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The graduate of the Edward R. Murrow High School decided to embark on an adventure. “When I was eighteen I traveled around Europe with a backpack and started in Israel,” stated Darren Aronofsky. “Because I had no money, I put myself on a kibbutz with dreams of being in an avocado field, picking avocados with my shirt off and catching some rays. In fact, they stuck me in a plastic factory and my job was to run between assembly lines for eight hours a day...It was a nightmare so I ran away after two days.” Heading off to Jerusalem, the penniless traveler agreed to take Torah classes three hours each morning from a sect of Hasidim Jews in exchange for food and shelter. Returning to America, Aronofsky attended Harvard University to study anthropology, boarding with an animation student. “My roommate [and future business partner Dan Shreker] would finish the year with a movie and I’d finish with a bunch of C’s. I decided to switch and found that film was the first thing that kept me awake at night, solving problems and doing mental edits. Film was also the first thing in which I got an A.”
“My friendship with Darren began with a collaboration on his thesis film at Harvard, Supermarket Sweep [1991]. I played a violent sociopath,” remarked actor Sean Gullette (Happy Accidents) who performs alongside Seth Gitell in the short film which combines elements of action, comedy, and drama; the directorial debut lead Darren Aronofsky to become a Student Academy Award Finalist. “When I went to film school we had to do three short films,” stated the filmmaker who sought to obtain his masters in directing at the American Film Institute, “so I started reading the short stories of my favourite authors. The first film I did at AFI was called Fortune Cookie.” The tale, written by Hulbert Selby, Jr., is “about a salesman who gets addicted to fortunes, and can’t make a sale unless he has a good fortune from a fortune cookie.” Next up for the aspiring director was Protozoa (1993) where he teamed for the first time with frequent collaborator and cinematographer Matthew Libatique (Iron Man) for the first time; the drama which also serves as the name of his production company stars Michael Bonitatis, Lucy Liu (Lucky Number Slevin) and Damon Whitaker (Mr. Holland’s Opus). Completing the AFI trilogy was the comedy No Time (1994) which features Robert Dylan Cohen, Chas Martin and Billy Portman.
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“Pi [1998] has a young math genius named Max Cohen for the main character,” explained Darren Aronofsky who recruited Sean Gullette once again for the leading role. “He lives in a gloomy apartment in Chinatown, isolated from other humans… [Max] is obsessed with the idea that everything in the world, ultimately can be represented and understood through numbers.” This mathematical obsession leads to Max being pursued by two ruthless organizations: a Wall Street company seeking to dominate the world financial market and a Kabbalah sect seeking to unlock the secrets of their sacred texts. “A film made for $60,000, the only way you can get it done is with a tremendous amount of favours,” observed Aronofsky who collected $100 donations from family and friends. “Every single filmmaker on the film from the P.A. [production assistant] to me to Sean to the producer to the first A.C. [assistant cameraman] were all equal profit sharers in the film. There’s a pool of 50% of the film which all of us shared equally. That’s the way to do it. That’s how we got their passion.” With the fundraising campaign falling short, a cash infusion by executive producer Randy Simon allowed the principle photography to commence; the project, which involved eight months of acting rehearsals, and took three years to make.
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“We walked into the festival with no buzz,” recollected Darren Aronofsky regarding Pi being accepted as an official entry at the Sundance Film Festival. “At our first screening, we had a standing ovation.” A distribution deal was signed with Live Entertainment [later Artisan] causing entertainment industry publication Variety to print the headline Pi = $1 million. Grossing $3 million domestically, the science fiction thriller won the Directing Award – Dramatic, and a nomination for the Grand Jury Prize – Dramatic, at Sundance; it also received a Special Recognition Award for “excellence in filmmaking” from the National Board of Review, and the Open Palm Award at the Gotham Awards. The Independent Spirit Awards lauded the film with Best First Screenplay and nominations for Best Cinematography and Best First Picture. Questioned about how the Jewish community reacted to the story, Darren Aronofsky replied, “When we showed it at the Museum of Modern of Art [as part of the program of] New Directors, New Films, it was a very Jewish audience and they actually cheered throughout the film.”
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Performing in the $4.5 million production are Jared Leto (Panic Room), Ellen Burstyn (The Exorcist), Jennifer Connelly (A Beautiful Mind), Marlon Wayans (Scary Movie), Christopher McDonald (The Perfect Storm), Mark Margolis, Louise Lasser (Happiness), Marcia Jean Kurtz (Dog Day Afternoon), Sean Gullette, Keith David (Platoon), Ben Shenkman and Hubert Selby, Jr.. “When I pitched the movie,” revealed Darren Aronofsky, “I told people I wanted it to be like you jumped out of an airplane and about midway coming down you remembered that you forgot your parachute. That’s where the movie begins... And the film ends five minutes after you hit the ground, you’re alive during those last five minutes, catching your last few breaths.” Aronofsky added, “I wanted no catharsis at the end; [I wanted it to be] just as harsh and intense as possible. It’s a punk movie where the audience is a mosh pit of emotion.” The original author attempted to bring his story to the big screen years before. “Selby started writing a version of the screenplay… but he lost it. I started writing it, and got three-quarters the way done when I got a call from Selby, he had found the draft in his basement. He sent it over, and I would say about eighty percent [of the two versions] was the same. Basically, we were telling the same story. It’s about getting essence and then adding ornamentation.” Contemplating the subject matter of the drama, the director observed, “Ultimately the film is about the lengths people will go to escape their realities, and what happens when you chase after a fantasy.”
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Trouble erupted for Requiem for a Dream when the MPAA gave it a NC-17 rating. “It wasn’t so much the sexuality that was the problem but more the psychological intensity of the three-minute climax of the film,” remarked Darren Aronofsky. “Personally, I like controversy because I think it attracts the right audience to the movie.” Aronofsky went on to say, “I just think there are more unhappy people on the planet than there are happy people. To feel good about yourself and feel good about your world, you have to go through a lot of darkness.” Earning $7 million worldwide, the drama received a number of accolades in particular for Ellen Burstyn’s portrayal of a woman who overdoses on watching television and diet pills after getting a call to appear on her favourite TV show. Burstyn was nominated for Best Actress at the Oscars, Screen Actors Guild Awards, and the Golden Globes. The Independent Spirit Awards lauded Requiem for a Dream with Best Cinematography and Best Female Lead (Ellen Burstyn) along with nominations for Best Director, Best Feature, and Best Supporting Female (Jennifer Connelly). And for the second time in a row, Darren Aronofsky produced a movie which was presented with a Special Recognition Award “for excellence in filmmaking” from the National Board of Review.
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“I steal a lot of inventions from MTV, but it’s basically style without substance,” stated Aronofsky, who is quick to point out that a key principle for him is a stylistic technique must push the narrative forward. In recognition of his creative talent, the director was given the Franklin J. Schaffner Award by his alma mater the American Film Institute; the Young Hollywood Awards presented him with the trophy for Hottest Young Filmmaker, and he was a member of the dramatic jury at the 2001 Sundance Film Festival. The biggest compliment of all came from Hollywood which envisioned him as the one to revive a comic book movie franchise about a masked vigilante. “Vengeance and justice that are really deep issues for Americans,” said Aronofsky who was attached to direct Batman: Year One. Also in development was a WWII submarine horror thriller he co-wrote with Lucas Sussman and David Twohy (Pitch Black) called Proteus, which was later renamed Below (2002).
Things took a major turn for the worse for Darren Aronofsky when he chose to direct an original science fiction fantasy with a box office star.
Continue to part two.
For more on Darren Aronofsky visit his official website and blog, along with the fansites Darren Aronofsky Online and Aronofsky Films. You can also watch the trailer for Pi here.
Trevor Hogg is a freelance video editor and writer who currently resides in Canada.
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