In Neil LaButeβs latest writer/director role, he debuts Dirty Weekend, a film about two β rather secretive β work colleagues who spend their layover in Albuquerque getting to know each other better and discovering their own secrets. Starring Matthew Broderick as Les and Alice Eve as Natalie, the two share an onscreen chemistry that widens as they uncover their personal lives and experience the city. The Knockturnal had the pleasure of interviewing the cast and director at the Friars Club on Wednesday night.
Neil LaBute
You stated before that you shot in 15 days. Were there any challenges you experienced?
Yes I think it makes it a challenge for actors, because thereβs only so much that people can cram into their head and make real for themselves and then onscreen. And youβre asking them every day to do that you know? So I think thereβs a placem where exhaustion takes over; in fact, itβs sorta helped us in a way. Like in the last scene we shot with atthew was really late at night and on our last day, and itβs really meant to be the time that he spends with this young woman and he was so tired that I think he got relaxed in a way that you might not at 10 oβclock in the morning, you know? He really felt like he was sleeping at that place and woke up tired. So that kind of thing I think you get a lucky break, but you want actors to do their best and sometimes you ask them to work beyond where normal working conditions are for something thatβs a bigger budget film. Youβre saying, βWe have this much money, this much time, can you go above and beyond what most people as you to do?β
You worked with Alice before in Some Velvet Morning, so how was it like working with her again?
I did and she was great. It was so fun to work with her the first time and so different as a character so it was a pleasure to see her become a different character, physically see her become a different character. And we kept pushing that, βHow can we make it more different than that last thing you did?β So thatβs a fun thing to see how an actor can become different people. And sheβs really smartβshe takes your words and makes them become better than on paper, so what more can you ask for?
Since this is one of many projects youβre written and directed, did you do anything different now?
I think, like any work, you get better at it, you get more confident. If something comes up that you think you havenβt seen before, youβre a little more relaxed, youβre older. I think you hopefully grow a little bit. The more times Iβve done films or theater or television thatβs been in small increments of time, the more relaxed you are about doing it that way. So I think itβs more about the repetition of doing it well enough that people respond to it that you go, βYeah, I can do this now.β If you told me however many years ago, βOh, youβre going to do this movie in eight days,β Iβd go βNo!β I mean, Iβve made one in 11 days and that was really fast, I donβt think I can do eight days. And now you just kinda go, βYeah, I think I can.β So just more confidence.
Were you ever stuck in a layover?
Oh I have been but nothing like too bad. Itβs always been weather related or that sort of thing, or having a plane just cancelled when I was in Eastern Europe, Romania.
In a gulag.
Not quite a gulag, but itβs one of those things that feels so out of your control. When people say βFly safely,β youβre like, βIβm not really doing anything. Iβm just going to sit somewhere and hope it all goes really really well with someone Iβve never met in my life.β So thatβs just a strange phenomenon that most of us just pretend isnβt happening, you know, that weβre thousands and thousands of feet above the earth in something that really shouldnβt be up there. You know, itβs like βWhat is keeping this thing up here?β I try not to think those thoughts when Iβm doing it.
Were there any special moments from set? Like that whole Butch and Sundance scene seemed improvised.
No no that was all there. I got to work with four people that I got to work with in some capacity- Matthew I got to work with in a kind of talk to and work together but everybody else thatβs kind of a main character in the piece, I got to work with, so it was all very very comfortable set that way. Which was good because I was working with a crew that I didnβt know from New Mexico. But I spent a lot of time just trying to get the βDayβ shot and then youβre living out of a hotel in a place you donβt know. Have you ever been?
Nope.
Well, you get what you pay for. There are some beautiful parts. And the desert is quite beautiful, itβs not like my favorite thing, you know, but it worked perfectly for the film. And we used it as Albuquerque so that was kinda great, so you didnβt have to pretend it was somewhere else. So I didnβt mind the fact that I had a unique backdrop that I had never used before. And itβs actually one of those places that gives you a great tax break so the money stretched further than it would otherwise, so you canβt really complain. I mean, I could complain, but I wonβt.
Alice Eve
You first worked with Neil on Some Velvet Morning, so how was it like to work with him again?
I feel like itβs a great privilege to have worked with Neil because he is not only a brilliant writer, but he creates a safe, clean environment on set where you can create and touch the edges of yourself and the taboos of society, which is what all of his films are about. He makes it safe to do that so I feel lucky.
And what about working with Matthew?
Heβs just a funny guy isnβt he? I mean you canβt complain about funny peopleβthatβs why they have the voice. Heβs great. I have a lot of time for Matthew Broderick.
Youβre also working on a number of movies.
Before We Go is the Chris Evans one which is a romance which takes place in New York, which is a very cute movie that Iβm very proud of. And Beyond Deceit is the movie- that oneβs coming out in February- thatβs with Al Pachino and Anthony Hopkins and Anthony Hopkins has been a great supporter of my career and this is our first time to get to work together so I feel very privileged to have got to work with him.
Were there any challenges in filming in only 15 days?
Just learning it. You circle the room, clapping your hands, getting in the rhythm of the lines as they kind of go into your body as in your mind as well. And that becomes a physical and mental exercise, just stamping the rhythm into your body. But you know, thatβs not sort of a challenge, because as an actor you work two months and then you donβt work four months, so you kind of seize the moments that youβre working and store them up for when youβre on the sofa.
Have you ever been in a layover?
I have been in a layover and I was stuck for seven hours in Heathrow and I made a bunch of friends with a bunch of strangers and that was a great thing. Itβs amazing how a layover will bond people you know in the drama of a situation and hopefully it recovers.
Matthew Broderick
How was it like working with Alice and Neil on the film?
It was great. It was short, a three week shoot, but Alice was a great, great partner. Super friendly and we learned lines together. Without that, it would have been very hard. We had to learn like 15 pages or something of just us talking to one another a day so the night before we would go over in a panic over these pages, but sheβs always in a good spirit and friendly and very helpful.
Youβre also working on the Warren Beatty project.
I just did some more loopingβsome more ADR in that movie. I donβt know when itβs coming out but theyβre very close to finished.
Were there any challenges in filming in 15 days?
Yeah, a lot. You just have to work very quickly, you donβt have a lot of time to try. The hardest part, to be honest with you, is to just learn that much talking. Thatβs the only thingβsome of the speed is fun because you donβt have to wait around, because everybodyβs busy. So thatβs something good from a five month shoot.
Were there any special moments from set?
Well there were lots. Did she tell you we went ballooning? Yeah it was her ideaβwe went up in a balloon right when we started shooting. It was some festival in New Mexico- itβs actually really beautiful. Nothing really happenedβwe tried to walk to one restaurant some night I remember and thought, βEh, letβs not drive, letβs walk.β And you know how some places like Albuquerque are, unlike in New York, you walk and suddenly youβre like, βWow, Iβve been walking for two and a half hours and Iβm at the other side of a gas station.β I remember that walk, it took a long long time.
Watch the trailer below.