+ Series 7 review by Cynthia Fuchs
It's like they scooped us!
Daniel Minahan and Brooke Smith sit across from me in
one of those bizarre hotel suites that are part comfy
lounge area, part board room. So, we're drinking
coffee at a huge table, surrounded by standard hotel
"decor" -- sofas and mirrors and arty black and white
prints -- while we talk about their movie, Series 7: The Contenders. It's appropriate that the setting is
vaguely surreal, because the film is a surreal satire
of reality. Written and directed by Minahan
(co-screenwriter of I Shot Andy Warhol), the movie
satirizes reality-game shows: in Series 7, the
object is to kill your opponents: each entrant is
given a handgun and a camera crew and tv viewers root
for their favorites. The stakes are, as the announcer
intones dramatically, "life and death!" Smith (best
known as the tenacious kidnap victim in Silence of the Lambs) stars as Dawn, the show's reigning
champion. Eight months pregnant as the film begins,
Dawn has 10 kills under her belt, and a bleak
determination to survive, protect her unborn child,
and, of course, win the game.
Minahan and Smith have an easy rhythm together, adding
on to each other's descriptions, laughing like old
friends. In fact, Minahan wrote the role of Dawn for
Smith before he even met her. He recalls that in 1995,
before Survivor was a twinkle in Mark Burnett's eye,
"I had the idea for the script, and saw her in [an
off-Broadway production of Little Monsters]. I
recognized that she would be perfect for the lead
character, and then wrote it for her."
Cynthia Fuchs: How did you approach the characters'
reactions to and awareness of the camera?
Brooke Smith: I hadn't really watched those shows
before this project. I'd seen them sometimes, but then
I really got into them, and now I don't watch them at
all. Once the movie was done, that was it. But it
seems to me that the people on the shows are very
aware of the camera. Nowadays, a lot of young viewers
especially are ready for their close-up, because
they've grown up on The Real World.
Dan Minahan: When we were preparing for this, we were
trying to find that zone of real people on camera. And
we were using improvisation and watching shows and
mimicking them, and one night Brooke called me up and
said, "These people are acting."
BS: Right. I saw a cop, on Cops, who was playing a
real scene in real life, and then someone got between
him and the camera, and he literally pushed the guy
gently out of the way, because he wasn't involved, he
was like, the friend of the criminal they're about to
arrest. [Laughs.] But that was tricky, because you
were so aware of acting like you're aware of the
camera.
DM: Because it's breaking the rule of film acting,
which is that the camera is not there. I would
encourage people every day, to think of the camera as
a character in the film. You can react to it, you can
ignore it, or you can push it away. It gave people
something really good to work with, and it gave them
this immediate self-awareness.
CF: And reality shows tend to have a class-specific
dynamic -- they're upscale like The Real World or
they're underclass criminals like on "Cops." The film
is very aware of that, despite and because of the fact
that it's shot in Danbury, Connecticut.
DM: Yeah, I grew up in Danbury. I set it there because
there was a wide range, from people who live in
trailers to people who live in subsidized housing to
people who live in mansions. Dawn [Smith's character]
is from a very middle class family with aspirations;
her sister has an SUV, she lives in a McMansion. Her
sister is like "new money," and has brought her mother
to live with her.
BS: But Dawn was kicked out, and ended up out on her
own, so she has a more working class feel. She's not
really white-trashy, but she has a been-on-her-own
quality.
DM: The interesting thing to me is that Dawn uses the
camera to empower herself, and to reveal her family,
to get even, when she doesn't get what she wants.
That's one of my favorite scenes, because it does so
many things at once. It's a Real World bitch fest,
and humiliating for Dawn and her family, but you
really care about Dawn after that scene, because you
realize that there's nobody on her side, that she's
been rejected by her family, again.
BS: And it shows that Dawn hasn't received a lot of
love in her life, so it's just undeniable that the
camera becomes seductive. There's a camera in her face
and they're asking her how she really feels about
things, supposedly. I don't think it was calculated
that she went in there to expose them.
DM: I think she really wanted to make amends.
BS: Exactly.
DM: It's such an inversion. In the real world, when a
kid gets on tv, you love them and they're successful.
Where in this world, your kid gets on tv and it's bad.
The mother and sister don't even let her into the
house -- they meet her in the garage.
BS: It's always amazing to me that on the real shows,
when people have to sign waivers, that they sign them
because they feel they have to, or it's that pressure
to jump class, somehow. You have to wonder, why are
they signing them?
DM: We thought a lot about that, and I think it's just
that people feel validated and they get to be seen.
Half the time on "Cops," people are so fucked up or
drunk and high or whatever, that they probably don't
know what they're signing.
CF: There are certainly limits to what documentary can
do; today, documentary makers and audiences are have
doubts that documentaries can convey "truth."
DM: Yes, especially like Michael Moore, so that the
documentary filmmaker is more of a presence or a
personality, unlike Susan and Alan Raymond who
invented reality tv basically, who were still into
verite, and believing that the camera was objective.
The interesting thing is that Susan and Alan Raymond
[makers of An American Family, the breakthrough PBS
documentary series in 1973] did these "police tapes";
they did a ride-along, back in 1981, with a very
corrupt sheriff, who mistreated people. But Lance Loud
[the son in American Family] came to see Series 7,
and he really liked the film, which meant a lot to me.
CF: The American Family connection makes me think of
that intense relationship between Dawn and Jeff. How
did you develop that?
BS: Because of the circumstances [the competition] and
the fact that he comes into her life at just that
point, definitely cranks it up, because he's the only
person, as she says, who can "still hurt her." It was
tricky to do it, because to be forced to play out this
reunion in this sacred relationship was really
intense, so for me, it had to happen in our eyes. What
was moving to me when I saw the film was that they're
these three-dimensional characters who are forced into
these soundbites by the show. Why do you have to be
anything, the way everybody defines everything, gay or
straight, this or that.
DM: I think at a certain point, we had to trust that
the set up was there, and you can't act all of that.
It's inherent in the story, being revealed as it goes
along. You can't play eight months pregnant, that you
used to be in love with this guy who's gay. It was
about finding a strong connection and playing that, a
tenderness in this world that's completely brutal. We
worked really hard on the reunion scene.
CF: I can see that, because it's right on the edge of
being totally corny and totally visceral.
BS: Exactly.
DM: And then we did all those interviews to supplement
it, like they do on The Real World. So it's like
they're narrating it as it's happening, which kind of
pushes it into parody, but at the same time, I like to
think of that scene as the heart of the movie. You
have it both ways. I know people who see it as a
complete joke, and others who see it and are
completely moved by it. That's the success of that
scene, depending on who you are and where you are in
the film, you can react differently.
CF: It exposes the violence, or the intrusion, of the
technique at the same time that it exposes the
"emotions."
DM: It can remind you of a lot of things, but that's
the intention of it. I grew up loving Rollerball,
The Stepford Wives, and Westworld. I was this
paranoid little fat kid with this weird view of the
world. Stepford Wives was shot in Danbury and the
area where we shot. So to me it comes out of that
tradition, but also my experience working in
television, and this Orwellian fascination with
Cops. Because we were doing it as a low-budget and
digital video film, I convinced the producers that we
should use unrecognizable people. That was important.
Otherwise you'd be saying, "Oh, that's Steve Buscemi
as the clerk."
CF: On the same tip, how did you choose locations that
would be recognizable or ordinary, the garage, the
mall?
DM: They're all in-between spaces, very particular to
the moment we live in. There are scenes in vestibules
and foyers; our production designer understood that we
were doing something subtle. You could choose to shoot
in a great 1950s diner, but that would be too
cinematic -- I tried to choose locations that were
unremarkable, the same way we tried to use people who
looked real.
CF: I'm glad that you mentioned the word "subtle,"
because it seems there's a balance between something
entirely theatrical and spectacular and something
that's subtle and self-undercutting.
DM: The weird thing is -- as you've just described it
-- the whole thesis of reality tv is that it takes
these mundane, unremarkable moments and makes them
into spectacle. Turning the camera on ordinary people
somehow elevates their lives, because it's shown to so
many people. You're talking in more formal terms, but
I think it's just the nature of what it is. We never
crossed the line into this Saturday Night Live
parody. We played the scenes for real, not for humor,
because you would have stepped out of it, and betrayed
it.
BS: The whole reality tv thing is also interesting in
the way it makes people into celebrities. It used to
be that if you had a talent from something, you would
be on camera, but now, it's if you're chosen and
you're on tv, then you must be someone.
DM: The difference between this and The Real World
is that in The Contenders, you're picked. But, when
I was researching, I got these books and audition
tapes for The Real World, and it's an unbelievable
process these kids go through to get themselves on tv
-- they put themselves on tape, they do interviews,
they write essays. And I couldn't stop thinking, "What
kind of person wants this?" It's not like you're
plucked out of obscurity.
CF: Yeah, in order to expose yourself. And the reunion
shows are interesting, in that they comment on what
they've done, a year later.
BS: We loved The Real World in Hawaii, that was the
only one I've really seen. I couldn't watch
"Survivor," because I thought, if they're going to
really eat worms, they should dig them out of the
sand; the worms shouldn't be served in some little
Barney's coconut bowl.
DM: It was a game show. And it was so condensed,
everything was so telegraphed by the way it was cut;
it didn't have the same kind of "natural" flow of "The
Real World," because it's a game show. It's apples and
oranges -- a game show, or just let it happen. The
in-between is so contrived, and the rules of
Survivor keep meandering and changing, like cigars
and yachts. It turned into corporate office politics,
demonstrated when [Richard Hatch] won. [Laughs.]
CF: How do you think people consume these shows? Do
producers know their audiences?
DM: Here's the thing. I think with our film, because
it's a film, we tried to make the characters
sympathetic, so you can care about them, whereas
Survivor and Big Brother are predicated on hatred,
rejecting people, and exclusion. That's sad. It's
still fascinating to watch, but it's anti-social, or
at least, it's not nice. I've never seen a show that
was so mean-spirited as Survivor. The person I was
so looking forward to getting to know was Sonya, the
woman who played the ukelele, and she was the first
one thrown off.
BS: And wasn't the idea of Big Brother that people
watching the show voted people off?
DM: That's creepy. It's bad enough on America's Most
Wanted, when people fink on the criminals, they rat
'em out. [Laughs.]
CF: Or better, they rat out the actors who play the
criminals in the re-enactments.
DM: [Laughs.] At least the criminals have done
something wrong. But in Big Brother, it's just when
you don't like someone.
BS: And I like the way that in Series 7, obviously
Dawn doesn't like what she's doing; she just has to
get through it. I like her breaks with the rules.
DM: There are moments of humanity that sneak through.
I think it has more dignity than Survivor, even
though people are killing each other. [Laughs.] The
weirdest thing is that we didn't know that these shows
would exist when we came up with the idea, so it's
like, they scooped us! This was supposed to be a
satire. We describe it to people, and you tell them,
"It's a reality tv show where people are forced to
kill each other," and they say, "Oh yeah, I think I
saw that." And you say, "No, you didn't."
BS: I was afraid it was going to happen, between the
time that we actually made the film and when we'd find
distribution. I was in Africa with this little
short-wave radio, in the middle of the bush, in
August. And they were talking about a show that's
already gone, when murderers were telling about their
crimes on tv.
CF: That was a Court-TV show called Confessions, and
they only ran two episodes, one featuring the Preppie
Murderer. There was such a hubbub about that.
DM: This is the perfect example. I heard about it, and
I happened to catch the one where, immediately
afterwards, they had a show of commentators, including
Alan Dershowitz and Marc Klaas. It was such pure
exploitation. They had the titillation of showing it,
then flogged themselves in the next moment. It was
just perfect. Polly Klaas's father actually thought it
was good. He felt that it made it more real and
tangible, what they did.
BS: I want to read that book you were reading, about
gladiators.
DM: Yes, I was researching gladiators, because the
parallels to Series 7 were so obvious, the human
sacrifice. To me, that film was a total parable of
Hollywood violence.
CF: Going to the movies is a different thing than
watching tv, for your film too -- when you're paying
money and going to a theater to see this film, it's
not the same as reality tv.
DM: I think it gives it a strong context, because
you're really watching, you never step outside the
show. I did pitch it to a network executive, and he
asked, does everyone have to die? I said, yeah, that's
the point. And then, can you have a recurring
character? I said, okay, a cameraman could be that.
Can you make it sexier? Okay. But the final straw was
when they asked, "Can you make it more like Ally McBeal?" And we said, no.