Anna Biller makes movies about sex and sexy women who are smart, which is a super weird coincidence because she's exactly the same way. Take, for example, VIVA, essentially an ode to the swinging 70s that encapsulates all the best bits of Playboy, Russ Meyer and John Waters films, and lonely-heart love letters written by housewives in need of satisfaction. It was directed, written, produced, and edited by one Miss Anna Biller, and it was her first film. She also stars in the movie, which is lucky because she's awesome.
Vice: You’re based in LA, if I'm not mistaken. Have you always lived there or did you
relocate from some other exotic land far, far, away?
Anna Biller: I’m actually a Hollywood native. I think that’s
partly why I’m so interested in the history of movies.
I made Three Examples at CalArts. I hadn’t
studied film before, but I’d made Super 8 films and videos on my
own. It took about two years to make that movie, but I was learning how to
produce and direct as well as to use the equipment and edit as I went along.
I basically just learned by making a lot of mistakes. Although I did go to film school, I never really
worked like other students there. I had an art background so I made films more
like an artist making work in the studio, preparing sets and costumes for
months, and mostly just brought people in for the shooting days and for
rehearsals. I’ve watched a lot of films, so a lot of it was copying things I
liked from movies, but making it personal. I feel like, for me at least, I need
to have a hand in everything to make a film that’s organic and meaningful.
My first love has always been Hollywood musicals,
and fairy tale films such as Cocteau’s La Belle et la Bête and Démy’s Peau
d’Ane. I love films that involve poetry and spectacle, gowns, glamour, and
music. As I’ve gotten older I’ve become more interested in darker and more
difficult movies, and films that deal more specifically with sexuality and
identity. Lately I’ve been watching a lot of European cinema from the 50s and 60s, that’s been hugely inspirational. I like pre-code movies and
sexploitation movies because they deal with the different levels of pleasure
and un-pleasure that females experience in the world as sexual creatures. I do
reference other films quite often in my movies. For Incubus, for instance, I
studied The Harvey Girls, Horror of Dracula, Johnny Guitar, and Gunsmoke.
I loved the idea of what an incubus
presents: a female nightmare or fantasy of sex with a demonic stranger. What’s
interesting about the incubus is that he’s ambiguous in terms of whether he’s a
female wet dream or a figure of rape and terror, and also whether he’s real or
imaginary. Nuns in the middle ages, for instance, would blame unexplainable
pregnancies on an incubus. So I thought it was interesting to play on those
strange contradictions, and have an incubus in a film that you think is
imaginary, but then becomes a real person--in fact an annoying and whiny person
who’s really just a hammy actor. It’s as if her dream of a dark stranger taking
her in the night is the construction, whereas the reality is that men are not
all that sinister and sexy, are not demons, but in fact are just regular people
with their own problems.
I was lucky to find an investor who loved my
script, my short films, and some photos I’d taken for Viva, and offered to fund
it on an unrealistically low budget. I was very naïve about the cost of
producing a feature film. I was doing and making so much myself that we really
were saving a fortune by not hiring a proper art department, but we still ran
way over budget. My investor stuck by me though, and we were able to finish the
movie. Now that I look at it I can’t believe we shot it for such a low amount,
when I hear how much other people spend on much simpler and less visual films.
I wanted to make a movie about what it would be
like to be a woman in 1972 who bought into everything that the sexual
revolution promised to women: freedom, equality, pleasure. Suddenly the message
out there was that a woman who enjoyed sex was not a bad person, but a
liberated person in charge of her own destiny. When she goes out with all of
this optimism her hopes are slowly crushed, because she realizes that the
utopia she had imagined is impossible within the actual world of relations
between men and women. That was the original point of VIVA, and on top of that
I put all of the pleasure, fun, and weirdness of the style and strangeness of
that time, to make the audience feel like they were really there. I do consider
myself a feminist in a general sort of way, in that I’m consciously trying to
create a subjective and pleasurable space for women on the screen.
I took some of the characters from VIVA from my
own life (a little stylized, but the pickup lines are the same), and from
movies and television from the 60s and 70s. Some of the actors studied particular characters in
sexploitation movies to create their characters, with my guidance. But I mainly
wanted to represent a cross-section of stereotypes from the 70s. I think
stereotypes are key in creating comedy, and I wanted to produce that uncanny
feeling of being inside a Playboy advertisement or British sex comedy or nudie
flick.
I’ve finished the script and am doing production
design for my next feature, a movie about witchcraft tentatively called The
Love Witch, about a woman in the 70s who uses witchcraft to make men fall for
her, with disastrous results.... I’m also working on scripts for a couple of sexy
short films. One takes place in a circus and involves trapeze artists, the
other is about a prostitute and her customers in London circa 1905.
ROBERT MACMANUS
i didn't know hollywood natives actually existed.
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