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How does Boxing Helena look to you now?
Precious. I’m glad I was able to make it when I made it. You know, everybody in it worked really hard, and really believed in me. If I made it today, it would be a different film. At the time, I thought it was this little film that was going to be maybe seen by three people, and two of them would like it. Now enough time has passed that I can forget about the criticisms and just enjoy the performances. I remember hearing it described as a horror movie, and I guess I feel sad that nobody saw it as the awful comedy that it is, about a sort of flaccid Prince Charming. I had been through enough dysfunctional relationships to know that you steal from each other when you shouldn’t be together, and that’s what it was about.

Surveillance is interesting as the work of a mother, because the little girl is practically the only sympathetic character. The whole message seems to be, “Listen to her,” and nobody does.
I got a lot of that from my daughter. And I was reminded, from my own childhood, of the way we tend to negate the wisdom of children, and the clarity that they have. They’re not distracted by the thoughts we have: “Did I get the job?” “Did he like me?” Blah, blah, blah. And I wanted to use that in a story.

You know, there were a few months there where my own daughter was mad that I wouldn’t let her play the part. But until I met Ryan and her mother, I didn’t think it was possible to be a child actor and still be healthy. Now I’ll admit I’m reconsidering that.

Is your daughter interested in filmmaking?
She is. She’s an amazing photographer. In fact, she just made more money than I did last month, selling a photo.[laughs] I don’t know what she’ll do with her life, but I just want her to be as happy in her work as I am in what I’m doing now.

Has she seen the movie?
Oh, yeah! She saw it with me at Cannes. In fact, I actually got a lot of flak for that; she’s the youngest person ever to see an R-rated movie at Cannes. But she was there every day during the shoot, she was there every day of the editing; she knows what’s real and what’s not real. And she knows who her mother is. When I was told that I would never walk again, I promised her that someday I’d walk to the end of the driveway. And here I got to walk the red carpet with her at Cannes. That’s what that was about for us.

The performances in Surveillance are really surprising. You mentioned that your cast on Boxing Helena was really up for working hard and trusting in you; was that the case here? You’ve got people here like Bill Pullman and Julia Ormond who really take chances. You’ve got them doing stuff that they haven’t done before.
And isn’t that the joy of it? The great thing about good actors is that they really want to try different things. In a certain way, they’re a lot better at being other people than they are at being themselves. In that way, they can be all of us. They feel good going home at night knowing they’ve done something that they might otherwise never have done. So Bill and Julia and French and Cheri Oteri and Pell James — all of them, I asked them to fulfill parts of themselves that they never would have, except in this make-believe world.

Now, your father is one of the most important directors in the country…
You mean people have heard of him?

Yes, I am boring you by telling you something you already know. But people can be so funny about their influences — I recently saw Moon, which was directed by Duncan Jones, who’s David Bowie’s son. And the press kit is kind of funny, because in it, he talks about wanting to pay homage to all the great sci-fi films of the 1970s, and he names just about every one of them you could think of except for The Man Who Fell to Earth
You know, I can remember when I was teased for being his daughter. Growing up, I lived in a garage with him before it was hip to be his daughter. So I learned early on that it doesn’t matter what people think. I have always maintained that I am proud of my father. I try to look at his work and my work independently of each other, but there has never been a moment in life when I wanted to deny the influence of my father, whether it’s visual or spiritual or just the example of taking joy in what you’re doing.

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Comments ( 3 )

I fucking loved The Secret Diary of Laura Palmer. It was a great read.

Jessica commented on Jun 25 09 at 8:02 am

u look nice

galabuzi commented on Jun 25 09 at 11:50 am

The film is amazingly well done and features an outstanding performance by Ormond and Pullman. I highly suggest it to anyone wanting a break from the dreck being crapped out of risk fearing big studios right now.

David commented on Jun 27 09 at 7:12 pm

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