Los Angeles Times

Romance in life’s chaos

‘The Climb’ sees love’s messiness as beautiful and ‘settling’ as growth.

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Michael Angelo Covino and Kyle Marvin wrote “The Climb,” the story of an enduring friendship tested by betrayal and disappoint­ment but bonded with laughter. Covino directs and the two star in the film.

Michael Angelo Covino: The initial concept for this film came to me after a friend of mine slept with my ex and I was riding a bike up a mountain in L.A. trying to clear my head.

Kyle Marvin: At the time, we were working on commercial­s in L.A., so we were together every day. Mike showed me some pages he had written for what would eventually become the short film. We immediatel­y started talking it through and playing with it. This process really became the foundation of how we wrote the whole film. We would write something, perform it by ourselves or with friends, feel it out, play with it, explore things and then rewrite.

Covino: From the very beginning what was exciting to us was to look at how we all cope with and process disappoint­ment and betrayal. I found myself laughing at the absurdity of me taking my friends’ betrayal so seriously, and I started questionin­g, why do I care so deeply about this? I didn’t have a good answer, because it doesn’t really make sense. Kyle and I always talk about how the more

painful a situation is, or the more heartbreak­ing, or uncomforta­ble, the more exciting it is as a place to find humor. Pain, discomfort and comedy all live next door to each other; that’s why we can switch so easily from laughter to tears.

Marvin: Crying and laughter are in a way harmonics, both give relief to pressure. They are almost interchang­eable forms of catharsis to a situation, an expression of acknowledg­ing the absurdity of what’s happening or of life. That was something that we were acutely aware of when writing and something that guided our decisions in when and where we would place comedy in the scenes. But the goal was to not overwhelm the film with too much comedy, so we were always trying to find a balance between tragedy and comedy in the writing and in the performanc­es.

Covino: We spent a lot of our time focusing on the dynamic between Mike, Kyle and Marissa. As we were writing, we watched a lot of French cinema and found these recurring themes and situations of love triangles and people coming to accept their imperfect state of affairs. I’ve always found it interestin­g to explore the idea that the more messy something is, the more romantic it is. It’s this idea that a relationsh­ip hasn’t fully become as strong and resilient as it can be unless it’s been through a lot, that a friendship needs to be tested to become a deep friendship.

Marvin: The goal was always to put pressure on the characters, not just from the people around them and the emotional stakes of what is happening in their lives, but actual external physical pressure. We wanted things like mountain

roads, frozen ice, houses and cars to be constantly imposing themselves on the characters. It made for scenes where the environmen­t was helping us to shape the scenes and how they unfolded.

Covino: What was interestin­g was to focus on scenes that were expected and at the same time not expected. You expect a Christmas scene, a wedding scene, a funeral scene, a bachelor party, the first day a kid rides a bike. But we wanted to explore these milestones in a way where they become about something else. The wedding isn’t about ... how much we love each other and kiss, it’s about admitting the things we don’t like about the other person and coming to terms with the fact that sometimes a wedding is about settling. There’s a beauty in that, because at a certain point in our life we settle, and there’s something really romantic about it.

Marvin: That’s tonally where this movie lives. The characters don’t necessaril­y grow in that they evolve into some advanced and more capable and successful versions of themselves. They grow in their ability to accept, understand and be comfortabl­e with the people around them and their own life’s journey.

Covino: To me that feels like real life; it’s always moving. People die, you experience pain, you experience joy, you achieve your dreams, but you also fail at a lot of them. All those things happen at some point or another, but life always moves forward.

Marvin: Don’t take it too seriously.

Covino: Yeah, sometimes you have to laugh.

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 ?? Los Angeles Times ?? M A RV I N, left, and Covino, who also star in their film.
Los Angeles Times M A RV I N, left, and Covino, who also star in their film.
 ?? Zach Kuperstein Sony Pictures Classics ?? GAYLE Rankin is Marissa, the third part of the dynamic.
Zach Kuperstein Sony Pictures Classics GAYLE Rankin is Marissa, the third part of the dynamic.

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