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‘Mr. K’ | Deadline Studio at TIFF 2024
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9/11/2024
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Fun
Transcript
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00:00
Hey, I'm Scott Shillstone in the Deadline studio at the 2024 Toronto International Film
00:15
Festival. I'm joined by Crispin Glover, star of Mr. K. Crispin, thank you for being here.
00:20
Glad to be here. Thank you.
00:21
First off, this is a really interesting film. Tell me how you got involved in the project.
00:26
I was given an offer with a screenplay and a kind of PDF with different images of inspiration for
00:38
the look of the film. And it was apparent it was a good screenplay and it would be a nice
00:44
production. And I met with the director, writer on Zoom and all worked out.
00:52
So I want to hit on something you said about the PDF of the look of the film.
00:56
I mean, it's a gorgeous film in terms of production design. And I'm just curious,
01:01
as an actor, how important are those elements to you? Do
01:04
they inform or kind of shape your performance at all?
01:08
Well, this film in particular, it is a character in this film in particular,
01:14
the hotel and elements having to do with the hotel. You can feel if something's going to be a nice
01:21
production, if it is going to have a nice production value, and that can be a good thing.
01:27
And often it is an important thing.
01:30
And so can you talk to me a little bit about collaborating with Tallulah Schwab on this film?
01:35
How was she as a director?
01:36
The film is, which I'm glad of, is interpretable by the audience,
01:47
which I like. As an audience member, I prefer to be able to have some variable feelings
01:57
about what something could be. And the script, the screenplay, also had possibilities of ways
02:08
possibilities of ways that it could be played. I had a certain interpretation
02:15
at the beginning, which was somewhat different from what Tallulah, the writer-director had in
02:25
mind. And so over the course of the film, I'd say about 98% of what I had in mind was
02:33
on the same, in the same realm. But there were a couple of things that were, a couple percentage
02:39
points that we really had to discuss out, and things changed over the period of the film.
02:46
But ultimately, the main thing that I was always attracted to and like is the element of
02:56
interpretation for the audience. And that remains in the film. So that's important.
03:01
And speaking of interpretation, when you first read the script, who was Mr. K to you?
03:09
What really kind of excited you about taking on this role?
03:12
Well, like I say, there actually was a core differentiation of what it was to me,
03:19
specifically. And funny enough, there was even a time in the middle of the film,
03:24
which doesn't usually happen for me. I usually figure something out and can be set on that.
03:32
But midway through the film, there were some things that Tallulah said to me that were,
03:38
I started thinking, oh, I could have done it in this other way. But by that time,
03:43
it would have been very, very different. It would have been a very different
03:46
approach to the character altogether. But by then, we'd already shot almost half the film.
03:54
So but I even kind of think now like I could have done it in this other way and it would
04:00
have been interesting. But I'm glad because there's reviews have been coming in and
04:03
it's being well-reviewed. And so I'm happy. I'm glad that it seems to be being well-received.
04:12
One of the things you talked about is that this movie is great because it just opens it up to
04:16
interpretation. I don't want to get into maybe a specific singular message, but is there any
04:22
sort of message that you took away from it? I think it does have a positive message.
04:29
Some of the things that, and I always thought it did, some of the things that I had interpreted
04:36
had more perhaps dips in the character's psychology as opposed to a more straightforward
04:45
path toward the end. But I always felt like it had a positive message or ending or idea or feeling.
04:55
As an artist, and because you're so much more than just an actor, you're a publisher,
05:00
a filmmaker, an author. I'm curious, as an artist, what inspires you most?
05:04
I find that I usually am reactive to things. And it just depends.
05:10
There's a film that I've been making for a long time. I had two films that I toured with between
05:19
2005 and 2020, right till the pandemic happened. My first film, What Is It? premiered at Sundance
05:27
in 2005. My second film, It Is Fine, Everything Is Fine, premiered in Sundance in 2007.
05:34
And I, like I say, at least, yeah, every year from 2005 until 2020, I continued with the tour.
05:40
I perform a live show that has the books that I dramatically narrate. And then I introduce the
05:48
film, then there's a Q&A after the film, and then I have a book signing. But I realized when there
05:53
was the pandemic, it was a good time to take the natural pause and wait to this new film. I started
06:01
shooting it in 2013. And so it's really, it's been a long time. I funded the film myself, and
06:09
I tend towards shooting in production segments. There's been a lot of reasons why it's taken a
06:15
long time. But I do believe I'll be, it's going to be done very soon, within the next few months.
06:22
And I plan to start touring with it next year. So I'm very excited about it.
06:32
Which is what inspires you as an artist?
06:35
My father's an actor, Bruce Glover. He's in films like Diamonds Are Forever and Chinatown.
06:42
And he and I had never acted in a film together before. So I purposefully developed this for
06:47
he and I to act in together. And it's taken a long time to get it done, but it's almost done.
06:56
But there is a reaction to various elements. First off, what can I make with he and I? And then
07:06
what were the, I own property in the Czech Republic, and the former farm buildings of
07:15
the chateau. It's an old chateau that was built in the 1600s. 18,000 square feet,
07:20
but they're in very specific shapes. So I had to think of sets that would be able to be
07:26
built in those specific shapes. And that influenced things that I thought in the screenplay.
07:32
So it's, I find that it's often reactive and making what can work, work, or what is at hand
07:41
work and how one reacts to that thing. And of course, when you're acting in a film, you're
07:47
reacting to the story or the character, the lines, or what the other actors are doing. So
07:55
often reaction. Well, Crispin, I really appreciate your time. Congratulations on the film.
08:01
Thank you. I appreciate it.
Recommended
6:12
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