It is kind of a dance
Jehane Noujaim and Chris Hegedus have a rhythm
together, like they're used to talking and thinking as
a team. No wonder -- they've spent over two years --
intensively -- working on Startup.com, a documentary
on the spectacularly speedy rise and fall of an
internet company called govWorks.com. Conceived and
developed by Kaleil Isaza Tuzman and Tom Herman,
friends since childhood, govWorks was designed to
facilitate interaction between local government,
citizens, and businesses and began during the dotcom
boom.
Startup.com is the first film for 25-year-old
Noujaim -- Kaleil Isaza Tuzman's roommate at the time
she and Hegedus decided to make the film, which, a
circumstance that they both agree gave them unusual
"access" to their subject -- and of a piece with
Hegedus's previous work with her partner D A
Pennebaker (who also produced Startup.com), such as
Moon Over Broadway (1998), a documentary on the
production of a Broadway musical starring Carol
Burnett, and The War Room (1992), a
behind-the-scenes look at Bill Clinton's 1992
presidential campaign.
Cynthia Fuchs: What's at stake in making a
documentary, for you?
Chris Hegedus: You're always making the same old
thing. We're always looking for a story where we can
follow some person through something in their life
that is important to them, that has some kind of risk
and built-in dramatic structure, so that we can make a
film in a style that is as similar to a fictional
feature as possible, and gives the viewer the sense
that he's dropped in that world and gets to experience
it. That's what has always been interesting to me in
filmmaking, and quite often you can't do that, you
don't get the dramatic arc or a character that
interesting.
Jehane Noujaim: Kaleil was my roommate, so I was
feeling that in addition to being able to follow this
story over a period of time, I was very interested in
getting a personal side as well. We decided it would
make a better film to continue living together, to
focus on Kaleil and Tom's relationship. And you need a
period of time and access to watch those emotions come
to surface.
CF: The film has a mix of domestic scenes and office
or business scenes, all showing something different
about these guys.
CH: Well, we had exceptional access since Jehane was
living in Kaleil's house: of course we were coming in!
It was a true luxury that was given to me when I
partnered with Jehane on this. You want to get as many
sides of people as possible in those situations. In a
lot of ways it was difficult to get a balance because
all they did was work. They didn't have much of a
life. So we were always desperate to find the
girlfriend [Dora] -- and Kaleil was hardly with her
during that whole time.
JN: In editing, we looked through all this footage
looking for shots of them together, and there weren't
any. So all of the stuff with Dora is by herself,
except that one scene, but he's on the phone!
CF: How do you deal with the ways that people are
affected when you're filming them?
CH: You don't deny that you're there. But if you are
there enough, you really are part of their life and
they can't be bothered with you after a while. They
were so involved in what they were doing, really
hanging on by their fingernails so much of the time.
So they couldn't be worried that we were filming, and
the times that they were, we'd work it out with them,
but you can't film everything, and you try to get what
you can.
CF: The personal relationship between Kaleil and Tom
develops so dramatically, almost as if you'd written a
script.
JN: At the beginning I have to say, I was thinking a
business story could be very dry. And a lot of the
meetings were. But it was so exciting: they were like
an adventure group: I used to read the Secret Seven
and adventure stories. So here were these guys who
wanted to raise a lot of money and put government
online and change the way government works. And 6
months later he's sitting next to the President and
has raised $60 million. It was fascinating to watch,
though, because of the personal relationship.
CF: On some level, the whole set up is unreal to most
of us, just the staggering amounts of money they're
talking about.
CH: (laughs): Right. We're trying to make ends meet.
Kaleil and his friends came from Goldman Sachs, they
were already making $300,000 a year salaries, so it
was a big step down for them in salary, to make
$90,000, and then they're charging out there to raise
$20 million, and did it in like four weeks. That's
something to watch. They're only 27 years old, and
walk in with this idea and walk out with $20 million.
It's generational, too: all this money is out there
for all these young kids.
JN: What really interested Chris and I was their
idealism. This wasn't a movie about barbeque.com. When
they started, they had a flat structure, where
everyone would be working together, and that had to
change when they got so much money and had to have a
hierarchy. But they had great ideas at first: they
were going to move the office to Harlem, create a kind
of internet community, bridge the digital divide, and
bring government back to the people. But then you had
your cynics, concerned with making money. I think it
was difficult to balance the demands of the venture
capitalists who wanted to make money quick and the
idealism. There was a lot of pressure to make products
that made money.
CH: I really admired them taking on that kind of
responsibility at that age, the caliber of people they
enticed to be on their board. There was so much
competition too, not necessarily for the same idea --
not many people have the ambition to take on
government -- but there were other companies working
in the sphere already, without the internet. So it was
like David and Goliath, once these other companies
figured that out.
CF: Did Tom and Kaleil have input into the structure
of the film?
JN: They didn't see footage until the end, but that
was because the thinking was, it was a joint process.
It was their film as well, and they should want us to
be there at different times. At the end, you want
their opinions, you want them to like it. If you're
working with someone and they feel you're committed to
the story, they want the true story to be told. But
looking at footage along the way just makes you
self-conscious.
CH: Yeah, they start seeing themselves as actors in
their own lives. That's why we don't do much
interviewing along the way. It gives people the
impression that all you want to do is interview them
and go away and they go on with their lives. And
that's not the relationship we want to develop. We
basically just had Jehane and I following them.
JN: We thought about having two crews, and following
the VCs' [venture capitalists] side and the
entrepreneurs' side, but I don't know, I felt so loyal
to them that going down to EzGov would have been
really hard.
CF: The dotcom world is very guy-focused and -driven
-- how was it to work in it?
CH: (laughs) It was really strange. We tried to use
it to our advantage when we could, getting into VC
meetings, acting like two girls with cameras. But it
was a real problem for employees in the company. Those
long hours, women don't want to be going home at 3 in
the morning in New York, and that's when they'd be
having a big meeting, "spontaneously."
CF: What is it that you like about collaborating on a
film?
CH: For this type of film, where you're following a
story, it's nice to have a partner, because you don't
know what the story's going to be, and quite often
you're feeling very unloved, so it's good to have a
partner you can commiserate and strategize with. It
would be hard if the person didn't have the same
vision. And Jehane, though this is the first film
she's done, has a similar passion and had studied with
a friend who makes similar types of films, so she was
aware of this genre of filmmaking, and she got it
right off. It is kind of a dance, figuring out how to
communicate.
JN: With sign language!
CH: We would signal each other, you know, I think
something's happening with this phone call over here,
and we'd get set up quickly.
JN: It's good to work with someone who can help you
see the bigger picture, because you have four eyes on
something all the time, you can tell when to pull back
for a wide shot or something.
CF: Documentaries don't typically open in theaters.
What is the appeal of making documentaries, for you?
JN: When I started on this, I was actually surprised
to find out that Chris and Penne [Pennebaker] aren't
making money. But it's obviously not why you do it.
It's amazing to experience other people's lives and I
can't imagine a better existence than what Chris and
Penne do, dropping themselves into people's lives.
CH: Well, if you're going to make a film, you do want
critical response, and in this country, you don't get
that unless you have a theatrical release. If you just
show the film on television, you might get a review
but you might not, you don't know who sees it. So if
you really want audiences to see it and look at it in
a critical way, you need to get to theaters. Film
festivals are a good way to promote.
CF: And cable tv?
CH: HBO is good when you have a certain subject
matter, but we never seem to make that kind of subject
matter. It doesn't have that sensationalism that they
seem to like. At the same time, everybody has read
about this dotcom phenomenon, they're probably totally
sick of it in some ways. But many people say after
they see this film, "Now I understand what it was
about. Now I really see the excitement." They can see
that there are people involved, who are ambitious but
have some virtuous intentions about what they were
doing, and they work very hard.
CF: You have so much material to work with -- do you
see the story take shape as you film? Do you edit in
your head ever or do you make all your choices in the
editing room, afterwards?
JN: There were several endings that could have
happened: At the beginning we were thinking that in 6
months they'd be IPO millionaires and we'd be swimming
in their pools and they'd fund our next film. The next
ending would be that Tom and Kaleil might have both
had to give up their posts to senior leadership, and
that would be like giving up their baby. We were
following so many stories at the same time, the
girlfriend, the company, the relationship.
CH: I think I try to figure out a little bit what the
story is, it's like being a detective. Right off you
see that Tom and Kaleil are such opposite
personalities, they were kind of like James [Carville]
and George [Stephanapolous] in The War Room. You
could see that Tom was the techie-artist type and very
blunt and he wasn't going to fit in with these
business guys at all. You could see there was going to
be some kind of problem, in the personal story. And
the business part, we started knowing nothing; I told
Jehane, I thought VC meant Viet Cong. I think in the
end, we knew that Kaleil was a person who was so
dynamic that if we just stuck to him, something was
going to happen.
CF: The language can seem alien at first.
JN: Yeah, we thought at first we'd have to have a
vocab list with the film, and then thought, we'd
structure it around emails going back and forth. We
had a bunch of ridiculous ideas. But while the
business environment is so arcane, the focus is really
the human story, and that's easy to follow.