French actress Juliette Binoche had been urging Kore-eda, who
won the Palme d'Or for "Shoplifters" at last year's Cannes film
festival, to make a film with her for several years but nothing
had got off the ground.
Inspiration finally struck for Kore-eda on a flight back from
Paris: the film, based on a theater script he began in 2003,
would be set in France with Deneuve and Binoche as mother and
daughter.
"I thought we couldn't make the film unless it was Catherine
Deneuve," Kore-eda told Reuters, saying only she could have
played the role of Fabienne, a grande dame of French cinema
still active in movies.
"If it was her then we could make it a reality."
"The Truth," which hits Japanese cinemas on Oct. 11 after it
premiered at the Venice film festival, features Fabienne, who
has just published her memoirs and is hosting her screenwriter
daughter Lumir (Binoche) and TV actor son-in-law Hank (Ethan
Hawke) on a visit from New York.
But painful memories and tensions between mother and daughter
resurface when Fabienne's book reveals more lies than the truth
mentioned in its title, "La Verite".
Kore-eda had feared Deneuve would turn down the role but sensed
her enthusiasm at a meeting where he showed her bits of the
still incomplete screenplay.
"She was saying things like, 'It's really interesting but maybe
you should fix this part,' or, 'Filming's going to be in Paris,
right? You know I can't leave Paris,' so that's when I knew she
was up for it."
'HUGE ADMIRATION'
Kore-eda's admiration for the "Belle de Jour" actress did not go
unnoticed.
"I think the click came when he met with Catherine, I think he
had a huge admiration for her, he was like a little boy seeing
her coming on the set," Binoche said.
Binoche said she was thrilled to finally work with Kore-eda.
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"For me, Kore-eda is like Anton Chekhov of nowadays and he has
this quality of being subtle, of getting into real themes in
families that hurt so bad," she said.
"And yet you've got to find a way to love all those complexities
and tragedies and all. And so he's able to really develop those
relationships and situations."
Still to be resolved after the casting, however, was the matter
of filming in another country and in a foreign language for the
first time.
Kore-eda wrote the screenplay in Japanese and then worked on the
French translation with Lea Le Dimna, his Japanese-French
interpreter for the past five years. He had complete faith she
would nail the nuances.
"If I hadn't met her I don't think I would have had the
confidence to do this project," Kore-eda added. "I think this
project probably succeeded because of the kind of presence she
brought."
Despite its setting, "The Truth" largely unspools within
Fabienne's home and avoids stereotypical Paris locations such as
the Eiffel Tower and Champs-Elysees - which Kore-eda called a
trap foreign filmmakers often fell into.
"I wanted to shoot Paris from the perspective of ordinary people
there and I made a point of avoiding all that."
Kore-eda said he had other projects in development but after
five films in five years, it was time to ease the pace and hold
off on any decisions for six months.
"It's been a good run with a film every year, but it'll be tough
to keep going at that rate."
(Reporting by Chris Gallagher in Tokyo and Mike Davidson in
Venice; Writing by Chris Gallagher; Editing by Clarence
Fernandez)
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