Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Eyes sold filmmaking duo on crafting movie about donkey

- By Lindsey Bahr

It was the eyes that did it. Filmmaker Jerzy Skolimowsk­i had decided some years ago that his next film was going to be about an animal. He and his wife and co-writer, Ewa Piaskowska, had been getting bored of traditiona­l movie structure and dialogue and wanted to do something different.

They didn’t know which animal to choose, though. Cats and dogs were out. That has been overdone, they thought. Then they came upon the donkey, an intelligen­t, stoic creature with historic significan­ce in not only religion but cinema as well, most famously in Robert Bresson’s 1966 masterpiec­e “Au Hasard Balthazar.” But it was those massive, expressive eyes that convinced them they’d found a star who could hold the frame.

The resulting film, “EO,” is the story of a circus donkey who is taken from his owner and begins a long, spiritual journey through the modern Polish and Italian countrysid­es, encounteri­ng humans both kind and cruel. Eo doesn’t talk, but he does dream, and you can’t help but feel his burdens, his loneliness and his hope. It is, they said, a love letter to animals, and it’s playing in select theaters.

“We wanted this film to be more of an experience than a traditiona­l feature film,” Piaskowska said in a recent interview with Skolimowsk­i. “We were very conscious of the fact that we wanted to speak to the viewer through emotions mostly because our hero is devoid of any words. The idea was from the very beginning that we don’t want to tell the story about the donkey, but that we want the audience to feel like it is a donkey.”

Skolimowsk­i, 84, has received wide praise for the film. After a long production that began in 2020 and was delayed because of the pandemic, they finally wrapped in March and two months later were at the Cannes Film Festival, where it won the jury prize. Since then, “EO” has been selected to represent Poland at the Oscars and picked up several prestigiou­s critics’ group awards.

Though there were headaches because of the pandemic, the production was actually quite a serene undertakin­g. They employed six donkeys to play Eo, named Marietta, Tako, Hola, Ettore, Rocco and Mela, and everyone took care to create a relaxing and supportive environmen­t to get the donkeys to do what they needed them to do.

“Everything was very quiet, very smooth,” Skolimowsk­i said. “There was no rushing, and people were really keeping down their nerves.”

If they needed the donkey to cross a bridge, and the donkey didn’t want to cross the bridge, all they

could do was wait.

“Time ceased to exist,” said Piaskowska, who also produced the film. “You give him some carrots, and then you wait some more. Then you try the other donkey. I can’t tell you how much nicer sets were. Everybody uses a very gentle voice. Everyone’s smiling. We were like kids in kindergart­en devising ways to convince the donkey to do this or that.”

Both give special credit to cinematogr­apher Michal Dymek, who would sometimes shoot from the donkey’s point of view, and editor Agnieszka Glinska for canny cuts and juxtaposit­ions that help make the performanc­e and get the audience invested in the emotional life of the animal without the use of dialogue. Composer Pawel Mykietyn was even asked to think of the score as Eo’s inner monologue.

“Instead of having dialogue, he would produce the sound which would express the emotion, the mood of the animal,” Skolimowsk­i said. “He did it in a perfect, perfect way. I think the film owes him a lot.”

 ?? SIDESHOW AND JANUS FILMS ?? Filmmaker Jerzy Skolimowsk­i is seen on the set of “EO,” a film about a circus donkey.
SIDESHOW AND JANUS FILMS Filmmaker Jerzy Skolimowsk­i is seen on the set of “EO,” a film about a circus donkey.

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