Kathimerini English

Keeping the myths alive in ‘Before Midnight’

Trilogy director and lead actors share their thoughts and experience­s on Greek shoot

- BY CHRISTINA SANOUDOU

Not two hourshad passed since he landed at Athens Internatio­nal Airport with a long day of interviews ahead of the official premiere of “Before Midnight” before him, but American actor Ethan Hawke was full of energy and obviously excited to meet up again with director Richard Linklater and on-screen partner Julie Delpy at the Hotel Grande Bretagne.

His excitement may also have been due to the fact that he wasn’t in Greece just for the film’s premiere but also for a family holiday in the Peloponnes­ian region of Messinia, where the romantic drama in which he stars is set.

Linklater, Delpy and Hawke spent a few minutes chatting away like old friends do, oblivious to the cameras and the journalist­s waiting to bombard them with questions.

“We have so much to talk about. We don’t see each other every day,” Delpy apologized, as Hawke quipped: “We’re not a couple in real life. We don’t have kids together.” Linklater could not hold back his enthusiasm about the film’s location in the southweste­rn Peloponnes­e, describing the entire experience as “amazing.”

“It has never happened to me before to be working in a foreign country and not feeling the urge to jump on the first plane back home,” he said.

According to the helmsman who directed Hawke and Delpy in the first two installmen­ts of the trilogy, “Before Sunset” and “Before Sunrise,” “Before Midnight” is “very much a Greek film.”

“It could have been filmed anywhere,” he conceded, “but we decided to do it in Greece. We looked around for the right place to convey the impression that the protagonis­ts were in paradise, and we found it here.”

After finding his ideal location, Linklater went on to write the screenplay, incorporat­ing pieces of local history and culture.

“We knew that wherever we made the film, we would use the location as an integral part of it,” Hawke added. “It could have been set in Italy or Argentina, but this particular location really grabbed our fancy.”

There is a scene in the film where Celine, played by Delpy, expresses some concern about the current situation in Greece.

“When you watch the news abroad you get the impression that a revolution could break out at any minute,” Delpy said when asked about that scene. “But when you come to Greece you see that it is all happening in one small part of Athens. We know that the crisis is real and that people are suffering, but this is not a country on the brink of collapse.”

A refreshing­ly “real” film that does not try to wow nor project an idealized version of human relationsh­ips, “Before Midnight” raises the question of why so many films go to such lengths to replace reality with cliches. “I have often wondered about that myself,” answered Hawke. “For example, every time I have seen a birth scene in a film, it is completely fake – it has nothing to do with reality. I would imagine that at least half the people working on these production­s have been in a delivery room. Yet they keep up the lie, indifferen­t to whether the end result is overly dramatic. The same goes for love scenes. We like to maintain myths,” he added. “Ultimately, everyone else needs to feel that their lives are totally boring.”

encounter in Vienna in 1995 was followed by a second meeting in Paris in 2004. Now Jesse (Ethan Hawke) and Celine (Julie Delpy) take a realistic look at their relationsh­ip as they vacation with their children at Pylos, in Mani, in the Peloponnes­e.

‘Before Midnight’ are currently taking place at a number of open-air movie theaters in Athens and the city’s suburbs.

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