Compareo! The German term Komparse goes back to the
Latin verb comparere, 'to appear'. Thus on Thursday and Friday I
appeared to be aged, infirm and confined to a wheelchair. While the first of
these descriptors may be deemed accurate, my infirmity was a pretense for the
movie production for which I was booked as one of about twenty extras for
scenes shot in a retirement home.
In this previous post I reflected on the times when I
had previously appeared before the camera in such a subordinate role. Extras or
walk-ons I have always likened to the colours on a painter's palette, hues in
human form which a film director can use to animate the emptiness behind the
principal action in the foreground. And so it was that in my wheelchair I was
trundled around the garden and along hallways of the residential home while the
film's protagonists played their scenes for the camera.
My comportment was informed by the behaviour of those
I saw and closely watched... who actually were living there with their various
ailments and in many cases with incipient dementia. It was an interesting
experience in many ways, some with absolutely nothing to do with the process of
making a movie.
However my reason for making myself available for such
humble jobs was (apart from the desire to take paid work where available) was
the chance to be back in the environment in which I feel most at home... that in
which storytelling is fabricated as screen entertainment. It is a fact never to
be overlooked that the seventh art emerged as a side-show when the circus came
to town. And as is the case with the circus, all involved feel part of a
privileged community, from the ringmaster controlling the show to the
shit-shoveller who cleans up after Dumbo.

On Thursday the day spent doing my bit to animate the
background was especially enjoyable, since it was an experience shared with
Jessi. My daughter is also up for even modestly paid jobs to augment what she
earns from her current internship and was by chance also booked as an extra for
the same day. In her nurse's uniform, furthermore, she could have stepped off
the set of the 'hospital soap' Geliebte Schwester which I produced for the Sat
1 network at the end of the nineties!
The assistant director responsible for the extras (the
sweetest nineteen-year-old lass imaginable, intent on studying film in Łódź)
immediately decided that my daughter should be my 'carer', pushing the
wheelchair with allure back to the designated starting position for each
re-take.
Oddly this was the second time that playing as a
supernumerary was a sort of family affair. Back in the eighties Jessica's
god-mother was the producer of Beethoven's Nephew (director was Paul Morrisey)
and I was her assistant. Again it was not so much a matter of earning a fee as
saving the production money... and so my wife and I both donned glorious
Biedermeier costumes for a crowd scene in the gardens of a sumptuous Viennese
palace!
Anyway, on Thursday for one of the exterior set-ups I
was wheeled into the foreground, asleep in my wheelchair. I was to constitute an
obstacle in the way of the movie's leading lady as she made a dramatic exit
from a key scene.
At this point all became even more bizarre. The
director, Niki Müllerschön, stared at me
and said "Ich kenne Dich, doch!". Recognition! In fact we had been
acquaintances in Munich
at the end of the eighties and the photo below is of my daughter and his son,
both aged one and celebrating her birthday in 1989!
Fade in audio... As Time Goes By!
Perhaps as a result of this unexpected encounter I
became known to the crew by name, and was given some 'featured extra'
instructions for the interior scenes. In sloppy pyjamas and bathrobe, I
animated the background to the best of my ability, inexpertly propelling the
wheelchair with my feet down endless corridors, told by the director to imagine
myself as being ninety-three rather than a mere youngster! Yes, scratch the
surface of the Sandlander and a Rampensau comes to light... one who is never
happier than when hogging the stage!
Not all of the extras called that day were as
fortunate, and indeed some picked up their fee without ever having appeared on
set.
Which started me thinking of another issue. The
production is question is categorized as a 'made for television' movie, with
one of Germany's most popular actresses in the lead, Senta Berger, still a
radiant presence at the age of seventy-two and one of the nation's best loved
stars. Understandable, therefore, that the production is all else than a low
budget undertaking. Used as I am to the rigorous economies of soap opera, I was
struck by the size of the crew and the and all of the trappings of a major
feature film shoot.
Arri was present with three trucks carrying gear, and
the camera was Arri's Alexa, the digital system said to be giving celluloid a
protracted reading of its last rites since its introduction in 2010. But
excepted the digital cinema image capture and the hi-tech lamps, it was the
classic crowded set and controlled chaos of film shoots I have know for over
fifty years.
There was, however, a sign of the times. In a sequence
scheduled later Ms Berger will herself... I suspect... be in a wheelchair, with one leg
stretched in front of her, supported on a cantilevered support bracket. This has
been given two extension rods at the front carrying at the end a lateral bar
with mounting for a compact DSLR camera, a Panaxonic Lumix GH3 capable of
shooting high-definition. It will be able to capture the erratic progress of
the wheelchair as its occupant presumably swerves and flails, pictured in a
low-angle close shot which could not be realized using a normal dolly. I am
convinced that the finished sequence will be visually very arresting.
All of which brings me to mention a movie I learned of
very recently, Jean-Claude Brisseau's La fille du nulle part. There is a
fascinating story here, but the take-away is that the film won the
prestigious Golden Leopard award at the Locarno Film Festival a year ago.
Brisseau used his own savings to make The Girl From
Nowhere on a budget of just 62,000 euro. The director's Paris apartment acted as the film set and he
used just one digital camera, a Canon XF 100, in his desire to "break with
the prison of the traditional film production".
This was the achievement of a man over seventy year
old who also played the leading role opposite Virginie Legeay (below), previously his
assistant director on an earlier film and one of his students at the renowned
film school which used to be called the
IDHEC before that. The camera was handled by David Chambille. And that was
it... just the three of them and the director's own savings as the entire
production budget.
The story... if not the film... has a happy end. Brisseau's Locarno prize money put
the project instantly in profit!
In our circus which is the world of the cinema
I think Brisseau must be seen as a very important, provocative clown.
Provocative, indeed! Could I imagine writing and directing a film, and being enough of a Rampensau to play the lead? Could I fill the bare minimum of crew positions with ambitious youngsters met in the course of gigs as an extra in the coming months... kids like the AD determined to study cinema in Łódź?
Compareo! I am evident or apparent, I am visible, I appear.
I wonder!
1 comment:
hi Malcolm,
nice story about you being a Komparse ... I never knew that you hide a Rampensau inside of you ;-)
And yes: I do admire Senta Berger as well, though I nver had the good luck to meet her personally. She's an incredible actress - whatever role she is acting.
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