Atonement——Director Commentary

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@filmtrivia
Atonement——Director Commentary
Alfred Hitchcock tested the fear factor of Mother’s corpse by placing it in Janet Leigh’s dressing room and listening to how loud she screamed when she discovered it there.
Director F.W. Murnau found Max Schreck “strikingly ugly” in real life and decided the vampire makeup would suffice with just pointy ears and false teeth.
Director Dario Argento’s original idea was the ballet school would accommodate young girls not older 12. However the studio and producer (his father) denied his request because a film this violent involving children would be surely banned. Dario Argento raised the age limit of the girls to 20 but didn’t rewrite the script, hence the naivety of the characters and occasionally childlike dialogue. He also put all the doorknobs at about the same height as the actress’ heads, so they will have to raise their arms in order to open the doors, just like children.
Hell is a teenage girl.
The girls in these horror films could be a representation of the paranoid patriarchal fears of one of the most vulnerable groups in society, they could be a subversion of the age old tropes of teenage girls being the damsels in distress, the victims, the sexually objectified playthings for the male characters onscreen, they could be simply a representation of the metaphorical hell that teenage girls go through from bullying (Carrie) to puberty and menstrual cycles (Ginger Snaps), toxic friendships (The Craft, Jennifer’s Body), sexual frustration and angst, or they could be a way of taking revenge for the way teenage girls’ sexuality are turned against them in the way that Hard Candy, Teeth and All Cheerleaders Die explore the rape and revenge trope. If hell is a teenage girl, then society as a whole has made her that way.
(accompanying mix)
Johnny Depp accompanied his friend Jackie Earle Haley to auditions for the film. Instead of Haley being chosen for a role, it was Depp who was spotted by director Wes Craven, who asked him if he would like to read for a part. One of the main reasons Depp was chosen was because the producer’s daughter thought he was “dreamy.” It was his first film.
Sissy Spacek asked Brian De Palma how he wanted her to react when Carrie first realizes that she is bleeding in the showers at the start and De Palma told her “It’s like you’ve been hit by a truck.” Spacek talked to her husband Jack Fisk (art director), who as a child had been run over by a car when he was standing in the streets looking at Christmas lights a neighbor had put up, and used his description of the experience as a basis for the scene.
To keep Drew Barrymore looking scared and crying, director Wes Craven kept telling her real life stories about animal cruelty. She is a keen animal lover in real life.
In the wedding scene, Lydia’s dress is a bright red. According to the old rhyme about wedding dress colors, it’s “Married in red, better off dead.”
A good portion of Blue is the Warmest Color's B-roll footage with Adèle Exarchopoulos that ended up being used was in fact of the actress when she was out of character. The camera would be on her when she ate and even when she slept on the train while they were on their way to set. Since during this footage people kept calling Exarchopoulos the name Adèle instead of the main character’s name Clementine, they agreed to change the character’s name to Adèle (x).
I had a bunch of ideas for what that song could be, but I didn’t feel it was right for me to give Ryan a song to give to Michelle. And so I gave him a challenge and let him pick out a song for her. Ryan has a great taste and the song he picked out was You and Me by Penny and the Quarters. And I thought it was just great. So I told Ryan to keep the song a secret, and never share it with Michelle until we were shooting. So they day came to shoot the scene, Ryan had the song in his back pocket, and we captured the real moment where one person gives an other person the gift of music. The gift, because it came from Ryan, was personal. Michelle was touched deeply by it. What happens on the screen is a real, living and breathing, intimate moment.
Derek Cianfrance
Johnny Depp testing out his”new” hands
"I think your whole life shows in your face and you should be proud of that."
Betty Joan Perske aka Lauren Bacall | September 16, 1924.
R.I.P Lauren Bacall
In the scene where Sean starts talking about his dead wife and her farting antics the lines were ad-libbed by Robin Williams, which is why Matt Damon is laughing so hard. The scene took everyone by surprise. According to Damon in the DVD commentary, this caused the cameraman to laugh so hard that the camera can be seen moving up and down slightly.
"What’s wrong with death sir? What are we so mortally afraid of? Why can’t we treat death with a certain amount of humanity and dignity, and decency, and God forbid, maybe even humor. Death is not the enemy, gentlemen. If we’re going to fight a disease, let’s fight one of the most terrible diseases of all, indifference."
Patch Adams
“You’re only given a little spark of madness. You mustn’t lose it.”