The Homesman: Interview with director and star Tommy Lee Jones
The Homesman is the latest
directorial outing for veteran actor Tommy Lee Jones (following 2005’s The
Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada and 2011’s The
Sunset Limited) is a revisionist western in the model of Kelly
Reichardt’s Meek’s Cutoff. Putting the female experience
front and centre, the film focuses on Hilary Swank’s Mary Bee Cuddy, who leads
a party of three women back east to civilisation, finding refuge with a
Methodist minister’s wife (Meryl Streep).
What is The Homesman
driven pretty much
insane by the hardships of life on the American frontier. When I completed about?
The Homesman is the story of three women who are
transported in a wagon across Nebraska in 1854, because they have been the
script, my vision of the film was minimalist because there are not a lot of
visual details to show it’s Nebraska and the northern part of the west. Now,
I’m certainly impressed by north eastern New Mexico, where we shot the movie,
because it stands in very well for Nebraska. For me, the landscape itself is a
very important character in our movie
Why was your vision “minimalist”?
Because of the
landscape, which mostly consists of a line that divides heaven and earth? The
line is usually straight, which creates an emotional environment as much as a
natural one, and you can take it from there.
Why was it important for
you to explore the female condition in the mid-nineteenth century American
west?
It was important for
me to explore because I think it’s the origin of the female condition today.
Who is George Briggs, the
character you portray in the film?
George Briggs is a
fearless man, a claim jumper, an army deserter – an independent man of rather
low character. He is willing to help a woman who believes she can get across
Nebraska in a wagon with three insane women as passengers. The truth is he
agrees to help her out because she rescues him from a very dangerous situation,
and so he is indebted to her, even though she finds out that she wouldn’t have
made it on her own.
The Homesman
features an original and an unlikely team…
They don’t like each
other at the beginning of the story. But they learn that they need to be able
to rely on each other, and how to depend on another – until somehow they
finally begin to understand one another
Do you consider it to be a
western?
I don’t know how the
term western is defined. I have the impression over the years that the western
is a movie that has horses in it and big hats and that takes place in the 19th
century usually on the west side of the Mississippi river. I’ve even read
critics who are bold enough to call a science fiction movie a western. It’s a
term that people use so often that I don’t think it has much meaning anymore.
So I’m not sure I can really answer your question, because I don’t know what a
western is.
How was it working with
Hilary Swank?
It’s wonderful to
work with Hilary Swank; she’s always prepared, happy and very creative. She
read the script very rapidly and understood it. She’s always ready to go, at
the very beginning of every single day. It’s a joy to know Hilary Swank, and a
greater joy to work with her.
How about Meryl streep?
Meryl Streep needs no
praise, she’s got plenty of it. She’s one of the finest movie actors in the
history of cinema, and I’m very happy to call her a friend, because to be a
friend of hers is another total joy.
Tell us about James Spader.
Spader is a very fine
movie actor and he’s very good company. He’s a congenial man, very funny, and
we always had a lot of fun, whether working or playing. But the character that
he brings to the screen has nothing to do with the real James Spader.
What about Hailee
Steinfeld?
Hailee is a complete
actor, beyond her years. She had a small part in this film but a very important
one and she played it perfectly with no evasions, nothing extra, or irrelevant.
She’s very simple and very direct to the material. A couple of the scenes she
appeared in had a strange quality to them – she was able to observe and play in
a way that made perfect sense to the narrative.
How do you use rehearsal to
prepare your cast?
Well, everybody needs
to know where to stand – that’s called blocking – and everybody needs to gain
confidence, to know their lines, to gain some idea of what the camera is doing,
whether it’s going to move, whether it’s close or wide. And with rehearsals
actors can develop an idea of how they relate to one another. Every rehearsal
is different: some people need a lot of them, some people need very little;
some people can get a lot of rehearsal and won’t do better; you never use
rehearsal the same way twice. But the point of rehearsal is to be ready, and
the readiness is all, I read somewhere.
Please tell us about your
work with production designer Meredith Boswell.
Meredith is a wonderful production designer,
and she can design the simplest of things, including a wagon rolling across 19th
century Nebraska and when you put a lens on it, it’s always beautiful and very
functional. She is the best production designer I’ve ever met.
Billy Burton and you have
struck up a strong sense of camaraderie.
I’ve been working with Billy for thirty five
years and we’ve always got good results. We communicate clearly, concisely, and
quickly. He’s getting a little older now but he has been one of the handiest
people in the motion picture stunt business.
How about Lahly Poore?
Her costumes are
perfectly appropriate and specific to 1855. She achieved beautiful work with a
small budget
“The Homesman”
is released and distributed by CAPTIVE
CINEMA.
SHOWING ON DECEMBER 17, 2014.
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