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Female Forward

Catching up with some of the women making news at Sundance.

- BY KRISTEN TAUER

“One of our intentions was that by not coming at truth straight on, by kind of circling around notions of truth, that we get at something a little more real than if we had just put Annie [Clark, St. Vincent] in front of the camera and interviewe­d her.”

CARRIE BROWNSTEIN

“WE’RE NOT DATING IN THE film. We’re not fighting in the film, we’re not enemies. It’s just two artists — it’s like a coartistic journey,” says Carrie Brownstein, describing the film she cowrote and costars in with Annie Clark ( aka St. Vincent).

“It’s a lady two- hander,”

Clark adds, lounged on a couch next to Brownstein in Park City the afternoon ahead of their midnight premiere. “And, we’re not robbing the bank.”

The musicians, longtime friends — they met in 2005 through mutual friends during South by Southwest — teamed up for the doc- drama hybrid, “The Nowhere Inn.”

“At the end of 2017 I was on tour and I broached the idea with Carrie to make a tour doc with me,” says Clark of the film’s beginnings. “We had a very loose idea of basically a concert film, with some skits in between. And then it was just kind of a long, strange trip to get to this place, where it’s completely fictionali­zed and completely scripted.”

“We play ourselves, but we played versions of ourselves,” adds Brownstein. “It’s kind of a thriller and it’s sort of a fake documentar­y and there’s a lot of aspects of it, but it’s definitely a deviation from how we started out.”

In the film, which is structured as a documentar­y, Brownstein is tapped by best friend Clark to shoot a music documentar­y about her. The resulting project causes a rift in their relationsh­ip.

“One of our intentions was that by not coming at truth straight on, by kind of circling around notions of truth, that we get at something a little more real than if we had just put Annie in front of the camera and interviewe­d her,” says Brownstein. “We’re sort of exposing the artifice of what a real documentar­y is.”

“Ultimately the artists at hand have final cut over the thing,” says Clark. “So they’re telling the story that they want told. There’s a layer of authentici­ty or truth to any kind of documentar­y where the subject is the final filter, that will be forever just through their own lens anyway. So we were just like, let’s acknowledg­e that and then run with it.”

The fake music documentar­y is a stark contrast to the recent influx of music docs with some of the industry’s boldest names — a Taylor Swift one opened

Sundance, a Justin Bieber docuseries followed closely behind, and a Billie Eilish one is on the way — and subverts the genre to expose its limitation­s.

“These notions of authentici­ty and likability are topics that Annie and I just discuss in our regular lives, as people who are asked in the modern culture of celebrity and performanc­e to have a certain kind of relatabili­ty or likeabilit­y,” says Brownstein. “And how much of that is real or not, how much of that is performed,” she continues. “And so I think we put some of those ideas into the film so that it does feel a little meta, where in the film we are trying to get at that realness that supposedly documentar­ies get at. But what we discover is that that’s an impossible task. And that realness is often very mundane.”

“And also, why is there a premium put on realness when what you do as an artist is try to create really exciting, pretty, jarring — or whatever — interestin­g worlds?” adds Clark. “And to me that’s more interestin­g than the idea of someone, you know, watching ‘Dateline’ on the tour bus.”

“Especially female performers, there is this premium on, well, you’re supposed to get on stage and be otherworld­ly, but then at the same time be super down to earth,” says Brownstein. “You’re supposed to Instagram what you ate for breakfast and your beauty routine and just be very like relatable and almost exalt the domesticit­y of one’s life, but then also be able to wow people. It’s like, can’t I just do one of those things? And hopefully the latter.”

The pair describes the collaborat­ive process as “kind of dreamy,” with a natural give-andtake as they relinquish­ed control to cater to their respective strengths as creatives. The pair tapped

Bill Benz, who Brownstein knew through their work on “Portlandia,” to direct; it’s his first feature film. Dakota Johnson, playing herself, also stars in the film.

“One of the things we’re excited about is I think it does defy people’s expectatio­ns of what this is,” says Brownstein. “One reason that we changed the format of the film was so that it was more coherent with who Annie is on stage. We wanted the movie to speak to what she’s capable of and her uniqueness instead of just being like, and here she is, stripped back.”

 ??  ?? St. Vincent and Carrie Brownstein
St. Vincent and Carrie Brownstein

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