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Danny Boyle has
nailed nearly every genre in cinema and now, after turning down
the opportunity to direct the fourth instalment of Alien,
he has opted to try his hand at science fiction. The cult
director has already had an astonishing career, winning
twenty-four awards along the way for films such as Shallow
Grave, Trainspotting and 28 Days Later.
On a chilly Monday
afternoon in London, Danny Boyle took time out of his busy
schedule to talk to PureMovies.co.uk writer Faisal Latif
about Sci-Fi, romance and his new film, Sunshine…
PureMovies.co.uk:
So, Danny, was
it your idea to make a science fiction movie or were you drawn
into it by Alex Garland?
Danny Boyle: It
was actually Alex’s script that drew me into it, because he had
this fantastic idea about eight astronauts strapped to the back
of a bomb, and of course it was attached to an amazing notion
about the sun. There’s never been a film about the sun before,
so it was an incredible experience to work on something like
this, and you could actually feel your brain swelling with the
enormity of such a premise. It was good to be able to feed that
back to the actors to make their performances more efficient.
It must have been
hard to fill the footsteps of classic science fiction films…
We tried to follow the
pattern of great sci-fi movies like Alien and 2001: A
Space Odyssey by filming in a narrow corridor. This was a
weird sci-fi in its own right, but it boils down to basically a
ship, a crew and a signal. It was bizarre to work in such
classic circumstances, but it was like creating an original
movie at the same time because a film based around the sun has
never been made before.
Were you not linked
to the fourth Alien movie at one point?
I actually backed out of
that because I was intimidated by the special effects, but doing
a sci-fi was on the radar. And while I was making Sunshine,
I’m sure its true for a lot of directors, I realised I was a big
fan of this genre. I always go to the premieres of sci-fi movies
such as Contact and Alien: Resurrection, and I
don’t do that with other films so it was nice to be a part of
this sort of film.
How
was the film received in America?
It’s funny because
there’s a part in the film where there’s a little hope that
shines through, and then we dash that almost immediately after
introducing it, and that killed the Americans! They will do
anything for hope, even if it means sacrificing all levels of
plausibility, and they didn’t like what we did there at all.
Did making Sunshine
perfect in terms of special effects prove expensive?
It was filmed in the UK
and was therefore cheaper than other films, but $45 million is a
decent budget and we did manage to stick to it. We had more
freedom because we didn’t do it at Pinewood Studios, we decided
to do it at the same place as 28 Days Later, therefore
really made our money go further. The place we filmed it at was
a lot smaller, but we got used to that, making it as real as
possible for the actors as it would be inside the spacecraft.
Is it true that you
also made the actors stay in student accommodation in London for
two weeks so that they could get the feel for what it would be
like to be together for as long as their characters have in
Sunshine?
Yes, they had quite an
experience with that, sharing toilets and sharing a kitchen.
Apparently, they decided to cook fish one night and the dig
smelled like that for two weeks.
How
did you create the CG?
We used a company, MPC,
who did the Harry Potter and Narnia films, and
obviously their work is quite technical in terms of what they
have to do when they create a dragon’s tail, or a snake. This
was a chance for them to do something totally artistic and a
little different by creating a solar system that the audience
could be sucked into, and instead of doing one small aspect of a
creature they had total control over the whole project.
How
accurate are the science fiction elements of the film?
Well, we brought in Dr.
Brian Cox to check over the script and remove anything that was
wrong, but Alex’s script was written quite accurately and by
reading it you can tell he’s a big fan of sci-fi and knows what
he’s talking about. But the fact that the sun is going to die is
true, and that aspect of the science is definitely sound. Even
though it will happen in a very long time, that important fact
is that it will happen.
If it was going to
happen next year, how would you spend your last year on earth?
I’ve recently returned
from a visit to the Taj Mahal in India that I’ve never been to
before, and it was the most beautiful and romantic place I’ve
ever seen, and I’m not really a romantic guy. So I’d go back
there, and I’d urge others to do something as equally romantic.
What did you learn
about yourself after making this movie?
That I never want to do
another sci-fi! You’ll often find that unless they have a
contractual obligation, directors tend not to go back into
space, and I think that’s because the standard set by classics
is so high that you have to get to that point reached by them,
and its fucking exhausting doing that, especially as you’ve got
to do it at every point throughout the film, and what’s more
you’ve got to push everyone else to that standard.
What conventions or
standards did you feel you had stick to? Did you abide by any
specific rules previously created by the classic sci-fis?
Well, we tried a romance
but realised that it didn’t work because it hadn’t been done
before. 2010: The Year We Made Contact tried to do it,
but even there it didn’t take off, so we decided to leave it
out.
Renoir once said that on
set you should always leave the door open for life to walk in,
and a convention of science-fiction films made in space is that
you can’t leave that door open, and you have to have everything
in order before you set out on the journey.
You have worked with
Alex Garland before when you brought The Beach to the
screen, and with Irvine Welsh on Trainspotting. Have you
any plans to make any other novels into movies?
My favourite one is
actually already being done. It’s a novel called Blindness, and
it involves an all-blind cast, so exactly how you go about doing
that is going to be quite interesting to see.
What is next for you
then?
I’m going to be filming
in Mumbai, a script written by Simon Beaufoy [Full Monty],
and the casting is currently the problem because it involves two
Indian brothers and a sister, at ages 8, 12 and 16, so that’s
what’ll be keeping me busy for a while!
Danny Boyle smiles
at me, shakes my hand and tells me it was nice to meet me,
implicitly asking my permission to leave, before I walk out of
the conference chamber wondering how a legendary film-maker,
such as the one who pleasantly answered my questions with
enthusiasm, could be such a down-to-earth guy.

Related Topics
Sunshine Review
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