25 NEW FACES OF INDEPENDENT FILM
Filmmaker's annual survey of new talent. Page 1 of 5

IAN OLDS. PHOTO BY RICHARD KOEK.
Ian Olds
We put
director Garrett Scott on our "New Faces" list in 2002 following his
accomplished short documentary Cul de Sac: A Suburban War Story. Ian Olds edited that film and
would later partner with Scott to direct the 2005 feature documentary Occupation:
Dreamland.
That feature won the Truer than Fiction Spirit Award, and just a day before the
ceremony, Scott died suddenly of a heart attack. At the Spirits, a shaken Olds
accepted the award for the film.
"After
Garrett died I really thought I would no longer make documentaries," says Olds.
"The thought of starting a new documentary project without him seemed too
painful and too fraught with the history of our working relationship to
contemplate. Working with Garrett on those projects is where I really learned
how to pay attention to the world. Garrett was a compassionate man with an
incredibly sharp mind, and his emphasis on approaching the world with a cold
eye and a warm heart is something I've tried to embrace in my own work."
After
going to Sundance with a fiction short, Bomb, in 2007, Olds decided to explore
documentary again "as an experiment." His film Fixer: The Taking of Ajmal
Naqshbandi,
which previewed at Rotterdam, premiered at Tribeca, and was bought by HBO, was
set to be a doc about "the mechanics of war journalism," but when Olds's
interpreter, Naqshbandi, was kidnapped and murdered by the Taliban midway
through shooting, the project took on a new urgency. "Telling Ajmal's story
became an obligation, and I was forced to simply rely on whatever sensitivity I
have as a human being and a filmmaker to tell it with the complexity it
deserved. During months of editing alone and trying to walk the line between
staying close to the personal story of Ajmal while evoking the web of history
and power that came to bear in his murder, it became clear to me that this film
was in many ways a continuation of the work Garrett and I had done together."
Citing
the industry trend of trying to "suck every last ounce of drama out of the
image" when shooting in war-torn territories like Iraq and Afghanistan, Olds
says it's important for him to slow things down so he can "recognize the human
beings caught in the middle." He'll try to do the reverse in upcoming fiction
work, hoping "to invest what's inside the frame with a kind of raw,
unconstrained life." Olds says he's now focused on a thriller set in an expat
community in Guatemala as well as a new script set in Northern California. —
Scott Macaulay
Contact:
Craig Kestel at William Morris Endeavor Entertainment: (310) 285-9000

ELEANOR BURKE AND RON EYAL. PHOTO BY CHRIS OWYOUNG.
Eleanor Burke & Ron Eyal
"At some point in her life my grandmother was a bit of a
wanderer," explains New York City-based but U.K.-born Eleanor Burke. "She was
attracted to the beach and the seaside, and she was itinerant at different
times of her life." Says Burke's partner, Ron Eyal, "We thought about that idea
and then imagined Adeel [Akhtar] in that role [of the wanderer]." With Akhtar,
another lead actor, Bridget Collins, and a small house belonging to a family
friend near Hastings, U.K., Burke and Eyal riff on the themes of homelessness,
loss and human vulnerability in their delicately beautiful debut feature, Stranger
Things, currently in postproduction.
Stranger
Things
tells the simple story of a vagrant, played by Akhtar, who breaks into the home
of a young woman's (Collins) recently deceased grandmother. Of course, a
friendship follows, but Stranger Things' best qualities can't be captured
in a plot synopsis. It's a small-scale story sensitively attuned to its fine
actors as well as broader themes of responsibility, loss and community.
Burke and
Eyal, who are engaged, met at NYU Film School in 2003. "We've worked on a lot
of projects together," Burke says, "like documentary things I shot and Ron's
directed. This was the first time we co-directed something, but we were always
on the same page." "Before we shot," continues Eyal, "we got advice from the
faculty at NYU, who all said we should split it up," with one director handling
actors and the other overseeing the camera. "Eleanor's background is as a d.p.,
and we knew we wanted her to shoot it, but really quickly we learned that
things didn't have to be that strictly divided. We both worked with the actors
and I was involved with setting up shots. It was very fluid."
The
couple worked at a homeless shelter in England while preparing the film. "There
were people who were very vulnerable and who were in poor mental health and
then there were recent immigrants who didn't have a place to go," says Burke. "We
would prepare meals for them and just sit and talk." "It's stuff you just take
for granted, like people enjoy eye contact and don't always get it from people,"
adds Eyal.
Burke and
Eyal say they have other films to do together, but first they've got to finish Stranger
Things,
which recently completed the IFP's Rough Cut Lab. "We both like to tell stories
about people on a very human level," says Burke. "We were hoping to make
something that would deal with real emotions and real moments." Concludes Eyal,
"It's kind of a tiny drama but we hope it can connect with people." —
S.M.
Contact: info@strangerthingsfilm.com;
strangerthingsfilm.com

NAT SANDERS. PHOTO BY KITAO SAKURAI.
Nat Sanders
When
editor Nat Sanders attended the Independent Spirit Awards in
February, he shared a table with his two most recent collaborators, Medicine
for Melancholy director Barry Jenkins and Lynn Shelton, director of Humpday — who
happened to be competing against each other that night for the Acura Someone to
Watch Award. (Shelton won, for her second feature, My Effortless Brilliance.) Sanders was
happy to be the common link between the two nominees. "These two films have
actually been a perfect microcosm of how I'd love the rest of my career to play
out," Sanders writes from the Sundance Directors' Lab, where he's working with
25 New Faces alums Benh Zeitlin and Andrew Okpeaha MacLean. "We alternate
between helping to bring more traditional auteur-driven narrative films to
fruition, and to also tell stories in this very spontaneous, collaborative way
where the editing is incredibly crucial."
Years
after meeting Jenkins at Florida State, Sanders quit his reality-TV editing job
and moved to San Francisco to start cutting Melancholy concurrent with production so
that the film could be ready for the 2008 SXSW submission deadline. At SXSW
Sanders met Shelton, who was gearing up to shoot Humpday in her hometown of Seattle.
Sanders again quit a job and relocated, cutting as Shelton shot, partially to
make the Sundance submission deadline but also to facilitate Shelton's process
of working with actors without a script.
"Medicine was a much more traditional
narrative editing job," Sanders writes. "The material was already very tight,
so a lot of the work was more subtle and craft-oriented. Humpday is packed full of
[improvisation], so it was far more about storytelling. Lynn's method of
shooting is incredibly gratifying for an editor. It almost combines documentary
aesthetics with narrative. There are so many different directions the film
could go in that in the end the editor really is one of the writers of the
film."
Sanders was keen on grounding Humpday's improvised
performances and camerawork with tight, invisible editing. "I felt from the
very beginning that this film had some potential broader appeal, and I was very
interested in cutting it almost like a Hollywood comedy. If you've already
captured that feeling of naturalism in the footage, it's going to be in the
finished product — you don't need to further emphasize it in the editing
in a way that might alienate viewers with less patience."
Sanders
is currently cutting The Freebie, the directorial debut of Kathryn Aselton, co-star of
The Puffy Chair and wife of Humpday star Mark Duplass. Another feature shot sans
screenplay, the film stars Aselton and Dax Shepherd as a married couple who
agree to a mutual "one-night get-out-of-jail-free" card for infidelity. And
after that? "I guess I'm greedy, because I just want my friends and I to keep
making films on a bigger and bigger scale, with all the stories being
humanistic, meaningful and important and told in fresh and real ways." —
Karina Longworth
Rebecca
Fayyad at Sheldon Prosnit Agency: (310) 652-8778;
Rebecca@lspagency.net

JESSICA ORECK. PHOTO BY RICHARD KOEK.
Jessica Oreck
Jessica
Oreck works days in the American Museum of Natural History's live exhibitions
department, preparing gourmet meals for visiting sugar gliders and poison dart
frogs. There she witnesses firsthand the changing ways of how we interact with
science. Hand-painted dioramas gather dust while touch screens proliferate;
students study aspects of biology so minute that it's nearly impossible to
relate them to whole organisms, and it becomes harder and harder to grow up
feeling a real connection to the natural world.
Finding that
connection is made a bit easier by watching Beetle Queen Conquers Tokyo, Oreck's first feature, which
premiered this year at SXSW. Its subject is the historical and current
fascination for insects in Japanese culture, and it takes a "three-dimensional"
approach to the topic, mixing together beautiful images of the insects
themselves, individual stories of workers in various sectors of the insect
business, interviews with historians, b-roll of swarming crowds, all draped in
a Japanese voice-over that delves into science, poetry, folktales and pop
culture. "My main goal with anything I work on is to create a sense of wonder,"
says Oreck, and she succeeds.
Oreck's
path has been straight and clear ever since she saw David Attenborough's The
Private Life of Plants in a ninth-grade science class. The documentarian
Jean Painlev was also an influence, and until the recent Criterion release of
his 1930s underwater photography, Oreck had to import foreign-region DVDs from
France. But Oreck has never wanted to make traditional nature
documentaries, which tend to take an omniscient view of an environment, leaving
out all traces of human life. "People usually do nature films by geographical
section, or by type of animal," she says, "but what really interested me was
why — why these people were so interested in a part of the
natural world that the rest of the globe ignored or thought was disgusting."
She is planning her next feature, about the role of
mushrooms in Eastern European life and mythology, but can't shoot it until the
mushrooms come in the fall. But that's just one of a dozen projects. Others
include museum exhibitions of strange and esoteric living worlds, science-based
interstitial Web content, and episodic survival guides she films on
custom-built miniature sets that take place in a postapocalyptic landscape of
her creation. She says, "Almost all of them are about ethnobiology: how humans
relate to plants and other animals. I think people sometimes forget that humans
are animals." – Alicia Van Couvering
Contact: beetlequeen.com

D CIANFRANCEIMA. PHOTO BY DAVI RUSSO.
Derek Cianfrance
If you
don't believe the independent film business is a marathon, not a sprint, talk
to Derek Cianfrance. He's making our "25" list while in production on his
second feature, Blue Valentine — 11 years in the making.
A searing
drama that chronicles the lead-up and aftermath of a bitter divorce, Blue
Valentine
has, to observers in the New York City indie scene, almost seemed fated never
to shoot. "The best explanation is that it just wasn't ready," says Cianfrance.
"I wasn't ready, the cast wasn't ready, the money wasn't ready. But for those
11 years, I always thought I was going to be shooting the movie 'three months
from now.' After awhile you start feeling like a crazy person. Family and friends
start thinking you are delusional."
Cianfrance,
who directed a small, well-regarded first feature, Brother Tied in 1998, and has since
directed commercials as well as television documentaries for Radical Media,
says Blue Valentine derives from fears he had as a
child. "When I was a kid, I had two nightmares: nuclear war and that my parents
would get a divorce. I was 20 when they did divorce, and it caused me to
question things. What's the point of falling in love? What happens to love over
time? I needed to confront that thing I was so scared of when I was growing up.
And to not repeat the mistakes my parents made."
Despite the 11 years of feeling like a crazy person,
Cianfrance says it's good that it took so long. "My grandma always told me, 'You
can't force things to happen.' I have a wife and kids now, and I could never
have told a story about being married with a wife and kid [when I started]."
And fortunately, in the middle of production, Cianfrance isn't at all bored
with his material. "It feels alive!" he says. "It's surprising me; it's going
places I never thought it could go. And it's a dream working with [stars] Ryan
[Gosling] and [Michelle] Williams."
Next up
for Cianfrance is post ("I let the film be improvised a lot — we have
these incredible moments, but it's the script plus 70 percent. It's going to be
hard — I only have a 10-week director's cut") and also finishing another
project, a feature called Metalhead, about a heavy metal drummer with tinnitus. Shooting
bits and pieces "every two or three months," Cianfrance says, "that film should
be done in two more years. I'm good at these long films that take forever. I
guess I have patience." — S.M.
Contact:
Craig Gering at CAA: (424) 288-2000
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