IFC Speaks with James Mottern
[For full interview click the link at the bottom of this post]
IFC: The other thing that was interesting in the film was how gender roles was defined — having Monaghan play a role that usually would be reserved for man and you have dialogue referring to what makes a good man — was that a thread you wanted to follow through?
Mottern: A lot of this film is about identity, that you live your life and you think you have free will. But as you walk around in the day, whether it’s the way you look, your gender, the way you behave, the sound of your voice, you’re immediately identified and categorized by people. They’re trying to tell you who you are at all these points and you begin to believe it, it chips away at your freedom until you have no free will. You’re beholden to these people who are identifying you. [Monaghan’s character] Diane says “That’s not who I am. That’s not who I am.” To me, that’s why she’s a hero — she does resist that categorization by other people. It wasn’t so much role reversal, because I never thought of this movie as being a woman’s movie. It was always [about] a human being first.
IFC: Knowing your background with Slamdance, where you were once a festival producer, what’s the experience been like to switch sides from producing a festival to participating in one as a filmmaker?
Mottern: The thing I like about those films [at Slamdance] is that not all of them are great, but there’s always some little nugget that’s good in each one of them. It’s always like filmmakers first, and to me, Tribeca is very similar in that sense that it was started not by a city to promote the city, but in a response to 9/11. I’m religious about movies anyway, that some of the great films would suggest somebody is finding redemption or salvation or freedom. It’s a very American phenomenon to have that feeling.
The other thing about Tribeca is that they have a very high regard for the history of film in terms of American history and influence and what films have meant to people beyond the box office. It depresses the shit out of me when I’m listening to Indie 103 in L.A. and they have the Sundance Report. You tune in and you’re like alright, tell me what the movies are, and the first thing they do during the Sundance Report is tell what the sales were of these films and it’s pathetic.
IFC: “Trucker” was bandied about as one of the titles that might’ve been selected for Sundance. Were you actually aiming for that before Tribeca?
Mottern: Yeah, but I think that when you’re making a film you’d hope that everyone’s working together for what they believe in — that’s why you’d do it. An independent film, no one’s paying you any money to do it. You do want your film to sell because you want people to see it — you don’t make it to put it in your bureau. But when there are these big festivals, you find yourself almost making a film for the people who run the festival — will it get in? Who’s there? Who will like it? Who knows someone who’s at the festival? It’s almost like the festival becomes a distributor who you haven’t even sold the film to.
For Sundance and this film, it was being bandied about because I always thought it was great and people will tell you, “This is a Sundance film,” but I always thought this is any festival film because it’s going to be great. For me…and Sundance, God love ‘em… I wanted to finish my film. I didn’t have a score in, so we were all like let’s just finish it, you know, because it’s going to be a good film.
IFC: I was curious about it because I knew it did have that history.
Mottern: And that’s the other thing — so it’s bandied about that it’s going to get into Sundance, right? And so people then say “What is wrong with it that it didn’t get in?’
IFC: It comes off as damaged goods when you don’t get in.
Mottern: But it’s…. not done. [laughs] I learned a valuable lesson — the movie that you are going to make you should make, come hell or high water. I’m [actually] very positive about that experience, but it discourages me when I see filmmakers have that feeling that their film didn’t get into a particular festival. I have friends that didn’t get into this festival and it’s divisive. It makes it so that these filmmakers that have worked together or have tried to nurture each other are suddenly divided by a festival because the festival is suddenly qualifying the value of your film.
- Full Interview: www.ifc.com
