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Martha Marcy May Marlene The Movie in Agawam, MA


  • Genre: Drama,Thriller

    Synopsis:
    After escaping from a cult, a young woman (Elizabeth Olsen) is haunted by her experiences there and fears that its vicious leader (John Hawkes) may be trying to find her.

    Release Date: 10/28/2011
    Running Time: 101

    Rating: R - Restricted

    http://foxsearchlight.com/marthamarcymaymarlene
  • Cast:
    Martha: Elizabeth Olsen,Lucy: Sarah Paulson,Patrick: John Hawkes,Ted: Hugh Dancy,Watts: Brady Corbet,Max: Christopher Abbott,Katie: Maria Dizzia,Sarah: Julia Garner,Zoe: Louisa Krause

    Crew:
    Director: Sean Durkin,Screenwriter: Sean Durkin,Producer: Josh Mond,Producer: António Campos,Producer: Chris Maybach,Producer: Patrick Cunningham,Executive Producer: Ted Hope,Executive Producer: Matt Palmieri,Executive Producer: Saemi Kim,Executive Producer: Saerom Kim,Executive Producer: Alexander Schepsman,Original Music: Daniel Bensi,Original Music: Saunder Jurriaans,Cinematographer: Jody Lipes Lee,Film Editor: Zachary Stuart-Pontier,Casting: Randi Glass,Casting: Susan Shopmaker,Production Design: Chad Keith,Art Director: Jonathan Guggenheim,Costume Designer: David Tabbert

    Distributors:
    Fox Searchlight

    Notes:
    Production Notes - Notes provided by Fox Searchlight - ``Fear is the most amazing emotion, because it creates awareness. -- Patrick, MARTHA MARCY MAY MARLENE Elizabeth Olsen stars in director Sean Durkin's psychological thriller, MARTHA MARCY MAY MARLENE, about a young woman who undergoes an explosive crisis of identity after escaping the confines of a rural cult-like farming community. Trapped by unsettling flashes of memories from the past and visions of a perilous future, she becomes taken over by an unsettling sense of fear, leaving her consumed by paranoia and a mysterious burden of guilt. The film, winner of the Best Director Award at this year's Sundance Film Festival and the Cannes Prix de la Jeunesse, begins with Martha (Elizabeth Olsen in her feature film debut) running from an idyllic farmhouse into the woods of Upstate New York. Terrified, and with nowhere to turn, she calls the estranged sister she hasn't seen in years (Sarah Paulson), and suddenly finds herself in a lush, lakeside Connecticut summerhouse with Lucy and her new husband Ted (Hugh Dancy). Yet, the beauty and comfort of Martha's new surroundings clash with everything she is feeling as a secret fugitive from an unexplainable world, and so long away from society's rules, she is unable to act in a way others find normal. Martha may have run away, but she still is held captive by memories that slowly, devastatingly, begin to creep up on her. Seeping into her fledgling new life, revealing all that she has been through, from the innocent desire for familial love that brought her to a secluded farm commune to her chilling relationship with the fatherly but manipulative community leader Patrick (John Hawkes). Building, until they expose the heart-stopping source of her mounting dread. The result is a closely observed tale of psychological suspense that is also an arresting meditation on identity, vulnerability and the hunger for family in forms both tender and dangerous. Fox Searchlight Pictures presents a Maybach Cunningham, Filmhaven Entertainment and Borderline Films production in association with This Is That, MARTHA MARCY MAY MARLENE, written and directed by Sean Durkin. The producers are Josh Mond, Antonio Campos, Chris Maybach and Patrick Cunningham and the executive producers are Ted Hope, Matt Palmieri, Saerom Kim, Saemi Kim and Alexander Schepsman. The cast includes Elizabeth Olson, Christopher Abbott, Brady Corbet, Hugh Dancy, Maria Dizzia, Julia Garner, John Hawkes, Louisa Krause and Sarah Paulson. The film was shot by Jody Lee Lipes, the editor is Zac Stuart-Pontier, the production designer is Chad Keith, the costume designer is David Tabbert and the music is by Saunder Jurriaans and Danny Bensi. Who Can You Trust When Nowhere Is Home? Sean Durkin's first feature film is an intimate journey into deep peril, as he and a fluid, probing camera follow a young woman who has run away from an idealistic but controlling cult on a secluded farm far from society's reach. Finding refuge with her sister, she seems safe at last, but Martha is far from it, as secrets fester inside her, where everyday family life seems as strange as the world from which she has broken away and nowhere feels like home. Durkin has long been fascinated by the power and lure of utopian, family-like cults in America. But with MARTHA MARCY MAY MARLENE he wanted to explore this topic that is usually presented in broad or sensationalized strokes from an original, personal perspective - from inside the pressure-cooker of emotions impacting a young girl trying to get away from a cult that has left her with questions about her place in society, her future and her own culpability. ``I wanted to do something character-based, contemporary and naturalistic, explains Durkin. ``I feel like cults are usually portrayed so that they're over the top caricatures of themselves. So I started doing a lot of research and I read one passage that just completely popped out at me and said, 'this is the story I want to tell.' It was about a girl who left a group that was growing more and more violent. I wondered what the weeks after leaving were like for her? How does someone settle back into normal society after living through that? Durkin started talking about the fledgling story with his partners at Borderline Films, a thriving indie production company formed by Durkin, along with Josh Mond and Antonio Campos, when all three were students at NYU Film School. Since then, the collective has nurtured a growing group of collaborators -- nearly all under the age of 30 -- to explore every avenue of filmmaking, from writing and directing to producing and shooting. Their driving MO has been to give each other maximum creativity even amidst the industry's shifting economics. Mond and Campos made it clear right away they would do anything and everything to help Durkin realize his new idea. ``The general theme of the way we work is that each of us is down to do whatever it takes for the others, explains Mond. ``Sean, Tony and I have built a deep trust in each other and that seeps through to everything we do at every level. Adds Campos, ``We knew Sean was the right person to tell this story because he has so much sensitivity. He's a classic filmmaker in a lot of ways. He really cares about finding the truth in the moment and that's a rare thing. Another director could have made this film, but not with as much subtlety or power. We always maintained that belief in him, and our job from the beginning was to let Sean focus completely on what matters: the creative side of the film. With us, it's not just about fighting for a filmmaker - it's about fighting for a friend. As Durkin began writing, often bouncing ideas off of Campos and Mond, he found that the story hit even closer to home than he'd imagined. ``A friend of mine came forward and said she'd been through something similar. She wanted to help me, and she'd never talked about it openly before. She shared her stories with me and they were very painful, scary and sad. She was very generous. From that came the basis of Martha's story, says Durkin. His imagination sparked, Durkin started envisioning sharp, detailed pictures of the cult family Martha joins, with its back-to-the-land lifestyle and the alternative philosophies of its leader, Patrick. ``The question for me was how do I make this real? Durkin recalls. ``A turning point came when I went up to the Catskills and I saw all these abandoned farms up there. I realized it would be so easy for someone to come up and start a community here and suddenly have 20 people living together on this farm. So that became the foundation for Patrick's community. Durkin imbued Patrick with many of the contradictory qualities that make cult leaders so capable of attracting blind devotion including charisma, compassion for his followers, idealistic philosophies that stand in defiant opposition to a materialistic society and even a musical talent that lends him moments of easy charm despite his dark actions. But Durkin also made it clear how these same qualities have become subverted with the power Patrick holds, especially over young women. He binds his community not only with ties of closeness, but with chains of violence, justifying himself every step of the way as a loving father to his flock. Patrick may see himself as a moral visionary, but Durkin reveals him transgressing past all ethical boundaries in the name of his beliefs. ``Some of what Patrick says comes out of real truths, notes Durkin. ``He talks about being in the moment, about focusing on other people, on the land, and what it means to all be together but then he manipulates all those attractive ideas to get what he wants. The key to Durkin's script was its tone, which merges the snowballing fear of a horror thriller with the life-like naturalism of a drama stripped to the barest emotions. Though the story delves into worlds not often seen, Durkin notes that there are also aspects of Martha's story that will be relatable to anyone who has ever felt they were trying to be two people at once. ``Ultimately, it's a story about identity, he says. ``At the farm, they're always talking about 'finding your role in the family,' and I think that is a very basic part of human nature. We all want to belong, to be part of something, to feel like we contribute somehow to the group. No matter who you are, everybody takes on slightly different roles and personas for the various parts of their life. Like many people, Martha isn't sure who she is anymore, but her situation is extreme. While Durkin was still writing the script for MARTHA MARCY MAY MARLENE, he decided he needed to prove himself as a first-time feature film director (he'd already produced several projects for Borderline Films), so he wrote and directed a short film that also emerged out of his research about cults. With Campos and Mond serving as producers, Durkin shot MARY LAST SEEN, starring Brady Corbet, for about $400 on credit cards in 2010. It went on to win the Cannes Director's Fortnight Short Film Prize, becoming a catalyst for the next step. ``We sent the film to Sundance without thinking about it too much and simultaneously submitted the script for MARTHA MARCY MAY MARLENE to the Screenwriters Lab. Both got in, and that really changed things, recalls Durkin. ``The short was at Sundance and then went to Cannes, and while I was at the Writer's Lab, Josh and Antonio were able to secure a little financing. I came home and went full steam ahead. Campos credits Mond with creating a lot of that propulsive steam that allowed them to make the film. ``The chutzpah that Josh has as a producer is amazing, he says. ``It's something special and it was a driving force in getting this film, and all our films, made. Responds Mond, ``I think a lot of people supported us because they connected with Sean's script and believed in the project from the beginning. In the end, everyone who joined the production from the cast to the below-the-line crew trusted Sean's vision and instincts. Martha AKA Marcy May AKA Marlene The first major task facing the filmmakers was to cast the film's central character, the young woman named Martha who becomes Marcy May (and sometimes Marlene) as a member of a cult family -- and then becomes Martha again, in a courageous bid for a new life on her own. Casting director Susan Shopmaker, part of the Borderline Films' circle of collaborators, surprised everyone when she suggested Elizabeth (Lizzie) Olsen, who had never made a movie before, for the role. To the filmmakers' awe, Olsen proved ready to dive fearlessly into the darkest corners of a young girl's mind as she confronts confusion, paranoia, shame and defiance, as she fights for her future. When Sean Durkin saw Olsen audition for the first time, he knew he'd found exactly the right person to take this challenging journey. ``Lizzie is so interesting to look at, so unique and beautiful. She has a depth to her, and an emotional strength. I just sensed it was all there when I first met her, he remembers. ``I could picture her walking down a driveway, picking up a rock, and shattering a window - as someone who could carry that boiled-up anger but also have the strength to let it fly. In turn, Olsen found the story riveting and believable, and right away felt she could intuit all that was going on underneath Martha's skin, as her strange past bleeds into her present. ``This is the first script I've read that got me really excited, says Olsen. ``It was something very different and I could see the character so clearly. I understood her psyche and in a weird way, I really liked Martha. She goes on, ``I especially loved that Sean didn't ever cede information to the audience. He treats the audience as intelligent and allows them to make discoveries as the characters do. I was also amazed that such a good script for a woman was written by a man. It's a really cool, special thing. Martha is the type of character I hope more filmmakers will write for young women. She's not a stereotype and her struggles are very real. Martha's struggles began long ago in a troubled home life, which Olsen believes made her easily vulnerable to the appeal of a commune offering her the sense of family and meaning she's been missing all her childhood. ``At first, Martha thinks she's found her sense of purpose in this family, which she's never had her entire life, says Olsen. ``Patrick is the first person to ever make her feel truly loved and important. That's what leads her to stay on the farm, but once she starts to question what is going on morally inside this family, that's when problems start. She starts to wonder, just how far are they willing to go to be self-sufficient in this seemingly happy, pleasant place? It was clear to Olsen from the beginning why Martha was unwilling to tell her sister, or anyone else, about what she has been through. ``She really feels like she can't talk about it and she's still living in a state of extreme paranoia, unable to trust anyone, she explains. ``Martha turns to Lucy only because she has nowhere else to go, but they don't exactly have the closest relationship. Lucy has just gotten married and though she tries to help Martha blindly, it creates a lot of friction in the house. A lot of that friction stems from Martha's inexplicable behavior. ``She can't really remember how she is supposed to act in society, explains Olsen, ``and she still believes in the cult way of living. She wants to be selfless and not materialistic, but those ideas have become twisted up in her mind. She doesn't understand little things, like the way people sit down for dinner - she hasn't sat down with another male in years, so she really can't eat in front of a man. She doesn't even know when it's normal to be naked and when it's not. She is a stranger in a strange land. Once on the set, Olsen developed a rapport with Durkin that was key to her ability to be so exposed in the role. ``Sean is so caring and sensitive and no BS, that it was like being directed by a good friend, she says. ``You can share your secrets with him, because you know he'll keep them. He was always answering my questions - and I asked a lot of them - and everything he said clicked. Olsen admits the darker sequences at the farm were frightening to her, but she dove in anyway. ``I think Martha is completely devoid of any understanding of sexuality when she gets to the farm and what happens to her is scary for anyone to face, she says. ``It was a difficult thing to portray but I really trusted Sean aesthetically and he gave me all the space and time I needed. Josh Mond was impressed with how positive Olsen was able to stay under the circumstances. ``She definitely had a lot of challenges, he says, ``but Lizzie has an infectious energy that kind of set the tone for everyone. Just watching her had the rest of us very excited. Adds Antonio Campos, ``Lizzie was the biggest discovery of the film. We all watched her audition tape a million times and the consensus was that she had incredible potential. Of course, it's always a bit of a gamble and you never really exactly how it will turn out, but we soon saw that no one works harder than Lizzie. She just didn't stop getting better. Working with John Hawkes further gave Olsen the trust needed to go to some very perilous places, as Patrick ``initiates Marcy May into his forced version of shared intimacy with his family. ``We were in a lot of compromising positions, she says, ``but I never felt uncomfortable with John until I was supposed to. He always made me feel like everything we were doing was safe. Safety throughout was essential, because Olsen spent much of the movie in a kind of naked state -- emotionally and literally -- often dirty, without makeup, clothes or even defenses. ``The film is about raw human reactions, raw life, she observes. ``Nothing is manipulated. That was really the only way it could have worked, given that Martha's story hinges on pulling the audience into her fear and uncertainty. ``It's funny because we had such a great time filming and it was great to play Martha . . . but I still find her life completely terrifying, Olsen sums up. On The Farm To re-create Martha's life on the farm, Sean Durkin knew he needed an actor who could evoke both the allure and savage impulses of the community leader Patrick. He had no doubt that John Hawkes, fresh off his Academy Award(R) nomination for the searing role of Uncle Teardrop in WINTER'S BONE opposite Jennifer Lawrence, could give the character the necessary human depth. Hawkes says that working with Elizabeth Olsen reminded him a lot of the catalytic impact of watching Lawrence perform. ``I got a pretty great idea early on that Lizzy was hitting it out of the ball park, a lot like Jennifer did on WINTER'S BONE, he says. ``They are both young women who are wise beyond their years, both very game and very brave. Indeed, Hawkes sees some elemental similarities between the two gritty, indie films, despite their very different subject matters, locales and styles. ``What is interesting is that they both focus on a young woman in ways that we don't usually get to see, he says. It was the unusual nature of the whole story that grabbed Hawkes from the beginning. ``There are a lot of scripts about cults out there, but this one was very different, he says. ``It was only half about life in the community and the other half was about a young woman's attempt to live in the world after escaping that. The writing had a lot of gray areas, a lot of tension and no easy answers. Once I spoke to Sean on the phone, he was so convincing and interesting that I took that leap of faith. Although Patrick shares personality characteristics with several infamous American cult leaders - from Charles Manson to Jim Jones to David Koresh -- Hawkes did not want to emulate any of them. ``I'm usually very much an over-preparer but in this particular case, I didn't want to research a great deal. I didn't want to pattern Patrick after any true-life character, he explains. ``I felt like my job was to make him a credible seducer but never too arch or over the top. I thought the more I could make him a real, caring, charismatic person, the more this guy would be someone Martha would want to follow and truly believe in. I tried to avoid the obvious. I wanted to play him as a decent human being because that makes the way things turn out much more interesting. Part of Patrick's appeal is his ability to boost a young person's self esteem, with just a nod of approval or warm, paternal smile. ``I think a lot of manipulators are good at that, observes Hawkes. ``They find what a person lacks and try to feed it to them. Patrick is able to be just the kind of father figure that a young woman in distress would cleave to. Yet for all of his exploitation and moral degeneracy, Hawkes was able to find a drop of something genuine at Patrick's core. ``I've never played a character I didn't like and I wouldn't be able to, he comments. ``This is a difficult guy to like, but one of the exciting things about being an actor is finding moments with a guy like Patrick that the audience can side with. That was the challenge. Shooting in the Catskills, in a peaceful, rural setting that felt like its own private world, helped Hawkes to sense the moments that make the farm community seem to young newcomers like a more loving alternative to the harsh, outside world. ``We were all kinds of marooned there and it truly felt like a family, like a real community, and that was great for the film, he says. In one riveting sequence, as true-to-life as it is unsettling, Hawkes portrays Patrick serenading his followers with a song for Martha. Having played music all his life, Hawkes was willing to tackle the intimate, campfire-style performance, improvising around a classic 60s folk tune by Jackson Franks called fittingly ``Marlene. ``I wanted to serve the song the same way you serve the story in a film, he explains. ``We did it without edits, just me playing solo shot straight through, warts and all. It was very cold that day and part of the challenge was just trying not to let my teeth chatter! He goes on, ``I felt like it was such a great song for the movie - it was mysterious and odd and psychedelic, yet it had a soft, lovely edge to it. I was worried about how that scene might go but it was real fun and exciting. It was almost like adding to the score in a way, and it provides some texture to Patrick, showing his positive side . . . and the more you can get that out there in the story, the better. The song brought home to Elizabeth Olsen why Hawkes was so right for the role. ``If you had someone who was just creepy and scary, you wouldn't believe they could entice all these people to come to the farm, but with John, there is something else, just a little edge, she comments. ``He can be such a kind person and when he sings Martha a love song, she falls for it. I'd fall for it, too. A rising young star who have become part of the Borderline Films family comes to the fore as a member of Martha's cult family: Brady Corbet plays Watts, who recruits her into the unusual collective; and Christopher Abbott is Max, who grows close to Martha when she is Marcy May on the farm. Corbet, who made his feature film debut in THIRTEEN, and is known for his role as Derek Huxley on the hit television series ``24, describes Watts as ``a true believer who meets girls in the city and brings them to the farm. He might have some deep-seated regrets over luring innocent kids into the controlling atmosphere of the community, but Corbet says he is beyond recognizing them. ``Watts is too far gone at this point - it's too late for him to save himself or to save anyone else, he says. At Lucy and Ted's House For Martha, there could be no greater contrast than between the life she was leading at the farm and the new one she finds herself starting at her sister Lucy's lake house in Connecticut - where the materialistic world of ordinary ambition that the cult avoided is very much in evidence. While both seem like family situations on the surface, Martha finds no comfort in either one. She might turn to her sister Lucy out of desperation, but she really doesn't trust her, or her new husband Ted. Playing Lucy, who goes through her own roller-coaster journey as Martha's would-be savior is Sarah Paulson, well known for her television work on such series as ``American Gothic, ``Deadwood and ``Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip. Paulson wanted to allow the character to be simultaneously caring and flawed. ``Lucy has the best intentions but she just doesn't really have many people skills, observes Paulson. ``She's probably better with strangers than she is with her own family and at the point that Martha calls her, she hasn't seen her in years. Martha coming to live with her is just incredibly fraught. She doesn't really know where Martha's been. Her husband's never met her. And here Lucy is trying to have a baby and her sister comes along having clearly experienced something no one can understand. Paulson admits she was unsure at first of what to expect from Elizabeth Olsen, but was instantly won over. ``She really wasn't at all what I expected, she says. ``She is the most down-to-earth, smart, funny, quick to laugh person. She was very refreshing. She was able to go through all the intensity of this role and yet not take herself too seriously. She had to do scenes in freezing water, naked in front of strangers, and she doesn't ever complain. She's so spontaneous and so present, I could act with her for days. I think she's pretty spectacular. For Paulson, one of the biggest challenges was holding back her natural reactions to what Martha is going through, and letting Lucy's stand-offish emotional caution, born out of long-troubled family relations, hold sway. ``My instinct with Lizzie was to touch her and tell her everything's going to be OK, but that's not Lucy, she notes. ``I usually like to pay attention to my instincts but in this case I had to kind of sit on them a little bit. And then I thought, well maybe if I allow myself to have the instinct but then don't act on it that would come across as something interesting for Lucy. This restraint comes to a head in the climactic scene where Lucy and Martha battle it out. ``We both were very concerned about making sure that we were giving each other what we needed, Paulson says of the scene. ``We did one take where Lizzie was amazing. It was just wild. Lizzie being the actress that she is really upped my game. The whole film was an incredible experience. Perhaps one of the most difficult experiences of the film came in shooting the scene where Martha joins Lucy and Ted in the most unlikely of places: in their marital bed. Durkin says nailing the tone of the scene was a challenge for all three of the actors. ``It's such a crazy event, it's hard to wrap your head around how someone would react, he muses. ``At first, we didn't know quite where to go performance-wise, but in the end, I think Sarah, Lizzie and Hugh made all the right choices. We just kept asking ourselves 'Is this the most honest reaction?' Honest reactions were also on the mind of Hugh Dancy, who plays Ted, the hard-working New Yorker looking forward to a stress-free vacation to a start a family with his wife when her very oddly behaving sister suddenly shows up. Dancy, who also stars this year as a Victorian doctor in HYSTERIA and as a New Age artist in OUR IDIOT BROTHER, was drawn to Durkin's script. ``I loved Sean's writing, says Dancy. ``It's very subtle, very graded. I found the relationship between Ted and Lucy very convincing and it was interesting to see how when Martha arrives into this family unit she views them as everything she's been taught to look down on. That could have been made really stark, but instead, Sean wrote it in a way that you really sympathize with these people. They just want a reasonable life, a conventional life of ordinary aspiration. Working closely with Paulson, he felt their relationship had a visceral life of its own. ``They fought to have a relationship and it's not perfect, but there's real affection and they're reliant on each other, he observes. Still, Martha's influence begins to weigh heavily on their marriage, and drives the usually affable Ted towards outbreaks of anger and dismay. ``Ted is a good man and a good, supportive husband to Lucy, but with the arrival of Martha certain cracks begin to appear in his certainty, explains Dancy. ``There's a slight bullying tendency in Ted and that becomes darker not only towards Martha but towards Lucy as well. Thankfully, Sean brought so much subtlety to it. Ted is not really a terrible person, he's not a creep, he just behaves intolerantly at moments as the movie progresses. He goes on, ``The challenge for me was to pinpoint these moments and kind of put that single drop into the water and let it disperse and never completely color the performance too much in any one direction. Dancy says that his co-stars created an atmosphere in which that kind of nuance was possible. ``I felt so lucky to be part of such a warm, tight unit, he summarizes. ``We all felt safe to put ourselves out on the line. I was especially impressed by Lizzie Olsen because she plays such an incredibly difficult and traumatized character yet she showed so much maturity, intelligence and skill. As for Sarah, it was clear right away that she was going to be great in this role and she was. Martha's Colliding Worlds To forge the unrelenting mood of MARTHA MARCY MAY MARLENE, Sean Durkin put his visual emphasis on a cool-toned naturalism intended to bring the audience directly into the blur between Martha's two colliding worlds, and into the heightening chaos her journey from one to the other sparks. His aim was to have every element in the film - from performance to photography to design - work in concert to create a sense of deep disturbance just under the surface of every scene. Durkin collaborated not only with Antonio Campos and Josh Mond, but a tight-knit crew, most of whom have been part of the Borderline Films collective through multiple projects. ``It was important that creativity and energy be really good on the set, and the crew we work with brings that, says Mond. ``A lot of us have worked together for a long time. Many of us have worked in multiple roles on different sets, so every facet of every department does their work with such grace and understanding. It's an awesome thing to be a part of. Continues Campos, ``When you have the kind of respect this crew has for each other, you know they'll go to the ends of the earth for you. We've spent years hanging out with our editors, our sound guys, our A.D.'s, our lighting department. It's an amazing family kind of experience. A key part of the creative team on MARTHA MARCY MAY MARLENE were cinematographer Jody Lee Lipes and production designer Chad Keith, who together worked with two completely opposite upstate locations: a secluded, traditional Monticello farm owned by producer Antonio Campos's family and a crisply modern, lakefront property near the town of Roscoe. ``Sean divided the film almost into two separate movies with two totally separate vibes: the cult family was one shoot and the lake house another, Mond explains. ``Our challenge was to work out the locations so they would give him everything he needed, without money or logistics ever being an issue he had to think about. Campos notes that Mond has a knack for sniffing out hard-to-find locations. ``If you need amazing locations that everyone says you can't get, Josh will be able to get them. That's just in his nature, he muses. At the same time, it was Campos was introduced Durkin to his grandfather's upstate farm, which became the quintessential idyll for the cult family. ``I knew Sean would fall in love with it, says Campos. ``It's so rich with history, full of rotting wood and shafts of light coming through broken glass panes. There are so many different rooms and moods, that there was a lot for him to choose from. ``The house was so old and beautiful, describes the director. ``From there, given the necessity of shooting nearby, we asked: how can we find a lake house that feels the complete antithesis of this? How do we create a world that's going to be totally foreign to the farm? That was harder to find. I wanted something open with lots of light, high ceilings, and an outdoor area, somewhere I could really focus on these two sisters who made such different choices. Josh went up to the area worked his way into the community, getting to know people and finally tracked down just the right house. Lipes, a promising young filmmaker in his own right and the recipient of a Spirit Award nomination for his cinematography on TINY FURNITURE, utilized both locations to the nth degree to reflect the roiling turmoil in Martha's shattering psyche. He and Durkin worked to find just the right visual rhythms to build anxiety, claustrophobia and suspense - mixing extended, static close-ups, shadowy wide shots and slow zooms with more frenetic, handheld camerawork, that together forge Martha's overwhelming, restless reality and dreamlike memories and fears. The variety in the camerawork was a part of Durkin's vision. ``I knew I didn't want to be in Martha's perspective the entire time, he says. ``It was all about pacing, adding to the suspense and lulling you into the experience. The first thing we wanted to do was mix in a little handheld, and also u

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