Before Anything You Say
Before Anything You Say is a 2017 Canadian experimental domestic drama film directed and produced by Shelagh Carter and written by Deborah Schnitzer about a couple struggling to maintain their love and marriage even as a life-altering decision threatens to tear them apart.[2][1][3] Carter's second independent feature film is partly autobiographical,[4] its "impulse" based on an event in Carter's own life and another experience in Schnitzer's.[5] The film toured mainly in Europe, at Film Festival International-organized events in 2017 and 2018,[6] winning a handful of awards ahead of its Canadian premiere at the Gimli Film Festival in 2018, where Shelagh Carter was presented with an award by the Directors Guild of Canada.[3] SynopsisWhile on vacation in Paris, a couple are faced with a crisis when Jack (Darcy Fehr) announces his intent to pursue a dangerous job that would require him to live in Bangkok for five years, working to combat human trafficking. He assumes that his wife Isobel (Kristen Harris) will follow, leaving her life and career behind. However, Isobel is not prepared to follow blindly. Hurt and feeling misunderstood by one another, they attempt to reconcile their lives and love in Paris while Jack attends business meetings, and in their recently built dream home in Winnipeg. Both struggle with a desire to care for others without being aware of their inability to care for each other, refusing to give up despite themselves and despite the world around them.[3] Cast
ThemesOn the surface, Before Anything You Say is a film about "life-altering decisions",[3][7] but the way the film deals with the theme, the decision in question leads to an argument which brings other issues to the surface, as Sheila O'Malley points out in an interview with Shelagh Carter: Jack shuts Isobel out of his decisions, and Isobel has abandonment issues: "He is making a decision about his life and trying to involve her, but in her mind, he's leaving her."[1] Carter said in response:
The theme of abandonment is seeded throughout the film through brief inserts of other people: younger women, the woman at the coffee shop, the woman at the bar, the couple walking on the street, seeing the girls out the window, shots of long-haired women walking away from the camera:
ProductionInspiration and developmentThe earliest film to inspire Carter was Hiroshima Mon Amour, a collaboration between Alain Resnais and Marguerite Duras:
Deborah Schnitzer had been collaborating with Carter since the short film Rifting/Blue (2005).[5][9] At the same time, Carter's husband had just taken advantage of an opportunity which took him elsewhere, and "he was gone and here I was, in the prairies, by myself, in the place he wanted to move to."[1] Their relationship was the "springboard" for Carter and Schnitzer, who drew on an experience of her own walking along the Champs-Élysées, an argument with her own husband of "epic proportions" whose revelations "we scarcely comprehend even now."[5] Carter and Schnitzer talked about how painful it was, "when you miss each other, when you think you know the other person ... and then suddenly they take a Left turn. We wanted to mix some of the personal with fictional aspects."[1] Writing and castingWhen it came to the structure of the script for Before Anything You Say, Carter wanted to play with past and present, and to experiment with memory. Talking about where the characters might have gone on vacation, it was Schnitzer who nominated Paris. "Paris is usually the place of love and nostalgia, but for this couple they can't find what Paris is." Schnitzer watched Hiroshima Mon Amour and began writing.[1] Around the time that Carter had gone to see Schnitzer with her story idea, they had both just seen Darcy Fehr in the role of George in a production of Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?: "He was terrific.".[1] After Schnitzer sent her script to Carter, they had a reading with Fehr and Kirsten Harris,[1] who together had played the lead roles as husband and wife "in a similar stressful difficult relationship" in Passionflower, Carter's first feature film.[10] The two of them both said, "We've got to do this!"[1] FinancingIt is unclear what the budget for Before Anything You Say was, or whether the film had sponsorship beyond C$12,010 raised by November 2015 on crowdfunding website Indiegogo.[11] FilmingPrincipal photographyThe film was shot over six days by cinematographer Ousama Rawi, who first worked with Carter on One Night.[12] Carter considered him "a great mentor": "Sometimes he kicks my ass and I love it. He believes in me so he's going to give me the straight goods. The bar is high. Why do we settle? No. We do not settle. I love that about him."[1] The film being experimental in structure, trust played an important part for the director and the two leads: "I trusted all the years of directing, I had to trust it, and I trusted these two actors. They really went for it. There was a little bit of fear, I think, to really go to those emotional places."[1] Harris loved the role of Isobel, but was "beyond scared to do it", "actually shaking, unable to sleep" the night before the first day of shooting:
According to Carter, Fehr was scared too: "It hit them in different ways. As soon as Kristen's on a set, she's there. Any anxiety leading up to that moment disappears and she's just there."[1] Fehr's problem was different: he had always played characters "who need to seem to be good guys", and this character challenged him to be "brave" and to "get ugly".
Editing and post-productionBefore Anything You Say was editor Chad Tremblay's first feature but he and Carter had already worked many times before on short films:
Carter referred to David Mamet saying that editing is like a dream: "your subconscious is going to show you only what you want to see. And so I'd go away and I'd think about it, 'What is the ending? I don't think I want them in the shot. I think I just want their voices.' We worked with montages, and then we found it, we found the ending.[1] Post-production took place in Toronto under the supervision of Pete Soltesz, a producer on Carter's next film, Into Invisible Light. Soltesz told Carter when she arrived that his team were arguing about Jack and Isobel and who was right, taking sides (Soltesz was on the side of the husband): "And it was all men. 'No, I like the husband!' 'She's a bitch.' 'He's not listening to her.' 'Look how he treats her! He's not telling the truth!'"[1] MusicKeri Latimer is a Winnipeg musician that Carter appreciates and worked with before on Is It My Turn. "Debbie and I sent the script to her to see how she responded to the material and she really got it. We didn't want the music to be overkill. She just nailed it. It was the right person, right place, right time."[1] The song which plays at the end credits is Latimer's This Is Not Paris.[13] ReleaseThe world premiere of Before Anything You Say took place at the Madrid International Film Festival in July 2017,[1] one of several European film festivals organized by Film Festival International which also screened the film through 2018.[note 2] Before Anything You Say had its North American premiere at La Femme International Film Festival in Los Angeles on 22 October 2017.[19][16] The Canadian premiere took place at the Gimli Film Festival on 27 and 28 July 2018 to sold-out crowds,[20] followed by a limited release in Winnipeg in October.[3] Home mediaA DVD was released in 2018 by Shami Productions.[21] StreamingThe film is available for streaming on Amazon Prime.[22] ReceptionCritical responseSheila O'Malley called Before Anything You Say an "extremely intense" film, a sometimes "hallucinatory" study of what happens when things are left unsaid, when trust is broken, when the mere prospect of "breaking up" becomes the cause of a break-up to start, in which both leads give "phenomenal performances".
Greg Klymkiw says the film "does not disappoint in the long-honoured snipe-fest sweepstakes" in terms of the "dazzling cinematic potential of watching two great actors verbally slugging it out against the backdrop of claustrophobic domestic strife":
Klymkiw goes on to praise Deborah Schnitzer's "fine" screenplay, the "sumptuous" cinematography of Ousama Rawi, Taavo Soodor's "impeccable" production design, Keri Latimer's "haunting" score and editor Chad Tremblay's "hypnotic" cutting, concluding that the one-hour drama could have "sustained itself for even longer."[23] Accolades
NotesReferences
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