The Star Malaysia - Star2

Perfect harmony

- By JAKE COYLE

EVEN amid the chaotic melee on the Dolby Theatre stage during the infamous best-picture Oscar flub, Ryan Gosling was typically unflappabl­e. While most reacted with shock and confusion, there was the La La Land star – cool and bemused – chuckling on the side of the stage.

“What can you say?” Gosling said in an interview by phone from Los Angeles. “I was very happy for Moonlight at the same time. It’s such a wonderful film. It’s great to see such great work acknowledg­ed.”

It takes a lot to rattle Gosling. But making Terrence Malick’s largely improvised Song To Song, the 36-year-old actor grants, was like working “without a net.” Gosling stars in the film alongside Michael Fassbender and Rooney Mara. It’s – broadly speaking – a love triangle set against the music scene of Austin, Texas, but the plot describes only so much in a Malick movie. Song To Song isa careening kaleidosco­pe of light and love, wandering between the everyday and the transcende­nt.

Gosling is currently readying for another film with La La Land director Damien Chazelle, in which he’ll play astronaut Neil Armstrong. And he stars in this fall’s sci-fi sequel Blade Runner 2049. But his experience on Song To Song, shot all the way back in 2012, is still powerful for him.

How did Malick approach you?

It was just: Would you be interested in working without a script? I said sure. A little more than a year later, he asked me to come out to Austin. They were doing some kind of preliminar­y shooting at one of the music fests out there. The idea was that he wanted to try to cause what he called “collisions” between a narrative film and this music scene in Austin, to take these scenes into real environmen­ts that you couldn’t control and see what happened.

What was the atmosphere like while shooting in Austin during a festival?

My job was to try to encourage passersby on the street – nonactors, musicians, people in the crowd – to come into the world of the movie and take the scene where they wanted to take it and to try to keep in the world in the movie.

To try to keep them from looking into the camera, to try to make them address me as not an actor but as a fellow concertgoe­r or whatever the situation required. It was very different than just playing a character. It was almost like, I don’t know, your job – to get these people to reveal themselves.

You directed Lost River, a highly personal Detroit-set fairy tale, shortly after making Song To

Song. Was Malick an inspiratio­n? He would give me the camera almost every day and have me shoot something. It was great for me just to be having that practise knowing I was about to go make a film on my own.

He doesn’t place a lot of importance on the rituals that most people in the industry kind of depend upon: continuity, linear storytelli­ng, traditiona­l coverage, a script, hair, make-up, wardrobe, location. In some cases, he refers to them as cinderbloc­ks holding you down. Obviously that doesn’t work for every film, but it’s very helpful to see from that perspectiv­e to sort of demystify the importance of all those things.

Do you think about directing again?

Absolutely. It was one of the best experience­s of my profession­al life. I look forward to doing it again. – AP

 ??  ?? Gosling says working with director Malick on Song To Song was like working without a net. — Broad Green Pictures
Gosling says working with director Malick on Song To Song was like working without a net. — Broad Green Pictures

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