NEW YORK โ The great films of the 1970s have long loomed in the imagination of filmmakers raised during one of the most fertile periods of American movies. But Alexander Payne wanted to take it a step further.
Payneโs latest film, โThe Holdovers,โ isnโt just set in 1970, it seeks to imbibe the humanistic spirit of films like โThe Last Detail,โโHarold and Maude," โThe Landlordโ and โPaper Moon" โ all movies he screened for his cast and crew.
Recommended Videos
โWe were very fully making a โ70s movie,โ Payne says, recently speaking by phone from his desk in Omaha, Nebraska.
Payne, 62, shot โThe Holdovers,โ set at a New England boarding school, largely with filmmaking equipment and camera lenses from that period. He mixed it in mono. โWe were trying to play the exercise of: We are in 1970 making this movie,โ he says.
โThe Holdovers,โ which Focus Features will release Oct. 27 and expand on Nov. 10, is Payneโs first film in six years and itโs one of his best. Payne, the filmmaker of โElection,โโSidewaysโ and โThe Descendants,โ has long made โthe kind of films they donโt make anymoreโ: smart, funny, melancholic dramas for adults. And yet heโs kept making them. After decades of making contemporary films that in some way evoke a โ70s sensibility of cinema, heโs finally made the genuine article.
โI was just trying to replicate the experience of the movies I love as much as possible,โ says Payne. โI donโt think it makes the movie quaint. I hope it lends it the warmth of nostalgia, the warmth of a lost time, maybe even some traces of memory.โ
โThe Holdoversโ reunites Payne with Paul Giamatti nearly two decades after the actorโs memorable, merlot-loathing breakthrough performance in โSideways.โ This time, Giamatti plays a curmudgeonly Barton Academy classics teacher named Paul Hunham tasked to stay at school with a handful of kids without family plans over the Christmas break.
The set-up could be broad: a gang of outcasts and troublemakers sneaking joints while the widely loathed Hunham chases them down the halls. And while there is some of that, Payne pares the group down to Hunham, Angus (Dominic Sessa), a bright student whoโs one mishap away from being sent to a lesser school (and thus likely to Vietnam) and Mary (DaโVine Joy Randolph), a grieving school cook whose son has recently died in the war.
Something remarkably tender and stirring follows. Digging into each characterโs life, โThe Holdoversโ ruminates on privilege in class and race, while steadily building an anti-authoritarian streak for the much-espoused supposedly high-minded ideals of Barton.
If Giamattiโs โSidewaysโ character โ a lonely unpublished writer with a manuscript no one wants to read โ was in need of a road trip to jostle him out of a rut, his Hunham is likewise due for some self-reflection and maybe a little encouragement.
For Payne, it was a long-overdue reunion.
โI wanted to work with that guy again for 20 years,โ he says. โI was waiting for the right thing โ and created it. I told (screenwriter) David Hemingson: โWeโre writing for Paul Giamatti. Thatโs who weโre writing for.โ"
โHeโs just the best actor,โ adds Payne. โHeโs the finest actor. Not casting aspersions on others, I just think thereโs nothing he cannot do.โ
When Payne screened โThe Holdoversโ for buyers at last yearโs Toronto International Film Festival, it prompted heated interest. Focus snapped it up for $30 million โ far more than is typical โ a sign of the indie distributor's belief in the movie as a crowd-pleaser and an awards contender. The three lead actors are likely to be in the Oscar mix.
But while Giamatti and Randolph are well-known performers, Sessa is appearing in his first film. After sifting through some 800 submissions, Payne felt like he still hadnโt found someone to play Angus. He and the casting director decided to call up the schools they were going to be shooting in to see if their drama departments had anyone to recommend.
โOne of the schools we were going to be shooting was Deerfield Academy in Western Massachusetts. We called up the drama teacher who said, โOh, yes, we have quite a few who would be happy to try out for your little movie.โ And Dominic was one of them.โ
Sessa was a senior when he shot โThe Holdovers.โ He hadnโt acted in front of a camera before, though youโd be hard-pressed to tell by the naturalness of his presence on screen.
โWhat you see is some people are born with it. You see all these people in New York taking classes on film acting. This guy can just do it,โ Payne says. โI learned a long time ago that the best actors are also the best technically. From day one, man, this guy could hit his marks and do his dialogue backward and forward. Heโs built to do it. And then you see him go toe-for-toe with Paul Giamatti, give him a run for his money.โ
Payneโs last film was his biggest budget gambit: โDownsizing,โ a sci-fi satire of an overpopulated Earth in which people can be made miniature. After โDownsizingโ struggled at the box office and found mixed reviews, Payne dabbled in a number of projects (he had been attached to direct, among others, โThe Menuโ and โLandscapersโ), but โThe Holdoversโ is the one that stuck.
It started for him years earlier after seeing a similarly plotted 1930s French film by Marcel Pagnol called โMerlusse.โ Payne, who had written all of his films except โNebraska,โ didnโt feel he had the right personal experience. (He attended an all-boys Jesuit day school in Omaha, Nebraska.) Instead he turned to Hemingson and โbeveled the edgesโ of the witty and soulful script he turned in.
But as long-term and โ70s-oriented as making โThe Holdoversโ was, it struck Payne as a contemporary story, too. โTrump years and Nixon years,โ he says.
โGravity led me and my collaborators to 1970 for some reason. I canโt necessarily articulate it,โ Payne says. "Itโs obviously not a message film or any crap like that. As Marx would say, all films are political films.โ
___
Follow AP Film Writer Jake Coyle on Twitter at: http://twitter.com/jakecoyleAP