Actress Julie Delpy has been a familiar face on
screen – both in her native France and in the United States – for well
over 20 years. In fact, as the daughter of French theatrical stars
Albert Delpy and Marie Pillet, she has been working on stage and screen
since she was a little girl. However, now she has been spending much of
the last decade behind the camera.
Delpy was really first noticed in the States (other
than perhaps in a bit part in the hit film Europa, Europa) when
she won the lead role in Krzysztof Kieslowski's White, part of
his acclaimed colors trilogy – the other two titles were Red and
Blue. Soon she was in the States, making a bunch of English
language movies like The Three Musketeers, Killing Zoe and An
American Werewolf in Paris.
However, she really started turning heads with
Richard Linklater's 1995 film Before Sunrise. The movie, about a
French girl named Celine and an American boy named Jesse (played by
Ethan Hawke) who spend a night walking around Vienna, talking and
getting to know each other, was a critical favorite. It was also
Delpy's first experience as a writer, an experience that opened her
career up immeasurably.
While Before Sunrise did not become a huge
hit at the time, video and cable grew the cult audience to the point
that they were able to make the 2004 sequel Before Sunset, which
also shared critical acclaim, and this time around was a fairly big hit
to boot. The third film in the series, again at a nine-year interval,
was the 2013 film Before Midnight. Together, the Before
movies make up one of the most important film series ever.
It also grew Delpy's love of writing and her desire
to try directing. She achieved this dream (not including a couple of
short films) with a barely remembered French film called Looking for
Jimmy in 2002. However, for the last decade she has thrown herself
into filmmaking. First was the popular 2007 comedy 2 Days in Paris,
in which she and Adam Goldberg played a squabbling couple visiting her
parents in France. That film was followed by the 2012 sequel 2 Days
in New York, in which Chris Rock took over as her character's
current relationship. Between those films she made the creepy period
drama The Countess and the coming-of-age drama Skylab.
She has written and starred in all the films she has directed (though
she only had a supporting role in Skylab.)
Her latest film is a return to her native France,
and it is her wildest film yet. In Lolo she plays a fortyish
fashion industry PR person who finds herself falling in love with a
goofy guy that she met on holiday, but not realizing that the
relationship is being sabotaged viciously by her grown son. Lolo
pairs Delpy with some of the greatest names in French comic filmmaking,
including Dany Boon (Welcome to the Sticks), Karin Viard (The
Chef's Wife) and young up-and-comer Vincent Lacoste (Hippocrates:
Diary of a French Doctor).
A couple of days before the New York premiere of
Lolo, I sat down with Delpy to discuss her new movie and her career
both in front of and behind the camera.
Nice
speaking with you again, we did an interview years ago when
Before Sunset was
coming out.
That was a long time ago, yeah.
This is your sixth
film as a director, but I believe this may be the first time that you've
directed completely in your native French – I know a certain amount of
2 Days in
Paris was also done in French and I'm not sure about Skylab.
Skylab
is in French as
well. That wasn't a comedy, more like a coming of age movie.
Why did you decide
this project would work better in French?
You know, just the way I started writing it. My
co-writer is French. The producer that we started talking with. It was
generated from a conversation with the producer of Skylab,
Michael Gentile. We started talking about making a French film
and I never even thought about writing it in English. It's a great
thing to accept the fact that you're making a French film and go all the
way with it and make a French film. (laughs)
Both as an actress
and a director, what are the differences between making a French film
and an American film?
Both are a different experience, I think. The way
crews work in France, it's a different life on set. You have long lunch
breaks where you pour wine. (laughs) Choosing the catering is
very important to everyone. It has to be the best food in town. That's
the goal in every French film. (laughs again) You usually get
high-A quality restaurant French food on set, which is really nice. I
would say the food is mainly the difference. (continues laughing)
Pretty much, if you had a good crew in the US and a good crew in France
you get a good result. It's great to work with people. The food is the
big difference.
As
the son of a divorced mother, I'm very familiar with the whole idea of
the kids not giving a new guy a chance. Of course Lolo takes that to a
whole new extreme. Your own son is obviously much younger than Lolo is,
so how did you and Eugénie Grandval come up with this idea?
You know, the film has nothing
autobiographical in it. There is nothing further from Lolo than my
son. He has so much empathy for others. He always looks at the
smallest kid in the classroom and goes and protects him. He's like the
good kid. I'm very lucky and I intend to keep him that way.
(laughs) But, people change, you never know. I think Lolo
is like, there was this film in the 50s called The Bad Seed. [ed.
note: That film starred Patty McCormack as an angelic looking little
girl who was actually a psychopath.] I always thought of that film when
I was writing this. What did these people do wrong in The Bad Seed
to have a daughter that is so mischievous and evil? She kills the
cat. Really, really bad stuff.
They probably did
nothing wrong...
You never know 100% what you get as a parent. You
can do everything right and something comes off wrong. It's always a
question you ask yourself as a parent: Am I doing everything right? Is
telling a kid everyday that he's the greatest thing in the world really
the answer? Definitely putting down your children is bad. That's
definitely bad. That will never make someone happy, someone that
functions happily in life. But is putting people on a pedestal – to the
point of turning them into people that do not understand that they are
not the greatest thing in the universe – is that good or bad? I don't
know. Even myself, I wonder. The way I was raised, my parents always
took my side. It was an extreme. Then I realized, oh, I had to face
many things from being an only child and being very much loved by my
parents.
Your writing has
always had a strong humorous content, but this is probably the most
blatantly comic film you've written yet. Were you looking to do more of
a broad farce with this film?
Yeah, I really wanted a broad farce. That's what I
was going for. The film did really well in France, so I'm happy that's
what I did. Very happy I did that, because I had never really done it.
My films always have this indie vibe, especially in the way it is
filmed. In this film, it's not a complete mainstream movie because it
goes a little bit too far, sometimes, you know? Visually I tricked
people into watching a film that's pretty and glossy and everything is
shiny and colorful. And the camera doesn't move too much, it doesn't
make you sick. Yet, the content of it is a little darker than the usual
broad mainstream comedy. It's a mix of both.
You
are both star and director. While on the set, what is it like to juggle
the two positions?
It's always going back and forth. It's sometimes
quite exhausting. But the truth and secret is a lot of very good,
thorough preparation. As a director, with the crew, with as many people
as you can, with the first AD [assistant director], have a perfect shot
list, everything is pre-planned. Everything is thought in advance.
Every prop is pre-picked. Everything is picked in advance for every
scene. And also you know your lines in advance as an actress. So, it's
to be very prepared.
You have been doing
more and more directing over the years. I believe in recent years the
only role you have done simply as an actress is
Avengers - Age of
Ultron. At this point is your writing and directing more vital to
you than your acting?
Last year I did a Todd [Welcome to the Dollhouse,
Happiness] Solondz film [called Weiner-Dog] that was in
Sundance and that is coming up. So, I did work with other people. I
love working with other people, if it is the right people. I find it a
lot of fun and in a way, very relaxing.
Dany is such a
terrific comic actor. Did you plan the role for him? Was it tough to
keep a straight face working up against him?
He is indeed a fantastic actor. He's a great guy to
work with. A real sweetheart, and a really good comedian. Really fun
to be around. I wrote it with him in mind. I'm lucky that he agreed to
do it. 90% of the time, he doesn't do films [for others]. He mostly
does his own films. So I was very lucky he agreed to do my film.
I really had enjoyed
Vincent in
Hippocrates as
well. How did he get involved and what was he like to work with?
I worked with him on Le Skylab. He played
one of the cousins. He is a fantastic actor. I was really, really
impressed. He was 16, he turned 17 on Skylab, and I was
impressed by how professional he was. How serious and focused he was
for his age. Really a guy that cares about movies, cares about his
craft. It's really great to work with people like that. It's funny,
because even though I make comedy [and] it all seems crazy and playful,
I really like people who are very serious about their work. I take my
work seriously, even if I make comedies. I like to really work hard and
do the best I can.
Karin
Viard was also in
Skylab, what do
you feel she added to everything? She had a smaller role, but it was a
very important one.
I told her when I was writing, "It's not going to be
the lead, because I can't have too much going on at all times. But it's
going to be a very, very noticeable role. It's not going to be
something you're going to forget. It's not the kind of part where you
have ten scenes but no one remembers you." (laughs) She has
like eight scenes, but you remember each of them. My dad [French actor
Albert Delpy] always says, "You gave her the best lines. You didn't
give it to yourself. You gave it to Karin." I accept that. I wanted
the really fun, fun friend, a very memorable supporting role. When she
read it, she was like, "Great! It's so much fun. I'm very excited to
do it."
I was hearing that
you are working on a streaming series called
On the Verge. I know it's in the really early
phases, but what can we expect from that?
You know, I hope something and maybe nothing. It
depends. Streaming and stuff, they make decisions, and I have very
little to do with the decisions they make. If they like it, they'll go
for it. If they don't, they don't.
What else do you have
coming up?
I wrote a drama that I will be directing, I think in
the UK, called Zoe. That's my next film. I also have a film
called A Dazzling Display of Splendor, which is a very, very fun
epic about actors and moviemaking. It's really, really sweet and
fun and family and funny. I'm hoping to make [it] right after Zoe.
I have to tell you
that I think that the
Before Sunrise series is one of the most important film series in
history. Obviously, you've been working on and off on that series for
over 20 years now.
Actually for 23 years.
Looking
back, what has it been like to be part of such a groundbreaking and
beloved group of films?
You know, I put so much of my romantic ideals in the
first film. It's a weird thing, because when you write something, they
take it away from you, in a way. It changed me as an individual, as a
romantic person. I put all my sweet romantic young woman ideas in that
first film. Then the second film, I put more of my young romantic ideas
in. The third film, it was a little more bitter and sad. It's an
interesting evolution. It's a very personal film for Ethan [Hawke] and
I, and Richard [Linklater]. Ethan and I are really growing with the
characters. The films are almost, I think, more personal to Ethan and I
than anyone else. And Richard, obviously.
Did you ever have any
idea they'd catch on like they did?
It's been an interesting journey. Not always easy,
because sometimes when you write things down, you take them away from
you, in a way. It becomes everyone's. The idea of writing is weird.
You share with people, and at the same time, it's not yours anymore. A
lot of my romantic ideas went into the first film and maybe took away
from my romanticism. (laughs) I wasn't credited [as a
screenwriter] on the first film, so it was hard to take in the fact that
all those very romantic moods and stuff came from me, but no one knows
they did.
But you did get the
credit as a writer for the second and third films.
Yeah, afterwards. Thank God. Thank God.
Since you have worked
so closely with Richard and Ethan over the years, how exciting was it to
see how well
Boyhood did last
year?
Oh, that was great. That was great. What a
beautiful film. I was very happy for Richard and Ethan. And Patricia [Arquette],
who I love.
When I last talked to
you,
Before Sunset was just coming out and you told me that you didn't
think it was likely that a third film would be made in the series.
Obviously that did happen, and we are way too early to be thinking of a
fourth film, but do you think it is possible we will check in again with
Celine and Jesse around 2022?
The truth is, I have no idea. I really have no
idea. I really don't know if we'll do another one. I have no idea.
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