Joanna Hogg mines memory but embraces storytelling for âSouvenir: Part IIâ
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Semiautobiographical in decidedly indefinite fashion, âThe Souvenir: Part II,â like its 2019 predecessor âThe Souvenir,â functions as meta canvas for British director Joanna Hogg.
In the first chapter, film school student Julie (Honor Swinton Byrne), a fictional stand-in for Hogg in the 1980s, falls for a cruelly alluring lover â not unlike a devastating romantic relationship the artist herself lived through as a young woman. With âPart II,â Hogg consummates a sweeping, inward-looking masterwork, one that reexamines and in certain cases amends reality, the likes of which few filmmakers reach in their careers.
A film about the making of a film, this final installment sees Julie turn into a detective trying to decipher what she underwent in the first half through the creation of her graduation film project. From the outset, Hogg was certain her emotionally embattled alter ego would dissect that experience through filmmaking but couldnât anticipate precisely how.
âI had an idea of what the second part would be, but then when I started to prepare it after we shot Part 1, there were so many new ideas that occurred to me,â Hogg told The Envelope. âIt changed quite a bit from when I first conceived Part 2 alongside Part 1. That was for many reasons because the shoot of Part 1 itself was an inspiration.â
Malleable in nature, the thematic framework of Hoggâs films â for which she doesnât pen traditional screenplays but rather intuitive documents of ideas and references â is precise in concept but not in form. Unafraid of embracing the unpredictable that may arise from that process on set, she couldnât be precious about every detail from her actual personal experience.
âThere were times when I was a little frustrated with my memory and wished Iâd remembered something more clearly. But mostly it was navigating the story in the present, so it no longer became about my own memories,â Hogg said. âIt was something happening in front of me with characters portrayed by Honor and the other performers. It became something very much in the moment, rather than always looking back into the past.â
For the introductory feature, Swinton Byrne learned about the unfurling of Julieâs heartbreaking ordeal as production went along. But in the sequel, or rather the companion piece, Hogg showed the actress the document to empower her portrayal ahead of time. A more self-assured Julie, with hard-earned maturity in the aftermath of catastrophe, called for an understanding of the characterâs discovery of her voice, as a woman and as a storyteller.
The maximum expression of that coming of age is the short film Julie brings to fruition within âThe Souvenir: Part II,â a show-stopping, dreamlike set piece. Hogg envisioned her leading ladyâs work to feel slightly similar to the film she herself made several decades ago, âCaprice,â but to also tackle the love affair she was so ill-equipped to back then.
Starring a still fresh-faced Tilda Swinton (who in turn plays concerned mother to her real-life daughter in both âSouvenirsâ), the short student film âCapriceâ follows a woman trapped in a magazine. Julieâs comparably exuberant vision, however, places Swinton Byrne inside the world of Jean-HonorĂ© Fragonardâs painting âThe Souvenir,â from which the pair of films take their titles.
âThe making of Julieâs film was very exciting to all of us, all the crew and the cast, because we felt like we were students making it and we didnât plan it in every detail,â said Hogg. âWe didnât have a huge budget to make our film â we had a student budget really â and we didnât even have a lot of time, but there was something very exciting about creating something so stylized in the moment.â
Through this re-creation, and the entire two-film venture, Hoggâs conflicted feelings about the institution of higher education she attended, the National Film and Television School in Beaconsfield near London, have been reframed.
âIâm more appreciative of what film school gave me and how sometimes the fights I had were necessary ones and maybe ultimately strengthened me as a filmmaker,â said Hogg. âAt the time, it didnât feel like that and that was sometimes difficult. Now I see the positive sides and think, âWell, this story wouldnât have happened but for that experience.ââ
During its inception, Hogg decided her references for Part 2 would include only those that had been significant for her while at film school in the early to mid â80s. The substantial, musical-heavy list featured Mitchell Leisenâs âLady in the Dark,â Charles Vidorâs âCover Girl,â Chris Petitâs âRadio On,â Ulrike Ottingerâs âTicket of No Return,â Federico Felliniâs seminal â8 Âœâ(a movie about the crafting of one) and Martin Scorseseâs âNew York, New York.â
An executive producer on both âSouvenirâ features, Scorsese engaged in multiple cinema-adoring conversations with Hogg, most notably to discuss the influential output of Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburgerâs production company, the Archers (âThe Red Shoesâ).
Verbally pinpointing how the idiosyncratic mĂ©lange of elements, often embedded in a fascinating self-referential dance, merge is a taxing exercise for Hogg, a director unable to watch her visions once completed. âFor all the energy and time that goes into the making of a film, the process is always whatâs most interesting,â she said. âI donât linger too much on what the result is.â
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