[nabs-l] Fwd: Blindness - Movie Director Fernando Meirellesinterview

Rania raniaismail04 at gmail.com
Thu Nov 20 16:48:59 UTC 2008


Yes I agree with you.
Rania,
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Franandah Damstra" <fantasyfanatic01 at gmail.com>
To: "National Association of Blind Students mailing list" 
<nabs-l at nfbnet.org>
Sent: Thursday, November 20, 2008 9:13 AM
Subject: Re: [nabs-l] Fwd: Blindness - Movie Director Fernando 
Meirellesinterview


> Ha, he has the male version of my name. lol Anyways...I had a friend
> who read the book who is blind and he really didn't mind the book at
> all. I don't know if he saw the film though. I think that Fernando's
> perception of vision loss is clouded and confused. I mean, when people
> loose vision, they don't loose their minds and all of a sudden become
> completely helpless...I had a friend who I watch loose his sight, and
> he is fine. He struggled and it was hard on the family, but he lived
> with it and moved on. I think that he is just ignorant of blind people
> and should maybe talk to some before jumping to conclusions. I mean,
> I've seen children's shows that preserve blind people better than
> this. They need to sit down and maybe study the behaviours of blind
> people. Go to a school or camp for the blind and live in their shoes.
> Then, after you gathered your information, make a film that makes
> sense.
>
> On 11/20/08, Sarah Jevnikar <sarah.jevnikar at utoronto.ca> wrote:
>> His derision of the protests and NFB's reaction really hurts. NFB saw the
>> movie before protesting, didn't it? And the interviewer was biased a 
>> little
>> too. That makes me more humiliated than the prospect of the film did.
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: nabs-l-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:nabs-l-bounces at nfbnet.org] On 
>> Behalf
>> Of Corbb O'Connor
>> Sent: Wednesday, November 19, 2008 7:38 PM
>> To: National Association of Blind Students mailing list; vabs at nfbnet.org
>> Subject: [nabs-l] Fwd: Blindness - Movie Director Fernando Meirelles
>> interview
>>
>> In the interest of equal opportunity of opinion, I forward this
>> interview to you.
>>
>> -----
>> Corbb O'Connor
>> studying at the National University of Ireland, Galway
>>
>> Begin forwarded message:
>>
>> From: LPovinelli at aol.com
>> Date: November 19, 2008 10:06:23 PM GMT
>> Subject: Blindness - Movie Director Fernando Meirelles interview
>>
>>
>> Blindness - Fernando Meirelles interview
>>
>>
>> Interview by Rob Carnevale
>>
>>
>> FERNANDO Meirelles, the Brazilian director of City of God and The
>> Constant Gardener, talks about his latest project Blindness, the
>> controversy surrounding it and why Stevie Wonder was involved in one
>> of the most expensive jokes he's ever played.
>>
>> He also relates how the film has become an overwhelming success in his
>> own country even though American audiences turned their backs on it,
>> and why author Jose Saramago was reduced to tears after seeing the film.
>>
>> Q. When this came back to you after the success of your other movies,
>> did it feel like kind of a reward for those successes?
>> Fernando Meirelles: You know, it had nothing to do with the success of
>> my other movies because when [Jose] Saramago sold the rights to Niv
>> Fichman, the Canadian, he didn't know I was going to direct. They
>> first developed the script and then they tried to think about the
>> possible director. They said they thought about me first, but I don't
>> believe it. Saramago didn't know I was going to do it. They just told
>> him later.
>>
>> Q. How disappointed were you not to get the rights initially?
>> Fernando Meirelles: I just moved on very quickly. There was another
>> book that I was interested in, from the same publisher, which was City
>> of God. So we talked about the other one and started negotiating about
>> City of God. So, it wasn't a big deal. At that point, I'd been doing
>> commercials for nine years and I really wanted to move on because my
>> life was very boring. So, I just bought City of God and started
>> working on it.
>>
>> Q. Did you talk to Saramago about the book?
>> Fernando Meirelles: Actually, after I signed on to the project I went
>> to Lisbon to meet him and I had a lot of questions. We met for dinner
>> and I thought he was going to answer them but he didn't want to. He
>> said: "It's my book and this is your film, so let's not mix them up."
>> I really wanted to know a lot of things but in the end I think he was
>> right. If he'd told me something about specific characters or events
>> in the film I would try to follow whatever he'd said and not what I
>> was thinking. I would have been a bit divided. In the end, I was happy
>> that he didn't want to talk about his book.
>>
>> Q. Did you mention any of your casting ideas, such as Julianne Moore?
>> Fernando Meirelles: No, not at that point. His idea for the doctor's
>> wife was Susan Sarandon, who was also on my list. But we wanted an
>> actress who was a bit younger. We needed her to be 10 or 12 years
>> younger. There were three things he asked us: one, that the film
>> should be spoken in English, so it could be very international; he
>> didn't want the story to be set in a specific place, it should be very
>> generic; and the dog with the tears, he said he wanted a big dog. So,
>> we had a big dog but he hated it [laughs].
>>
>> Q. Has he seen the film and does he like it?
>> Fernando Meirelles: He saw it right after Cannes. I took the film to
>> Lisbon because he couldn't come to Cannes. I showed him in a very bad
>> cinema screen in Lisbon and when the film finished he wouldn't say
>> anything. He was sitting next to me and he wouldn't talk! I was sure
>> he hated the film and didn't know how to tell me. But then the lights
>> came on and he was crying. He said he was as happy to see the film as
>> he was when he finished writing the book. Actually, my son was seated
>> in front of us, so when the lights turned on he turned his little
>> camera and then at night at the hotel he put this video on YouTube.
>> So, if you go to YouTube and put in Saramago, Blindness and maybe my
>> name, this is the first thing that pops up. There's like 200,000 hits
>> already. My son's footage is more successful than mine! But it's a
>> very moving moment because I was so pathetically nervous next to him.
>> I was sure he hated it. But then when he said he loved it, I kissed
>> him. I don't kiss people a lot. But I kissed his head because I was so
>> moved.
>>
>> Q. How did he feel the film worked compared to the book, because the
>> book is more of an allegory and the film is more naturalistic?
>> Fernando Meirelles: He said he liked it. He said they were different,
>> because they had to be as there were different sensibilities and
>> different people telling the same story. But what he liked about it
>> was that the spirit of the book was totally respected by the film. I
>> came from Lisbon yesterday and the day before yesterday, we had dinner
>> together and he presented the screening. I didn't stay to see it but
>> before I left I went by his house to say goodbye and he was so moved.
>> He said: "Fernando, yesterday I watched it again and it's a great
>> film." He talked about the violence in the film and he really loved
>> the texture of the tension. Again, he was very, very happy, so that
>> was good news for me. But, again, he didn't like the dog. And that's
>> an important thing to me because I had read this interview and among
>> all his characters that he'd written for this book, he was asked which
>> was his favourite and he said: "I could kill all my characters but the
>> dog of tears." So, for him the dog was really important and that's why
>> it was the only character he had something to ask for. And I missed it!
>>
>> Q. Did the criticism from blind groups in America take you by surprise?
>> Fernando Meirelles: It was not a surprise because when we were
>> preparing the film and they read the story was going to be shot, they
>> [The National Federation of the Blind] wrote to us and said they
>> didn't approve of the project and they'd only approve if we sent them
>> the script so they could revise and correct it. They were very bossy.
>> So, we politely answered that they could have their own opinion, etc,
>> etc, but it was our film. So, as promised, before we released the film
>> they told us they were going to demonstrate and they carried out
>> demonstrations in front of 75 cinemas, which is quite a big thing. To
>> be honest, they missed the point completely. They thought the film
>> tells the audience that blind people can't be adapted, that blind
>> people can't work because they're stupid and aggressive and it has
>> nothing to do with blind people. It's about human nature. It's about
>> people just going blind and losing their humanity. It's a totally
>> different story.
>>
>> Q. Did Stevie Wonder give you any feedback about it as you use one of
>> his songs?
>> Fernando Meirelles: Well, that was actually a little joke that
>> happened when we were shooting. We were waiting to shoot the scene
>> where Gael [Garcia Bernal] was talking on the microphone to attract
>> everyone's attention. But before doing that, he had the microphone in
>> his hand and so, for fun, started singing Stevie Wonder [I Just Called
>> To Say I Love You]. I thought that was funny and maybe we could shoot
>> it. I wasn't sure I was going to use it but we were laughing a lot, so
>> finally I decided to use the joke and we bought the rights. That was
>> the most expensive joke in my life. They charged us $50,000! But we
>> paid.
>>
>> Q. You say the story in the book and the film is about human nature.
>> So what does it say about the human nature of a group that protests
>> against something before it's been released?
>> Fernando Meirelles: Well, what we found out about this group is that
>> this organisation don't really work for blind people. It's more like a
>> PR organisation. They want to promote the idea that there is an
>> organisation for blind people. Other organisations have training for
>> blind people for adaptation or school. They don't have that. It's just
>> a news agency and it's about promoting the idea that blind people can
>> adapt. That's fair. But I think their decision to protest before
>> seeing or hearing the film was really a mistake. Saramago's reply was
>> quite aggressive. He said something like, [with regards to human
>> blindness] there's some people who can see but are blind, and some
>> blind people who are really blind but can see how stupid somebody can
>> be.
>>
>> Q. Is this the first film you've made that's not been praised by the
>> international press?
>> Fernando Meirelles: Everybody can have their opinion. We've had some
>> good reviews. The Guardian here, and the LA Times gave us a good
>> review. It was really divided. But it's a difficult film. There's
>> people who love the book and those who can't read it to the end. The
>> good news is that the film in Brazil is doing really well. We did an
>> investment to do 300,000 tickets because it is a hard film to sell.
>> So, we did 95 prints and we thought we were going to do 300,000
>> tickets. The Constant Gardener did 500,000 in Brazil, but this is a
>> harder film so we thought that maybe it would do less. But now the
>> film is now going to go to 900,000 and we might make a million. And
>> that's with no investment. It's all word of mouth. We released eight
>> weeks ago with 95 prints and still have 95 prints going on because the
>> cinemas are still packed. So, audiences are responding very well. in
>> Mexico as well.
>>
>> But in the US the film didn't work at all. I don't know why. They
>> released it four weeks ago and now we have only 80 prints left. The
>> American audience wasn't interested in seeing the story. They opened
>> very wide and on the first weekend, the audience didn't show up. They
>> saw the trailer, saw the posters and decided they didn't want to see a
>> depressing film. So, they didn't go. If the film hadn't been so
>> successful in Brazil or Mexico I'd say it was a problem with the film.
>> But I'd say it's a cultural thing. Maybe the election is really
>> creating a tension. In this financial crisis, people are losing their
>> jobs, losing their houses and losing their investments. It's not a
>> good moment for dark stories. because in the same week that we
>> released Blindness, Beverly Hills Chihuahua opened on the same day and
>> was a big hit!
>>
>> Q. The blindness camps sounded like an interesting part of the
>> process, which you took part in as well. What did you discover about
>> yourself while doing that, because it makes you confront one of every
>> person's worst nightmares?
>> Fernando Meirelles: You know, we had groups where we blindfolded
>> people for hours and did different exercises. In every group, there
>> was always two or three people who, at some point after two or three
>> hours, would sit down and cry. They really, really couldn't go on -
>> but we wouldn't let them take off the blindfold. Somebody would go
>> there and say: "No, let's keep going." But for me, it was the
>> opposite. It was so comfortable and so cosy. I remember I did it
>> twice. The first time we did a lot of things and we were taken to a
>> restaurant, we were served and we had to eat while blindfolded. After
>> lunch, the guy said we could remove our blindfolds but I didn't want
>> to. I think I stayed with the blindfold for another eight minutes. It
>> was so pleasant being with myself. It's so good because when you're
>> talking to people you don't see their faces. When I'm talking to you
>> [now] I have expressions, I'm trying to engage you. But if you can't
>> see, it's much more free. It's so liberating.
>>
>> Another thing I've found, which is so interesting, is that when you're
>> blindfolded and you're talking to somebody the conversation goes to
>> places that it would never go if you could see the other person's
>> reaction. You start talking about very intimate things. It's such an
>> interesting experience. I recommend maybe Sunday morning and spending
>> the day in a blindfold. It's really, really interesting.
>>
>> Delicious
>> Digg
>> Reddit
>> Facebook
>> Stumbleupon
>> Quite apart from his incorrect characterization of our objections to
>> his movie, Mr. Meirelles proves in this interview that he knows
>> nothing about the National Federation of the Blind and what we do. We
>> operate three model training centers in the United States that offer
>> the best available rehabilitation training to help people adapt to
>> blindness, and we are very involved in mentoring blind youth and
>> encouraging them to participate in careers that are falsely thought to
>> be closed to the blind. And those things are just the tip of the
>> iceberg. In our sixty-eight years of existence, we have done more good
>> for blind people than any single organization that claims to "work for
>> the blind." This is because we are an organization of blind people,
>> and blind people are in the best position to know what blind people
>> truly need. The biggest problem that blind people face is the public
>> misconceptions and misunderstandings about blindness and blind people,
>> so public education is a critically important part of our mission, but
>> it is not true to say that we are simply a "PR organization."
>>
>>
>> - Chris Danielsen    Nov 19    #
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> One site has it all. Your email accounts, your social networks, and
>> the things you love. Try the new AOL.com today!
>>
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