Spanish Filmmakers Have a Hit
Inspired by Spielberg
By Debbie L. Sklar
Inspired by Director Steven Spielberg, Spanish filmmakers Sadrac Gonzalez, 25,
and Sonia Escolano, 28, have created an award-winning film that leaves viewers
mesmerized.
Myna Se Va (Myna Has Gone) is a graphic, yet heartfelt foreign film about Myna,
a young illegal immigrant woman from an eastern country that is at war. She
works as a home assistant for a married couple and their young son. When the
couple goes on a trip, Myna has to shoulder all of the responsibilities for the
household, as well as the child. However, one night, the child has an accident
and Myna, who knows that she can be deported if she goes to the hospital,
decides to help the child in underground ways. She also has a bout of violence
that is one, if not the most, memorable scene of the film. With a small budget,
the filmmakers hope they have delivered a film that will be on the tips of
everyone’s lips that see it. González recently spoke with
Indie Fest about the
film, what is was like filming in Spain and what’s next on their agenda.
Q: Did you always want to be filmmakers?
A: “Yes, we did. Sonia, wanted to be an actress, but she noticed that her true
talent was as a director to other actors. And me, I always wanted to be
filmmaker since I saw Batman in 1989. I was seven years old, but I knew that
there’s nothing more wonderful in the world than film.”
Q: How did you get started?
A: “We went to the cinema to see a film directed by Steven Spielberg. We were
very excited for this movie but, at the end, we got out disappointed because we
had been waiting to see this movie since 2001. We were in the bus going home
when Sonia said she had an idea for a movie about a lost cat and, after two or
three changes, we had a very interesting issue (without cat). We thought: ‘we
must make it’ and we were so tired of seeing movies which we thought could be
better. So, we decided to make our own movie where cinema would be 100 percent
cinema.”
Q: Why did you decide to write this particular script?
A: “We think that the most important element in a movie is not the story, but
rather if the story can be a transmitter of emotions. Hollywood for years has
been without good ideas because it lacks in this concept. The most important
thing, we think, is to transmit emotion. Filmmakers must get people to feel the
same way as the character feels in the film. When you don’t care about the
characters, the movie is not good. Clint Eastwood proved this when he made yet
another boxing movie [Million Dollar Baby].”
Q: Did you have any unusual difficulties during filming?
A: “Yes, we had two big difficulties: shooting with a seven year-old child
because he was so hyperactive. He had a hard time keeping quiet and his scenes
required the opposite. But, we think that the result is good. Second, the
sequence-shot (the violent rape scene) of 33 minutes. It had to be rehearsed for
three months. At last, we used the steady-cam for shooting (the original scene
was going to be more quiet).”
Q: What lessons did you learn as filmmakers this time around, and what advice do
you have for first-time filmmakers?
A: “Well, we have been making short films since 2005, but this was our first
feature film. We have learned to direct actors in extreme situations, and we
learned to structure a script to make it emotional.”
Q: Will winning an award from
Indie Fest help your career and help promote your
film?
A: “Of course, to win an award means a theatrical distribution in our country.
This is one of the most important things for a movie, with distribution it can
be watched by everyone.”
Q: What's your next project?
A: “It is about the skinhead group and it will have a big budget.”
Q: This movie was graphic, what has the feedback been from people who have seen
it? Are they disturbed? Sensitive toward it?
A: “Yes. During one showing, a woman felt so dizzy, she had to leave the cinema.
We know that the film is graphic, but it’s necessary to show what a real
violation is like and for viewers to understand what a woman feels like in this
terrible situation. There are people out there who are determined to take
advantage of weak people like immigrants. However, we mustn’t forget that this
is a realism movie. Although, almost all of the people who have seen the movie
have agreed that they like it.”
Q: Where did you find the actors?
A: “Sonia Escolano, the co-director, is a theater director too, and almost all
of the actors in the film have come from her theatre group, called Broken and
Stitched.”
Q: What was it like shooting the film in Spain?
A: “In Spain, we usually say:
‘No man is a prophet in his own land.’ The truth
is that Myna has gone on to have success only in the United States. We suppose
that it makes sense because to Spanish people, in general, they only like
American movies.”
Q: Has the film been distributed? If so, where?
A: “Not yet, but we hope so soon. We are beginning to get some support here. We
suppose that we had to prove something first.”
Q: What is the message that you wanted to send out regarding this film?
A: “It’s a critic message about our Western society of racism, but we also
wanted to show the guilt complex when we don’t know if we have done something
really bad. Are we ready to help somebody even if it means a great sacrifice on
our part?”
Q: It costs $7,500 to make; how did you make it for such a little cost?
A: “First, we didn’t want to annoy actors by offering them little pay, so we
ended p hiring unknown actors and as a result we got very natural performances.
Second, obviously we have not much money (laugh). But, overall, we wanted to
prove that we could make a great movie without money.”
Q: Were you pleased with the end result?
A: “Yes, we were. When we finish a short film, we always find mistakes. It’s the
first time that we are pleased with our work.”
Q: There were long periods of time in various scenes where there was no talking
and the camera stayed focused on one room ... was this intentional?
A: “Well, we have the influences of several filmmakers like Michael Haneke or
Gus Van Sant; they usually use this film resource. Besides, we love a single
film resource called “Image Off,” which Alfred Hitchcock used in
Frenzy, for
example. People going to the cinema must use their imagination and when they can
hear a noise, but cannot identify it with an image, they think: ‘what is it
happening? Therefore, the sequence-shot concept is decisive in our film because
it allows us to contain and control the reality due because it is in real-time.”
Q: What was the hardest thing about making this film?
A: “Of course the sequence-shot (the violation scene) because we knew that the
actors would need psychological support. We were worried that maybe we crossed
the limit.”
Q: The best?
A: “The actress who plays Maria had to speak in perfect Russian (she is Spanish)
for the oranges scene. We were very worried for this issue. When the scene only
took one shot, we couldn’t believe it! The entire crew cried and embraced each
other; it was a little strange (laugh).”
Q: How long did it take to make the film?
A: “The shooting was just three weeks but we had to rehearse for six months
totally.”
Q: What are your personal backgrounds?
A: “Well, we come from meek backgrounds, although that’s different in Spain. We
know that in the USA this matter is very important but, in Spain, it’s not
necessary to have a cinema or theater background to make movies or work in this
environment.”
Q: Do you have full time jobs?
A: “No. It would be impossible if we want to make more movies and to have
success.”