Last week I posted the first installment in my Wuthering Heights 2017 series: my interview with Shao'ri Morris, the actress starring as Catherine Earnshaw in the upcoming movie. Today I've got not one but two absolute exclusive features: the fist trailer and an interview with director and screenplay writer, Nina Elisaveta Abrahall. She kindly answered all my questions, even the most insidious ones, with generosity and open-mindedness. You know, I even dared ask whether we truly needed a new version of Emily Bronte's novel after so many had been already made. I think she has a point there! Discover more reading through the interview and enjoy the trailer at the end of the post! By the way, my next interview is with Heathcliff, that is Paul Eryk Atlas. Stay tuned!
First of all, welcome
to FLY HIGH! and thank you so much, Elizaveta! Before I start with my questions would you mind telling the readers something
about you?
Hi, well I have worked
as an actress, writer and Director for the majority of my adult life, I live in
Herefordshire and have always loved the classics. As I've got older I've become
more keen to see projects through from inception to finish myself, rather than
working on other people's projects and wuthering Heights is the culminaiton of
two years writing and two years pre produciton so far. By the time it completes
it will have been a five year project from start to end.
The first questions that comes to my mind is … Why of all
the classics you decided to adapt Emily Bronte’s Wuthering Heights?
It was the first adult
book that I read as quite a young child that I really related to. I read it
first probably when I was 6 or 7 and as we lived miles from anywhere I was
quite a lonely child and spent a lot of time feeling quite kindred to
Catherine. As I got older I began to see different facets of the novel until
finally I realised exactly how much it has going on with it that is rarely
touched upon, so it's been an important book to me my whole life.
Since there have been several adaptations of Wuthering Heights both for the big and the
small screens, what is it that you felt the need to say that those versions
didn’t?
I have nothing against
ny of the previous versions of Wuthering Heights, they all in their own ways
have a great deal of meit, but most of them are not actually Wuthering Heights,
they are adaptations of only part of the story and sometimes they are so
contrived and mixed up and that the essence of the story is lost entirely. This
on the other hand follows the book quite closely by comparison. It does include
things not included in the book, but which were likely as well as some fan
theories which were stringly implied or hinted at in the novel, but this is
going to be the first retelling of all major parts and generations involved in
the story, so I hope that alone gives it some merit.
Personally, I love to compare the book to its adaptations
and even the different adaptations between them. But, you know, many believe
that “the book is always better than the
movie”. What’s your opinion as a
reader/viewer?
I do by and large tend
to agree. It's impossible to convey all of the tiny nuances which are present
in books, and it's important when we watch a film to understand that if we
tried to include them all, it would be slow ands dry and boring, and very very
very long! Even versus my own adaptation I doubt I will ever prefer anything to
the book as you can disappear into that world for days as you read it, whereas
any film is only a few hours.
Can you tell us what you especially like of Cathy?
Cathy is this primal
force, she has this wild woman energy and doesn't care who or what she offends.
I think in this world where we all have to conform and mind our manners a lot,
it would be very freeing to have her sense of emancipation. Whenever you
imagine a heroine it's always something fierce and wild and for me Cathy is the
embodiment of that.
And what about Heathcliff?
In our fantasies we
all want a Heathcliff, a tall, dark, exotic someone who will love with a
passion so fierce it's terrifying and who will mourn himself to death on our
demise over 20 years. In reality a Heathcliff would be a petrifying psychopath
who would be best avoided, but in the book, I really like him because as a
youth is he full of strength and surety and
towards the end of his life, he is just really fed up, disappointed and
worn down and I think we can all relate to that too. He's the human failing in
all of us.
Do you reckon contemporary readers/viewers can still relate
to those 19th century lovers? How’s that possible?
Yes. Human nature
never changes. There are soulmates then, now and always. If we are lucky we
find them ourselves and if not then we get to watch others blaze brightly but
that will never change, love is a constant necessary for our very existance.
Being the screenwriter as well as the director of this
movie, which was the hardest tasks you had to face in both roles?
To be honest doing
both made the job a whole lot easier. As I wrote I saw the movie in my head
which made the logistics of location, costume and casting very simple indeed.
Once I had cast it to my satisfaction, I'm happy to say that as we all lived
together at my house as a 'Wuthering Heights Family' it was very easy to convey
what I wanted to the cast, especially Sah'ori and Paul who I worked with very
closely. It because so second nature to everyone that I barely needed to Direct
anyone, they got it as I wished pretty immedietely.
Did you use Emily Bronte’s dialogues as they are, famous
lines included, or did you try to semplify and modernise the language?
No I didn't modernise
the language at all and for the most part used direct dialogue from the books.
The noteable exceptions to that occur where I have utlised my own original
characters to propel the story forward at a faster rate due to time
consatraints for the finished film, such as when the servants ( non original
Bronte characters) discuss their Mistress'
final illness. It just makes it jog along a little faster and doesn't
labour over parts of the story we need to know but which we don't actually need
to see, just simply understand has taken place. Even those conversations are
with language contempray to 1780 though, so it shouldn't jar on the viewer
hopefully.
Do you have a favourite line/scene?
Yes and it's an
important one constantly overlooked. It's actually the way Heathcliff treats
and considers Isabella before their marriage. He is the only male character
that gives any kudos to a woman's right to choose anything in the whole book.
He says of Isabella:-
'I have a right to
kiss her if SHE chooses',- ergo it is HER choice- and he always gives her a
choice prior to their marriage.He shows himself in all his detestable cruelty
to her in hanging her dog, and yet she still marries him. He did not decieve
her, and in a backhanded way that is admirable.
If you could substitute one of your actors for one day,
which character would you like to play?
If I was young and
gorgeous I'd be Cathy in all her wild spirited glory, she's a joy of a role.
About our guest: Nina Elisaveta Abhrahall
Always a bookish child, Wuthering Heights is the first book that Elisaveta can remember reading on her own somewhere around the age of six. She was immedietely enraptured by the story and revisited it many times during her adolescence and adulthood and through all sorts of other projects it remained like a constant nag at the back of her mind until now when it finally demanded to be brought to life.
Educated in Soliihull and later at RADA, she has cultivated a career as an actress, writer and director as well as working as an agent for The Wintersmith Agency.
She set up Three Hedgehogs Films, named after her family's coat of arms of three gold hedgehogs on a blue background in 2012 which specialise in historical films, and recently collaborated with the late Gordon Honeycombe on a screenplay for his novel Dragon Under the Hill, slated for production in early 2017.
And now ... here's the brand new trailer!
No comments:
Post a Comment