Tim Burton discusses a larger than life film ‘Big Eyes’
Tim Burton is a bit like the character he creates in his
movies—whimsical, highly animated, and quite appealing in a quirky kind of way
and larger- than- life.
His latest movie ‘Big Eyes’, opens on February 25,
across the Philippines!
In Manhattan,
Burton’s hair and beard were a bit scraggly, and he spoke with his hands waving
in the air. It is clear: he is passionate about three aspects of his life: his
films, his art and his family.
Among his unique
movies, most with a strong cult following, are, Batman, Batman Returns, Mars Attacks, Sleepy Hollow, Ed Wood, Big Fish and Sweeny Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street.
Burton has creatively
directed from his vivid imagination numerous darkly-themed children’s movies,
including: Charlie and the Chocolate
Factory, The Nightmare Before
Christmas, James and the Giant Peach, Frankenweenie, and Alice in
Wonderland.
Big Eyes, from The
Weinstein Company, is the biographical drama film directed by Tim Burton.
The film focuses on
Walter Keane (Christoph Waltz), an
artist known in the 1950s and 60s for his kitsch paintings of large-eyed waifs
and his then-wife Margaret Keane, (Amy
Adams).
The film tells the
outrageous true story of their heated divorce battle wherein Margaret accused
her husband, Walter, of stealing her paintings. The bazaar and shocking truth
would later be discovered: Walter did not create any of the art work, but
instead his wife did, and the Keane’s had been living a colossal lie that had
fooled the entire world.
The movie is too
incredible to be fiction, and focuses on Margaret’s awakening as an artist, the
success of her paintings and her tumultuous relationship with her husband , who
was catapulted to international fame
while taking credit for her work.
The
script was written by Scott Alexander and Larry Karaszewski, the screenwriters
behind Ed Wood, and is based in Los Angeles. In 2003, they began researching
the story that would take 10 years to become a
film.
“There
were a lot of reasons why we wanted to make this movie,” Karaszewski
explained. “We thought that Margaret was
a great female character that embodied the beginning of the Women’s Movement.
It stars with her as a 1950s housewife, who does everything for her husband.
Through the course of the story, she learns to stand up for herself.”
Burton
has long been involved with Helena Bonham Carter, and they have two children: a
son Billy Raymond, 11, and a daughter, Nell,7.
Please talk about approaching this
story of Big Eyes as a parent?
I
don’t know if that has everything to do with it for me. I mean, I came at
strangely, from growing up in that era. Because growing up in that era and
understanding the cultures that I grew up in, it was sort of the end of the
American Dream. And that kind of idea.
How so?
The
sort of the idea of this dysfunctional couple coming together. And ..creating
these mutant children! It just felt like my family! You know, it just felt like
of like this sort of…So it had this strange, so I sort of came at it in this
strange way. But you know..I’ll never show this film to my children! I’ll show
ém Sleepy Hollow, Sweeney Todd. But not this one!
What grabbed your
attention about these actors [Amy Adams and Christoph Waltz] you chose for your
new Tim Burton universe, Big Eyes?
It was just fresh energy for me to work
with these new people. And uh, because you know
everybody’s been getting sick of the
people I was working with! And, I know. It’s sad, isn’t! And I showed up
occasionally, yes!
I am sure you were
there more than that. Please talk about your attention to those Keane
paintings?
I found them fascinating, but quite
disturbing, actually! Like Big Brother watching you –those big eyes. And the
sort of polarized responses to it. Some people love it, obviously. And some
people just wanted to…rip it off the walls! So that kind of response is what I
found quite fascinating.
How did this project come about,
between you and the writers –Scott Alexander and Larry Karaszewski?
We were actually working in parallel! universes!
Because I didn’t know that the screenwriters were writing a script! And I knew
Keane’s work, because I grew up with it. But I didn’t know the real story. And
a friend of mine told me the story. And went to San Francisco and met Margaret
Keane. And I commissioned a painting from her. Then I don’t know how long after
that, but we had done Ed Wood together. And they approached me about doing this
movie.
Were you drawn at
all to Margaret Keane because of your own personal experiences, in a Hollywood
movie industry dominated by business interest over art?
Well, yes. I mean; that’s why I enjoyed
Ed Wood, because to me, there’s a fine line. Or it’s perceived as good and bad.
And you know; I’ve been through that myself. You know, when they had that MOMA [The Museum of
Metropolitan Art in New York] show her, the critics… It was
about 100 times worse than Keane! You
know what I mean?
Then what happened?
It got so
lambasted. And at the same time …it had a high attendance rate! So I’ve
experienced that kind of thing, of like good and bad. Because when you do
something, you’re very passionate about it. Whether it’s Ed Wood or the Keane’s
, you know, there’s just such enthusiasm. And they thought they were making
probably like..Michelangelo! As Ed Wood
thought he was making Star Wars. You know,
when he was making Plan 9 From Outer Space! So you understand that kind
of misguided enthusiasm. And then you sort of understanding the polarization of
people’s response to things.
Why do you think the Keane art was not
embraced by the psychedelic world by then?
But it
was very druggie! You know, big eyes, large pupils. I mean, It’s somehow
weirdly fit into that scene! And I always admired Margaret’s high-waisted look!
Why do you think that this film isn’t
as dark as your other movie?
For me.
you have the time, the era, and you have the paintings. Which suggest
something, strange color schemes that are those paintings; part of the vibe of
it. And then, just the story. I mean, the relationship between Margaret and
Walter and the other characters, in my own mind, it started to feel like a
weird sixties, kind of slightly Hitchcock.
Please elaborate—what do you mean by
this?
Well, I
found myself strangely drawn. I mean; the color scheme just fit the era and the
paintings, and the kind of psychological relationship, and feel of the movie.
So you know whether it’s black or white or color, you try to support that. And
make it a character, in a way.
So just
all of those elements made it…what it turned out to be!
The movie is in large part struggle
between abstract and popular art, Where do you stand in that struggle
personally?
Again, it’s a
fascinating thing about people’s perception of art. And you see it today.
Either it speaks to you, or it doesn’t. And I think the reason the story really
sort of flew under the radar, is that most critics, most people, didn’t really
consider it art. So it didn’t hit the major headlines.
Please, tell me more?
You know; it
was sort of on the back pages. Whatever. But like I said. I myself have experienced from the very beginning of my career, people loving
and hating me. And also, people would say about my movies, ‘Oh it’s so much
lighter.’ And at the same time, it’s so much darker. So I found that a sort of
juxtaposition. How could something be light, and then other people see it as
completely dark. So people’s perceptions of things fascinate me, you know?
Is that how you see the film Big Eyes?
Yes, in
that way I think this is perfect story , and an example of that sort of
question. And it’s kind of an unanswerable question! It’s just sort of a
presentation of that dynamic. But I loved it, because I also hated it! You know
what I mean ? There’s something about it like, why would grown people
have…images of children hanging in their living room!
It seems like
people do that.
I do too!
If you put
yourself in Walter Keane’s shoes for minute, what do you think was going on inside
his crazy head?
In his version, he was
Henry Higgins! She was ElizaDoolittle, and, it was a failed experiment!
“BIG EYES” is released and
distributed by CAPTIVE CINEMA!
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