Director of Photography: Kev Robertson
Curtis "Vain" Smith (played by screenwriter Brian Burnam)
and Mikey "Heir" Rosario (played by Lane Garrison) on the look-out.
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The
reviews I've been reading for Quality of
Life
say the film is about graffiti artists. Though the film is about 2
friends, Curtis and Mikey, it's also about the world surrounding the
characters.
And it's a whole world
that so many people don't even know about. Graffiti isn't just
something two people do, it's a total subculture
and it's really developed. I wasn't that into graffiti but my friends
were and I understood it. I was a B-boy in the mid-eighties and I was
in one of the biggest groups in San Francisco at the time. We were
called Fantastic Fource. Would
this qualify as your first feature?
Yeah, that's how I look at it. Robert
Rodriguez
wrote this book: "Rebel Without a Crew". In it he talks about
his
"plan". He went to film school but he was blew it off so he could make
3 no-budget movies and learn all he could from it and that's why he
started doing it all himself. Then, after the 3, he'd set out to make a
feature for distribution. El
Mariachi
went haywire and his plan got shot - thought I don't figure he was too
sad about that - and when I read that book I decided that was what I
wanted to do. I set that course of action, shot 3 films, used almost
none of my own money, financed with the support of local businesses, in
kind, friends, and that whole path set me towards Quality of
Life. Well, it wasn't a path towards Quality of
Life
at the time, but a path that set me towards making a film. The other
films were feature length; they were like my films school. Honestly I
probably should have made shorts. That would have made more sense but
since I didn't go to films school I wasn't exposed to that stuff so I
made features because that was comfortable to me.
The
way you're talking about making your film points towards a drive or
compulsion to create - and that's a major theme in
Quality of Life. You really deal with the
questions of what drives us and how we either can't or shouldn't stop
it.
I
had this realization one day. I saw an ant. And the ant was carrying
something way bigger than him and he didn't seem to know where he was
going. That's what got me started. I was just so inspired by this ant
and the metaphor he was to me. That was exactly when I decided to make
my plan and make 3 films. I didn't know why, but I couldn't stop
myself, I was consumed by my path.
Aren't paths built before
us?
Hm. Well, I suppose they are.
When we were shooting Quality of Life, we used the
metaphor of climbing Mt. Everest. That's not a thing I really do, I
don't climb so I've
never climbed a mountain, but it's not something that's never been done
either. It's something you have to prepared for, both mentally and
physically. I used that analogy all through production and when we'd
get closer I'd say "the air's getting thinner, we're almost there". One
day, after we had wrapped Kev Robertson, my DP, called me
from
his car and he'd been hearing an NPR show on Mt. Everest and he said,
"Ben, I just heard on the radio that most of the deaths that happen
when climbing Mt. Everest, happen on the way down." That was kind of an
eye-opener. But you know, a path is something I think you step onto and
you either follow it to the end or you don't.
Your plan was something you desired. It doesn't
sound like an absolute compulsion.
I
really think a filmmaker has to be tied to the story. If you're not,
what you're doing is just a job. There's nothing wrong with that,
everybody's gotta eat and pay bills but that's not what it was to me. I
needed it, bills or no bills.
Photo by Meika Rouda
Curtis "Vain" Smith (played by screenwriter Brian Burnam) and Michael
"Heir" Rosario (played by Lane Garrison) doing pieces in a dark
alleyway. |
The film is obviously personal. Why isn't it
about breaking?
Good
Question. Why isn't it! ... honestly the story came tome in a dream. I
had this blurred dream that Picasso was hanging out with my friends and
he was a graffiti writer. It wasn't super clear and the story of the
dream was hard to untangle but once I got it kinda straight, I started
reading about Picasso and I based the core story on this one part of
Picasso's life.
What I found
incredible about graffiti was that there seemed to be no other crime
that exemplified everything that was wrong with justice system the way
graffiti does. Our justice system is hyper focused on symptoms: they
see writing on a wall and they paint over it. And that's the way the
justice system reacts: it's all reactive and symptom based. It doesn't
deal with root problems. Sure, there are
prevention programs
but they're the ones that get slashed first. In fact I worked for a
prevention program and they cut me two months before production. It
wasn't just my job, the state lost production funds. Preventions is
always the first to go. That's what was most attractive to me about
graffiti: the phenomenon of painting over something to eradicate it.
That's a ridiculously topical way to deal with a problem and over the
course of the last 30 years painting over the problem has made the
sport more popular.
My original ideas
were more political but in the end, we finally made something more
human and I credit Brian Burnam for that change.
Burnam plays Vain, and you wrote the script
with him. How did he get involved with the
script?
Brian
and I go way back. When I was starting in college he was 12 y/o - my
next door neighbor. I kinda brought him up in a way. He actually lived
with me when his dad kicked him out and I knew he was into graffiti so
he looked at my script and his feedback became so intensive I started
giving him scenes to write. It got to be where he was the rewriting the
whole script, so I gave him lead screenwriting credit.
How much is the character of Lisa's son based on
Brian?
It
really had nothing to do with Brian it was more about the mentoring.
Brian and I have done so much non-family mentoring in our lives.
Mentoring kids who aren't you flesh and blood: it's not done enough.
And that's really what I was doing for 13 years when I was a social
worker. The character of Lisa's son found it's way in there to show the
compassionate side of Curtis.
Photo by: Dave Schubert Curtis "Vain"
Smith (played by screenwriter Brian Burnam) shows up at
Danny's place after narrowly escaping a police raid. |
Well, speak of the Devil!
-Brian Burnam comes around the corner of the theatre
and Introductions ensue.
So how did Ben ensnare you in his
project?
BURNAM
He showed me the script when I was in the middle of moving to NY. I had
a ticket for a plane that was leaving in 2 weeks. Ben called me out of
blue with the script. I read it and gave feedback. I hadn't talked to
him in like 10 years. I said: "Sounds good, have fun". He wasn't
offering me a job, just calling to pick my brain. He kept harassing me.
Finally I just said, "I'm going to NY" and he said, "there's no such
thing as too much feedback - break my heart". I said, few changes, one
scene in particular. He asked me what I'd recommend and asked if he
could use it. Two days later I got a call. "Check your mail, I sent an
attachment with the scene from over the phone: you said I could use
it." Then he said "What's the matter?" and I said "You got that wrong".
So he said "so you write it, ass hole". And then: "That's perfect" and
we started stuff together. He convinced me he was going to make a movie
he had to stay here and get it done.
MORGAN
I was writing, but he was channeling: real life, memories, it was raw,
just what we wanted. I don't know if I called him "ass hole" but I was
like "why am I writing this over and over and getting it wrong when you
do it once and get it perfect?" and he had never written anything
before, but he had a very real grip on the sense of the story. And he
had a dramatic sense too. Some scenes were interpretations and had a
sense of what was meaningful. The overall story arc never changed but,
pretty much everything else did.
BURNAM
Yeah, like: "Script is locked this week". "Script is locked next week".
You'll never get the movie made like that - novels take decades to
write. You have to lock the script to get it made.
MORGAN You gotta have it ripped from your
hands.
Photo
by Meika Rouda
Cinematographer Kev Robertson shooting Michael "Heir" Rosario (played
by Lane Garrison) and Curtis "Vain" Smith (played by screenwriter Brian
Burnam) on location in the Mission District of San
Francisco. |
The
camera work in the film is so fluid and constantly moving that it seems
hard to have been strict about your script. You said that you let the
actors rewrite or retool their dialogue. Did your actors do any improv
or was it all rewriting from rehearsal work?
MORGAN
They did both. Improv is a dangerous thing and most will advise against
it. You have to have limits. You have to know you will not change the
story arc... you have to be sure what has to stay and what can be
flexible.
I remember hearing that when
Brian was in the scene there would be more improv than if he
wasn't.
BURNAM
I was thrown in the movie at last minute. When I writing it I thought
I'd be the main character. I said to Ben "What's harder: teaching an
actor how to write graffiti or teaching a graffiti writer to act?" A
week before production, the second lead actor bailed. So Ben threw me
in there - not as the role I wanted. When Lane got here he swapped with
me, he was supposed to be Vain, and we had to relearn all the scenes.
We didn't have a script supervisor so we were running through scene by
scene, just trying to hold it together. We were always asking each
other "is this right?", "I think it's right".
MORGAN
We knew what we needed to do but we were okay working outside of our
boundaries and I wanted things to be raw and natural and flexible,
which you will not get if you over-script. We spent our
rehearsals doing back story and bio and bonding so we could be
comfortable with each other and get ready to work on a level that was
personal and intimate. We didn't rehearse the hell out of
dialogue.
How could you have, you shot
in 3 weeks!
MORGAN
Brian and I disagreeon this one. I think 3 weeks was enough time but
since we had no money for producers we were doing preproduction during
production. We were scouting for locations the same dayand dealing with
food and propsand we were all spread so thin that it was chaotic and if
we had things locked down it would have been easier.but, but since we
didn't plan on doing lots of takes or lighting extensively, 3 weeks was
really ample time to shoot.
BURNAM
I was woken up before every shoot: "Brian get up, we're doing it". We
worked late nights. We didn't get to hang out at any of our
locations. Three hours was the longest we spent at any location.
What about the Rooftop scene? The
editing implies the painting takes all night.
BURNAM That was our longest location.
MORGAN
But, even that location we left midway. When we got up there we
shot Bryan Dawson (he was our stunt graffiti artist &
chief
creative consultant - he made the sand mandala) and then while he was
painting we left and shot some other stuff and came back when he was
done.
About the mandala, your film
features some really involved themes.
MORGAN
It was BRANT'S idea to include the mandala and the way the mandala
would weave this theme of impermanence into the story. He pitched it to
me and I didn't get it at first. I couldn't see the theme in terms of
how it affected the story: I just kept thinking "that's not what
happens in the real world". But it sunk in and Brian was feeling it and
it was an outside concept for him and the whole concept of impermanence
and the Mandela was the way to translate that.
You shot on super 16, and your DP did some
really dynamic things with the actors/characters and focal
distance.
MORGAN
Kev and I were soul mates from the start and I knew we had parallel
vision. I trust him completely. And I infected him with
graffiti
off the bat. I gave him newspapers and magazines and videos
and
books and pictures, I had a writer friend give him a Graffiti tour of
San Francisco. In our book, "Putting the Pieces Together",he talks
about how he was drawn to graffiti throw ups, and how they're placed a
certain way. He wanted to shoot the film like a filmic throw up and he
took Brian out and took stills of him by these paintings. Kev
took this really incredible picture of Brian in front of a tunnel. It's
all out of focus with parts of Brian in focus. Then he laid a bunch of
pictures out in front of me and said "choose" and I took the one by the
tunnel. Kev just decided: the look of that picture would be his
aesthetic for the film.
That
was a purposeful philosophy, this ‘in focus/out of focus' aesthetic
would be a great way to deal with the issue of impermanence and
uncertainty. Hetold our editor upfront not to shy away from out of
focus stuff. You know editors are always worried they'll upset the DP
if they include out of focus shots. The sense of impermanence had to be
felt. Everything is fleeting. When Mike walks away he walks into blur.
I take no credit for that work, it was Kev's vision.
Photo by Meika Rouda
Director Benjamin Morgan and Cinematographer Kev Robertson prepare a
shot. |
How did the actors
deal with the camera? Kev must have been all over the
place.
BURNAM
That's what we were expecting. Kev knew what he was getting into. He
knew it was gonna be a lot of hand held, not much staging. Get what we
can get, when we can get it. Not lots of takes. I was ready for a him
to grab the camera and just hope that I could keep up.
MORGAN
We talked about graffiti model for film: graffiti artists do
incredible, compelling workwith no resources. It's not like there's
time or money. We adapted the graffiti model for this film. We didn't
shoot test, or scout locations, or rehearse. Just go out, do it and get
out. We knew it wouldn't be perfect but it'd be raw and loose and
natural and that outweighs any down side.
Kev
gets a lot of credit for the frame work, he shot from documentary
perspective. He planned on not having any control over the subjects so
he have to be flexible. My original script was more
documentary
in nature and I wanted to expose everything about graffiti. I thought
that was the point of it all. I thought I could reach people by
teaching them about it. It's a whole world that we don't talk about.
But we ended up with a much more universal story.That's what Brian
brought: it's about human relationships. People. Sure, if you watch the
movie, you'll get exposed to graffiti but it's not gonna tell you why
people do it.
How are you
distributing?
MORGAN
The film opened theatrically on Wednesday. Right now we're working on
self-distributing which is an incredibly difficult feat. I was coming
in on a bus yesterday and I looked out at the street at a Circuit City
and 24 Hour Fitness and I though ‘how would a little electronic store
compete with that?' And that's what we're up against. We can't assume
the same model, we can't buy big and we have to be creative. It's been
a grassroots, Guerilla marketing campaign - it's all about getting your
name out there in every way you can. We'll be self-distributing in
theatres and depending on how we do in San Francisco, we'll travel with
it. We have a home video deal with Screen Media, so we'll be released
on DVD in spring.
Opening night, tons
of people from your history showed up to see the
film.
MORGAN
It was a combination of people we knew and people who had heard about
it from relations. And then there was the crowd that heard the buzz
about opening. We packed 500 seats. It was a great hometown turnout and
what we're hoping is, since we can't afford ads, we want word of mouth
to get around. So we're counting on people to spread the
word.
About
"spreading the word", I wanted to ask you about use. You made the film
with the intention of using it for out reach. What type of outreach and
why did you feel you needed to make a film to tap your
audience?
MORGAN
I'm really driven about the politics. I've been working with at risk
kids for 13 years. When I was an at risk kid I felt like no one could
help me because they had studied at risk kids in books. No one who was
helping had experienced it, so they couldn't identify or I couldn't
identify with them. This film isn't political but the subject matter
and the material that grows out of it are. I want to drum up
the
problems with our values.
The
issue of graffiti is the tip of the ice berg, the fact we could spend
billions of dollars to wipe the paint off and cut the money from
schools in order to do it.
So far, we've
screened it at some alternative schools. We plan to do more outreach to
high schools. I've worked in treatment centers, partially to stir up
discussions about graffiti. I think, with the high school age group
it's more about showing them that you can do something without
resources. It's been inspirational to kids to know that they can have
nothing and still be creative and achieve things they're proud of. The
film has different uses. When we talk to law enforcement we have
political discussions. When we deal with at risk kids we talk more
about how to achieve your dream and do things you're passionate
about.
Can I ask you about this mean
love you and Brian have?
MORGAN
Originally, I didn't want to Brian acting in the film is because we
fight like brothers. I felt like that would be really unhealthy on a
set. Brian would say "man I can do this" and I had no double but you
don't want the screenwriter on the set and fate took over and it ended
up being the best things ever happened but as screenwriter we argued
all the time but Brian as brother we fought Everything I
feared
was true but almost every debate ended up for the better of the film.
the tension was healthy.
Do both of
you feel that way?
BURNAM
That's it.
You
described Graffiti as a combination of art and sport. It's a pretty
amazing thing, particularly the way you deal with it in the film.
Everything that could be going on in the span of 3 seconds, is. There's
creative pressure, the threat of being found, the thrill of getting
away with it. I mean (I turn to Brian) did you feel like you worked to
put that in your performance?
MORGAN
Brian's not gonna answer that. It's in his contract he doesn't have to
answer questions about graffiti.
Can't
or won't?
BURNAM
It is what it is. I don't like to try and explain it. Hollywood wanted
to cheese it out and we're just gonna show it and if you like then you
do.
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