Every year, hundreds of GLBT films are
picked for festivals here and around the world. From Spain to San
Francisco, Auckland to Austin (yes, Austin Texas), films depicting
GLBT relationships and themes are snapped up by promoters and played to
enthusiastic audiences.
This year, a short New Zealand film by
the name of Teddy has been selected.
Hannah JV met the dedicated team behind Teddy, and found
that a film doesnt have to be long to be packed with drama both on
screen and off.
The team behind Teddy are warm and
nice a bit like the films namesake.
Meeting at the express offices last week, the friendly crew
made up of director Chris Banks, producer Andy Jalfon and actor Alan
Granville are all smiles in the lead up to the films release at
this years Out Takes Reel Queer Film Festival, and their enthusiasm is
infectious.
Teddy is Chris first project since his 2005
feature Quiet Night In. Itching to make another film but without
the funds to pay for a feature, Chris with the help of Andy tabled
a series of short film ideas surrounding different emotions.
We thought of different ways to
encapsulate different emotions, eventually settling on regret. I came up
with the idea for Teddy guy who breaks up with his partner
because the partner wants to move overseas and he wants to stay. In the
film, the partner who moves comes to New Zealand, buys a house and meets a
new partner. I quite liked the idea that there should be a symbol of the
relationship the two shared in England; something that was quite special.
In this case, its the teddy.
So is that a cheeky jibe at bear culture?
It is a bit of a cheeky jibe, says Chris, It has a double
meaning because the tagline is the story of two men and a bear, and
the partner who moved away, Neil, now has a new man who happens to be a
bear, so he has swapped a fake bear for a real one!
The film was shot over two days, in a
Kaukapakapa house and the Helensville train station, just north of
Auckland. Andy says the train station shoot had to be on a Monday, because
passenger train arrivals and departures are scarce in the area.
The train only comes to Helensville
twice a day, once at 6am and once at 7pm, so we only had one opportunity
to get everything with the train in it. We literally had ten minutes when
it came into the station to get everything shot. I was also the assistant
director on the shoot, so it was a whip-cracking experience when the train
came in. We had to get five shots done in the space of ten minutes.
Despite the tight schedule placed upon
the team by train timetabling, Andy says the Helensville station had the
perfect look and feel that they wanted for the shoot one that was in
the countryside and had a warm character to it.
The film gives a number of nods to old
world sensibilities from lead character Tonys desire to travel by
train, to Neils beautiful classic Mini, the film harks back to a
simpler time, like that of George and Mildred the 70s British
sitcom Tony and Neil watch in the films flashback.
Trains and a Mini were the choices of
transport in the film, says Chris. I think a lot of it comes back to
Tony, whos very old world and romantic, so I thought that these
antiquated forms of transport would be more his style, and he loves George
and Mildred, so you can see hes very old world and doesnt like
change, hence why he doesnt move to New Zealand with Neil.
In the film, Tony first sees Neils new
partner Phil in an awkward bedroom moment. Alan had his role increased
from briefly featuring in online previews to a more revealing role as
Neils new bear, Phil.
Its my major scene and I get my
shirt off! I was very conscious about taking my shirt off on screen, but
Chris reassured me itd be fine. I havent seen it on the big screen
though so that reassurance might quickly fade!
But for both Andy and Chris, the bedroom
scene is the films pivotal sequence. It encapsulates the characters
completely, and you get to see them all together in a tight space in a
very awkward moment, says Andy.
The bedroom scene may have been the
films most trying moment, but behind the scenes, heavy rain and broken
equipment were providing all the drama.
We encountered some very bad weather, which was very odd because
it was shot in November, says Andy. Whats more, it was perfect
weather before and after the shoot! All agree that they were fortunate
the rain at least held up for both days of shooting.
To have one good and one bad day would
have completely screwed us up, says Chris.
Meanwhile, in the hype and stress that was the train station shoot,
the teams camera broke. We had a tight schedule beforehand, and
everything did go to plan except for when the camera broke, says
Chris. It was touch and go there for a while, we thought wed need to
use the camera used for shooting behind the scenes footage, but we got it
together.
If you head to the TVNZ website, you can
watch this behind the scenes action. Commissioned by film reviewer Darren
Bevan, featured Teddy material includes an interview with the cast
in front (and the frenzied repair of the camera behind), as well as
Chris video diary. Andy says the support the team has had from TVNZ, as
well as the wider GLBT community, has been spectacular.
Its good to see so much interest in
the film before people have seen much at all, he says.
And now, with the film done and dusted, the team are planning to
travel as much as they can with Teddy. Over the coming months, the
film will be heading to Toronto, Boston, Fort Worth and San Francisco,
which is home to the oldest and largest GLBT film festival in the world,
Frameline, averaging around 80,000 attendees over its ten-day run. Chris
says he wont be going to every screening (as lovely as it would be to
disappear for three months), but he will be heading to Toronto and San
Francisco, amid hopes Teddy will be snapped up by the Los Angeles
festival.
Looking ahead, Chris says he is keen to
make more films, and admits he will probably use gay characters again, he
wont necessarily be angling at a gay theme.
Most of the things that interest me
tend to be gay themed but I dont think of it in terms of theming,
Im writing from my perspective and my life experiences. I was just
saying yesterday, theres no such thing as a heterosexual themed
film, which is funny to think about but absolutely true.
We have to have GLBT film festivals in
order to be able to see meaningful representations of us in film. Although
things have gotten better, we still tend to be sidekicks or the butt of
jokes in mainstream films.
And as for his future projects, Chris is
in the early stages of working on a new short, but hes still angling
for that next big feature. Big features require money though,
he laughs, so if you know of any rich homosexuals out there with
$100,000 to spare, tell them to look me up!