Stella (Elizabeth McMenamin, left) and Gabe (Eli Kent,
right) absorb PJ's (Rangimoana Taylor) news in a scene from
the film Hook Line & Sinker. Photo from
Torchlight Films.
The message is in the method for a team of New Zealand
film-makers, Tom McKinlay reports.
There's a nice symmetry about the new New Zealand film
Hook Line & Sinker.
Those producing and performing in the film strove to create a
process and environment in which they could do their best
work, and one in which everyone felt valued.
In a similar way, the message of the film is about the
importance of work and the way in which it underpins our
image of ourselves and our relationship to others in the
community.
The approach those involved in the film settled upon will be
familiar to fans of British director Mike Leigh, who is well
known for starting his films without a script, or indeed much
idea what the film might be about.
In this way Hook Line & Sinker directors Andrea
Bosshard and Shane Loader drew together a core cast of nine
actors - including such well-known names as Rangimoana
Taylor, Geraldine Brophy and Kate Harcourt - to build their
feature film from the ground up, using snippets of
conversation and observations from the everyday milieu as
building blocks.
Dunedin-raised Bosshard says when they began, all they knew
was that they wanted to make a film about work and worth.
"That was as loose as it was."
They also knew they wanted to focus on "modest" working
lives.
"Working lives, if you ever get to see them on-screen, tend
to be lawyers and investigative journalists - the glamorous
jobs."
The truck drivers and seamstresses around which Hook Line
& Sinker revolves are less commonly portrayed.
"We had our cast together, then each one of those cast
members ... had to go out into their community, into their
homes, into their families, into their workplaces, and come
back to us, the directors, with a list of 50 'characters',"
Bosshard says of the way in which they began to craft a
story.
The characters gathered could be single observations. "It
might just be an interesting way someone eats their eggs. I
remember one actor saying they watched someone in a cafe cut
the yolk out of their egg and eat that first."
The hunted and gathered raw material was used to make an
amalgam character for each actor, who then had to go off and
live in that character's shoes.
"The characters then, I think, feel very full, very real,"
Bosshard says.
Improvisations came next and five weeks later, Bosshard and
Loader had enough material to go away and write the
screenplay for the Wellington-based production.
It was a demanding process for the directors, said Bosshard,
who previously directed the film Taking the Waewae
Express with her partner, Loader.
"Directors are not very good listeners as a rule, because you
have your little image in your head, and you want everything
to conform to that little image.
"This process forces directors to have to listen, just with
all of your being, because that's the very reason you are
going through these improvisations, because of the material
that is being given to us through them - what the actors are
saying in character, what those relationships are. So it
really forces us as directors to observe and to listen in
ways that we have not had to observe and listen before."
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