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FEATURE Full steam ahead


Bille August recruited some of Europe’s most acclaimed actors for Night Train To Lisbon, the first film under a new partnership between Studio Hamburg and C-Films. Wendy Mitchell visited the set of the film, which K5 is selling in Cannes


B


ille August maintains an air of mystery when talking about his new fi lm Night Train To Lis- bon, adapted from Pascal Mercier’s 2004


bestselling novel of the same name. “There was a special atmosphere and feeling in


the book that stayed with me. Working on the script has been a lot about making this big novel into a two-hour fi lm, but also maybe more impor- tant to try to create that very, very mysterious atmosphere. It’s about a man who is trying to look for the truth. And slowly, scene by scene, new doors open and he meets a lot of secret and mysterious, inaccessible people,” the Danish director tells Screen about the film, which wrapped its eight- week shoot earlier this month. That “big novel” is about Swiss teacher Raimund


Gregorius (Jeremy Irons), who meets a mysterious woman in Bern, Switzerland, leading him to a phil- osophical book by the author Amadeu de Prado — who lived during Portugal’s Carnation Revolution (seen in historical scenes). The book inspires Raimund to take a journey of discovery to Lisbon. Irons says: “It is not just my problem, it’s also


Bille’s problem to condense the feeling of the book, the philosophy of the book, the emotion of the book into two hours of screen time. You can’t play unspoken philosophy in a character; you can just play a journey of discovery, a journey of change.” Irons was the fi rst choice for the complex lead


role. The director says: “He is a wonderful, experi- enced actor. But he also has that intelligence and profoundness and diversity for an actor that is needed for the part.”


Six years in the making


The fi lm’s genesis started six years ago when Swiss producer Peter Reichenbach of C-Films in Zurich read the novel, which became an international best- seller published in more than 30 countries (it sold 1.8 million copies in the German-speaking world.) Reichenbach tells Screen: “There are a lot of very interesting characters, even if Raimund o n l y me e t s someone once it’s an important confrontation. I thought one could really get an interesting cas t . Every


role, no matter how small, has such substance.”


Reichenbach developed the script for nearly


three years, then brought on Studio Hamburg FilmProduktion (as well as attracting co-producers Tele Muenchen, C-Films Germany and Cinemate). “C Films thought it would be too big to shoot on


‘Working on the script has been a lot about making this big novel into a two- hour film, but also to create that very, very mysterious


atmosphere’ Bille August, director


their own, so they came to us because we’ve known each other for 20 years,” says Guenther Russ of Stu- dio Hamburg FilmProduktion. “We rewrote it and started the financing process.” Ulrich Herrmann wrote the script with August collaborator Greg Lat- ter, and the budget raised was $12.4m (¤7.7m). Producers are Andreas Knoblauch, Michael Leh-


mann, Kerstin Ramcke and Russ of Studio Ham- burg, Reichenbach of C-Films Zurich and Benjamin Seikel from C-Films Germany. August was on board for the past two years.


Russ says: “Bille was at our side throughout the whole progress. It was very, very good working with him on the pre-production… Also, it’s a com- plicated novel, a philosophical novel, so we had to look for a person who had the knowledge to make a fi lm of philosophical thoughts. Bille is perfect.” Studio Hamburg raised the fi nancing, which is


split 70% from Germany (half of that was state funding), 20% from Switzerland and 10% from Portugal. Backers include Germany’s FFA, DFFF, FFHSH, MBB; Switzerland’s BAK, Zuercher Film- stiftung, Eurimages, MEDIA, Portugal’s Institute of Cinema and Audiovisual (ICA), Schweizer Fern- sehen SRF and Teleclub. Studio Hamburg was able to tap into German


funds despite the project not shooting in Germany. “That was so important for us,” adds Ramcke. K5 came on board for international sales and


also some fi nancing. K5 fi nance partners PalmStar Media Capital and Efi sh Entertainment are also on board. Executive producers are K5’s Oliver Simon and Daniel Baur, PalmStar’s Kevin Frakes and Efi sh’s Tom Reilly. Distribution deals have already been done for


Eastern Europe (EEAP), Latin America (Swen), the Middle East (Falcon) and Benelux (Paradiso). Con- corde has German rights and Frenetic will release in Switzerland, while Lusomundo/Zon Audiovis- uals releases in Portugal. K5’s Carl Clifton says: “Buyers are connect-


ing with what attracted us when we jumped on board — a beautiful, textured and compelling script based on a highly successful novel, all in the hands of a great production team, a brilliant director and a stellar cast. We’re thrilled it’s shaping up so wonderfully.”


Night Train recruited a who’s who of European


actors: Bruno Ganz, Jack Huston, Melanie Laurent, Martina Gedeck, Lena Olin, August Diehl, Beatriz Batarda, Burghart Klaussner, Christopher Lee and Charlotte Rampling. All will speak English with Portuguese accents. Studio Hamburg and C-Films partnered with


Portuguese producers Ana Costa and Paulo Tran- coso of Cinemate for their local expertise. Russ says: “They are a very serious production company that has been around a long time, so we speak the same language. We all trust each other.” For August it is something of a homecoming, as


he shot The House Of The Spirits (also starring Irons) in Lisbon 19 years ago. Of Night Train, he says: “That’s the fun part of showing not only Lisbon, but sides of Lisbon that have not been shown before.” After shooting the initial scenes in Bern, 90% of


the fi lm shot in Lisbon and surrounding areas. Por- tugal does not have a rebate like other European territories but the government pulled out the stops to help the fi lm get made, with backing from sev- eral bodies including the City of Lisbon, the may- or’s offi ce and the Department of Treasury. Logistically, the team has pulled off some chal-


lenges. “There are 75 people in the crew, and that’s not easy travelling in our streets, and there are some days with three different locations,” Costa says proudly. Ross adds: “We haven’t had any issues logistically. There are well-trained crews and good locations.”


A fruitful partnership C Films and Studio Hamburg are also collaborating on another project, Simple, adapted from Marie- Aude Murail’s 2007 novel about a boy and his brother who has learning difficulties. Markus Goller will direct. Ross says: “The co-operation for both companies is very important because it allows us to make projects which are bigger and more international, and both companies fi t together per- fectly. It’s a very fair partnership.” Meanwhile, August has also completed his fi rst Danish production since Pelle The Conquerer in 1988: Marie Kr o y e r , a drama about the unhappy


Marie Kroyer and painter PS Kroyer. 


marriage between s


Night Train To Lisbon


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