the leverage and freedom you need to make your pictures?
You get the freedom by making films that make money. So if you've made money easily, it's quite easy on the next film. It's as simple as that. There are good people out in Hollywood, and I haven't had that difficult a time out there, but there have been a few individuals that have become the stuff of legend. But I tend to work quite well with people. I'm polite, but I don't listen to studio people very often.

I've never found much good advice from Hollywood as far as solving problems. But there seem to be enough people who still like working with me. There's still plenty of bridges that I haven't yet burned in Hollywood.

Any likelihood that the animations you did that weren't part of Python, short films and adverts and the like might come out on a DVD collection?
There is Monty Python's Personal Best available on DVD. It's not everything but it's my version of Monty Python. It doesn't have any live action in it. It's a pretty good collection of my cartoons. It's basically an hour of animation. But there isn't one assembled source of the non-Python stuff. There's the stuff from Marty Feldman and Do Not Adjust Your Set that I have never assembled. Maybe one day…

When you were at Cannes with The Meaning of Life, Orson Welles would have been there. Do you know what he thought of Crimson Permanent Assurance?
I didn't know he was there and I don't know if he saw it. I've no idea what he might have thought about it. On the other hand Henry Jaglom was there. He's made lot of witty films.
During the last few years of Welles's life, he was very close to him. Henry came out of Meaning of Life and said it was a masterpiece. So maybe Welles thought it was too, that's the best I can do… a few degrees of separation from Orson Welles.

What is the most difficult shot that you have ever captured to film?
That's a hard one. There's the difficulty on the floor when you are doing a shot - for example the big tracking shot in the beginning of Brazil with all the clerks in the Ministry of Information. That was a pretty difficult shot because it's all about the dolly operator.

The flying sequences in Brazil were very difficult because we had so many elements there to create the illusion, The clouds and the flying model we had in there. That was hard because we had to shoot so much material to be able to find enough shots where you didn't see the wire, where the model worked correctly. That was an incredibly hard shot to do.

In Time Bandits, why did the Supreme Being walk behind the pillar before answering Kevin's question about why we need to have evil?
Because he didn't want us to see that he didn't know the answer. Again, a kid asks an embarrassing question. Even God has to duck for a moment to think about it!

Which film are you most proud of?
We don't want to choose between our children… we don't want to hurt their feelings!

Are there any directors working today that you would have to see every film as soon as it comes out?
Maybe the Coen Brothers. I'm now a big fan of Stephen Chow. It's bad, I've stopped watching films. I don't rush out to see any film. They constantly disappoint me. The Coens come closest to not disappointing me each time. It's really quite weird. There's a lot of good filmmakers out there but I'm not addicted to anybody, not like I used to be with Fellini, Kurosawa or Bergman. Maybe that's just a sign of getting old.

Have you seen any short films either animated or live action online that you have actually liked?
Again, that's not something I do, so I can't answer that.

Have you ever considered making a Dogme 95 film?
I think it's the biggest bullshit I've ever heard. "Dogmeshit" I call it. I always thought Dogme was nonsense. It was a very clever PR stunt. It got a lot of showbiz journalists writing nonsense. You don't need fascist manifestos, all you need is no money - and then you are stuck with one light, and without a big orchestra. I always thought it was a very clever PR stunt. Anyone who's working on a tiny budget comes across the same restrictions that the manifesto seemed to insist upon.

They seemed to go on and break the rules anyway...
That's why I think it was a PR stunt. I was talking with Lone Scherfig, a good filmmaker who did Italian for Beginners, at a film festival recently. She was one of the Dogme people. She said it was very important for her, because it lifted the responsibility off her shoulders of trying to be like a Hollywood movie. But I think that was because she went to film school. It pumped into her brain what a "proper" film should be like, ie you need the costumes, sets, locations and all that stuff.

Have you ever sought financing from other booming film industries, such as those in various parts of Asia?
I keep thinking about that, asking people if they want to give me money, and giving them my email address. I keep thinking of China... I've got to go and visit. Actually I keep on thinking I should probably get more familiar with the gaming industry. There's plenty of money there, and my mind works similar to a lot of games.

You worked with clown Slava Polunin earlier this year. Could you tell me about that and what you contributed, and what the show was like?
I'm a friend and a big fan of Slava's. He was working on a new show - Diablo. In fact it was a resuscitated show, because he had done it a few years ago. He wanted to rethink it for a big festival coming up next year in Moscow. He asked me to direct. I said I couldn't really direct his material, so maybe we could co-direct. I was in his extraordinary house outside of Paris where everybody gathered for a week to rehearse… all the other clowns, technical people. Then we went to Tel Aviv, where it was then performed for two weeks.

In the end, I said my title should be "Assistant to Mr Polunin" because ultimately he's had to make the choices. I find if it's not my project and I'm not really in control, I don't know how to do it. But I felt I could just be there, throwing in ideas suggestions, pushing things whatever way it seemed to improve it. By the end I think the show had improved and I'm not sure what exactly I did or didn't do!

What's in the show, what's it about?
Diablo is a show about a clown and his death. A clown ends up in hell. And in hell is this guy who struts his stuff, he's very smooth and beautiful. It's also about order, and the clown in hell is chaos. So it's a strange interaction between these two characters. It's got some extraordinary moments in it. Slava's a clown, a poet and even a philosopher. It's quite interesting because the world of clowning is quite precise and it's got its own set of rules which I knew nothing about. So I was in a sense the element of chaos.

What is it about live performance that interests you that film doesn't?
It doesn't interest me that much to be honest. I was doing it out of curiosity as much as anything. There is something that is wonderful about the relationship between the audience and live performers that you just don't get out of cinema. But what always bothers me is the rather ephemeral aspect of it - it's gone when all the people have left the theatre. With film, it exists in its own right, long after all of us are gone.

And that's what intrigues me more. But with a live show you can adjust each night, you can see how it plays differently. You can try things all the time. With film, when you've editted it, it's stuck. I don't quite have the patience for a live show, because there is so much rehearsal time and I'm not used to that. I'm useless at planning things and then going and doing them.

Do you believe there is ever a reason to censor to avoid causing religious offence?
This word offence… religious offence makes me crazy because I think what we in Western society have fought for, for so many years is the right to cause offence. Offence often makes people think, it makes them angry. And people who cannot live with offence just makes me crazy. I'm not saying the rest of the world should be living like this, but this is what Western civilisation has really been about, really I suppose from the Age of Enlightenment.

The bills that they were trying to push through [the British] Parliament are ridiculous. Half of what we do in comedy would be potentially illegal. I always live by the rule that sticks and stones can break my bones, but words can never hurt me. I like to keep it simple.

Besides Spamalot, are we ever likely to see stage musicals of any of your films?
There was someone who wanted to do an opera of Munchausen. I don't know if its making headway or not. Someone wanted to do a musical of Brazil, but that's not reached very far. I don't think I would be much involved in any of these projects.

If they were to make an opera of Munchausen, were they talking about going to the original text?
No, it was going to be based on our script!

There's a filmmaker making a documentary about President Johnson's visit to LA Century Plaza Hotel in June 1967, and he understands that you were at the anti-war protest outside.
That's very interesting - I was there. Maybe you should pass on that website. I even saw myself on television.

Is there a story there that would make a feature documentary?
Yes, it was a very interesting moment, because it was the first police riot in LA in the Sixties, and it was quite surprising how the press treated it and then the press… the LA Times had to recant and basically do a 180 degree turn on their original stories about what happened there. It's certainly worth a documentary.

How often do you watch your own films for enjoyment?
I don't watch them because while making them and editing them, I have to see them probably 150 times by the time I'm done. I really reach the point I don't want to watch them any more. Occasionally when someone does a retrospective of my work, I will watch a bit of a film. Some years ago in Paris, they did a retrospective and I sat through Brazil for the first time and I was quite surprised by it. A lot was very good but there were bits that made me cringe. It wasn't anything specific it was just that I wouldn't have cut the occasional scene that way, or the rhythms were wrong. I keep meaning to have a little festival of my own films for myself, at some point when I'm distant enough from them, but I haven't done that yet.

I've saved to the end the most profound question that anyone has asked… What is your favourite food?
Probably a toss up between Italian and Japanese. If we throw in German food, we have the Axis of food… but I don't like German food! I can just eat and eat Italian food... and if I'm enjoying mozzarella from Eboli, then I'm in heaven!


Tideland
is released in the UK on Friday 11 August 2006. For other countries' release dates, consult the official website.

LINK: Official Tideland website
 

Jeliza Rose with friendly rabbit


Jennifer Tilly as Queen Gunhilda


Dickens with wig


Close-up of a dolls-head pal


Jeff Bridges as Noah
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