At the Movies

Japanese Director Koreeda Hirokazu Heads to France to Tell “The Truth”

Cinema Culture

Award-winning Japanese director Koreeda Hirokazu went to France for his latest film, The Truth, a drama starring Catherine Deneuve and Juliette Binoche, two of the country’s most revered actresses. We recently spoke to Koreeda about his first overseas production.

A Long Gestation

Film director Koreeda Hirokazu is at the height of his profession. His latest creation, The Truth, was selected to open the Venice Film Festival, the first such honor for a Japanese director. Shot entirely in France, the project is Koreeda’s first venture overseas and saw him direct cinema legends Catherine Deneuve and Juliette Binoche. We recently sat down with the direction to talk about what led him to step out his comfort zone and film with an entirely foreign-language cast and crew.

©2019 3B-Bunbuku-MI MOVIES-FRANCE 3 CINEMA
©2019 3B-Bunbuku-MI MOVIES-FRANCE 3 CINEMA

Koreeda says the first spark of an idea for the project came in February 2011, when Binoche visited Japan. The pair have known each other for many years, and during Binoche’s stay they promised to make a film together one day. Binoche perhaps imagined a project set in Japan, but the prospect of filming with the French star inspired bigger ideas in Koreeda—if he was going to shoot such a renowned artist, why not film the entire project in France with a French cast and crew? The concrete idea for the plot came to him in the autumn of 2015, on a flight back from France. 

The story would feature a famous actress in her later years who releases an autobiography titled The Truth that is full of lies. Even at this early stage, Koreeda knew that he wanted Deneuve to play the part of the aging star Fabienne, with Binoche playing her daughter Lumir and the American actor Ethan Hawke as Lumir’s husband. Everything started from this remarkably complete initial idea.

The Truth (© 2019 3B-Bunbuku-MI Movies-France 3 Cinema)
The Truth (© 2019 3B-Bunbuku-MI Movies-France 3 Cinema)

From there, Koreeda expanded the story and started taking steps to make the project a reality by first contacting Binoche and then Deneuve. He fleshed out his portrait of the main character based on hints and observations gained from time spent talking to Deneueve in person. After preliminary approaches to Hawke, Koreeda flew directly to New York from Cannes after claiming the Palme d’Or for The Shoplifters, a success that probably helped ensure the negotiations went smoothly. 

Once the remainder of the cast and crew were decided, the next crucial choice was finding a site to shoot. Location was particularly significant on a project like this as so much of the story unfolds in one setting. Eventually, the team settled on a large house with a view of an overland section of the Paris Métro and an extensive garden—a rarity for a place so close to the center of the city. It was the perfect setting for the residence of a successful film actor.

Film director Koreeda Hirokazu
Film director Koreeda Hirokazu.

According to Koreeda, to the unique flavor of the location helped shape the script. After finishing writing the screenplay, I stayed a night in the house alone and walked through the residence reading the lines aloud,” he recounts, chuckling at how he must have looked if someone had seen him. As he went from room to room, he realized that the space was larger than he had imagined. “I found when walking from the living room into the kitchen or from the kitchen to the back door that the lines finished before I got to wherever I was going.” The discovery forced Koreeda to write more lines to fit the space. “When the script was translated into French, though, the length of the lines changed again, and I had to do more fine tuning. It was extremely important to get it just right, so I spent a lot of time on it. It was perhaps the most enjoyable part of the process—but also the most difficult.”

Juliette Binoche (left) and Catherine Deneuve. photo L. Champoussin ©3B-Bunbuku-Mi Movies-FR3
Juliette Binoche (left) and Catherine Deneuve. (photo L. Champoussin ©© 2019 3B-Bunbuku-MI Movies-France 3 Cinema)

In this way, the pieces gradually fell into place until Koreeda had everything he needed to realize his dream of shooting a film set in France. Apart from the English lines spoken by Ethan Hawke’s character, the entire script was in French. What made the film different from any other French production was the simple fact that Koreeda was the writer and director and that it starred the duo of Deneuve and Binoche, a team no French director had ever brought together before. For Koreeda, though, it was business as usual. 

“It never occurred to me to impose my own style or personality onto the film,” he insists. “That’s something that happens naturally—or not, as the case may be. It can’t be forced.” Koreeda says he did not feel any particular pressure to make his film appear “French”—just as he would be disinclined to make a film seem “Japanese.” Instead, it was business as usual for director. “I was preoccupied with the same thoughts as when shooting in Japan. Standard things like how to bring out the appeal of the actors, how to get them to respond and react convincingly to one another as an ensemble, and how to get the best out of our location—that’s all.”

The Truth starts when Fabienne, a cinema star whose career spans a half century, publishes her autobiography. To help her mark the event, her daughter Lumir returns to France for the first time with her American husband Hank and young daughter. Lumir is working as a scriptwriter in New York, where Hank is an actor in television dramas. Fabienne is about to start a new film, one that will see her work with Manon (Manon Clavel), an up-and-coming young actress said to be the reincarnation of Fabienne’s close friend and rival who died at a young age in tragic circumstances.

The stars and director of The Truth are joined by Japanese voice actors at the premiere of the film October 3 at Tōhō Cinemas, Roppongi Hills, Tokyo. From left: Miyazaki Aoi, Catherine Deneuve, Miyamoto Nobuko, Juliette Binoche, Sasaki Miyu, and Koreeda Hirokazu. (© Watanabe Reiko.)
The stars and director of The Truth are joined by Japanese voice actors at the premiere of the film October 3 at Tōhō Cinemas, Roppongi Hills, Tokyo. From left: Miyazaki Aoi, Juliette Binoche, Miyamoto Nobuko, Catherine Deneuve, Sasaki Miyu, and Koreeda Hirokazu. (© Watanabe Reiko.)

next: Deneuve: The Grande Dame of French Cinema

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