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PEARRY TEO TALKS ABOUT GENERATING ‘THE GENE GENERATION’ Interview by: June Caldwell, Rodger Caldwell, Steve Carver and Tim Estrada 20
06.
We sat down with the mysterious and creative
Pearry Teo, and asked some questions to see if we could find out
what makes him tick! What is the
significance of the ‘black crow’ for you? I have a black crow tattoo on my back. My
first tattoo took only two hours but to make the jump was bold and
daring. I got my crow tattoo in The Gene Generation goes the opposite way.
In the process of people revenge, people find redemption. in
process of finding romance, they find family. Take a detective
film like LA Confidential and reverse it and you get revenge.
Themes are reversed with a different approach. If you
approach a film like everyone else you will end up making a copy of
the film that makes the quality look bad. I want to be
original and use thematic elements and create something new. I
hope that people look at life and question things.
Everyone should make movies they want to see. They can only
please themselves first. Take the phrase "you can't love
someone unless you love yourself." If you can’t love it, put passion
and inspiration into film don’t expect the audience to like it.
Take it and try to let it shine through the cast and crew or else it
will not come out great on screen. Say you’re going to shoot
at 500 people and that’s going to be OK. Never be afraid.
Many directors are afraid. They feel there always needs to be
a happy ending otherwise the audience wont like it which isn’t true.
We don’t always view life a certain way. One person may say
your lead character will die in a melancholy fashion or something
happens that’s not supposed to happen. It becomes logic vs.
your creative side. Instead of saying what might work on the
audience, say what is true no matter how ridiculous. If you
believe it, it will happen. Look at George Bush. He
looks like a moron but he believes what he says no matter how
ridiculous. He believes in himself and people get sucked into
believing him. If you believe it is possible. How do you get people to suspend their
sense of disbelief? There are times when people try too hard when they
try to make it believable. It doesn’t work when making
something as real as possible like a documentary. Get you
facts right. Elements of the Passion of the Christ
seem untrue, for example, the costumes. On the flipside you
can do something so bizarre that people know not to believe in it.
When you see a fantasy, you stop asking questions. Through
fantasy you seek the direction as opposed to why is that wolf
flying? These are questions you shouldn’t have to ask.
Take the Never Ending Story. What's that flying thing?
You shouldn’t ask that because it is already established.
People who take the movie too seriously… I have no interest in them
being for the audience. A movie should take the audience away
from the real world. Through opening the imagination you look
at it through an
unconscious way. The conscious mind is always working to make
things believable and the state of being OK with it. Your
subconscious mind opens and you start thinking with your left brain.
Emotions open up. You can
take a typical romance where boy meets girl and they fall in love
toward the end or in action/adventure where the scene is set up and
through 25 minutes the action starts. In act 3 the protagonist
realizes their power,
How did you get
involved with this particular film? The film that was approached to me was a typical
documentary. It was a silent film that seemed slightly normal
that the producer asked me to create. Most of the movie was
about a sister trying to get her brother out
of trouble. The producer wasn’t too impressed. I jumped
in and explained to him it was a science fiction film, which he did
not know. I just made that up on the fly, and ran with it! What is the storyline of the film? How did
it come about? This film was approached to me as a story between
a brother and sister. It was originally set to be a silent
film about fathers and sons. He told me you'd be perfect for
this drama feature about a brother and sister. I was
wondering what the film would cost me. I read the script and had a
normal reaction. The brother and sister had a normal life.
In act two the brother gets in trouble, then the sister tries to get
the brother out of trouble. The producer read the script and
wasn't impressed by it but he did owe the script writer so he just
asked him to call later for a meeting. He never saw the catch
to the story so I informed him that this was a Science Fiction
flick… which he didn't know. Since he never got to see the
script writer I improvised to make the script clear. I got
full writing credit at the end of the film. I worked to
incorporate the Science Fiction elements and I had them living in a
war. I was thinking of what kind of war I wanted.
Everything about Science Fiction has been thought of. I was
looking at my bookshelf and decided to make it based on ordination.
They thought it was a great new concept. Nobody found out it
was based on Hitler's Natural Selection process with the names
changed! Thus was born ‘The Gene Generation.’ I had already shot the entire picture with a re
shoot on December 21st. It was a long process creating the
entire city. We spent seven weeks in Were you on time and
under budget? My budget was 1.3 million. My shooting
schedule was 26 days. I was directing two films from two units
and I was the only director. If I had my way it would have
taken 52 days to shoot but we had a budget. We were on
schedule with a few cuts including a scene with the lead actress who
played a punk. She and her friends were going to a secret club
but we didn't have the set ready so we ended up on the roof.
We had to build a set in and hour and a half. There were all
sorts of weird animals like a three legged cat roaming around.
This actually added new interesting elements. This was all
unscripted. There was a point where I was freaking out!
What is the heart and
soul of this movie? I elaborate that love is something we fight for.
What I learned from making this film is that love does hurt. You
loose out when you look at the final outcome. We are who we
want to protect and the people we protect
are who we really are. The goal, morals and pursuit of
thematic elements are what principals our lives. What we fight
for and hold on to is what makes us. It's not about what we
get in the end. It's the journey in the
process that makes us. The characters express that while
love does hurt in the end you need to turn into something.
Love was worth getting hurt for. People may look at the
finished product wanting to die and live for love and that's when we lose. They have to want to learn for
love even if it's for a day or 20 years. All that matters is
the journey that we go through for that person. People
forget what happens in between. It's not
the destination, it's the journey. In the end it's more
complicated. It's all these emotions that make life's poetry. The media in society promotes sex, not love.
I hope the Gene Generation gets a message across... You can
find sex in any I prefer an intelligent audience. I prefer
them to look at life instead of conflict, looking at life with a
dark aesthetic. They're not afraid of conflict. Foreign
culture works better with this. I was raised in
What does being the Director mean to you? Rather than showing off my work I'd rather share
the experience... It is collaboration. I like to nudge people
in the right direction and get them to see what I'm feeling. I
explain to people what's in my head and push them to run it a
certain way. I don't like the director title as King of
Everything. Everyone owes something to someone at some point.
Even the president answers to us. It's all about the project
and not about power. Let's get together and do something great
out of this.
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