Episodes

Monday Dec 07, 2015
CAROL Phyllis Nagy's New Film
Monday Dec 07, 2015
Monday Dec 07, 2015
Writer-director Phyllis Nagy about her latest
screenplay “Carol” starring Cate Blanchett that just
won the New York Film Critics Circle for Best Screenplay and Best Film with Emmy Winner Charlotte Robinson host of
OUTTAKE VOICES™. This
much anticipated romantic film is an
adaptation of Patricia Highsmith’s important novel “The Price of Salt”
that endured a 18 year journey to bring it to the screen. The movie
follows two women from very different class backgrounds who find
themselves in an unexpected love affair in 1950s New York. As a period
piece it's beautifully directed by Todd Haynes who also won New York
Film Critics Circle for Best Director along with cinematographer Ed
Lachman who won New York Film Critics Circle for Best Cinematography.
“Carol” is an important film to see especially by our LGBT millennial
generation to reflect just how far our community has advanced. Nagy
delivers a beautiful and honest story within the conventional norms of
the time. The story is about a young woman in her 20s, Therese Belivet
(Rooney Mara) who is working as a saleswoman in a Manhattan department
store and dreaming of a more fulfilling life when she meets Carol (Cate
Blanchett), an alluring woman trapped in a loveless, convenient
marriage. As an immediate connection sparks between them, the innocence
of their first encounter becomes more challenging as their love deepens.
When Carol breaks free from the confines of marriage her husband (Kyle
Chandler) begins to question her competence as a mother as her
involvement with Therese and her relationship with her best friend Abby
(Sarah Paulson) come to light. The refreshing aspect to “Carol” is that
the story is not problematic because the relationship is between two
women but instead the characters just have complicated issues like
everyone else. We talked to Phyllis about her journey bringing “Carol”
to fruition and her spin on our LGBT issues.
When asked what her personal commitment is to LGBT civil rights Nagy
stated, “I’m an out lesbian, I always have been and I think by leading
my life openly as possible and trying to inspire other people to do that
and help other people do that, I don’t know if there could be a bigger
commitment than that, to inspire people not to hide, let’s say. When
one’s creating one’s work it’s important to include out interesting
characters. They don’t have to be saints. It’s preferable that they’re
not, but that they are presented as real people with real complexities
who are neither burdened by having the weight of centuries of sexual
attitudes behind them nor burdened by having to represent every single
gay person on earth. Just real honest characters behaving in a world
that either accepts them or does not, but how they behave in that space
reflects well on them.”
“Carol” is Phyllis Nagy’s second film with Number 9 Films and Killer
Films. Their first collaboration was the Emmy nominated HBO film “Mrs.
Harris” written and directed by Nagy. Phyllis’s stage adaptations and
translations have also included Patricia Highsmith’s “The Talented Mr.
Ripley”, Chekhov’s “The Seagull” and Nathaniel Hawthorne’s “The Scarlet
Letter”. Currently she’s at work on two new film adaptations of “The
Trap” a novel by Melanie Raabe for TriStar and “The Luneburg Variation” a
novel by Paolo Maurensig for Raindog Films, with Colin Firth attached
to star. “Carol” is now playing in limited release by The Weinstein
Company.
For More Info: carolfilm.com
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