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Exclusive: Filmmaker Alfonso Cuarón
![]() The movie stylings of Mexican filmmaker Alfonso Cuarón have ranged from the character-driven road movie Y Tu Mama Tambien to the high fantasy of Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, two movies that helped put the director on the map. Cuarón’s latest movie Children of Men ventures more into futuristic sci-fi territory, being based on P.D. James’ novel about a dystopian future where no one’s been able to have kids for nearly 18 years, creating turmoil and chaos worldwide. It stars Clive Owen as a British government official who finds himself working with the mysterious activist group called The Human Project to find a solution. ComingSoon.net talked to the director via the phone after he had spent a long day doing press for the film. ComingSoon.net: You started working on this movie some time ago, so what took you so long to finally make this movie? CS: Obviously, the world has changed a lot since you wrote the screenplay, maybe getting closer to the reality in the movie then when you started. The world has gotten a little more dangerous. CS: So then before the end of the year, you’re thinking? The movie’s look into the future is pretty amazing. Was a lot of that taken from the book? CS: In the book, does it ever explain why or how this thing happened? CS: So that was one of your own additions, including all the immigrant stuff? CS: We really only see England in this movie, though other places are mentioned. Are we to assume that the rest of the world is actually much worse? ![]() CS: Even though this takes place in the future, you’ve been trying to brush off the “sci-fi” label. To me, the movie had the feel of a Stanley Kubrick film, something that’s hard to put into words. Are you a fan of Kubrick? Cuarón: Ah, very much so. I’m a huge fan of Kubrick but who that is a filmmaker is not? For me, the important thing of Kubrick is not so much about speculating about the future, it’s about taking different premises as a point of departure to make conceptual explorations of humanity. I think that’s a big important thing of Kubrick is how the abstraction, based on very simple premises. CS: The dialogue in the movie is fairly minimal, at least compared to “Y Tu Mama Tambien,” yet you have a lot of writers on this. I assume some people started it, and then you worked on it with your writing partner, but was it deliberate to keep the dialogue so minimal? CS: So all those writers on the movie is a contractual thing? CS: What was it about Clive that made you think he could pull off some of the difficult things he has to do in the movie? There really are some tough scenes in this due to the long single shots you did. CS: Right, because there’s so much going around him and he’s very much like the viewer in that he’s seeing it all for the first time just as we are. Did he know when he signed on that you planned on doing these elaborate long shots? CS: You weren’t able to get a ménage a trois into this movie. I was kind of surprised. CS: There really are some amazing scenes in this like the tracking shot as Clive is going through the refugee camp and seeing all hell break loose. Are you able to do multiple takes of something like that or is that just setting it up and going for it? CS: I know there are limits to the amount of film you can have in hand-held cameras. ![]() CS: Did you have any sort of chance to rehearse or run-through those scenes before doing them? Cuarón: That’s the thing. The last scene in the movie, in the schedule say we have 14 days to do that scene. In the conventional way, from the first day, you’re shooting and doing inserts and doing little bits and pieces, and here, we hit Day 11 and we haven’t really rolled camera, and believe me, that creates a lot of tension and anxiety. CS: Especially having actors waiting around for things to be set-up. CS: At one point, the movie was going to come out in August or September but then it got moved. Did it need more work done at that point or was it just a positioning thing? CS: Now, it’s coming out mere days before Guillermo del Toro’s movie. CS: They’re very different, but I guess I can see some parallels between the three movies in terms of the way they look at the world. CS: So you’re okay with how so many lazy journalists have lumped the three movies together? CS: Are you going to try to schedule your next movies together, too? CS: Do you have something else lined-up that you’ve been wanting to do now that you’ve finished this? CS: Any plans of getting back together with Gael or Diego or some of the other actors from your previous films? CS: Will this be your brother’s first film as a director? ![]() CS: Has he been on your sets enough to know what’s involved with directing a feature and do you expect to offer him some tips? Cuarón: Well, I help in the sense of the creative collaboration that I have with other people, but this is pretty much his baby. CS: What’s going on with your distribution deal? Do you have any new movies coming out next year? CS: Are there any new things you’re producing that you’re excited about? CS: Because the last two movies you did were pretty expansive… CS: At one point, you were going to do a movie about the Mexican revolts in 1968. Is that something you’re still interested in doing? CS: Maybe do something a little cheerier or happier? Children of Men opens in limited release on Christmas Day. We can’t think of a nicer present to give someone. Show Comments Please enable JavaScript to view the comments powered by Disqus. 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