Formentera Pressemappe.indd
Transcription
Formentera Pressemappe.indd
Sabine Timoteo Thure Lindhardt Ein Film von Ann-Kristin Reyels mit Ilse Ritter, Tatja Seibt, Christian Brückner, Geoffrey Layton, Vicky Krieps, Frank Bruneau, Finn-Henry Reyels und Bonaparte Regie: Ann-Kristin Reyels · Buch: Antonia Rothe, Kathrin Milhahn, Ann-Kristin Reyels · Casting: Ulrike Müller · Kamera: Henner Besuch Montage: Halina Daugird · Ausstattung: Peter Weiss · Kostüm: Manfred Schneider · Ton: Andreas Mücke Niesytka Mischung: Lars Ginzel · Musik: Henry Reyels, Marko Baumgartner · Produktionsleitung: Heino Herrenbrück Redaktion: Christian Cloos, Anne Even, Georg Steinert · Produzent: Titus Kreyenberg Eine Produktion der unafilm in Koproduktion mit ZDF Das kleine Fernsehspiel, ARTE und The Post Republic Formentera Illes Balears Cast and Crew Synopsis Sabine Timoteo Thure Lindhardt Nina Ben Ilse Ritter Tatja Seibt Vicky Krieps Wencke Christine Mara Christian Brückner Geoffrey Layton Franc Bruneau Finn-Henry Reyels Pit Georg Pablo Yoko special guests BONAPARTE Ann-Kristin Reyels Ann-Kristin Reyels Antonia Rothe Katrin Milhan Henner Besuch Halina Daugird Peter Weiss Manfred Schneider Monika Münnich Ulrike Müller Andreas Mücke Heino Herrenbrück Henry Reyels Marco Baumgartner director writers Christian Cloos Anne Even Georg Steinert commissioning editors Titus Kreyenberg producer DOP editor set design costume design make-up casting sound production manager original music unafilm in coproduction with ZDF Das kleine Fernsehspiel, arte and The Post Republic. Nina and Ben have been together for many years. They have a three-year-old daughter. Their first vacation without their child leads them to the south: to Formentera. Caressed by the sun and the warm Mediterranean winds they enjoy their freedom from the necessities of everyday life. Finally they have some time on their own. But during a wild beach party the paradise turns into hell: Ben is flirting with the young and beautiful Mara and at the end of the night Mara und Nina dive into the dark sea. Nina is drifted away and only just manages to get back on land on a different island. Mara, however, has gone missing... Nina and Ben are caught in a deep crisis, questioning everything they once believed in. The sunny island turns into a darkroom, rendering visible what has been concealed: doubts concerning the plans they had for their lives and a quiet grief over a reality that may only be accepted. After her critically acclaimed and awarded debut „Hounds“, Ann-Kristin Reyels once again proves herself an accurate observer and sensitive storyteller. Featuring the impressing performances of lead actors Sabine Timoteo and Thure Lindhardt, „Formentera“ is an intense and deeply touching portrait of a generation in search of its own identity. Notes on the film In her second feature, Ann-Kristin Reyels tells a story that many young couples with children can relate to. It raises the question about dreams that have withered in the day-to-day routine. Where has become of the future that once seemed as bright as the midday sun on Formentera? What became of the plan to lead a different life, of not becoming like so many generations before? Ann-Kristin Reyels director Nina (Sabine Timoteo) and Ben (Thure Lindhardt) have always taken their dreams and themselves for granted. Being alone again for the first time they start to realize that they have lost their inner connection to each other. The child that kept them happily together in the past years is not with them now and it seems like they have to get to know each other all over again. Overshadowed by mutual accusations concerning the death of a young woman this is not an easy thing to do. Sabine Timoteo Nina Born in Bern, Switzerland, Sabine Timoteo has been seen in many award winning films, like L‘Amour (P. Gröning), Der Freie Wille (M. Glasner), Gespenster (C. Petzold) or Brownian Movement (N. Leopold). Apart from working as an actress, she has worked as a professional cook and balett dancer. Thure Lindhardt Ben Born in Copenhagen, Denmark and worked with directors like, Neil Jordan, Bille August, Ole Christian Madsen, Sean Penn and many more. He won the Shooting Star Award at the Berlinale in 2000 and the Danish Robert Award for Nordkraft. Ann-Kristin Reyels was born 1976 in Leipzig, Germany. She worked as a researcher and assistant to Heinrich Breloer on his award winning TV-Feature The Manns as well as camera assistant to Peter von Haller. From 2001-2007 she studied film at the Academy of Film and Television Konrad Wolf (HFF) in Potsdam. She finished her studies with her much acclaimed film Jagdhunde / Hounds, which won the FIPRESCI Award for best feature at the 2007 Berlinale. Ann-Kristin Reyels lives Berlin and is currently working on her next feature. Awards for Jagdhunde / Hounds (selection) Best Director Palm Springs IFF, USA (2008) Fringe Report Award, London, (2008) DEFA-Young Talent Award & Cinestar Award, Filmkunstfest, Schwerin, (2007) Best Movie Berlinale FIBRESCI-Award (2007) Festival of German Film, Nantes (2007) Art of Film Award, Ludwigshafen (2007) Interview Ann-Kristin Reyels What made you write this story? The observations I’ve made around me. How do I want to live is an important question for people in their 30s and 40s. For many it seems like now is the last moment to sneak out of a situation that feels gridlocked and determined. Introducing the parent generation in Formentera I thought that the life concept of the hippie generation has a lot to say without spelling it out too much. This generation of parents also played an important role in your first feature, JAGDHUNDE / HOUNDS, where the father moves to the country to lead a different life. Do you think that this generation has had more freedom at hand compared to todays generation of parents? I do not think that living in a commune equals freedom or liberty. But as Christine says in the film, young people in the sixties have at least tried to have a different life. Maybe this generation had more freedom but it’s equally possible that they were just braver. Things one had to rebel against seem to have been way more evident. To what extent? 25 years after World War II and a generation of parents who were more or less involved in the Nazi regime you knew what to rebel against. Today you are cornered by possibilities and it seems easier to define what you do not want at all. To me that is a big difference and to be able to spell out what I actually want is quite a lot and part of the freedom that I was referring to. The generation of 68 are the parents of my generation or were at least influenced by their ideas and I think it has become increasingly difficult to find the right way, when as a child you’ve been told, just listen to yourself and you will find the right way. What I am interested in is the idea of a free and independent life that has a lot to do with the liberation of ones own constraints, which in turn does not mean that you do have to live on an island as a hippie. What does freedom mean to you? I believe that it is probably the most labourintensive, most difficult and most desirable state you can reach in life – to live in selfdetermination based on your own free will. Important decisions should not be made because of others or depending on circumstances. One should be able to make them oneself. Did you have any particular actors in mind while you were writing? Of course you think of actors while you are in the writing process. I knew that I wanted to work with Sabine Timoteo and Thure Lindhardt after our first casting which was just great. It may sound tacky but it was really magic and I hoped that they would agree to play the parts. When they said they would, they stayed with me and the project although it took such a long time to have the film realized. The mode of life is not crucial to me, rather the inner state of being. If that is not right, a relationship, I would say, seems rather difficult. Why did you choose to make the film on Formentera? I knew that a lot of former dropouts live on the island. So I thought that maybe we would find the proper surrounding for the shoot. I wanted to shoot all the scenes outside the finca in an uncontrolled environment and I thought it would be important to see a few hippies here and there. Apart from that I found this Mediterranean idyll far more tempting than the rough climate on other dropout-islands in the Atlantic. When I travelled to Formentera for the frst timetogether with the two other writers, Antonia and Katrin, it became clear that the story had to unfold there. The film has a hopeful ending. Is it possible to change ones life after all? I would hope so. The couple in my film has all options. I firmly believe that they will try. They are connected forever through their daughter and they have both reclaimed a small piece of freedom on the island. A consoling end has been important to me from the beginning. How did you work with the actors? Did you rehearse and improvise in advance? I spend a long weekend with Sabine and Thure before we started shooting, to read the script and to choose the costumes. That was terribly important for our collaboration. We had to make the film for a shoestring budget in just 17 days and that’s why it was very important to find a common language in advance. So we were in close contact for a long time until we actually started shooting and worked on the scenes until the very end. It was a very special and rewarding collaboration with the two of them. Would you say that the small budget and the small team lead to a more focussed work? No, I do not think so. A small budget is always a juggling act and with Formentera it luckily worked out. But only because everybody involved knew in advance what they were letting themselves in for. As a team we worked together just wonderfully. In general I prefer working with small teams. I can work in a more focussed way. While shooting we never had the feeling that we ran out of time or we did not have enough people on the crew. The production somehow managed to make everybody feel that nothing was missing. Torsten Minack, our cook, played a decisive part in that... Which part does the producer play in the creative part of filmmaking? A big part in this case. Without Titus the film would never have been made and without him I couldn’t have made the film the way I did. I think our collaboration is what you call a dream. Statement Sabine Timoteo If I think of Formentera I see two people, their faces next to each other and nested into each other, their hair moving in the wind. Together, yet each one for his or her own. Two people... I thought you were like me and me like you... I thought I knew who you were and thus who I am. Don’t destroy what I believe. Don’t take away this wonderful illusion. This is what comes to my mind if you ask me about “Formentera”, about Ben and Nina. Statement Thure Lindhardt I‘m playing Ben in Formentera, a modern man, divided between the woman he loves and the dreams he has. He‘s a man who faces adulthood, growing up, letting go of his childhood dreams, and finding out that life as an adult maybe isn‘t that bad at all. When I read the script I was very fascinated by the gentleness, the softness in the characters. There is a deep love between them, but also some great challenges, and it‘s a dream for an actor to play parts like this. And: I know this wasn‘t a question so I‘ll ask myself : How was it to work with Ann-Kristin Reyels? : I looooove working with her, she is so sweet, gentle, respectful, listening and cool. Let‘s make ten more movies together, and with Sabine as well please! :-)))) Formentera describes the quiet and steady path of two people through a world that could be a dream world. But as they are not feeling free themselves this freedom is like a prison to them. Not a lot seems at stake, yet maybe everything. For Ann-Kristin the island was always both – a prison and a place where you dream about freedom. We tried to preserve this juxtaposition in everything that we did. All in all I think that our efforts were quite brave. Little money and thus very little time meant that we had to shoot in a very decisive manner. It wasn’t possible to make safety shots. We didn’t shoot scenes and shots unless we were certain that they would be essential for the film. As a result, I think, we have found a clear and simple way of telling the story, which, to my mind is the strength of the film. Statement Titus Kreyenberg Ann-Kristin and I sat together at the Berlinale 2011 in order to discuss the project. And without really loosing too many words we agreed to go for it. Three months later we were shooting in the middle of the blue Mediterranean sea. We worked incredibly hard but at the same time it felt like a gift and still does. So many talented people came together on the film and helped crafting the vision of a simple, but deeply touching story. Although AnnKristin hadn’t worked with most of the crew before, we hit it from the start and had the most wonderful time, because we loved what we were doing and because Ann-Kristin is the most intuitive and sincere director I ever had the pleasure of working with. But it wasn’t for her and the crew alone: Sabine and Thure, Vicky and Franc, Christian and Tatja, Ilse and Geoffrey, who were the backbone of it all, lending their talent to the film. And of course there was Finn, who played Yoko –he was the king of the world, a big man, amongst grownups. And last but not least there are three great people sitting at ZDF and ARTE, Anne, Christian and Georg, who did not stop pushing us and the film for the better. I am convinced that our experiences have been concentrated in an entertaining and enriching film that truly moves people. technical data 92 mins colour dcp / 1:1.85 German with English subtitles unafilm Titus Kreyenberg was an executive producer for film and television for many years before he founded his own production company unafilm in 2004. unafilm produces uncompromising and artistically ambitious feature films for cinema. unafilm produces fiction and documentaries for the international market. The company’s films compete in internationally acknowledged film festivals around the world, Berlinale, Toronto, IDFA, Thessaloniki, San Sebastian, DOKLeipzig, Diagonale among them. The German-Swiss coproduction “Colours in the Dark” achieved a major success in German cinemas, the German-Turkish Coproduction “Our Grand Despair” premiered in Competition of Berlinale 2011. The Cologne and Berlin–based unafilm is an active member of ACE, the German Producers Alliance and AG DOK. contact unafilm: Berlin Bozener Straße 13 – 14 D – 10825 Berlin +49 30 6630 7220 wwww.unafilm.de www.formentera-the-movie.com