Fishing for an Oscar
An Interview with British filmmaker Chris Jones
By: Laura Lee
When making a film, it helps to have a clear vision. British director and author
Chris Jones proclaimed his goal to make an Oscar-worthy short film and found
people ready to join his journey every step of the way. The result,
Gone
Fishing, is 10 minutes of visually lush and emotionally touching story telling.
It has won numerous awards, including an Indie Fest award, received critical
praise and, yes, it was short-listed for the coveted golden statue.
The genesis of “Gone Fishing” was an off-hand comment during a film seminar.
Jones, who is the co-author of the
Guerilla Film Makers Handbook, had
carved out a niche for himself as a master teacher.
“I’d become quite comfortable with that,” Jones said. “I was doing a film
seminar for some students and a girl who was particularly focused said, ‘You’re
not a filmmaker. You’re a writer.’ I thought, ‘How dare you! You cheeky little
so-and-so!’ And then I realized she was right. It had been so long since I’d
done the last film that really I was more of a writer than I was a filmmaker.”
Jones decided it was time to get back in the directing game with a
feature-length script called
Rocketboy. He got some positive feedback,
but producers were skeptical that a film could be successful with a director at
the helm who had no recent credits.
“I said, ‘Fine, I’ll make you a short film that resonates in the same ways as
Rocketboy, and I’ll deliver it to you in a year, and it will be world class
and will win an Oscar. So I was completely bonkers. But we put our stake in the
ground.”
Not only did Jones set his Oscar goal, he posted it publicly in his blog,
http://www.chrisjonesblog.com/,
and asked everyone who had an interest to come along with him on the journey.
“What better way to set a goal than publicly,” he said. “‘Look I’m going to try
to win an Oscar, and I need your help.’ At no point after that was it possible
for me to go to bed when I was tired if I knew that extra thing needed to be
done. There was nowhere to hide. And that created an overwhelming drive. As soon
as people see that, everyone’s infected by it. It’s like the lunatics are out of
the asylum then. We lunatics congregate together and do stupid things like make
films.”
While some might consider the blog to be a marketing tool, Jones prefers to
think of it as “sharing,” a concept that permeates every part of process from
working with actors to financing. The entire ₤22,000 production was funded by
small donations from individual donors. The film had 150 associate producers in
all.
“We made the lofty claim that we were going to win an Oscar and people started
to believe in the dream.” he said. “I basically asked everyone I’d ever met for
₤50.”
Jones’ Oscar aspiration, and feel-good script, attracted talented artists who
were willing to donate their time and energy. The film stars veteran Scottish
actor Bill Patterson as Old Bill and Devon Murray (Seamus in the Harry Potter
films) as Young Bill. It was the only time cinematographer Vernon Layton, whose
credits include
The Englishman Who Went Up a Hill and Came Down a Mountain, and
I Still Know What you Did Last Summer, has donated his time to a film project,
Jones said.
Shot on 35mm film, the stock, cameras, and lighting for
Gone Fishing were also
all donated.
“That was part and parcel of saying, ‘We’re not just going to make a short film,
we’re going to win an Oscar.’ We need a cast now that is worthy of an Oscar, and
suddenly everything was raised to that sort of level. I run a very optimistic
ship and I believe as an independent filmmaker you can’t be a ruler you have to
be a leader. So I’m always picking up lights and so on so people can see I’m
busting my gut along with everyone else. They know I’ve done enough drafts of
the script to get it right; they know that I’ve seen every actor possible; that
I hired the best DP and the best editor; and we’re shooting on film and not
digital. By virtue of the actual physical technology, it requires that you find
people who are experienced and passionate about that aspect of the craft, which
then raises the game. When people see we’ve pushed the boat out in that way,
they want to get on board.”
The director was pleased to discover that the advice he had had been giving in
the
Guerilla Film Maker’s Handbook and his seminars was effective in real life.
“For example, my take is, if you hire a DP because they’re great then you trust
them,” he said. “Whether they get the shot exactly the way you wanted in your
head is not important compared to whether you’re in an emotional space right
next to the actor. When you say, ‘Cut,’ the actor looks over and sees you’re
three feet away looking into his eyes, instead of fifty feet away with your
headphones on and your back to him looking at a monitor and saying, ‘That was
good but can you again, but do it better?’ This is what a lot of directors do on
their first films, and they wonder why their actors fall out with them.”
He believes that too many new film makers rush into production, and worry about
financing and marketing, before the script, or the director, are ready.
“The reason money doesn’t find most people is that the project isn’t worth
making, he said. “It’s not often said; it’s almost sacrilege to say to
filmmakers, ‘Actually your idea is rubbish. Go back to square one and start with
something work making.’ You’re talking about an investment of millions, if not
millions at least certainly hundreds of thousands, if not in cash, then in
personal time; in your time and in other people’s time. It’s a massive
investment. You have to build your house on a solid foundation. A lot of people
invest too much too early and end up working in Pizza Hut for three years
because they can’t get over this catastrophe of a film that they forced upon
themselves because they simply did it too early in their development.”
It is experience he gained the hard way.
“I’ve made a feature film that was unwatchably bad. At the time only one person
told me, a good friend. I said, ‘Well you know mate, you’re wrong. It’s genius!’
It’s like ex-girlfriends and boyfriends. There is part of you that is still kind
of in love with it, but now you have perspective and you say, ‘That was actually
a bit of a mess, but we can be friends.’ The awful truth is one needs an
enormous ego in order to get you through, and sometimes that ego is the very
thing that blinds you to criticism. We all want to believe, who doesn’t want to
believe, that their next film is going to be a smash hit, make everybody very
wealthy and feed the soul?”
Regardless of the outcome, however, Jones firmly believes making a film is worth
the effort.
“One of the things I fundamentally believe in is that what we do as filmmakers
is very important. It’s so wonderful to sit at the back of a screening and to
hear people sniffling at the same moment, or jump or laugh at that same moment,
and to know that you’ve created that emotion in them. That, I think, is the real
addiction of film making and story telling. You can say it’s manipulative, and
to some degree it is, but stories should manipulate the audience into an
uncomfortable place, because it’s only when they’re uncomfortable that they
confront how they might react to something. And that is the rehearsal for the
real life that they’re going to have to deal with tomorrow. ‘If Luke Skywalker,
who is a farmer, can save the universe, maybe I can break up with my partner or
maybe I can ask that person on a date, or maybe I can ask my boss for a pay
rise.’ So what we do deeply resonates with people.”
And by asking a wider audience to follow his film making journey online, Jones
has learned to put a positive spin on all of his experiences.
“One of the things that stifles creative people is the fear of failure or
getting it wrong,” he said. “I’m not infected by that any more. I can’t get it
wrong. It’s just an experience that either creates a result or it doesn’t. And
if it doesn’t, I have to figure out a new way. But that all came out of having
to write without saying, “Oh it’s been an awful day,” because I know no one
wants to hear that.”
Thanks to
Gone Fishing, Jones no longer feels that he is more of a writer than a
film maker.
“I’ve met so many incredible filmmakers on the festival circuit. I’ve made very
strong new relationships with them and we’re inspiring each other to keep going
and to move to new heights. That’s been extraordinarily rewarding. So I’m back,
baby!”