Baz Luhrmann Quotes


Baz Luhrmann

The Red Curtain requires some basics. One is that the audience knows how it will end when it begins, it is fundamental that the story is extremely thin and extremely simple - that is a lot of labour. Then it is set in a heightened, created world. Then there is a device - the heightened world of Strictly Ballroom, Verona beach. Then there is another device - dance or iambic pentameter or singing, and that`s there to keep the audience awake and engaged. The other thing is that this piece was to be a comic tragedy. This is an unusual form, there`s been a few goes at it - (like) Dancer in the Dark - but it`s not common in Western cinematic form.

So, what is creative freedom? We can make what we want, how we want. The only constraint is: not for any budget.

It`s meant to be an ultra-romantic story

...if you make a film full of risk, studios don`t run towards you to give you $50,000,000 in order to reinvent the post-modern musical, I can tell you. If you do manage to cajole them into doing it and you want to maintain the flag of creative freedom, you better make sure that it pays its bill.

We set it in 1899 to reflect where we are,

We have some of the most extraordinary landscape on the planet and we want to get two of the most extraordinary actors in the world and put them ... in that landscape.

There are successes and failures in what we`re doing, but that`s the road we`re walking down - stealing from culture all over the place to write a code so that very quickly the audience can swing from the lowest possible comedy moment to the highest possible tragedy with a bit of music in the middle.

There`s no doubt that when you`re up for an award you want to win, but, finally, art is not a horse race. If Gladiator was a great film in its form and Crouching Tiger a great film in its form, which is better? They`re just different. It`s not a horse race. You can`t say, you know, Gladiator is so much faster!

All the films I make are about 60% of what I imagine them to be

That`s the only plan I`ve got - to not have a plan.

What I think is extraordinary, apart from the inherent values of the ideas, is that we were experiencing ourselves a historic moment in the life of the Internet, an example of how massive publishing power is in the hands of anyone with access to a PC.

She is just a life force to be reckoned with,

So we thought, let`s look back to a cinematic language where the audience participated in the form. Where they were aware at all times that they were watching a movie, and that they should be active in their experience and not passive. Not being put into a sort of sleep state and made to believe through a set of constructs that they are watching a real-life story through a keyhole. They are aware at all times that they are watching a movie. That was the first step in this theatricalised cinematic form that we now call the Red Curtain.

One of the proud moments for us was Robert Wise, who directed Sound of Music and West Side Story, he is the great-great grandfather of musical cinema and he said, I`ve seen Moulin Rouge and the musical has been re-invented." I bring this up because you get that kind of thing and that`s wonderful."

But above everything else, Shakespeare had to deal with a city of 400,000 people and a theatre that held 4,000 and everyone from the streetsweeper upwards. Not unlike your local cineplex, and he used everything possible to arrest and stop that audience - really bawdy comedy and then, wham! Something really beautiful and poetic. Everything we did in Romeo and Juliet was based on Elizabethan Shakespeare. The fact that there was pop music in it was a Shakespearean thing. We would be fearless about the lowness of the comedy.

So, yes, we won for ourselves a criteria, a mantra, which is that we only make what we want to make in the way we want to make it. I believe we make universal stories for the world, but it has an Australian voice, and to maintain that voice you must be connected to your land. So the need to be in Australia motivated us to motivate Fox to build this studio down there, where they now shoot Star Wars and The Matrix, so it`s a wonderful facility.

We went to this huge, icecream picture palace to see a Bollywood movie. Here we were, with 2,000 Indians watching a film in Hindi, and there was the lowest possible comedy and then incredible drama and tragedy and then break out in songs. And it was three-and-a-half hours! We thought we had suddenly learnt Hindi, because we understood everything! (Laughter) We thought it was incredible. How involved the audience were. How uncool they were - how their coolness had been ripped aside and how they were united in this singular sharing of the story. The thrill of thinking, `Could we ever do that in the West? Could we ever get past that cerebral cool and perceived cool.` It required this idea of comic-tragedy. Could you make those switches? Fine in Shakespeare - low comedy and then you die in five minutes.

Moulin Rouge

To say it is a complex and large-scale undertaking is an understatement and I cannot formally announce the project until all of the crucial elements are secure.

Well, it`s pretty hard for them to sack me and put someone in to do iambic pentameter in modern dress, you know? What we`ve made, we only have one iron-clad guarantee every single time which is it will never work and no-one will ever see it. Because it has gone on to more than pay its bill, and, by varying degrees, it has been acclaimed, the notion that the studio interferes... I like to engage with them, I don`t have a producer... There`s a whole system in Hollywood where the director never speaks to the studio, but I like to engage them in a discussion. I listen. But then finally we listen to ourselves.

Russell, Nicole and I have been wanting to do a large Australian piece for a very long time.

The primary myth part came out of a revelation of the value of Shakespeare. Those are dramas that play to the simple person and the complicated person.






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Empire Award for Best Director
Baz Luhrmann
BAFTA Award for Best Direction
Baz Luhrmann
BAFTA Award for Best Adapted Screenplay
Baz Luhrmann
Films directed by Baz Luhrmann
Australia (2008)
Baz Luhrmann
Moulin Rouge! (2001)