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Moje własne Idaho

My Own Private Idaho
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Moje własne Idaho
powrót do forum filmu Moje własne Idaho

niestety po angielsku i strasznie długi, jeśli komus sie chce to zachęcam do przeczytania

Keanu Reeves / River Phoenix

By Gini Sikes and Paige Powell (Interview, November 1991, USA)

Gini Sikes - Keanu, you've said you accepted a part in Idaho first, hoping River would do the film too.

Keanu Reeves - No. We were always together.

River Phoenix - He was lying. We were doing I Love You to Death, and we both got the Idaho script. We were driving in a car on Santa Monica Boulevard, probably on the way to a club, and were talking really fast about the whole idea. We were excited. It could have been like bad dream -- a dream that never follows through because no one commits, but we just forced ourselves into it. We said, "O.K., I'll do it if you do it. I won't do it if you don't." We shook hands. That was it.

Paige Powell - River, what were the challenges you faced portraying a character who suffers from narcolepsy? When I first saw your narcoleptic attacks on film, for one tenth second they could have been perceived as comic. Then they seemed painful. It's clear that they come out of nowhere. How'd you know how to do that?

River Phoenix - Mainly from Gus' descriptions of what Jake would do. Jake was a narcoleptic in Portland who worked with me [on this aspect of the part]. I spent a lot of time talking to him about why narcolepsy happens. I understood it completely from the medical and scientific standpoint, though they don't know exactly what it is. But when I was with Jake he never had a narcoleptic attack in front of me. After I'd done a few of the fits, Gus said they were exactly the way Jake had them.

Keanu Reeves - Do you think this film will cause narcolepsy? I mean, should parents watch out for their children?

River Phoenix - I would definitely stress that viewers should all be very aware of the catching nature of narcolepsy.

Keanu Reeves - should viewers wear special glasses?

River Phoenix - It's like the eclipse. If you look at it too ling, you might get it.

Paige Powell - While we're on the subject of research, did the two of you hang out with the street kids in Portland?

River Phoenix - Totally.

Keanu Reeves - Yeah, a little bit.

Gini Sikes - Were there ever times that you felt that asking street hustlers for information was somehow exploiting them?

River Phoenix - I think they were flattered that their story would be told.

Keanu Reeves - No, man. I don't feel that this story is a contemporary tale of the street. It's not current in the places or the language. The only way this story is contemporary is in a larger sense, in its emotions and perhaps what goes on inside of some people…

Paige Powell - Aren't emotions timeless?

Keanu Reeves - Exactly. But I'm talking about how they're manifested in language, or, you know, in anything that people are doing. I'm just saying this film is not representative of the street scene in Portland.

River Phoenix - That's very true. If a kid from Portland saw this movie, he wouldn't think it was Portland street life. But it's our responsibility to go as deep as we can and to explore all the directions that might even be suggested in a script. Just so we have all the bases covered. Our research was extracurricular, it wasn't necessarily needed.

Gini Sikes - Describe how you went about researching the lifestyle of street hustlers.

River Phoenix - I entered it through friends of Gus' who were already on the street, Scott and Gary. Gary died in a car wreck recently, from what I heard ; God bless his soul. Being anonymous also helped us, I think.

Gini Sikes - They had no idea you two were actors researching a role?

River Phoenix - No, no. It was all in character. We were just hangin'. If anything, they thought, this is another cat who's trying to take my spot on the street. There was maybe a little curiosity but never any animosity or jealousy. Because it's a brotherhood on the street, man. You all watch for each other's backs. Because no one wants to see anyone get stabbed.

Gini Sikes - So nothing was set up?

River Phoenix - Some street kids came over to Gus' house and we met different people at different places. It was staged in that sense. But the actual street stuff was just us working on our own time. Like guerillas. [laughs] It was very sensational for us. I thought our main problem was to find out if we could be the real guys. Gus' choice was to use real street guys or us, so Keanu and I felt a great burden. We wanted to believe in this script and work out the problems.

Gini Sikes - Both of you are very popular among adolescents. In particular, teenagers seem to relate to you, Keanu, because of your Bill and Ted persona. Was there any concern in your camp, from, say, your agent or manager, that playing a male prostitute would hurt you "image"?

Keanu Reeves - Hurt my image? Who am I -- a politician? [laughs softly] No. I'm an actor. That wasn't a problem. But shooting was a very intense experience. I had just finished Point Break and was still into my character. I felt a bit of anxiety about Idaho. I was overwhelmed at what I had to do -- it was a little like, Oh no! Can I do this? I was afraid. But Gus and River made me fit in. Said, Let's do one bitchin' movie. I don't know about you, River, man -- but I was introduced to so many elements through the guy I was playing. Real people. My imagination. Gus' interpretation. Shakespeare. It was rich! And it was just bottomless, man. You could go as far as you could go, you know?

Gini Sikes - I remember reading an interview with Robert Downey, Jr. after Less Than Zero, where he said he was afraid people would harass him because of his character. Has anyone reacted strongly to your roles?

River Phoenix - Fuck them. That's all I can say. A big capital F and a U-C-K and then THEM. T-H-E-M.

Keanu Reeves - Get a clue, man.

Gini Sikes - So you haven't had any negative --

River Phoenix - No. I get negative shit all the time. I don't care.

Paige Powell - Do you think anyone would have taken this script ten years ago?

River Phoenix - Porno stars maybe. Like maybe one of Warhol's crowd.

Paige Powell - Joe Dallesandro?

River Phoenix - Possibly one of those cats.

Gini Sikes - One of your co-stars is a Warhol actor -- Udo Kier from Dracula and Frankenstein. Which brings me to a prurient question…

Keanu Reeves - It's your job!

Gini Sikes - How comfortable were you guys filming your three-way sex scene with Udo?

River Phoenix - Well, I really didn't help matters. While we were doing our scene I said, "Just think, Keanu. Five hundred million of your fans will be watching this one day." Like a stupid idiot. I made him feel completely self-conscious. But Keanu rose above it. Gus scolded me endlessly the night after.

Keanu Reeves - Did he really?

River Phoenix - Yeah. He scolded the shit out of me. I almost cried. That was terrible of me. I was just trying to break the ice. You know I thought it was humorous -- I was trying to save Keanu from being freeze-framed by twelve-year-olds at home!

Keanu Reeves - Thanks, brother.

River Phoenix - Later on Keanu was filmed naked with the beautiful Chiara [Caselli, who plays Scott's Italian girlfriend Carmella]. That scene was really a drag. He was having a great time with this girl, but it was freezing cold and they were dying. So I think they were more worried about the temperature than the nudity. That took five hours.

Gini Sikes - The scene with Udo must have been easier simply because you two were already good friends. How did you meet?

River Phoenix - Actually I met Keanu through my ex-girlfriend Martha [Plimpton] while they were doing Parenthood -- they were sucking face regularly. My brother Wakim, otherwise known as Leaf, was also in it. So Leaf and Martha were his buddies before I was even a friend of his. Then I met up with him on I Love You to Death. And I liked the guy. I wanted to work with him. He's like my older brother. But shorter.

Paige Powell - Keanu, Scott is a rich kid who wallows in the gutter to rebel against his father who's the mayor of Portland. Gus based Scott on Prince Hal in Shakespeare's Henry IV plays…

Keanu Reeves - Yeah, but in the Shakespeare world Prince Hal turned out to be a good king. To avoid internal strife he gets into these wars. All the dukes and lords were pretty happy because men were going off to die for a noble cause and people were being fed. But in Idaho, Scott is not connected to the people. He's got his own agenda. He just dogs everybody and goes his own way. So he doesn't have, like, the noble aspect. In the end his father was very compassionate and concerned. Perhaps that's what makes it a modern tale.

Gini Sikes - Were you concerned at all that Mike speaks in street vernacular throughout the film whereas Scott goes in and out of Shakespearean verse? Did you think your switch in speech might seem jarring, Keanu?

Keanu Reeves - The Shakespeare stuff was an aspect of the script. Gus said it was something to do and to think about it. So that was my game. I wasn't worried. It just seemed challenging and interesting to me.

River Phoenix - I was afraid of it not working.

Keanu Reeves - For me?

River Phoenix - No, for the entire film. I felt we needed to be very clear on how we set up the transitional scenes between the mock Shakespeare stuff and the docudrama street stuff. There needed to be stepping stones to those scenes -- so it wouldn't be like jumping from black and white to Technicolor. It was important to organize our thoughts and to support Gus stylistically.

Keanu Reeves - I wasn't aware of all the different styles going on in the film initially, though. You were looking through the camera a lot more than me.

River Phoenix - It was more of my duty in the character of Mike to be concerned with the directorial perspective. I was aware of how my narcolepsy would affect the narrative, how the random narcolepsy fits would affect the viewer. I'm glad that it didn't turn out to be a tale through my narcoleptic vision. But it was something I had to take full responsibility for and it made me ask all these questions. Even when I wasn't involved with the scene, I had to be aware of it to some degree so that I could make myself match up to everything.

Paige Powell - The thing I like so much about Gus and his work is his compassion. Mala Noche just ripped my heart out. In My Own Private Idaho, he's dealing with the search for home and family. Was that theme important to you in deciding to do this film?

Keanu Reeves - Oh, not for me.

River Phoenix - I have really strong feelings about the search for home and mother. I thought it was very, very touching. You just knew that someone who could come up with this premise would have something to back it with in terms of knowledge and experience. Which Gus has.

Paige Powell - What was it like working with Gus as a person -- living in his house, on location, and so on?

River Phoenix - Gus just has those qualities that we all need to get back. Open eyes, open ears, a kid's stream of consciousness. You know the things kids do -- like putting their fingers up strange pipings in the house or acting all soft because they've screwed up and Mom's mad at them. That's Gus just being a kid. He was very collaborative, completely wide open. It was like a family operation -- co-op style.

Gini Sikes - How did you two manage on the set?

River Phoenix - Every morning Matt [Ebert, production assistant] woke us up by singing show tunes. He'd drag us by our ears down to the van.

Keanu Reeves - No, man. I was always there, prompt and ready.

River Phoenix - But he had to drag me by the ear down to the van. I'm very stubborn about getting up in the morning.

Keanu Reeves - Yeah, man. But I knew that Matt would grab me by the ear too, so I'd just hang out.

River Phoenix - Yeah. Keanu would wait downstairs with his script in hand, ready to get in the van and I would be upstairs fumbling for my clothes, although I usually sleep with my clothes on.

Paige Powell - Gus was pretty spontaneous about what scene you shot each day, wasn't he?

River Phoenix - I have no clue. I don't know when he fuckin' decided to shoot what or where or when or why, man.

Paige Powell - Well, when you woke in the morning, didn't you know what scene you were going to shoot?

Keanu Reeves - Generally, yeah. I'm sure that was other people telling Gus, "You need to know what you're going to do tomorrow." I don't know if that was necessarily his personal impetus, but I think the machine was asking him what we were going to do so that we could be ready.

Paige Powell - The movie starts in Portland, moves to Idaho, then to Italy. While filming sequentially, did anything develop that you couldn't anticipate at the beginning?

River Phoenix - The campfire scene was definitely a combination of Keanu and me working together off-set, fucking around with improv, talking about our characters. Getting deeper into it, we discovered a lot about our relationship within the film and by the time we were ready to shoot the last scene in the States, we had enough insight to go a hell of a lot deeper than the script ever told us it would.

Gini Sikes - That's the scene where Mike tells Scott that he loves him.

River Phoenix - There was a lot of deep love [in the film]. You don't know until you see the dailies whether it comes across or not. But because we shot in sequence, we were watching the film unfold before us and when that scene came around we could just like ad-lib it.

Paige Powell - That campfire scene is very similar to the one you did in Stand By Me --

River Phoenix - The confession scene. It's also similar to a scene in Running on Empty. Gus did see both movies, so maybe he sampled them.

Paige Powell - When I visited the set in Italy, I noticed that you were both always sweet. You'd have gone without sleep and be really tired, yet were always considerate to the hotel clerks, limo drivers. Everyone.

River Phoenix - Oh yeah. We're great guys. We really are wonderful people. I think Keanu and I are the nicest guys on the planet -- with the exception of George Bush and Ronald Reagan.

Keanu Reeves - They are the sweetest guys! They're good on their clan. We should say thank you now that we have the opportunity. "Thanks, guys!"

River Phoenix - [laughs] I'm sorry. You gave us a compliment.

Paige Powell - O.K. But it's true -- you did seem to demonstrate a genuine consideration for anyone you worked with on the set.

River Phoenix - But, seriously, we know what it's like to be on the bottom. The Lord Jesus Christ has given us a chance to be on top. So we're not going to abuse it. We're going to be very thankful for it and gracious about the luck that we have in our positions. We're very lucky young men. We do what we want, we get to be creative and make money.

Keanu Reeves - Right on, brother. Right on.

Gini Sikes - So what else are you guys doing now?

River Phoenix - I want to buy a 16mm camera. I'm not committed to the idea of being a filmmaker, but I'd like to try some shorts. I really like documentaries. And I want to drive through the mountains where I used to live when I was doing this TV series [Seven Brides for Seven Brothers] when I was twelve. I'm going with my girlfriend.

Keanu Reeves - Every moment is precious. I'm trying to travel. I want to go to Paris. It's probably just a pipe dream. I'd like to read some books. Take some voice lessons.

Gini Sikes - To do more Shakespeare, perhaps?

Keanu Reeves - Um, who knows? I really would like to do Shakespeare with River. I think we'd have a hoot. We could do A Midsummer Night's Dream or Romeo and Juliet.

River Phoenix - I'll be Juliet.

ocenił(a) film na 10
Aliciaa

no no troche sie naczytałam i nie obyło się bez słownika;) ale warto było, naprawde super wywiad, wielkie dzięki że go tu umiesciłaś, tak sie składa że niedawno odświeżyłam sobie "Moje własne Idaho" i ciągle jestem pod wrażeniem tego filmu...River Phoenix pokazał klasę, jak przeczytałam ten wywiad, zwłaszcza końcówke to łezka mi sie w oku zakręciła...

pozdrawiam & raz jeszcze big thanks

Aliciaa

Kurcze, szkoda, że nie znam na tyle angielskiego, zeby coś z tego zrozumieć :(

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