Categories
Arts

Ruth De Jong designs real life in Manchester by the Sea

While on a scouting excursion for Kenneth Lonergan’s film Manchester by the Sea, Ruth De Jong walked into a coastal Massachusetts shop selling GPS systems for boats.

“I’ve been here for 45 years!” the shop owner exclaimed, showing De Jong his office. The room was packed from floor to ceiling with papers—stacks of receipts, notes, manuals and who knows what else covered every surface, including the well-used desk and parts of the floor—and De Jong knew immediately it was the perfect location for a short scene in which stoic apartment building handyman and main character Lee Chandler (Casey Affleck) is reprimanded by his boss for having a bad attitude.

“You can’t recreate that,” says De Jong. “Well, you can, but it was so perfect, what this human had created.”

As a production designer, De Jong leads a film’s design team in creating the environment that actors step into to perform—taking a script and bringing it to life through sets, props and costumes. She came into the craft after her family moved to Virginia, where her parents still live, in her teens, and she met Schuyler Fisk. Their friendship led to an introduction to Jack Fisk, Schuyler’s dad and one of the film industry’s most sought-after production designers and art directors.

De Jong thought she might pursue a life as a painter before Fisk brought her onto his team for Paul Thomas Anderson’s There Will Be Blood in 2005. She worked directly with Fisk for about 10 years on films like Anderson’s The Master and Terrence Malick’s The Tree of Life, Knight of Cups and the forthcoming Song to Song, before striking out on her own.

Oscar noms

Manchester by the Sea has been nominated for six Academy Awards:

• Best Picture

• Writing (Original Screenplay)

• Directing

• Actor in a Leading Role (Casey Affleck)

• Actress in a Supporting Role (Michelle Williams)

• Actor in a Supporting Role (Lucas Hedges)

In Manchester by the Sea, Lee returns home in the wake of his brother’s death to care for his grieving teenage nephew, Patrick. Lee, still consumed by a tragedy from his past, must settle his fisherman brother’s estate and decide what’s next for Patrick. It’s an extraordinary look at ordinary people.

For months, De Jong roamed Cape Ann, the rocky coastal promontory about 30 miles northeast of Boston where the film is set. She visited libraries and museums, she struck up conversations with shop owners and customers who, in turn, introduced her to their neighbors, to local fishermen, hockey coaches and funeral home directors.

She visited more than a dozen wharfs, noting where the sun rose and set; she rode boats, visited schools and police stations. Through all of this, “you learn who these people are,” De Jong says, and these real people informed every moment of Manchester by the Sea, from how the characters talked, to the cars they drove, the clothes they wore, the pictures on their dressers and the placemats on their kitchen tables.

Ruth De Jong built storyboards and put together sample houses, half a dozen or so per character, per location, and they’d whittle the options down before arriving at the final iteration. Courtesy Roadside Attractions

De Jong built storyboards and put together sample houses, half a dozen or so per character, per location, and they’d whittle the options down before arriving at the final iteration of Lee’s sparse basement apartment; or before deciding that Joe’s kitchen would be stuck in the 1970s, with brown wood cabinets, floral wallpaper, faux stone vinyl flooring and a pale yellow salt and pepper shaker set sitting on a simple, worn wooden table.

“You don’t always think about your everyday surroundings” and what they bring to bear on your daily life, says De Jong. But when you do, “it makes you realize that we all have subtleties, nuances to how we live in any given day. We’re all characters in a sense.”

De Jong borrowed everything from cars, boats, furniture and lamps to knickknacks and personal belongings. They painted and put wallpaper in houses when necessary, then “either leave it if the owner likes it or put it back to whatever they want,” says De Jong.

Making the scene

You can also see Ruth De Jong’s work in Inherent Vice, The Master, Knight of Cups, The Tree of Life, There Will Be Blood, Dead Man’s Burden, Swedish Auto, Terrence Malick’s upcoming film, Song to Song, and the return of the TV show “Twin Peaks” for a limited series in May.

The police station is a former schoolhouse and the actual home of the Beverly Police Department. The hospital nurses’ station required a full dressing; it’s only visible for a couple of seconds, but none of the paperwork-stuffed manila folders, stethoscopes or computers were there. Small details—like baby clothes and nursing pillows strewn about a bedroom or a dirty dish left in the kitchen sink—make sets feel real.

De Jong and Lonergan designed not to the sad tone of the script but to the reality of everyday life, “meaning, there’s death, there’s pain…but certain things (like the weather) don’t change given grief or happiness.”

“That scene where Lee and Patrick have left the funeral home and get into an argument over finding the car, and it’s really sunny out—it was great, because it was just another day, but they’re dealing with all of this drama and grief and frustration and pain,” De Jong points out.

Manchester by the Sea is closely shot, and much of what De Jong put together isn’t visible in the final cut. But shooting on location lent an unmatched authenticity and true texture. “It really gave the truest sense of this place. You were able to fall into this world because you didn’t think twice about it—it’s like you’re there,” she says, because, quite simply, you are there.

Categories
Arts

The best movies of 2016 flew under the radar

They said 2016 was the worst year for movies in recent memory. But for every Batman v Superman: Yawn of Justice, there were at least two amazing works of genius clamoring for recognition. Some are simple movies of modest scale, others layered in ways we’ll still be studying years from now, but all prove that as long as the world has problems, there will be filmmakers confronting them. Here, in no particular order, are some of the best movies of what has been a most trying year.

Beautifully written, impressively acted and skillfully paced, Moonlight is one of the greatest achievements in filmmaking of 2016.
Beautifully written, impressively acted and skillfully paced, Moonlight is one of the greatest achievements in filmmaking of 2016.

Moonlight

If Moonlight were only a recitation of its subject matter—an LGBT coming-of-age story in a setting vastly underrepresented in film—it would have still been a brave undertaking and a fascinating watch. But writer-director Barry Jenkins takes the opportunity to dive deeper than the surface-level hardship (though it is still unflinching in this regard) to craft an elegiac, beautiful work of art about how our ideas about the world around us and ourselves first take root. Beautifully written, impressively acted and skillfully paced, Moonlight is the greatest achievement in filmmaking of 2016.

Mackenzie Davis co-stars in Sophia Takal's Always Shine, which flew under the radar in most markets.
Mackenzie Davis co-stars in Sophia Takal’s Always Shine, which flew under the radar in most markets.

Always Shine

Always Shine flew under the radar in most markets, but Sophia Takal’s stylish, cathartic thriller was one of the most exciting offerings of the year. The film follows two friends, both actresses in L.A. at differing levels of success. The tension boils over on a weekend getaway, as identities blur and the performative nature of our entire lives—career, art, even friendship—is blown wide open. Takal may emerge as this generation’s Brian de Palma—keep an eye on this one.

Pete’s Dragon

The common refrain from those proclaiming the death of cinema is the prevalence of sequels and remakes. Lo and behold, one of the most imaginative films of 2016 is a reimagining of a Disney property, Pete’s Dragon. Virtually everything is different—including the total absence of outright villains to make more room for the resonant theme of family and belonging—and it is guaranteed to engage children in its silliness and adults in its emotional maturity. Definitely the most surprising success of the year.

Demon

Polish writer-director Marcin Wrona blends historical intrigue, political metaphor and involving characters with impossible-seeming ease in Demon, easily the year’s most inventive foreign-language film. The story follows the chaos that ensues when a horrific discovery leads a man to become possessed by a dybbuk—a spirit in Jewish folklore—at his own wedding. The various reactions by the guests indicate that all are aware of Poland’s horrific wartime history, and the lengths to which they go to explain away the supernatural occurrence parallel the ways the nation as a whole has forgotten its past transgressions. Powerful, ambitious and surprisingly funny, Demon is a gem waiting to be discovered.

Anna Rolse Holmer has invented a style all her own with The Fits, a surrealist examination of gender, growing up and fitting in, with the appearance of a social realist drama.
Anna Rolse Holmer has invented a style all her own with The Fits, a surrealist examination of gender, growing up and fitting in, with the appearance of a social realist drama.

The Fits

To call The Fits genre-bending is to give the concept of genres too much credit. Anna Rolse Holmer has invented a style all her own with The Fits, a surrealist examination of gender, growing up and fitting in, with the appearance of a social realist drama. Set almost entirely in a fitness facility for children of all ages, where the men box and the women dance with the exception of our protagonist, The Fits is an act of cinematic subversion and pure imagination that is well worth your time.

The rest of the best: Manchester by the Sea, The Witch, Weiner (the documentary, not the man), The Lobster and The Neon Demon


Playing this week

Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX
The Shops at Stonefield, 244-3213

Assassin’s Creed, Collateral Beauty, Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them, Fences, Lion, Manchester by the Sea, Moana, Office Christmas Party, Passengers, Rogue One: A Star Wars Story, Sing, Why Him?

Violet Crown Cinema
200 W. Main St., Downtown Mall, 529-3000
Assassin’s Creed, Collateral Beauty, Fences, La La Land, Manchester by the Sea, Passengers, Rogue One: A Star Wars Story, Sing

Categories
Arts

Manchester by the Sea sails on love and loss

Tragedy and comedy are, in fact, bedfellows when both are taken very seriously, and rarely is this relationship captured as well as it is in Manchester by the Sea. Writer-director Kenneth Lonergan’s meditation on love, loss and moving on strikes this balance with ease, and it’s a masterpiece in its own right for its emotional depth, stylistic restraint and masterful navigation of a story that might have veered into cloying or mawkish territory in lesser hands.

Manchester by the Sea follows the story of Lee Chandler (Casey Affleck), who comes home to the North Shore of Massachusetts after the sudden death of his brother, Joe (Kyle Chandler), to look after Joe’s teenage son, Patrick (Lucas Hedges). Until then, Lee had been eking out a living as a janitor in Quincy, a suburb south of Boston and about as far away as a person can get from Manchester while remaining in culturally familiar territory. Between getting yelled at by tenants and fixing problems beyond his job description, he also resists friendly advances yet picks fights with strangers. We initially know little about Lee’s story, except that he has suffered a great loss and that the last place in the world he wants to be is back in Manchester, let alone taking custody of a 16-year-old he had no hand in raising.

Manchester by the Sea
R, 137 minutes
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX, Violet Crown Cinema

Lonergan is keenly aware of the link between location and memory, telling much of Lee’s story through flashback when it is most emotionally relevant and not a moment sooner. The names of many Massachusetts towns appear frequently, but not as a play for local credibility. Audiences won’t need a map to make sense of the emotional geography—Quincy is the place Lee went to escape his problems, Essex is the neighboring town that may as well be on another planet for its economic differences. Manchester is the place where no one forgets the past, which is great for Patrick, a hockey star with a local band and two girlfriends, but a nightmare for Lee.

Lonergan also pays very close attention to the ways people react to the things they can and cannot control. When the film opens, we see Lee in a series of situations where he has no choice but to suffer the abuse of his tenants. Later that night, he turns down an obvious advance from a woman in a bar because responding would mean opening up to someone—an unpredictable undertaking—while he has no problem fighting strangers because that situation follows a predetermined pattern. When Lee is given custody of Patrick, his first decision is to bring him back south to live in Boston, thereby uprooting his entire life. Any requests that might make Lee vulnerable are refused, but he has no problem being Patrick’s chauffeur, no matter how inconvenient. And as we learn the truth of why Lee left, we learn the underlying reason for his fear of powerlessness and resistance to leaving anything to chance.

Manchester by the Sea is a thoughtful, intelligent film with excellent performances and characters you will want to spend as much time with as Lonergan allows. It is funny in expected places and is easily one of the best films of the year, if not the decade.


Playing this week

Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX
The Shops at Stonefield, 244-3213
Allied, Almost Christmas, Arrival, Doctor Strange, Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them, Hacksaw Ridge, Incarnate, Miss Sloane, Moana, Nocturnal Animals, Office Christmas Party, Trolls

Violet Crown Cinema
200 W. Main St., Downtown Mall, 529-3000
Allied, Arrival, Doctor Strange, Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them, Loving, A Man Called Ove, Moonlight, Moana, Office Christmas Party