Fairlady

COVER STORY

- BY JONATHAN DEAN

Sofia Coppola on the insecuriti­es of middle age, depicting the disaffecte­d, and her most personal film yet, On the Rocks

Sofia Coppola is an award-winning director, a mother, a wife and a warm, funny woman you’d like to have as a friend. Her latest film reunites her with Bill Murray, but this time he’s a father figure. (And no, we still don’t know what he said to Scarlett Johansson at the end of Lost in Translatio­n.)

SOFIA COPPOLA WAS FIVE YEARS OLD IN 1977 WHEN HER FATHER, FRANCIS FORD COPPOLA — FRESH OFF THE WILD SHOOT FOR APOCALYPSE NOW — INTERVIEWE­D HER.

‘I’m a little fishy, and I swim in the water and have two brothers who are fishies,’ she said, before counting in Cantonese. Later, father asked daughter to record a message for her future self. ‘I am Sofia,’ she said. ‘And when I grow up, I want to be a teacher or a nurse. I like being Sofia, because there’s a lot of fun things that I know how to do.’

Forty-three years later, Sofia is on a Zoom call from Napa in California, where her family is and where she grew up. ‘Oh, my God,’ she says, reminded of the recording. ‘Yes, my dad interviewe­d me when I was a little kid.’ The extended family has been together for lockdown – her husband, Thomas Mars; daughters Romy and Cosima; and brother Roman (one of the ‘fishies’), with his children too. ‘It’s been okay,’ she says. ‘Our kids are a little younger, 10 and 13. But it’s hard for a teenager stuck at home with us.’ Sofia is in a shirt and specs, in a room that looks like it’s waiting to be decorated. Lively chat fills rooms off-camera.

It is in Napa that her father makes his wine, including the Sofia Chardonnay. ‘Light in spirit. Elegant in character,’ the website reads.

So what would Sofia say to her older self today? ‘Oh, trippy,’ she says. She is 49. ‘I hope that I enjoyed it?’ She laughs and adds that she just feels lucky to be putting films out into the world that people, hopefully, get something from. It’s not teaching or nursing, then, but filmmaking is a fun thing she clearly knows how to do. ‘Yes,’ she nods. ‘So I guess I still feel the same as my five-year-old essence.’

She had a strange upbringing. Her Oscar-winning father also filmed her birth. ‘I haven’t seen that in a long time,’ says Sofia, now an Oscar winner too.

For her new film, On the Rocks, she has, in a way, turned the camera back on Coppola Sr, and got Bill Murray to play him. As usual she writes and directs, this time the story of Laura (Rashida Jones) and her dad, Felix (Murray), who spy on Laura’s husband, Dean (Marlon Wayans), when she suspects he might be cheating. It is part odd-couple caper, part moving look at that tricky time when children arrive and dreams are adjusted. ‘What if we find out he’s just busy?’ Laura asks, as she and Felix snoop on Dean. ‘And I’m in a rut?’

LAURA IS SOFIA’S ALTER EGO.

They even look alike. Dean goes away a lot, which makes Laura worry; Sofia’s husband goes away a lot too, given he’s the singer in globe-trotting French indie pop band Phoenix. ‘No,’ Sofia says, when asked the obvious, ‘their relationsh­ip is not based on mine. I was never paranoid and spying.’ She heard a story like the one in the film from a friend, although the influence of her father throughout is very real.

‘I just thought I’d love to see a father-daughter buddy story,’ she says. ‘I have so many memories and quotes from my dad; that relationsh­ip was really impactful. Felix is made up, yet there are elements of my dad. He was bigger than life to me growing up. But Felix is this internatio­nal playboy, so he’s a combinatio­n of my dad and my dad’s friends. Also, my father-in-law is a fun big character. [Felix is based on] a bunch of figures in my life from that generation.’

The conversati­ons between father and daughter are blunt. It’s like Curb Your Enthusiasm with a soul. ‘Women are the most beautiful between 35 and 39,’ Felix says at one point. ‘I have many months left,’ Laura replies. This, incidental­ly, shows Sofia’s underrated humour. ‘People don’t think of me as funny. They think of me as a serious person and the daughter of the Godfather maker – my humour is subtle.’ At another point Laura asks Felix if a man can be satisfied with one woman; the answer is far from reassuring.

‘I wanted to do something about men and women and different generation­s, because it has changed so much,’ Sofia says. ‘There has been a big jump regarding the roles of women.’ In terms of what? ‘Well, just in our culture there have been conversati­ons about how men talk about women and relate to them. I’m not going to say it, but you know.’

I assume she means the Me Too movement. ‘It’s been a big conversati­on over the past couple of years about what’s appropriat­e and what isn’t, and I was trying to have Laura talk to Felix about it. There is a huge generation­al divide between men of my father’s generation and our generation. It had been on my mind for a while.’

On the Rocks is her most personal film in years, the closest we’ve come to who Sofia Coppola is since Lost in Translatio­n.

Casting Murray, who revived his career with his role in that film, is coincidenc­e, but that breakthrou­gh film was essentiall­y about her life back then: unsure of her marriage, looking for connection in a foreign hotel bar, Scarlett Johansson as her younger alter ego. That film, Sofia has said, was a ‘really self-indulgent, personal project’ – and that exposure scared her. Is she scared again? ‘Yes, but that comes with anything that you put out. It reveals what you’re vulnerable about.’

If her first film, The Virgin Suicides, was made because, as Sofia said, she wanted to write for teenage girls, who is On the Rocks for?

‘I was making something about what my friends and I think about. It seems boring to make a film about middle-aged life, as there’s nothing glamorous about that, but I hope it connects for women going through what I was thinking.’

Specifical­ly, she means those years just after having children. And she gets the minutiae so right. There are the chats at school drop-off with parents you don’t like but pretend are interestin­g. There’s a lot of Jones pushing a buggy around New York that looks like paparazzi shots of Sofia doing the same. A scene in Mexico has Jones in a yellow dress in front of a pink wall, bringing to mind

It seems boring to make a film about middle-aged life, because there’s nothing glamorous about that, but I hope it connects for women going through what

I was thinking.

Frida Kahlo; yet Sofia remains the director who most faithfully captures the mood of Edward Hopper’s Nighthawks in her work

– all that silent woe. One great moment has Laura going to Dean’s office. She is introduced as Dean’s wife and there’s awkwardnes­s.

Is it because everyone is having sex with her husband, or is it because they’re younger than Laura?

‘There’s a moment,’ Sofia says, ‘when you have little kids and you’re working and thinking, “Who am I?” You get lost in the shuffle, then you find your way. I don’t feel like that now, but there was a moment I had to figure it out. As a writer I used to stay up all night, but when you have kids you can’t. As a writer you need hours to daydream. Then, suddenly, it’s “babysitter for two hours – be creative!” It was a whole different shift.’ Sofia chronicles life’s disaffecte­d, but not in a grand societal or politic way. When asked about the lack of Oscar recognitio­n for female directors, she says she doesn’t have an answer. Most other female directors I have spoken to are the opposite. Maybe being born into the bigger picture allows one to ignore it and concentrat­e on the details instead, and it is in those details that her films come to life. The sorely undervalue­d Marie Antoinette, starring Kirsten Dunst, fits that pattern. It emphasises character over history to come up with an in-depth look at a monarch as nuanced as The Crown. Marie Antoinette was the punk film of Sofia’s career, about youth and rebellion. On the Rocks, on the other hand, is about the end of such abandon. ‘It does sound dull!’ Sofia says with a laugh when describing her film.

She’s good company: friendly, quiet, thoughtful. And her film isn’t dull – it’s more factual than anything. Because Sofia doesn’t really do downbeat; she just does accurate. Towards the end of On the Rocks, Felix, with his big internatio­nal life, says to Laura, who largely stays at home: ‘You have your own adventure.’ It’s sweet. She was worried, but he is saying don’t be – your life is great; enjoy it. That is, I suppose, what we all have to learn, perhaps Sofia more than most.

‘It’s not so much about growing up, but about her finding her role outside of this big father character. And her role in her life.’

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 ??  ?? Sofia Coppola signs a photograph of herself at the premiere of The Beguiled, which she directed, during the Munich Film Festival in 2017.
Sofia Coppola signs a photograph of herself at the premiere of The Beguiled, which she directed, during the Munich Film Festival in 2017.
 ??  ?? Francis Ford Coppola and his daughter, Sofia, at the 1979 Cannes Film Festival.
Francis Ford Coppola and his daughter, Sofia, at the 1979 Cannes Film Festival.
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 ??  ?? CLOCKWISE FROM FAR LEFT: Bill Murray and Rashida Jones star in Sofia’s latest film, On the Rocks ; Sofia directs the two stars; behind the camera directing The Virgin Suicides, her first feature-length film.
CLOCKWISE FROM FAR LEFT: Bill Murray and Rashida Jones star in Sofia’s latest film, On the Rocks ; Sofia directs the two stars; behind the camera directing The Virgin Suicides, her first feature-length film.
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 ??  ?? CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: Jury member Sofia and her husband, Thomas Mars, at the 2014 Cannes Film Festival; Sofia in New York at a remote viewing of Chanel’s spring/summer 2021 runway show held in Paris last year; Thomas and the couple’s daughters, Cosima and Romy, at a soccer match in Paris.
CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: Jury member Sofia and her husband, Thomas Mars, at the 2014 Cannes Film Festival; Sofia in New York at a remote viewing of Chanel’s spring/summer 2021 runway show held in Paris last year; Thomas and the couple’s daughters, Cosima and Romy, at a soccer match in Paris.

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