+ Last Orders review
"A mosaic technique"
At first glance, Fred Schepisi looks like a quiet fellow.
But he turns quite effusive when he starts talking: sharply
observant and possessed of a dry sense of humor, he's
comfortable expressing himself. At 62, Schepisi's been
around the movie block more than once. From his early work
in Australia -- The Devil's Playground (1976) and
The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith (1978), or even the
First Big U.S. Movie, starring Meryl Streep but set in
Australia, A Cry in the Dark (1988) -- to his bigger
budgeted, U.S. and U.K. projects -- Plenty (1985),
The Russia House (1990), his greatest critical
success, Six Degrees of Separation (1993), and
1997's Fierce Creatures -- the writer-director has
established a varied and mostly impressive resume.
And yet, Schepisi still struggles to get pictures made. To
his mind, this is a function of economics: he's not keen to
make huge action pictures, but neither is he looking to
make a tiny picture that won't be seen or pay the rent. All
this makes him especially happy with his new movie,
Last Orders, despite the fact that he made it under
less than ideal circumstances: lousy British weather,
allotted money that didn't come through, a tight schedule.
No matter. The result, based on Graham Swift's novel,
traces the complicated shared history of four East
Londoners: Jack (Michael Caine), Vic (Tom Courtenay), Ray
(Bob Hoskins), and Lenny (David Hemmings). Their
multi-decades story unfolds in flashbacks, following Jack's
death, as the remaining three spend a day driving to the
beach where they will fulfill his "last orders," to scatter
his over the water. At the same time, Jack's widow, Amy
(Helen Mirren) takes her own journey, to the institution
where her 50-year-old retarded daughter lives, to say
goodbye one last time, before Amy starts another life,
apart from her family.
PopMatters: How did you come to make an accessible
layering of voices and points of view, from Graham Swift's
novel?
Fred Schepisi: The novel has a structure that's broken up,
not in the same way, but with the same effect -- each
chapter was headed by the name of a character. Within those
chapters, while they were advancing the story, they were
reflecting on the past, and expressing their hopes for the
future, pretty much in monologues. The way I chose to
interpret that, was similar to what I've done in other
films, and used to do it in documentaries; [it's] kind of
like a mosaic technique, if you like. Say, in The Russia
House, there's a point where Sean Connery and Michelle
Pfeiffer meet in the tower, and all those beautiful Russian
churches are outside. And you think you're just watching
them, but actually you're watching five different time
zones in the story: you're watching them and the tensions
they're going through; you're watching a spy watching them;
you're watching the spy's report back to his bosses in the
form of a tape, a number of days after the event; and then
you're watching two sections of the past, as Michelle
Pfeiffer tells a story.
I think that's how we tell stories. It's how memory
operates, how our thoughts operate, because we go on
memory, we go on apprehension of the present, and we go on
hopes or expectations for the future. When you tell a
story, you're throwing other lights on it, which makes the
story richer and more interesting. We can't stop saying,
"Yeah, but don't forget the time you did such and such..."
To that end, I did not try to pick up ever on the time
periods [in Last Orders]. By that, I don't mean that
the time periods aren't accurate; they are incredibly
accurate. But I don't come into them and waste time going,
"This is where we are," because, why is that of interest?
What's of interest is you, or your story of what's
happening, and it's all about your emotion and your
understanding. So I've got to follow you, and then it's the
pleasure of the audience to pick up on all that other stuff
that's going on in the background, if they want to. If you
do it accurately enough, they accept it without thinking
about it. So that allows you to move from 1935 to 1979 to
1950-something, to 1989, which is our actual present tense.
I didn't do all that conventional stuff, where you go to
the old-fashioned poster or the lady with the pram to tell
you what time period it is, and didn't play songs or music
from the period to set you up.
PM: That's a common device now, to use the compiled
soundtrack, that you can then sell as a cd.
FS: Well, yes, but then you get pulled by that. You go, "Oh
I remember that song," and your mind starts to go to
details evoked by your memory. But in a picture like this,
that makes you lose track of where you are. There is some
source music from within the eras, but it's more
background, to help you accept where you are without having
to think about it. The score of the movie is done
now, kind of a pop-jazz-classical structure, that's
got three themes going through it. The role of the music
corresponds with a particular belief I have, which is that
characters have themes, and when they come together, you're
hearing both those themes at the same time. The theme
helps, because even as I change its presentation or blend
it with something else, you're feeling an emotion, and
you're not even aware you're feeling, because I've trained
you to feel it throughout the picture. Of course, when I
say "I," I mean the composer [Paul Grabowsky], the editor
[Kate Williams], and all of that.
This helps you understand the characters' inner life, what
they're feeling, even if it's not exactly what they're
saying. It gives you pause for thought, other information.
Probably the boldest move in the film is the love theme, as
it becomes that, the theme of Ray and Amy, when you find
out that they've been unfaithful -- him to his best mate,
her to her husband -- and within 30 seconds, I'm playing
the love theme of Amy and Jack, her husband, because she
says, "He loved me, and he always did."
PM: The music does help to bridge the many storylines.
FS: Yes, there are sort of three journeys going on at once
-- two are going on in our present time: Amy visiting her
daughter [June (Laura Morelli)], and the men's car journey.
And the third, which is Amy and Ray, is actually taking
place a week before the other two.
PM: Many films deliver characters in a present moment, and
the story is about their movement from that point. Your
films tend to be more about how character might be shaped,
by past experiences.
FS: Yeah, and this film kind of takes that to the Nth
degree. Everybody thinks that action is what it's all
about, but the real action for me is the way characters
interact with one another. Somebody said that this is a
film about ordinary lives that proves there are no ordinary
lives. When I was casting the young people, they would read
the script and say, "Oh my god! Is this what we're going to
have to go through?" It's so complex, what a struggle.
PM: The sections of the film showing the characters as
their younger selves almost become another movie, though
you know they're headed somewhere specific.
FS: Exactly, I like the way you're drawn into that past
part of the story and almost forget the other one for a
minute. You throw a whole other color on the emotion that
you're experiencing -- from both the older person
remembering and the younger one experiencing.
PM: The pub culture is central here, with so many of the
characters' memories tied to it. But those memories seem to
be mostly the men's, though Amy and other women do appear
in the scenes.
FS: I think the way it works in most of those pubs --
though it certainly didn't work that way in Australia -- is
that the guys go over there and the women go over here. So,
the guys stand around the bar and do guy stuff and the
women sit at tables. It's very family-oriented too: kids go
too. I don't think the U.S. or Australia has an equivalent.
In Australia, women weren't allowed in the men's bars until
1976, when I think two women actually chained themselves to
the foot rail.
PM: How do you see class working in the film?
FS: Well, the characters are all from East London, they're
of a lower class. Though the distinctions are sort of
changing. It even happened in acting. Michael Caine,
Terence Stamp, and Tom Courtenay were probably the first to
be allowed to use their actual accent. All the actors there
are taught what's called received English, the proper way
of talking, and that's how all English films were, before
them. That's made it possible for a whole generation of
actors to act in films and plays about their own lives.
Margate, for example, or Southgate, another resort, is
where the working class go; the rich go to Brighton. The
people who retire to Margate seem to go there quite young,
at 62 or something, though they look like they're 75.
They're out to get the sea air and you see them, dressed in
woolen clothing, sitting in their deck chairs. And that's
part of what the film's about: that's where they go for
their Sunday outings, if they're lucky enough to have a
car. That whole business of picking hops, that's something
they all did, but it's their holiday. Not the picking, but
it got them out in the country, and kind of camping. So,
for him to want to go to Margate is pretty creepy.
PM: To do anything other than work, they have to travel.
FS: Yes, well, their life is contained in that one area,
but to go to places like Margate, or to the home [where
June lives], that's definitely a schlep.
PM: The journey back in time takes us to WWII. How were you
thinking about the war as backdrop?
FS: Oh, that memorial! That's one thing I didn't actually
do in the film, show the difficulty of finding that
memorial, it's so perverse. There's no beautiful sweep up
to it; you have to go through 20 suburban streets, and
then, you're lucky if you can find it because there's no
signs. In the book there's this whole thing that they can
keep seeing it but can't get to it: in the sweep of the
film, that was like one frustration too many. That
generation was defined by that war, having fought in it,
and having friendships bonded and friendships lost, only
going through Plenty -- I made a film called Plenty!
-- in 1953. It took that long before England started going
through good times again.
PM: How has your understanding of the process of filmmaking
changed over the years?
FS: If I do an autobiography, it'll be called "The Films I
Didn't Get to Make." And that could be more interesting
than the ones I did. For a while I was able to make films
that are not seemingly commercial, in the mainstream. And
over the last 9 or 10 years, that's not possible anymore.
That's because of the general attitude of the studios, and
specific individuals no longer being there, leading to
corporatization. And now the costs of marketing have become
more expensive than the film in some cases. Therefore,
that's almost negated a whole area of filmmaking. So it's
gone to $80 million and up (international, high action, not
hard to follow dialogue) or, each of the companies has
formed what they now call "classics" divisions, where they
make films for $12 million or less. The more they can make
them for less, the more they're actually doing that.
So, any time that you're in a middling budget picture, with
interesting subject matter, they're not doing those
pictures anymore. If you're making a $25 or $30 million
picture, you're still going to have to spend $50 million or
whatever the figure is, to release it. That's one of the
factors that has sort of made those pictures disappear, and
me with it! If I was making Six Degrees of
Separation today -- which I made for $16 million [in
1993] -- I would not get $16 million. I would get $8
million, if I was lucky. And so I wouldn't be able to make
the picture. So I have to go straddle two worlds, go back
into independent filmmaking. I've found one or two
mainstream films lately, but they almost always come
crashing down. I was going to do Don Quixote with
John Cleese and Robin Williams, but it was $16 million, and
so, though we got money from foreign sources, but couldn't
get any out of American, because, they said, it was
"episodic."
PM: Um, most U.S. movies are episodic.
FS: Shhh! Don't tell them that! In fact, I was doing
Shipping News for a while, but I was doing it with
John Travolta, and with his expenses, it was up around $55
million. But they didn't want to do that book for that
money; they wanted to make a more conventional story if
they were going to spend so much. Or, I was doing I Was
Amelia Earhart, a script I had done, a beautiful piece.
Even working very cleverly, it would have cost about $30
million. It needs a romantic sweep, to show her joy of
flying. You don't pull that out of a hat: you've gotta wait
for the light and the conditions [to shoot]. But they
wanted to rewrite the script for $20 million. No, then it's
not that script; it's this script. Then that went away. The
trouble is, if you don't hook them in on a certain scale,
they can dispense with a picture too easily. They put it
out there and put a minimum amount of advertising into it.
And if the public picks it up, as you're witnessing with
In the Bedroom, suddenly, it's terrific. But for an
In the Bedroom, how many pictures did Miramax dump?
They put all their eggs in one basket. That breaks your
heart: if you get to make the picture, then it gets killed
in theaters.
The world I want to go back to is one much like the one I
had [for Last Orders]. I had complete control. Yes,
the money didn't turn up when I was shooting, and yes, I
only had $9 million, and yes, I only had 42 days to shoot
it. But I had great actors who came and wanted to act: they
were playing parts that were in their very souls and they
were excited to act with one another. Even the young
people: they're going to be the Michael Caines and Helen
Mirrens of the future. They came so full of energy. It was
raining and cold, and when a bit of sun peeped out, there
they were in their thin summer shirts and dresses, and
they'd plop down in the mud and pretend it was hot out.
And I was able to give what I can give. When I did
commercials, I was quite arrogant, probably, though I
didn't think of it as arrogance. I thought of it as: when
you came to me, I always knew that I was able to take you
to the best place you could go, and you wanted to go there,
you just didn't know it existed. As I know there are plenty
of places that I don't know exist, that are beyond my
ability or knowledge. I'm always sort of scratching to get
up there. But I know that, and a lot of people don't know
that. And they're so scared of it that they try to pull it
down to their level. And though they hire you, they don't
let you do what you do. I kind of vowed never to do that
again, and to that end I've written a number of projects,
two originals, two from novels, and one from a play, all of
which I'm trying to get made.
PM: It sounds like you have a lot in the pipeline.
FS: Well, the other thing is, you've got to live. In the
last 9 years, since Six Degrees, I only did two
[films] for which I really got paid, and then you go and do
a project like Last Orders, which you love, but you
don't really get paid much for that. If the opportunity
comes along to get a bit of money and it's a good thing,
then you sort of take that chance, because that's going to
buy you the time to do the other stuff. The stupid thing to
do is someone else's passion project, where you don't get
the money or the power, but that's another story. The joy
of doing something like Last Orders, it's fantastic.
You can feel it on the set every day.