Acclaimed director Steve McQueen is known among cult fans as one of the harshest film makers in today's cinema. He is also known as one of the most talented up-and-comers in the business. Now his reputation is set to make its way into the consciousness of casual film fans worldwide, as his new film, "12 Years a Slave" is creating huge buzz on the film festival circuit as an early Oscar favorite. The film tells the true story of Solomon Northup, a free black man who was kidnapped and sold into slavery in 1841. McQueen was on hand to unveil his film to audiences at the New York Film Festival this Tuesday and answered questions for fans and media alike:
Director Steve McQueen at the New York Film Festival's opening screening of his new film, "12 Years a Slave." (Photo by Michael Iannucci) |
A: I think it has been brewing inside me since I've been conscious of it. Someone asked me the question the other day: "When was the first time you heard about slavery?" And I could never remember. All I could remember was shame and embarrassment as a person, as a child. That was the only thing I could think of and as you discover certain things about your past you start thinking about things. But that's when things start, when you have an idea of what has gone on in the world.
Q: It would have been easy for you to make this film with a kind of anger, but you keep from moralizing in the film. How did you approach the actual shooting of this?
A: I wanted to understand it and engage with it. It was like going into someone's apartment blindfolded and you're feel, your touch, your senses, these things take over the obvious. The obvious makes you interpret things in a way which sometimes is a false because morals come into play. You have to be honest; you have to be brute; you have to be direct, otherwise you're kidding yourself.
Q: This is not a traditional narrative of the slave experience. Were you initially interested in depicting the more traditional experience of slavery before you arrived at this particular story?
A: I didn't really know what the traditional idea of slavery was. I wanted to find out what it was really. I went in with open eyes. I couldn't go in there with a preconceived notion because that's just not me. The whole idea for me was a free man who gets caught into slavery and what I liked about that is that everyone in the audience can relate to Solomon, being taken away from his family so therefore you're on that journey with him.
Q: There doesn't seem to be a real moment of despair for Solomon in the film. Does that have to do with his Christian faith, something he shares with his oppressors?
A: I didn't see it in a sense of Christianity. In the book he calls on God a lot, but for me it was about his own self-determination, courage, and the gathering up of his own will in order to keep on going.
Q: Where does the hatred of Paul Dano's character originate?
A: Our idea was that this guy was beaten by his father. I come from a West Indian family and a lot of parents beat their children. This comes from slavery. You see something and you think it's good to do to your children. That was the idea with Paul's character.
Q: How did you work with cinematographer Sean Bobbitt to achieve the images of the film?
A: I've been working with Sean Bobbitt for the last 13 years. First we talk about color. This was the first time I've shot outdoors in an environment that was so lush. Our costume designer, Patty Norris, took earth samples from all three of the plantations to match them with the clothes and talked to Sean to deal with the temperature of each plantation and each character temperature. There was a lot of that kind of minute detail.
Q: What drew you to Solomon Northup's story?
A: Solomon's story actually matched my original idea and it was just so striking. It was like a Brothers Grimm fairy tale; the darkest, deepest, most haunting fairy tales which end happily ever after but you go through hell to get there.
Q: This is your third movie with Michael Fassbender. Did you have him in mind for the character of Edwin immediately when casting?
A: Yes, he was always my choice for that and he's an amazing actor. Personally, I think he's the most influential actor of his time right now. People want to be an actor because of him; people want to be in a movie because of him; people want to make a movie because he could be in it. He has that kind of pull.
Q: Is there a certain scene from the film that stays with you when you look back on it?
A: Not really. I mean, the whole thing stays with me. It's just the experience. It's the whole shebang for me.
Q: How did you find Lupita?
A: How did she find us? I mean, over a thousand girls auditioned for this role. I got her audition tape and I couldn't believe it. I just thought, 'Is she real?' And she was. She's amazing.
Q: What did you learn about the psychology of slavey in making this film?
A: Survival. I'm here because some of my ancestors survived slavery in whatever way they could. Could you imagine being born a slave? I think that's the worst thing that could happen to a human being. Someone who doesn't think of themselves as anything other than what their so-called master thinks of them, which is nothing. It's a deep psychological wound. Deep.
The Cast:
"12 Years a Slave" features one of the best casts of the year. Chiwetel Ejiofor plays lead Solomon Northup and is an early lock for the Academy Award for Best Actor, McQueen regular Michael Fassbender gives a powerful performance as evil slave owner Edwin Epps and Lupita Nyong'o, in her American acting debut, is undoubtedly the biggest surprise of the film as the most horribly abused of slaves, Patsey. They were on hand in New York to answer questions as well.Steve McQueen and cast members Chiwetel Ejiofor, Michael Fassbender and Lupita Nyong'o fielding questions about "12 Years a Slave." (Photo by Michael Iannucci) |
Ejiofor: Yes, I've known Steve for a while. I met him for the first time after "Hunger" and that was a great film as well and I knew he was an incredibly talented director right. After a couple of years he called me about this.
Q: How did you go about humanizing the character Edwin Epps?
Fassbender: I think through the fact that he's in love with Patsey. He can't quite wrap his head around that or handle it because of the time he's in so he sets about destroying her, but I thought that was a very human aspect to the character.
Q: What was it like being on this level in your American debut?
Nyong'o: At first it was a little bit intimidating but Steve is just such a great director that it's easy to work your way into the characters and once we got going it just flowed.
Q: How difficult was it to shoot the long take in which Solomon is forced to whip Patsey?
Fassbender: That was actually a harder scene to watch, for me personally, than it was to film because there were a lot of technical elements in the scene. We knew that we were going to shoot it in one take and there were quite a few actors involved in the scene so we all had to keep our rhythms and our space in addition to keeping the rhythm with Sean behind the camera. So there's that dance going on; there's the distance between the players, the camera, and for me personally I had to hit a mark so I didn't hit Lupita but we tried to get as close as possible.
Ejiofor: I think in some of those sequences which ostensibly look hard to shoot weren't because we were very deep down the rabbit hole at that point and I think focus on set in those times was so high that we were just in there to try to tell the story.
Q: What do you walk away from this film with?
Ejiofor: So much. It was a life changing experience for me and it really opens up my work in acting.
Fassbender: Just the satisfaction of making it. It's a very important film and I'm just happy to be able to share it with everyone.
Nyong'o: An unforgettable experience. It's not every day or even every film for that matter that you become a part of something so important.