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Actress, Director Mlanie Laurent Is The Kind Of Female Filmmaker We Need More Of

Published by Huffington Post on Tue, 22 Sep 2015


Mlanie Laurent has been acting in France since she was 14 years old, but most people recognize her best as Shosanna, the Jewish woman who runs, and burns down, a Paris movie theater in "Inglourious Basterds." The French actress is also well known for her roles in "Beginners," "Enemy" and "Now You See Me."But Laurent has also been spending time behind the camera, most recently with her second directorial feature, "Breathe"("Respire").Based on the French novel of the same name by Anne-Sophie Brasme, "Breathe" follows Charlie (Josphine Japy), a high school teen who gets wrapped up in a dangerous relationship with the rebellious new girl, Sarah (Lou de Lage).Think "Blue Is the Warmest Color," without a focus on sexuality and overly saturated sex, filmed from a female perspective.That's precisely what distinguishes "Breathe" from many movies about young women. In every moment, it's apparent that a woman was behind the lens and script. Laurent's film captures the powerful connection between two women -- at times perilously reliant upon each other, at other times entwined in a relationship both wonderful and rewarding -- and how easily friendly love can brew into intoxicating obsession.The Huffington Post sat down with Laurent in New York to talk about "Breathe," the mission of female filmmakers, how much she didn't like the sex scenes in "Blue Is the Warmest Color," and working with Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt in "By the Sea."This is the first feature youve directed and didn't act in. What was that transition like'Lovely. I enjoyed [it] so much. I was in my first one, but I didnt want to be in the first one, then I had to. [...] But for this one, I enjoyed [taking] a step back, and I enjoyed taking care of my actors.How has acting informed how you direct'I think we are talking the same language, so its obviously easier. I think the big problem is when youre just an actor you dont understand all the challenges of a director. And its the same the other way. We dont have the same priorities, the same fears. Its funny, when my two actresses arrived in the morning on set, I think, "OK, I know exactly what you think. Youre afraid of that line, youre afraid of that scene. You dont know how to play that, and its fine, its going to be fine." So it was easier. And I love directing people, but Im directing them as I wish people can direct me. [...] I remember on Inglourious Basterds I was doing the scene with Daniel Brhl and Quentin [Tarantino] arrived and in my ears just said, "What if youre mocking him'" And I was like, [gasp] "OK!" It changed the whole scene.Did you give the same kind of suggestions to your actresses in this film'Well, its hard because [Quentin] is a genius. But Im trying to be super precise and give them a lot of things. Then at the last moment Im saying, "Forget everything I said. Just do it in your way." For example, I really dont care if they dont say any dialogue. I dont care about my dialogue. Im just like, I wrote that, the idea of the scene, then you can just do everything. I love when theyre free. I trust actors because Im sure they have a vision of your movie.How much of the novel did you change in your adaptation'I read it when I was 17. [Brasme] was 17 [when she wrote it]. I called her and she said, "Oh please, please do the movie because we are the same age and we are on the same page. The directors I met want to make a sexual story of that and want to do something really far away from what I wrote." But I was 17, so I was too young. I was kind of like a baby, so I didnt find any producers. And thank god, because I needed that time, I needed that distance. I needed to make short movies to be able to film [this]. Then when I wrote the script, I didnt read the book again. I wrote the script with the memories I had of my experience when I was 17. So I changed everything, kind of.What was that like, to be 17 and want to make it, but revisit it now'Well, that was my biggest fear. When I was 17 we didnt have any cell phones, we didnt have Facebook, Instagram and all that craziness. So thats very different. Ive met a lot of Sarahs, and I was really, definitely Charlie during years. But I just kept that tension.What do you think is the benefit of making this as a female filmmaker versus how a male director might have done it'I think the men might have filmed maybe more kisses. [Laughs.] I dont know, because honestly every time Ive made a movie with, for example, Mike Mills or Tarantino, two directors who love women so much so they give us so much freedom and really amazing female parts. But when I see a woman film another woman, I feel the difference. Especially in movies with really sexual stories. I dont know if youve seen Catherine Corsinis "La Belle Saison"("Summertime"). Its a French one. Shes gay, the director, and when she films sexual moments, its exciting. We dont really see anything, but you just feel it. When I see "La vie d'Adle" ("Blue Is the Warmest Color"), that long shot of sexual, just sex and sex and sex for like 20 minutes, I feel bad for them. I dont feel its exciting. I loved the movie, but I didnt like that part. I just made a movie with Angelina Jolie, and I have a lot of sex scenes and I was terrified. When I saw what she did, I was like, "OK, shes a female. She loves females." She just chose beautiful shots and shes a female who filmed a female with lots of love and respect. There is no fantasy. Obviously, [men and women] dont have the same vision of what is sexy. I think for us being sexy [is] just wearing a t-shirt and being sexy because youre clever and you have no make-up and you smoke a cigarette. Maybe a guy will ask you to be like this, maybe more legs, maybe more body, when we dont really need that to be sexy. [...] But then theres so many amazing directors who know exactly -- I think about a lot of French directors -- Truffaut, Godard.But its the mystery of the woman, you know -- trench coats, cigarettes. But that would be so interesting if a woman made those films, just to see.Working with Angelina Jolie, did you learn anything from her as a director'Yeah, we talked about that a lot. That was so cool, to be able to say, Hows the editing room' We know exactly what that means. Even on set, she was like, This is the frame, and you know what I mean when I say that.What do you think the film industry needs more of with regards to female filmmakers, and how do you want to change that with your work'Maybe here [in America], but in France we have a lot of power. So I dont feel that specifically, but I realize there [are] very, very few female directors here. I dont know why here. But in France I know if you have a good script, its not because youre a female that you cannot make your movie. We have the same problem with salary, for sure. And sometimes Im a little bit mad when I see female directors filming women in a very vulgar way, talking about bullshit, like problems we dont have or something so unreal. Or the worse could be filming the women like they are men. I hate that. Its so important. You have a mission here. You have a mission to do something different, take a step back from the cliche. As a female director I love women. Im kind of obsessed with my actors, I love them so much. Im just like, the more theyre beautiful, more theyre clever, more I want to feel them, more I want to respect them. Its weird to be a female [who would want to] film women not in a beautiful way. I think its strange.This interview has been editing and condensed for clarity."Breathe" is now playing.Also on HuffPost:For a constant stream of entertainment news and discussion, follow HuffPost Entertainment on Viber. -- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.
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