Director, Oliver Parker talks about his role in creating the new film: Dorian Gray, with the producer and cast.
“I didn’t really want to corner myself having done two Wilde adaptations already, but I loved the book “The Picture of Dorian Gray”” explains director, Oliver Parker, “so Barnaby (Thompson) got the idea rolling and originally my role was as co-producer. It took time to get the script really coming off the page, I’ve had a chance in the intervening years to do a few more movies, cleanse the palate. By which point I was ready to have another shot at Wilde and of course I didn’t want some other bastard doing it!”
Parker and producer
With ‘Dorian Gray’, Parker decided he didn’t want to do the adaptation himself; “If you’re writing and directing you often feel you have a responsibility to the words especially if it’s a classic, but if you have a relationship with the writer, there’s the chance for some valuable dialogue”. So, two years ago rising young screenwriter Toby Finlay became involved. “Toby made a great impression on this piece” explains Parker, “he brought a very strong identity”. Finlay was introduced to the project by Sophie Meyer, head of development at Ealing Studios who’d read some of his work and thought he was worth a shot. “I think it was a great hunch – he’s certainly attacked it with a lot of vigour and has a visceral quality to his writing” notes Parker. “With Toby, the script would breathe and expand and he was absolutely relentless in going back and reworking it and continually refining it”.
“One of the things that made this project more interesting to me was it wasn’t quite so hidebound by the structure of a play. This particular story has enormous potential for expansion and investigation which is very liberating” concludes Parker.
“The book still resonates today because of the fundamental theme of ‘what if you were allowed to do anything?’” explains producer
“In modern terms, the first person I thought of with this piece was Mick Jagger” continues Thompson “he was a young man who became a rock ‘n’roll star and was able to do whatever he wanted and in some ways was above the law. We live in an age of celebrity, we live in an age where good looks and pop culture have become more and more powerful elements in our life and the idea of the power of beauty and what that gives you is as relevant now as it ever was”.
“You could analyse for hours why myths endure but I think we’re all fascinated by the physical appearance of things, certainly of each other and our own physical appearance and Oscar Wilde seemed to make a religion out of beauty” observes actor Colin Firth who play Henry Wotton. “It was almost as though aesthetic beauty was more important than morality, so he was writing about something he cared about. The germ of the idea must have come from Oscar Wilde thinking ‘would I sell my soul?’ Everybody who has ever thought about appearance has grown up with all the clichés about beauty being skin deep and how its beauty from within that counts. There’s nothing extraordinary being dealt with here it just happens to be a myth that the story deals with in such a dramatic, concise and rather chilling way” concludes Firth.
“Today’s culture is very obsessed with cheating clocks and trying to stay young” notes actress Rebecca Hall who plays Emily Wotton, “I think human beings have always been obsessed with that. The fact that Oscar Wilde was writing about it then just goes to show. In any era there are different ideas of what is beautiful and what still looks young. - today it’s Botox and maybe yesterday it was dressing a certain way. It’s always going to be relevant and there are always going to be ways to try and stop it”.
“The theme of eternal youth is always fascinating” says Ben Chaplin (Basil Hallward). “Dorian Gray” is Faustian for a start and for some reason that fascinates people. Do we have to be responsible for our actions? Do we have to just live for pleasure and not pay the consequences physically and spiritually?”
For Parker, who started his film career in the horror genre with the legendary maestro Clive Barker, this adaptation of “Dorian Gray” posed an opportunity to dip his toe back into that water “It’s great fun to be touching on something that has an element of horror. This isn’t an out and out horror movie but it certainly takes me back to my early years in the business, which is a surprise to a lot of people. Having worked with Clive Barker as a young man this is really interesting for me and I’ve been able to join some of the dots in my career”.
“It’s great that Olly’s been given a chance to revisit his horror roots” comments producer
“With this film we have a great gothic horror legend and the fact that it comes from Oscar Wilde gives it another twist” says
Source: Momentum Pictures
No comments:
Post a Comment