Caption: PRX default Piece image
PRX default Piece image 

THE LAST STATION -- Writer/director Michael Hoffman talks with Andrea Chase about his film.

From: Andrea Chase
Series: Behind the Scenes
Length: 16:04

Embed_button
THE LAST STATION -- Writer/director Michael Hoffman talks with Andrea Chase about using Chekhov to get to Tolstoy, why love is as wondrous and infuriating as it is necessary, and how sneezing can bring just the right tone to a film. Read the full description.

Default-piece-image-2 Director Michael Hoffman spent a decade bringing Jay Parini's novel, The Last Station, to the screen. Once he understood that the contradictions of love were the key to the script, the rest fell into place. During the interview, he goes into the way Anton Chekhov led him to the right tone, why Leo Tolstoy is still relevant today, and why paparazzi aren't a new phenomenon. He also lauds Helen Mirren for her refusal to pander to an audience, and James McAvoy for being the perfect collaborator.

Also in the Behind the Scenes series

Caption: Anita Monga, San Francisco, CA 6/10/13, Credit: Andrea Chase

The Hitchock Nine -- SF Silent Film Festival Anita Monga Interview (24:10)
From: Andrea Chase

San Francisco Silent Film Festival Artistic Director Anita Monga talks innovation, creativity, and why Hitchcock proved his genius in the first frames of his very first film.
Piece image

THE EAST -- Zal Batmanglij Interview (10:24)
From: Andrea Chase

Zal Batmanglij talks tribes, alienation, and being soft enough.
Caption: Gabriel Basso, Moises Arias, Nick Robinson, San Francisco, CA 4/29/13 , Credit: Andrea Chase

THE KINGS OF SUMMER -- Moises Arias, Nick Robinson & Gabriel Basso Interview (10:17)
From: Andrea Chase

Moises Arias, Nick Robinson & Gabriel Basso talk chemistry reads, pipe dancing, and facing Nick Offerman.
Caption: Amy Acker & Alexis Denisoff, San Francisco, CA 4/28/13, Credit: Andrea Chase

MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING -- Alexis Denisof and Amy Acker Interview (09:03)
From: Andrea Chase

Amy Acker and Alexis Denisof talk having no fear, short shooting schedules, and staircase soliloquies.
Caption: Nancy Kelly,, San Francisco, CA 9/27/12, Credit: Andrea Chase

REBELS WITH A CAUSE -- Nancy Kelly Interview (24:05)
From: Andrea Chase

Nancy Kelly talks cause, effect, and how saving the Marin Headlands paved the way for Alice Waters.
Caption: Scott McGehee, Onata Aprile, David Siegel, San Francisco CA 4/25/13, Credit: Andrea Chase

WHAT MAISIE KNEW -- David Siegel, Scott McGehee, Onata Aprile Interview (10:32)
From: Andrea Chase

Scott McGehee, David Siegel, and Onata Aprile talk framing shots, casting children, and climbing Alexander Skarsgard like a tree.
Caption: Frances Gerwig, San Francisco, CA 5/3/13, Credit: Andrea Chase

FRANCES HA -- Greta Gerwig Interview (10:38)
From: Andrea Chase

Greta Gerwig talks the addictive quality of multiple takes, the lightness of muscle memory, and keeping secrets from the cast.
Caption: Ramin Bahrani, San Francisco, CA 4/8/13, Credit: Andrea Chase

AT ANY PRICE -- Ramin Bahrani Interview (17:52)
From: Andrea Chase

Ramin Bahrani talks corporate corruption, Roger Ebert’s friendship, and calling Werner Herzog for advice.
Caption: Sarah Polley, San Francisco, CA 4/30/13, Credit: Andrea Chase

STORIES WE TELL -- Sarah Polley Interview (08:48)
From: Andrea Chase

Sarah Polley talks relative truth, the privilege being quiet, and narrative as a tonic for bewilderment.
Piece image

SIMON KILLER -- Antonio Campos Interview (21:18)
From: Andrea Chase

Antonio Campos talks religious prostitutes, music as plot point, and the choreography of life.

Piece Description

Director Michael Hoffman spent a decade bringing Jay Parini's novel, The Last Station, to the screen. Once he understood that the contradictions of love were the key to the script, the rest fell into place. During the interview, he goes into the way Anton Chekhov led him to the right tone, why Leo Tolstoy is still relevant today, and why paparazzi aren't a new phenomenon. He also lauds Helen Mirren for her refusal to pander to an audience, and James McAvoy for being the perfect collaborator.

Intro and Outro

INTRO:

Andrea Chase talks with director Michael Hoffman about his film, THE LAST STATION, adapted by Hoffman from the book of the same name by Jay Parini, it recounts the final days of Count Leo Tolstoy and the stormy, passionate relationship he had with his wife of 48 years, Sofya. The film begins with the arrival of a new secretary, Valentin, a dedicated Tolstoyan, who finds his own difficulties in staying true to the ideals of the utopian community Tolstoy founded, the same difficulties, so he discovers a the great man himself. Hired by Tolstoy’s longtime friend, Chertov, to assist Tolstoy with his writings, he is also tasked to spy on Sofya, who suspects Chertov of influencing Tolstoy into signing away the copywright to his early works. Meanwhile Valetin himself is tested when he falls for Masha, a tolsoyan with her own ideas about what constitutes being true to Tolsoy’s ideals.

The story encompasses contradictions of idealism in a messy real world, the difference between inspiring a social movement and keeping it going, as well as the wonder and pain of love. The film stars Christopher Plummer as Tolstoy, Helen Mirren as Sofyia, Paul Giamattie as Chertov, Kerry Condon as Masha and James McAvoy at Valentin.

OUTRO: