Filmshaft Exclusive: Nicolas Winding Refn Talks Valhalla Rising

Danish filmmaker Nicolas Winding Refn has carved a career for himself in the past decade that traverses genre expectations and showcases an unique voice in European cinema. Yes, his movies are often incredibly violent, but it is never mindless, unlike the Hollywood kind.

For his latest film, Valhalla Rising, there is a great turning away from contemporary stories as Winding Refn takes on a new type of mythology that still permeates his own culture as well as that of Europe and American history. It’s grand visionary stuff and truly a cinematic experience unlike any others.

I first saw Valhalla Rising at last year’s London Film Festival and its director introduced the film and discussed it afterwards. It is my view that this film is destined to be a cult classic – the kind of film I used to stay up late for on Sunday night’s Videodrome on BBC2, despite being in school the next day.

A month or so ago, I caught up with Nicolas Winding Refn to discuss his latest movie. It could be described as a Viking-saga-with-a-twist…the twist being this could well be a sci-fi flick. Bet you didn’t expect that?

How did Valhalla Rising start out?

I don’t have a “thing” for Vikings…I’m not a Viking fanatic, but the original story that got me hooked was when I was a sixteen there was a radio programme on about a runestone that was found in Delaware. That was a very big puzzlement because that’s way south of Newfoundland where the first settlements were that we know of. For many years people tried to study it and how it could possibly have happened and one of the conclusions is that a Viking ship had sailed much further and got into America and maybe got lost or something. The runestone is a warning that it was a dangerous territory and at sixteen, I thought ‘wow’. And little did I know that twenty years later I would be using it as the basis of a science fiction film (laughs).

So the story grew from that?

It took me a long time to get the film going and figure out how to tell the story…and how it turns into something like outer space travel. I went away and made Bronson…there were the normal film problems, but after Brosnan I went straight into Valhalla.

What were the cinematic influences on Valhalla Rising. Is there anything particular?

Many films were an influence. I guess I always wanted to make Escape From New York because that was my favorite film when I was little. Valhalla Rising is very much about mythology and cinema is a mythology medium, or can be, so it’s a mix of everything. I can’t really come up with anything specific.

Was it a tough shoot up in the Scottish Highlands?

It is such unfriendly terrain but beautiful. We knew that nature was overpowering us and we shot in one of the strangest, most faraway places you could imagine. It almost became about how far we could get away into the mountains. I didn’t have a lot of money to make the movie so I couldn’t provide any kind of luxury for anybody.

The atmosphere conjured by the movie is very dreamlike. Was that always the intention? It’s quite different from your other films, isn’t it?

I always wanted to do a science fiction movie but without the science…so it becomes like mental fiction.

The figure of One Eye is quite mysterious. How would you explain him, or do you even need to?

One Eye is a character who suddenly appears like a monolith with no past or present, and who appears at times of religious turmoil. Back then Christianity was spreading through Europe very rapidly. They were going from a very primitive pagan-worshiping culture to an organised religion. So the idea that One Eye appears and travels with these people to their destiny. It’s almost like he represents faith. During the travels there is an evolution starting as an animal…as a slave…then he becomes a warrior and then he becomes a God for the people around him and at the end he becomes a man.

Was the character always written as a mute?

Yes.

It’s a very physical performance from Mads Mikkelsen.

It was always written that way because it would sustain the mythology around him and it was always about what people read into him.

The use of chapters is very interesting, again was this devised from the start?

No, the chapters came later when we were editing the film because I felt it would be more…it would benefit from being divided up in sections. Actually I stole that from 2001! It made the dramatic storytelling a little more concrete and compelling, you know. Once you set the stage you’re able to create more in it.

The sound design is ferocious. What did you want to achieve with that particular approach?

The sound is almost like a character. I couldn’t really approach it with a musical format. It’s not like a contemporary movie where the music is very much part of it. I couldn’t use a musical voice, I felt it would be too much…I didn’t want any medieval music or things I couldn’t relate to. I decided that One Eye’s silence is kind of the music in a way…the sound of nature. The ambient sound of nature is a very powerful force.

Valhalla Rising is a really great film, do you have any more plans for this kind of movie again?

For me personally this is my favorite film that I’ve made.

I agree.

Cool, so we both agree!

You’ve mentioned the sci-fi elements. Do you think one day you’ll make a full blown sci-fi film?

Yeah, I’d love to make a movie with science now…now that I’ve gone beyond science and outer space. I would like to make something with technology.

What projects are you working on at the moment?

I’m going to Asia in the summer to do a western.

Nicolas Winding Refn, thanks for taking the time out to chat.

Thank you, and thanks for liking the movie. Talk to you on the next one session on the Film Shaft.

Valhalla Rising is released 30th April (UK) and 4th June (USA).

New Mini-Trailer For The Crazies

Following on from the three new character banners we published earlier today, a new “mini-trailer” has been released for The Crazies, the latest zombie-ish flick to hit the big screen. Directed by Breck Eisner, the film stars Timothy Olyphant, Radha Mitchell and Danielle Panabaker, it hits cinemas next month.

The new mini trailer comes courtesy of Fandango and clocks in at a paltry 41 seconds, however it does feature some new footage and so it definitely worth a look. Check it out below:

David Dutton (Timothy Olyphant) is sheriff of Ogden Marsh, a picture-perfect American town with happy, law-abiding citizens. But one night, one of them comes to a school baseball game with a loaded shotgun, ready to kill. Another man burns down his own house…after locking his wife and young son in a closet inside. Within days, the town has transformed into a sickening asylum; people who days ago lived quiet, unremarkable lives have now become depraved, blood-thirsty killers, hiding in the darkness with guns and knives. Sheriff Dutton tries to make sense of what’s happening as the horrific, nonsensical violence escalates. Something is infecting the citizens of Ogden Marsh… with insanity.

Now complete anarchy reigns as one by one the townsfolk succumb to an unknown toxin and turn sadistically violent. In an effort to keep the madness contained, the government uses deadly force to close off all access and won’t let anyone in or out – even those uninfected. The few still sane find themselves trapped: Sheriff Dutton; his pregnant wife, Judy (Radha Mitchell); Becca (Danielle Panabaker), an assistant at the medical center; and Russell (Joe Anderson), Dutton’s deputy and right-hand man. Forced to band together, an ordinary night becomes a horrifying struggle for survival as they do their best to get out of town alive.

US Release: 26th February 2010
UK Release: 26th February 2010
Australian Release: TBC

Christophe Gans Preps Fantomas With Vincent Cassel

Not sure how this one escaped my radar, but it did. French filmmaker Christophe Gans has tired of trying to get his videogame Onimusha off the ground and turned his attention to Fantomas – a 21st century re-imagining of a figure made most famous by Louis Feuillade.

Fantomas is based on the novels by Marcel Allain and Pierre Souvestre and they were a massive pop culture hit in France all the way to the 1960s. Back in the 1910s, Fantomas was an even bigger hit with the Surrealists, what with him being a master of disguise and totally amoral.

Gans is looking at Vincent Cassel to star along with Jean Reno and according to Worst Previews, it’s going to be a 3D extravaganza and shot in English and French. A teaser poster has been released to get everybody mildly excited. Might be one for genre fans only, but with Gans’ penchant for action and horror, this could be very cool indeed. And Cassel would be a great choice as the eponymous villain.

If you can manage watching a silent film, then Feuillade’s Fantomas has been released on DVD. You’ll be surprised at how entertaining it is And for the record, I thought Silent Hill was great.