Talk About Network

Google


Register and Login
Nick
Password
Register create new account Sign up is FREE and you can post replies, new topics, bookmark posts and more!
Recover lost password


Celebrities > David Duchovny > DD 4-29-05 Pitt...
Latest [ Topics | Posts ] Archive Post A New Topic Post a Reply
<< Topic < Post Post 1 of 1 Topic 663 of 741
Post > Topic >>

DD 4-29-05 Pittsburgh Post-Gazette from 4-8-05

by pam <fakeaddress@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Apr 29, 2005 at 04:32 PM

mutato at the Haven found this 4-29-05 PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE
interview via phone from HOD's 4-8-05 press day at the Loews 
Hotel in Philadelphia:

http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/05119/496101.stm


Duchovny moving in many directions

Friday, April 29, 2005
By John Hayes, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

David Duchovny is in a good place.  Film and TV roles got his foot 
in the door; "The X-Files" got him rich and made him a star. 


He now has time to hang with his wife Tea Leoni, the op****tunity 
to work when he wants, and the resources and contacts necessary 
to pursue artistic and professional interests.

"House of D" is a big step for Duchovny.  As the screenwriter, 
he has an excuse to re-explore aspects of his childhood. 
As director, he gets a chance to till a field that he's dabbled 
in before and, if it sells, to expand his Hollywood power base. 
As the film's co-star, he gains a little screen time to set up 
the release of three of his starring roles for other directors 
in the next couple of years. ("Trust the Man" comes out this year; 
"The Secret" and "Parallel" are scheduled for release next year.)

Duchovny doesn't call "House of D" a "labor of love," or even a 
"new direction" for his career.

"I'm moving in every direction at once," he says over the phone, 
laughing from a car seat as he cruises through Philadelphia on a 
busy press day.  He's loose, accommodating, curious, even funny. 
He's eager to talk about a project that he's clearly proud of.

"House of D" isn't autobiographical, but he co-opted memories 
from his early teen years to fill the film with realistic 
images of being a kid in the '70s. 

"I had all this stuff in my head from growing up," he says. 
"The way people talked, just being kids.  I just found a story 
to wrap it all around. The writing process went fairly quickly, 
and it took six months to secure the financing, which isn't a 
long time.  A year from the first draft, we started filming."

With a small budget by Hollywood standards, Duchovny relied 
on atmosphere to set the year at 1973. 

"For example, being unable to afford a bunch of cars, 
we just had to find streets that still look the same," 
he says.  "And the music is im****tant in framing a period. 
I used songs that meant something to me as a kid."

At the crux of "House of D" are several im****tant changes that 
alter the life of a 13-year-old boy, played by Anton Yelchin. 
Everyone at that age experiences changes -- some that will 
impact the rest of their lives and others that at the time seem 
insurmountable but are soon forgotten.

"Always, my aim as an actor or filmmaker is to tell universal 
stories," says Duchovny.  "To tell them in a way that involves 
everybody.  The best way to tell universal stories is to tell 
your own stories honestly.  Now, some parts of the story, 
some major things, are completely made up.  But I've always 
believed that the littlest events can have the hugest consequences.
I wanted to make this boy's life radically changed by a pretty 
meaningless event."

Robin Williams was brought into the project to play the boy's 
mentally retarded adult friend.  From the start, says Duchovny, 
both men understood that the character could easily spiral 
out of control, easily cross the line to distasteful. 

"It was never an issue," he says.  "The character was written to 
have some funny scenes, but Robin never let it get away from him."

Casting the boy, he says, was "the pivotal part of doing this 
movie."  Duchovny knew he had to have "a really special kid."

"I'd heard about Anton, but I didn't want to work with a kid that 
young," he says.  "I was hoping at first for a young adult who 
could play younger.  Not that I didn't think a kid could act, 
but I didn't want to have to work with shorter hours.  You know, 
the law says kids can't work more than six hours at a time. 
We looked at several other actors and finally I said, 
'OK, bring me that kid you found.' "

Yelchin radiates personality and bonded well with Williams and Leoni,
who plays his depressed, widowed mom.  While he struggles a bit during
climactic dramatic moments, he's a face to watch for in the future.

"When I set out to make a movie, I knew it'd be a small movie with a
lower budget," says Duchovny.  "But I didn't know it'd be something
that could make you laugh, make you cry, make you think about your 
own life.

"Emotionally, I think it really puts you through the ringer."

(John Hayes can be reached at jhayes@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 or 412-263-1991.) 

Copyright ©1997-2005 PG Publi****ng Co., Inc. All Rights Reserved.
 




 1 Posts in Topic:
DD 4-29-05 Pittsburgh Post-Gazette from 4-8-05
pam <fakeaddress@[EMAI  2005-04-29 16:32:31 

Post A Reply:
  Go here to Signup

AddThis Feed Button


About - Advertising - Contact - Frequently Asked Questions - Privacy Policy - Terms of Use - Signup

Contact
tan12V112 Sat Jul 26 8:10:16 CDT 2008.