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“It was wonderful to work on digital,” stated Danny Boyle. “I’m very proud of the fact that’s the first proper widely-distributed release on digital, and on a very inferior digital format. It suited the guerrilla nature of the story and that was cool, doing it like that. I began to learn how to contradict film culture just in the way films are made. I got much more into doing it in what you would call an unprofessional way. I’m not a big fan of the tautly professional films that do things ‘the right way.’” Grossing $83 million worldwide, 28 Days Later proved to be so popular that the picture was re-released months after its initial run with an alternative ending. On the awards circuit, the fifth theatrical feature helmed by Boyle won the Saturn Award for Best Horror Film as well as nominations for Best Director and Best Writing at the Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films; the British Independent Awards nominated it for Best Achievement in Production, Best Director and Best British Independent Film. 28 Days Later was lauded with Best British Film, and received a nomination for Best Newcomer (Cillian Murphy) at the Empire Awards while the MTV Movie Awards and Irish Film and Television Awards respectively nominated Cillian Murphy for Breakthrough Male Performance and Best Actor in a Film. Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times wrote “28 Days Later is a tough, smart ingenious movie that leads its characters into situations where everything depends on their [and our] understanding of human nature.” The DVD for the film includes three alternative endings. A sequel was released called 28 Weeks Later (2007) as well as a comic book series called 28 Days Later: The Aftermath (2009) which bridges the gap between the two stories.
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Asked how he determined the cinematic colour scheme for the story, the director replied, “The classic look is the James Cameron-Ridley Scott blue/gray/steel look. That’s the diet everyone expects to be fed in a science fiction movie. We deliberately didn’t have anything inside the ship apart from the carrots that were orange or gold. So, when you went outside, it was shocking to have this colour again. It was like going to colour from black and white.” Boyle referenced a number of classic films when making Sunshine. “The three big ones are 2001 [1968], the first Alien [1979] film, and Tarkovsky’s Solaris [1972].” A German World War II submarine tale directed by Wolfgang Petersen (In the Line of Fire) also had a major impact on the British moviemaker. “The obvious thing was to try and make it like Das Boot [1981], the classic claustrophobia film.” Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times wrote, “The interactions are the weakest elements in Sunshine, which is strongest when it focuses on the sheer enormity of the mission and its consequences.” The $40 million production grossed $32 million worldwide and was nominated for the Saturn Award for Best Science Fiction Film by the Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films; at the British Independent Film Awards it won for Best Production Design and received a nomination for Best Actor (Cillian Murphy). Empire Awards nominated Sunshine for Best British Film and Best Science Fiction or Fantasy Film while Cillian Murphy was nominated for Best Actor in a Film by the Irish Film and Television Awards. As for Danny Boyle, he competed for British Director of the Year at the London Critics Circle Film Awards.
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Based on the novel Q & A by Indian author and diplomat Vikas Swarup, Slumdog Millionaire stars Dav Patel (The Last Airbender), Freida Pinto (Rise of the Apes), Madhur Mittal, Anil Kapoor (Taal), Ayush Mahesh Khedekar, Tanay Chheda (My Name Is Khan), Irfan Khan (The Warrior), and Rubina Ali (Bollywood Hero). In an effort to find his lost love, a young man from the slums of Mumbai becomes a contestant on Who Wants to be a Millionaire? “In the book, the spine of the story is the [game] show, whereas in this it’s the love story because that’s his real agenda,” said Danny Boyle who conducted the principle photography for the $15 million production in India. “I was determined to make the film in real places because otherwise how was I going to understand or recreate it as a Westerner?” The country left a lasting impression on the director. “You leave India, but it never leaves you. It’s an extraordinary place and you learn about yourself as a person and as a filmmaker. It’s an incredibly generous place and it’s an incredibly contradictory place. And these contradictions are on a viciously extreme scale: the poverty and the wealth, the nuclear status — no toilets. Half the population of Mumbai have no toilets. I was trying to capture some of that, really, and we did it by some extreme storytelling. People say, ‘How can you go from the deliberate maiming of a child to a big Bollywood song and dance in the end?” Well, you don’t try to smooth the path from one to the other. I was trying to put all the elements into the film that belong to the city, that are a part of that city.”
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Earning $378 million dollars worldwide, Slumdog Millionaire caused Danny Boyle to become one of seven directors to win a Golden Globe, a Directors Guild of America Award, a BAFTA Award and an Oscar for the same movie. At the Academy Awards, the cinematic adaptation won Best Cinematography, Best Director, Best Editing, Best Original Score, Best Original Song, Best Sound, Best Picture and Best Adapted Screenplay; it received a nomination for Best Sound Editing as well as a second nomination for Best Original Song. The BAFTAs lauded Slumdog Millionaire with Best Cinematography, Best Director, Best Editing, Best Film, Best Music, Best Adapted Screenplay, and Best Sound as well as nominations for Best Actor (Dev Patel), Best Production Design, Best Supporting Actress (Freida Pinto), and Best British Film. British Independent Film Awards presented the drama with Best Director, and Most Promising Newcomer (Dev Patel) while handing out nominations for Best Screenplay, Best Cinematography, and Most Promising Newcomer (Ayush Mahesh Khedekar); at the Golden Globes it won Best Director, Best Picture – Dramatic, Best Original Score and Best Screenplay. Slumdog Millionaire was presented with British Director of the Year, British Film of the Year, and Screenwriter of the Year while contending for British Actor of the Year (Dev Patel), and Director of the Year at the London Critics Circle Film Awards; the Young Artist Awards lauded it with Outstanding International Feature Film Ensemble. Danny Boyle was presented with the Extraordinary Contribution to Filmmaking Award at the 2008 Austin Film Festival; at the same event, Slumgdog Millionaire was named the Audience Award winner.
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“James [Franco] wasn’t an obvious choice,” admitted Danny Boyle who originally planned to select Cillian Murphy as his leading man, “but when he read the script you could hear that he could do it. So we cast him.” To get a better sense of what Aron Ralston went through, the director and Franco watched the actual video messages created by Ralston while he was trapped; the footage had a profound affect on them. “I thought this would be a man on the edge breaking down and crying.” Boyle found himself to be greatly mistaken. “Just what was in his eyes; he was trying to be himself and yet there was this slow inexorable agenda of death going on.” Close attention was paid to recreating the moment when Raltson amputates his trapped arm, using a blunt knife and the weight of the boulder. “I remember reading the chapter and I thought – we’ve got to do it very accurately. We got to reflect the fact that it’s not instant, in reality it took him over forty minutes.” The filmmaker did not regret his casting decision. “What happens in the scene itself is that he occupies these plateaus of pain so brilliantly…that people imagine it’s the sound effects that are [putting them] on the edge – and they obviously contribute to it. But the real issue is that it’s an extraordinary performance by Franco.” The sequence made headlines in the media. “What is astonishing, we did have a few people fainting, early on, but more importantly I don’t remember anyone walking out.” Boyle is quick to point out that the reporting of the fainting incidents was not part of a studio promotional campaign. “Fox Searchlight would have loved to have had the power the studios used to have where they could kill the story. But you can’t now, there are tweeters in the room! It’s out before the paramedics even get there.”
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“This is a film about how precious life is,” declared Danny Boyle. “And it’s only precious because of other people.” Boyle explained further, “He doesn’t survive because he is on his own; he survives because he finally realizes how important it is to get back to the people he cares about.” Made on a production budget of $18 million, 127 Hours was nominated for Best Film at the London Film Festival; it also received nominations for Best Picture, Best Actor (James Franco), Best Director, Best Adapted Screenplay, Best Song, Best Cinematography, Best Editing, and Best Sound at the Broadcast Film Critics Association Awards. At the BAFTAs, 127 Hours was nominated for the Alexander Korda Award for Best British Film, the Anthony Asquith Award for Film Music, the David Lean Award for Direction, Best Actor (James Franco), Best Cinematography, Best Editing, and Best Sound; while the Academy Awards nominated it for Best Picture, Best Actor (James Franco), Best Editing, Best Original Score, Best Original Song, and Best Adapted Screenplay. The real life drama contended at the Golden Globes for Best Actor – Drama (James Franco), Best Original Score, and Best Screenplay; at the Independent Spirit Awards it received nominations for Best Film, Best Director, and Best Actor (James Franco). James Franco also received a Screen Actors Guild Awards nomination for Outstanding Performance for a Male Actor in a Leading Role.
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Another project for the Manchester native is one that has international importance as he has been appointed the artistic director for the opening ceremony at the 2012 London Olympic Games. Commenting on the epic approach used by China at the 2008 Olympic Games, Danny Boyle said, “The thing is about the stadium is that it has the same number of seats as Beijing but is half the size. It is a more intimate space…We want to keep it on a human scale.” As for the tone of the opening ceremony, Boyle slyly stated, “What I do know is that after a couple of years of this [British] coalition government we may well be looking for a bit of light relief.”
“I want my films to be life-affirming,” remarked Danny Boyle who does have one overriding concern. “The worry I have is that I’ll make the same film again and again.” Rumours persist that Boyle will do a sequel to Trainspotting as well as turn 28 Days Later into a trilogy. “I would find that really difficult to do [a sequel], certainly not without a long gap. You want to approach it with a fresh set of guidelines or rules for yourself.” However, success is never a guarantee. “When you do one you just hope that you get the chance to do another one.” As for offering advice, the director who counts Apocalypse Now (1979) as his favourite movie, pushes the idea of never taking the easy route creatively. “To be a filmmaker…you need to lead. You have to be psychotic in your desire to do something.”
Read our review of Danny Boyle's latest Academy Award-nominated film 127 Hours, along with a report from its screening at the London Film Festival 2010.
Trevor Hogg is a freelance video editor and writer who currently resides in Canada.
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