The Scene at NYFF with Naomie Harris and Kenneth Lonergan
Monday, October 3, 2016 at 5:13PM
Murtada Elfadl in Barry Jenkins, Dodsworth, Kenneth Lonergan, Manchester by the Sea, Moonlight, NYFF, Naomie Harris, Paterson, William Wyler

Murtada reporting from a weekend at the NYFF.

The New York Film Festival enables local cinephiles to catch a finely curated collection of films that have screened at other festivals earlier in the year. It is also a veritable hotbed of casual sightings of the New York film crowd: there’s Todd Haynes entering the Alice Tully Hall animatedly chatting with his Carol editor Alfonso Gonçalves (who has two films in the festival: Gimme Danger and Paterson). Here's Mikhail Baryshnikov posing with his daughter Anna who’s in Manchester by the Sea; I see Bob Balaban making his way through the security line. And, look, Edie Falco introducing herself to Casey Affleck after the Q and A for his movie.

Lonergan in conversation with Jones

Most interesting though are the stories filmmakers tell as they screen their films...

In conversation with the NYFF artistic director Kent Jones, Manchester's Kenneth Lonergan revealed that he considers himself fairly new at directing films, having only made three. He revealed that while he doesn't have a process, he watches movies that  he loves and takes from them. His inspirations include classics like The Bicycle Thief, The 400 Blows, Casablanca and lots of William Wyler. In fact he considers Wyler’s 1936 movie Dodsworth “the most perfect American movie”.

Lonergan also talked about his no frills approach to production design and costumes, and how both should be naturalistic and not metaphorical reflections of character's moods. And about how he came to understand that experienced film actors are used to the idea that they are not in control of the final product, and very often don't even see their own movies.

A day later, that same sentiment was repeated by Jim Jarmusch when he was talking about his Paterson star, Adam Driver. Driver apparently never watches his movies because he doesn’t want to lose the intuition that enable his performances to happen.

Harris with co-star Janelle Monáe at the Q & A

Moonlight was rapturously received in its first New York public screening Sunday night with two standing ovations for Barry Jenkins and his cast. At the post screening Q & A, Naomie Harris revealed how she had to confront and overcome judgement, about her character being a crack addict and a cold mother, in order play her. She researched crack addicted women and found that a vast majority have been sexually abused. She used that information to fill in the gaps in her character’s story. 

Article originally appeared on The Film Experience (http://thefilmexperience.net/).
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