Quebec filmmaking prodigy takes on the critics - Action News
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Entertainment

Quebec filmmaking prodigy takes on the critics

Xavier Dolan, the wunderkind behind I Killed My Mother and Heartbeats, has little patience for film reviewers.
Rising Quebec filmmaker Xavier Dolan returns with his second feature, Heartbeats, a comedy about close friends who pursue their mutual obsession with a young man. ((TIFF))

(This article was originally published during the 2010 Toronto International Film Festival.)

Xavier Dolans staggering debut, Jai tu ma mre (I Killed My Mother), earned the filmmaker all sorts of superlatives from the press, not to mention three prizes at the 2009 Cannes film festival. Not bad for a 21-year-old.

'People wont allow me to be intelligent, because they think Im 21 years old and that, obviously, anything in the movie that doesnt respond to codes or rules is a mistake, not an intention.' Xavier Dolan, director of Heartbeats

Its the type of success story often followed by a sophomore slump, yet slumps are clearly not on the agenda for Dolan, who returns to the Toronto International Film Festival this year with Les amours imaginaires (Heartbeats), a followup thats every bit as imaginative, stylish and assured as his much-praised debut.

The film centres on close pals Marie (Monia Chokri) and Francis (Dolan), who find their friendship put to the test once both become besotted with a golden-locked Adonis named Nico (Niels Schneider). This complex, often hilarious triangle is captured in hypnotic slow motion and the bold primary colours of 60s-era director Jean-Luc Godard. But Dolan is an auteur in his own right, and he uses this fraught mnage trois to deliver keen insights into the fluid identities and loneliness of 20-something hipsters.

In town for the films premiere at TIFF, Dolan sat down with CBC News for an interview. Every bit as precocious, clever and passionate in person as his films suggest, he shared his thoughts on the making of his second feature, "freaks of love" and arrogant movie critics.

Q: After the wild success of your debut, did you feel pressure to live up to that when you were starting Heartbeats?

A: Not really. In order to avoid the pressure, I knew that I had to make a very different film, so that the expectations would be here, but Id be there. [He uses his hands to indicate opposite ends of the spectrum.] I thought that would be the only way by offering something very different from I Killed My Mother, with a different mandate, with a different tone, with a different body, a different language. I thought that is the only way not to disappoint people yet some people have already been disappointed, of course.

Q: Ive read one or two reviews that suggest the film is more style over substance.

A: Its just different [from the last movie].

From left, Xavier Dolan, Niels Schneider and Monia Chokri in a scene from Dolan's sophomore feature, Heartbeats. ((TIFF))

Q: Stylistically, it felt like you were pushing yourself to try cool new things, like shooting from the top of Maries head in one scene, so we see the tip of her nose.

A: Its not about trying cool new things. Thats not how I think. I just tried to make a movie that was very esthetic in order to show how shallow the love in the film is. But instead of thinking that I knew the film was overstylized, people immediately thought that it was just a case of style over substance, and did not think further.

But, I know! I know that the movie is very "looky" and everything. Its a movie on illusions and a movie on shallow love. This guy [Nico] is neither interesting nor charismatic, hes got no personality. The only thing he is, is beautiful. So the only thing the movie is, is trying to be beautiful. For me, that is just logical. People wont allow me to be intelligent, because they think Im 21 years old and that, obviously, anything in the movie that doesnt respond to codes or rules is a mistake, not an intention.

What do we mean by "substance"? We mean emotions, I believe? Emotions are: being rejected, having no for an answer, being lonely, waiting for something that never comes this is there in Heartbeats. And if people are not moved and they dont see the substance, it is because they have their arms crossed, trying to correct my homework! A movie is not made to be watched with ones culture or a Videotheque, it is made to be watched with your past, and your heart. And if you dont do that, you are a critic, not a cinephile.

Q: I totally agree with you, even though I write criticism.

A: I know a lot of cinema critics who are great critics because they watch films with their lives. Thats the door they open to film the doors of their life. Honestly, should a director really care about a BlackBerry-addicted cinema critic? Over-caffeined, arrogant, 90-year-old guy, who has no intention but to destroy you. How serious can that be? I have understood this soon enough in my life, and I am grateful that I did. I shouldnt listen to good reviews or bad reviews, or if I listen to any of those, Ill listen to both good and bad. But Im just trying to please myself and be proud of my own improvements, trying to improve myself.

Q: What sparked the idea for Heartbeats?

A: A road trip in Arizona with Monia and Niels. We were doing a trip as friends, and we thought, hmmm we should be reunited professionally, and we should start looking for a screenplay or something that would give us the opportunity to be together. So, I thought, well, lets just have a love triangle. Its the easiest way around. [Laughs.]

Q: There are documentary-like bits in the film. At what point did you know you were going to add that?

A: Oh, that was the first thing I had. I wrote the screenplay in the order you see the scenes. Thats the way I write. Its not a puzzle that I complete afterwards. Its written [pretends to type) da-da-da-da-da-da, end. The first thing I wrote was the first scene with the talking heads, and then these freaks of love.

Q: I loved the look of your film and was wondering if you generally use off-kilter framing to make a comment about your characters.

A: Generally, yes. I dont like free camera moves or unjustified movements. I spike myself whenever I use a dolly, and think, "Why the f--- was that a dolly? Why wasnt it just a static shot?" Sometimes I am very harsh towards myself.

Heartbeats opens at the TIFF Bell Lightbox in Toronto on Sept. 23.

Lee Ferguson writes about the arts for CBC News.