The Press Box - 'The Big Picture' — Ruben Östlund Is Trying to Provoke You (Ep. 369)

Episode Date: October 27, 2017

Ringer editor-in-chief Sean Fennessey chats with filmmaker Ruben Östlund about his new film, ‘The Square,’ satirizing the art world, and why he enjoys toying with audiences. Learn more ab...out your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hey, it's Bill Simmons. Wanted to make sure you subscribe to The Watch with Andy Greenwald and Chris Ryan. Two longtime friends who have had this podcast since 1973. Yeah, that's how long. It was even before a podcast they were having this. These guys spent their whole life arguing with each other. And now we just record it and they go out of it. They talk about everything in pop culture.
Starting point is 00:00:21 It is one of the most popular pop culture podcasts, especially valuable during Game of Thrones season. But they'll argue about movies, music, TV, you name it. The Watch, one of the best pop culture podcasts on the internet's. Subscribe now, wherever you get your podcasts. I was interested in actors imitating monkeys. Because, you know, acting becomes so interesting to look at when you go down to that level. It's not like when you have Hamlet, then you need a lot of background knowledge to say,
Starting point is 00:00:54 ah, hmm, he's doing a good hamlet, you know. You're bringing down acting to a level of playing soccer. I'm Sean Fennacy, editor-in-chief of the Ringer, and this is the big picture. Ruben Ostland is messing with you, provoking you, needling you. In his movies, specifically 2014's force majeure, and this falls the square, the Swedish writer-director takes him at big ideas. Masculinity, viral internet culture, the modern art world, marriage, and he completely upends them with his satire. His movies and their characters are unafraid to get strange and go to strange places. They cry, they fight, they act like apes.
Starting point is 00:01:33 Osloan is a character, too. I chatted with him this week about his career in his movies, particularly The Square, which zeroes in on the absurd happenings around an exhibit in a Swedish art museum. Without further ado, here's Ruben Osloon. Very happy to be joined by Ruben. Ruben, thank you for being here today. Thank you for having me. Rubin, your new movie The Square is a satire from my perception of many things, the art world, museum, culture, propriety, apes, love, romance, masculinity, maybe especially. So in watching your films, I was thinking about whether, what comes first for you, the theme or the story. In this case, what happened first?
Starting point is 00:02:13 Actually, started 2008. I was making a film called Play. And Play was about true events that happened in the city where I live in Gothenburg in Sweden. It was a group of young boys that was robbing other young boys for several locations in a mall in the center of the city. I was reading through the court files of these robberies. And what you could tell was that the bystander effect was very strong. you know, the fact that we have a problem as human beings to take responsibility when it comes to public spaces. So even though that these kids got robbed in a big mall at daytime when there were a lot of adults around them, it was very, very seldom and few occasions where adults interacted.
Starting point is 00:02:58 And me and a friend of mine, we were trying to like, we were trying like, you know, we got the idea suddenly that we could create a symbolic place. where we are reminded about our role as fellow human beings. And this symbolic place is like just as simple as a pedestrian crossing. You know, a pedestrian crossing is like a couple of lines in the street that where we have made a super strong agreement that the car drivers should be careful with the pedestrians. And our idea was that we with a couple of lines of the street like a white marked square should build an agreement of a symbolic place where we take care of each other.
Starting point is 00:03:31 So for an example, if you needed help, you can go and stand in this square, and that it's my obligation to address this person if I pass by and say, how can I help you? So this actually symbolic place was the starting point of the whole idea. Yeah, it's an interesting thing in the States. We have the Kitty Genevieve's case as sort of our version of that. I'm not sure how much you studied it, but a similar act where there was a crime against a woman. Many people heard about it, but no one acted. In your story, though, there is something a little bit metaphorical in every physical choice that you make.
Starting point is 00:04:01 So with the square, I'm curious how you started actually built. the installation and then how, if you knew when you were working on the installation with another artist, if it would actually be a film? Yeah, the thing is that I started to write the script first. Then we got invited to do this installation in the art museum. Oh, okay. So that's when I decided that the film could take place in a contemporary art world. Because I think it's something interesting with the contemporary art world because it's actually
Starting point is 00:04:26 a place where we can present an idea like the square and that arena can embrace it, you know? It can like, we can think out of the box, outside of the box in this arena. So, yeah. And so then, you know, what I did was like I decided, okay, I want the chief curator of this museum to be the main character. And then I look at the scenes that I make a little bit from a sociological approach. As the Kitti University case that you talked about, what I love about sociology is, is that it has a very humanistic viewpoint on us humans, even when we fail. And I want to do that in the same way.
Starting point is 00:05:10 You know, I want to make setups where we can look at our own failure and maybe create the knowledge out of it, you know. And so that is basically the scenes that I'm collecting, you know, different setups where I think, oh my God, now I would be pushed into the corner myself also if I had to handle this situation. Yeah. And then I enjoy, like, looking at that setup. And I'm almost, you know, the actors are almost like lab rats that is like I have to try to deal with my setup.
Starting point is 00:05:41 Yeah, you often choose sort of powerful but weak men, you know, men who are theoretically father figures or the curator in this instance who are somehow revealed to be less dignified than they initially seem. What is it that draws you to those figures as the center of your stories? Well, I think I'm completely uninterested in heroes. I think that I identify much more with someone that is struggling with life. And I mean, if you look at Clauss Bang, the actor that is playing Christian, he is a person that have like a little bit of his emotions. They are outside the skin on him. And it becomes so much more interesting to.
Starting point is 00:06:28 to look at the characters that are struggling with life than those that are heroic and always succeed. Also, I'm curious about underlining some of the pretensions of the museum world, having had some close-hand experience. Were you in any way also trying to celebrate what's happening inside of museums or is this strictly a sort of like, let's take a look at what's really happening in these spaces? I consider my film as a satire. So that is, of course, it doesn't matter if I aim my camera to my own.
Starting point is 00:06:58 the cinema industry. I will do a satire about that also. So I'm very fair in that way. Any area I will aim the camera towards, I will be just as mean. When I was doing the research for the film and I was traveling around in different art museums, what I felt is something happened when Dechamp put the pisoire into the museum,
Starting point is 00:07:20 and that was almost 100 years ago. But now it feels almost like this has become a ritual that is repeating itself over and over again. When he put the pisoire in the museum, it was a way of trying to provoke the room and raise questions, what should we use this arena too and what is art, etc. But pretty much the same feeling I get when you see a lot of the objects in the museums today. And you see that the visitors are kind of disconnected from the art. They have like a neon sign on the wall.
Starting point is 00:07:50 They have a Giacometti. They have a war hole. And then there's a couple of objects. And people are walking around there and not feeling really connected with art. And the art doesn't feel really connected what's going on in the world outside of the walls of the museum. It's this box checking experience, right? It's curated, like a catalog rather than something you're feeling. So I think the challenge if you're running a museum is, of course, in which way you are exhibiting the art.
Starting point is 00:08:17 Because in order to get an experience of the art and get a connection of the art, that is a really, really big challenge. And we were talking me and a friend of mine, we were talking, what kind of exhibitions? What do we see in the museums? And he goes, well, it's mirrors and piles of gravel. And I like, yeah, you're right. So one of the exhibitions was called this was in the film. Yeah, so you chose a couple of familiar, if not specific examples. The Piles of Gravel is one of them.
Starting point is 00:08:42 Terry Notary who plays a man sort of in this film is in a video installation. How did you go about choosing the other installations to show, you know, sort of to satirize what typical art exhibits are like in the 21st century? Well, when it comes to a children-nortar his character, the character is called Oleg, and that comes from a Russian performance artist that is called Oleg Kulik. And in Sweden there's a kind of famous performance when he was playing dog in a museum in Stockholm. And that went so far that they actually had to call the police because he bit the chief curator's daughter in the leg. So a lot of the things that is in the film actually have a connection to,
Starting point is 00:09:26 like real events that have been happening in the art world. And you sort of won to one that in this film, in a scene with Terry, where he is at a dinner gala and he is acting like an ape. It's a really striking, incredible scene. How did you make that one happen? Well, first of all, I was inspired of an American punk rock artist that is called G.J. Allen. Of course, yeah. You know about him?
Starting point is 00:10:12 I do, yes. Yeah, okay. And there's like two fantastic YouTube clips called G.J. Allen, Boston, part one and part too. And I was looking at these YouTube clips and it's probably the most intense vibrating moments I have ever seen captured with moving images. I haven't seen these clips. What is he doing? Okay. He's like having a, how do you say, he's reading some of his poems for an audience. And I mean, G.J. Allen is a complete anarchist. I have never seen someone that is that anarchistic. If you get too close to him, you get beaten up. And you can tell that the audience
Starting point is 00:10:45 that are going to his performances knows about this. And then, also like trying to play with the fire, you know. And it's a certain moment when this playfulness from the audience becomes that they get really, really scared. Last eight years. We've got that fucking epic problem. Epic problem, motherfucker. And that dedication also that J.D. Allen had to play this figure is kind of interesting.
Starting point is 00:11:37 You know, I've never seen anyone go that far. So I was thinking, you know, since our goal with the. Square was to be selected for competition in Cannes. I loved ID to let someone like Gigi be a performance artist in a ballroom with a toxedro dress audience and that that scene should be screened in Cannes in Lumiere with a toxedrored rest audience sitting and watching another ex-dice audience trying to deal with Gigi Allen. Through the looking glass.
Starting point is 00:12:07 So it's like breaking the social contract on how you are supposed to behave on a very like strict dinner gala. But then I realized I will never find anyone like Giali, anyone that can play that role in that way. At the same time, I was interested in actors imitating monkeys. Because, you know, acting becomes so interesting
Starting point is 00:12:27 to look at when you go down to that level. Even a child can say, that guy is the best one playing a monkey. Yes. It's not like when you have hamlet, then you need a lot of background knowledge to say, ah, hmm, he's doing a good hamlet, you know? You're bringing down acting to a level
Starting point is 00:12:41 of playing soccer. Because we can relate to how hard it must be if you see someone doing it in a skillful way. Physical and primal and that's it. Yeah, exactly. And so then I was Googling on YouTube. Once again, I very often use YouTube as a source for references. I'm getting that sense. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:13:00 And then I found a beautiful clip of Turner Notary when he's doing a demo because he has been in Planet of Dave's. And he's like a motion capture artist in that one when he had this. green dots on him. Right. Many people will know Andy Circus, but Terry is sort of the second most notable mocap artist. Yeah. What Terry does is that he has these arm extensions.
Starting point is 00:13:24 And he's like saying, okay, so this is a chimpanzee. And then he walks exactly like a chimpanzee. And the feeling I had when I watched that YouTube clip is like, you know, you start, I start to laugh because it's so striking. And then he said, yeah, and this is a gorilla. And then he changed his way of moving.
Starting point is 00:13:48 And you see, immediately it's a gorilla. Then I realized, ah, maybe I can let him play the performance artist and he can play like a wild animal. Someone that comes in to this ballroom without this civilized shell that we have. He has been stripped of all these human being characterized things, like the culture and the clothes and so on. And in comes a man that is imitating a monkey and all he has left is his instinct and his needs.
Starting point is 00:14:19 So when you were writing the script, you didn't know that it would be someone being an animal. You had a story that was going about a performance artist of some kind, but you stumbled upon Terry and you rejiggered the movie to represent that. Yeah. And then also that scene became 100% focused on the bystander effect. Because it's like the voiceover goes on and it says, if you remain perfectly still, then you can hide in the herd, safe in the knowledge that someone else will be the prey.
Starting point is 00:14:46 And that is like trying to highlight that the reason that we get paralyzed when it comes to the bystander effect is like we're thinking, don't take me, don't take me, take someone else, you know? Yeah, you really captured in that. Yeah. What is it that is so appealing to you about provoking audiences? because it seems like you have a skill for button pushing. I think I love provoking myself, first of all. I love situations where I have to struggle with how would I relate to this myself. And I think that provocation is very good to you sometimes
Starting point is 00:15:23 because if we want to ask ourselves questions about our own behavior and what we would do or something that, yeah, if you need us to reflect a little bit more, then provocation is a very good tool to use. I want to ask you about a little more about YouTube and the concept of virality. That's also a theme in the movie. You had a moment of sub-virality a few years ago on YouTube when there was an announcement for the Best Foreign Language Film,
Starting point is 00:15:53 and your film, Force Major was not nominated. You had a very emotional reaction to that news. That video was very funny. I'm not totally sure what the intention of that video was, but I wanted to talk to you a little bit about that, and if you were using that to sort of explore something that you were trying to do. Creating attention was, yeah, well, it worked. The YouTube clip was called Swedish director freaks out when he misses out on Oscar nomination.
Starting point is 00:16:18 It is kind of an art installation in itself. You know, both me and Eric Hemendorf, that is the producer, and that I own the production company platform production in Sweden, we have been working together for 15 years now. One ability that I think is important when it comes to making it in this business is to turn a failure into something good. And, you know, we were so sure that we would get nominated with Force Mayor. You know, we were like, we were, okay, we were looking at the announcement.
Starting point is 00:16:45 Now, we are on the short list. Out of nine films, of course we will be one of the five. Such beautiful hubris. And, you know, the whole day was already planned. After the announcement, we were supposed to go and do interviews. And so we were like looking at the announcement and we were shooting it from the photo boot camera. And when it finally comes to the foreign language film the category that I think is way after makeup and things like that.
Starting point is 00:17:17 It's like, okay, now it's a foreign language film. Since they do it in alphabetical order, we quite quickly realize we are not nominated. And to film that bittersweet moment, sweet moment of failure is something. If you don't have the ability to laugh about that, then you shouldn't be in this business, you know? Is every instance of the reaction genuine in that moment? How much, because there's a question even in the films that you make as well
Starting point is 00:17:45 about the notions of performance and what is actually happening here. And, you know, you have a very violent emotional reaction to not be nominated. I can tell you that we are super jet lagged when we are filming that clip. We just came from Europe 12 hours earlier or something. And we are standing there and eating that green apple. Both of us were both chewing on apples. And at the same time, we're like talking and we are cocky also. We know like, soon we will be nominated.
Starting point is 00:18:13 Almost ape-like in some ways. Yeah, I agree. I agree. And then when we don't get nominated, then, you know, immediately the phone stops calling. It's just completely silent. And we are so disappointed. There's a moment when I'm walking out of the screen. And me and Eric, we went for a walk in Central Park. And we were like, you know, we were really depressed.
Starting point is 00:18:55 And then suddenly we came up with ID. Come on, we have to do something with this material that we got. And we realized that since I'm going out of screen, then we can record sound what's going on then. And then there's a scene in Forrest Mayor called Worst Man Cry ever. And let's do a paraphrase, you say it in Swedish at least, on that part. When I freak out. And so we put it together and then we subtitled it.
Starting point is 00:19:30 And later that night we put it up on YouTube. And for us it was a way of turning this into something. That was fun. and in a playful way, I wasn't making fun of ourselves because we shouldn't take these things too seriously, you know. Did you suspect that there would be a reaction to it? Did you suspect you'd be on all of the movie blogs
Starting point is 00:19:50 about posting this video and commenting on your sadness? No, we were super happy about that. Yeah, we didn't know. We thought that, okay, maybe in Sweden we'll write a little bit about it. But what also happened, which was a little bit troubling for me, was that people called me and was really worried. And then I felt, oh my God, you have to understand it's fake, you know. It's understandable.
Starting point is 00:20:12 You have this anguished cry at the end of this video that sounds like, you know, you are collapsing in the moment. Sure. And then there was a lot of people showing their sympathy and wanted to help me. And when I said it was fake, it was almost then they feel cheated. Yeah. So then I was like, it's not something strange that you think it's real. You know, you have to try to. Yeah, so that was probably the hardest thing.
Starting point is 00:20:35 Otherwise, we had a lot of fun with it. You have American and English actors in this film, and, you know, it does seem like you are making a bid for more visibility in the States. Force Major was very well received. You know, is a move like that very specific for you, or you are trying to make an effort to be a little bit more than a Swedish filmmaker more worldwide coming out of Europe? Definitely. But the thing that with Elizabeth Mosin, Dominique West, was definitely that they were so good. I was doing improvs with both of them in London when I was there. And Elizabeth, I was playing Christian, she was playing Anne,
Starting point is 00:21:13 and she could push me into a corner with her way of using the setup of the scene. But of course I know also that we will get more attention to the film. And the sad thing about this is that I'm playing on this arena. And in order that my, how do you say, the content that I think is important should get attention. Then I also have to fight to get attention. So you can't drop down, how do you say, your ambition and say, I will not play on this arena, because then other content will win the audience, so to speak. And I have to fight for my content. Yes, I was going to say, it is really a fight that you're in every day to get attention to your projects. So what does that
Starting point is 00:21:55 mean? Will there be more films now starring English actors? Will you be making a film in Hollywood? How does that go forward? I can tell you about the next project that. I'm really, really excited about. It's called Triangle of Sadness. From a square to a triangle. Yes, that was very unintentionally. But me and my wife were making fun, you know, I'm saying, first comes the square of trust, now comes Triangle of Sadness.
Starting point is 00:22:19 And the third film will be Octagon of Confucian. And it will be a feature film that never will be finished. And that is still in the editing room trying to solve Octagon of Confucian. No, but Triangle of Sandness, my wife is, she's a fashion photographer and she has been telling me a lot of interesting stories about the fashion world and a beauty industry. And the triangle of sadness is when you have this wrinkle in between your eyebrows because you have had a lot of trouble in your life.
Starting point is 00:22:48 In Swedish, it's called Bechimmer Shinkia, which means trouble wrinkles. But you can fix that in 50 minutes with Botox. So don't worry, you know. Trouble wrinkles would have also been a good title for this film. I'm just on this say. Yeah, yeah, yeah. But I like triangle of sadness. It's something beautiful about it.
Starting point is 00:23:04 So it's going to be like a satirical approach towards that industry. And something is interesting with beauty. Because you can be born beautiful without money, without education, and without talent. And it can make you travel in the hierarchy of a society very quickly. So it's almost like winning in the lottery in some ways. And then this can be an economical value. The thing is that if you're a model, then you have to find an exit very quickly because there's a very short career. And the main character of this film, he's a male model that is like getting closer to 28.
Starting point is 00:23:44 So the career is shown over. Yeah. How interesting. But he's on his peak of his career because he's the face for a big, big fashion brand. But he has two problems. One of them is that he's getting bald. So, you know, and it's not only that it's. getting bald, you know, it's actually, it's like completely connected to the self-confidence.
Starting point is 00:24:06 You can see on his face before when he was not getting bald, at least, and then he's like self-confident. And the pictures after when he knows that his hair is losing his self-confident, that is so painful to see. And the second problem he has, that is that he's so connected with this brand that he's representing, so no one else want to book him. But he has a very sweet agent, and I think it would be fun to make this agent very, very sweet and caring. And in this agent, he's like looking at his hair and how's it going? And oh, this is not good, you know?
Starting point is 00:24:40 You may have two more years in the business. But he has a suggestion to the model. And he's like, you should get together with the famous girlfriend, because then we can rebrand you. Then you're not only this guy that is connected with this big fashion brand. But the model is a very sensitive guy. So he wants to be in love. So this is of course a problem. And so this is an opportunity to draw in beautiful people
Starting point is 00:25:10 and then completely undermine them the way you have maybe some characters in the past. Yeah, I mean, I think this is a super opportunity also for a female actress because I have a fantastic part for a female actress also. that is she's also supposed to be a model she's coming from Ukraine or something like that not 100% decided yet
Starting point is 00:25:33 and she's getting closer to 24 so her career is soon over and the problem for her is that she's lesbian so she can't marry rich to get out of this business which is probably something that she could have thought of doing and the other thing is that when you see the pictures
Starting point is 00:25:53 of her she's like super beautiful. But as soon as you meet her in life, everything dies. She doesn't have any social skill at all. You know, she's laughing on the wrong spots. Every time she start talking, it just feels like out of face in some way. And I think it could be super interesting to find an actress that is very beautiful, but she must have a super comical timing and a talent of playing with pauses and doing things at the wrong time all the time. So it's going to be really fun. That sounds intriguing.
Starting point is 00:26:31 You mentioned earlier when you were researching the square. Is that something that will you now spend a lot of time researching that world? Obviously, you're married to a fashion photographer, so you have some access to that universe already. But is that a big part? Will you watch a lot of films? Will you read a lot of books? What goes into that process?
Starting point is 00:26:46 I think I will do a lot of interviews with people in the industry and trying to pick out those moments, when people tell me where, you know, I'm also interested in what is it like to be really, really beautiful. What are the downsides of being really beautiful, you know, and to try to pick up these small moments. Because very often when people tell you about their own experiences, I think that's when you see, ah, that's a beautiful scene.
Starting point is 00:27:17 So that is a big part of my research process. Ruben, I like to wrap up by asking filmmakers, what's the last great thing have seen. What does the last great thing you've seen? It was a documentary about that mayor in New York that tried to run to be mayor in New York. Winer? What was the name? Oh, Weiner, yes. Wiener. Yes. He is a Ruben Oslin-style character. Anthony Wiener, yeah. I thought it was very interesting to see that. And, you know, since I've been dealing with people that is trying to avoid losing face, and you have these moments when he have all these problems dealing with the media and with himself and so on.
Starting point is 00:27:56 Someone that is so transparent in that moment and like inviting us to actually participate in that moment. It's, it's, it was very interesting, scary and interesting and also, you know, I think the documentary also created a lot of sympathy for everybody that was involved. I don't know if you followed his story since then. It has not gone well. I haven't. Yeah, well, you can read up on it.
Starting point is 00:28:22 He's not doing nearly as well. Nor is he nearly as sympathetic a figure. Okay, okay. But I do know what you're doing. Rubin, thank you so much for doing this. Thank you so much. Thanks for listening to this week's episode of The Big Picture. Next week I'll have Tycho Waitidi, the director behind Marvel's new movie Thor Ragnarok,
Starting point is 00:28:43 which is surprisingly funny and strange. So I'll encourage you guys to check that out. See you then.

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