The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

LOVE AFFAIR WITH FILM

Jenna Scott meets north-east screenwrit­er Chris Watt who is beginning to make waves after his second feature film, The Mire, was recently released at an independen­t cinema

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Chris Watt has fond memories of watching iconic Steven Spielberg flick E.T. at Peterhead’s Playhouse Cinema as a child. Now, the 42-year-old is watching his own stories come to life on the big screen as his dream of becoming a screenwrit­er is his new reality. He recently watched his second feature film The Mire premiere at Portsmouth’s No6 Independen­t Cinema last week.

This follows a gruelling 20 years of commitment to an industry that wasn’t always promising to an aspiring “young lad from the north-east coast”.

But Chris recognised a passion within himself from a young age and fanned the flame until he reached his goal.

He said: “The fact that my earliest memory is being taken to the cinema probably says a lot about the person I turned out to be.

“I just couldn’t get enough of it. Cinema was always the art form that I gravitated towards. It’s all about telling stories.”

The father-of-one recalled “falling deeply in love with escapism”, sitting in front of a screen to absorb a film.

“Cinema has always remained the constant. I don’t have a religion, but it’s like going somewhere to worship something you love,” he said.

“I like the idea of someone being able to tell the full story in 90 minutes. It just appealed to me.”

While Chris was immersed in the glitz and glam of showbiz, he had never considered the plausibili­ty of becoming a part of that world, or that it flourished beyond Hollywood.

It wasn’t until his teens that the Peterhead native “found a better grasp for cinema” and began looking for opportunit­ies to explore storytelli­ng.

He credits this to the Belmont Filmhouse in Aberdeen, which has now closed.

“When you’re younger you tend to see cinema as Hollywood, particular­ly American films. It was so important to me to see films that didn’t get exposure in multiplex cinemas.

“The Belmont was incredibly important to me as a teenager because that’s where I saw the smaller films I was reading about. And I became more aware of this after I went to

film school,” explained Chris, who graduated from the University of Northumbri­a in 2001.

Since graduating, Chris has written around 20 screenplay­s and more are currently in developmen­t.

“Film culture up here is incredibly important to help us harvest the talent we have. And to no longer have access to world cinema, or the events they would put on, is a real blow.

He continued: “Cinema is more than a blockbuste­r experience. It is a legitimate art form.

“And we’re not going to have a generation who are curious about film as an art form in this area if we don’t have somewhere like the Belmont cinema to show it.”

Sharing his hometown with award-winning director Jon S Baird and Trainspott­ing actor Peter Mullan, Chris believes the north-east has potential to house the next generation of filmmakers.

Commenting on the city’s “great facilities” and “striking scenery”, he can’t comprehend why Aberdeen isn’t “utilised as much as Glasgow or Edinburgh”.

He said: “Having more films shot in this area is only going to be good for the curiosity of young people who want to get into the business.

“If they see it’s accessible they will come to it and we will have a new breed of filmmakers; God knows we need them.”

At the age of 12, Chris found himself working as an extra on the set of 1992 period drama Salt on Our Skin, and the experience made a huge impression on him.

“I’ll never forget the curiosity I had of seeing the camera, the crew, how the film is made and the camaraderi­e of the crew. I got a big buzz out of that,” Chris said.

Three decades later, Chris relives the same buzz after spending “30 years dreaming”.

Just last August, he witnessed his own penmanship transpire on screen with psychologi­cal thriller Stalker.

The film tells the story of a young woman trapped inside a lift with her stalker and stars Outlander’s Sophie Skelton, Stuart Brennan and WWE legend Bret “The Hitman” Hart. Chris drew upon his own personal experience of being stuck in an elevator before the tale blossomed over a number of years.

Reminded about the graft of his journey, Chris said: “You think it’ll come to you easily but it’s been a long slog. And now it’s finally happened, I’m just holding on for dear life.

“All I can say is you have to work at it and having a strong work ethic is vital. And it’s the cliche of never giving up.

“Rejection is a huge part of this business. I still get rejected now. But every single one of those rejections is a closed door that turns you towards another door.”

Chris’ latest thriller The Mire is the first feature film produced under a local production scheme run by Portsmouth-based company Apple Park Films and was shot entirely in the south-coast city.

It premiered last week.

Chris credits Danny Boyle’s 1994 directoria­l debut Shallow Grave, a film he calls an “absolutely perfect thriller”, as an inspiratio­n behind the story.

I DON’T HAVE A RELIGION, BUT (CINEMA) IS LIKE GOING SOMEWHERE TO WORSHIP SOMETHING YOU LOVE

 ?? ?? ON THE BIG SCREEN: Antony Knight in a scene from The Mire, a film written by Chris Watt.
ON THE BIG SCREEN: Antony Knight in a scene from The Mire, a film written by Chris Watt.
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 ?? ?? Screenwrit­er Watt, right, laments the closure of Aberdeen’s Belmont Filmhouse.
Screenwrit­er Watt, right, laments the closure of Aberdeen’s Belmont Filmhouse.
 ?? ?? Sophie Skelton and Stuart Brennan in Chris Watt’s psychologi­cal thriller Stalker.
Sophie Skelton and Stuart Brennan in Chris Watt’s psychologi­cal thriller Stalker.

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