Exclusive Interview with Ang Lee on Taking Woodstock

Taking Woodstock is released on DVD this Monday, 8th March (or now on iTunes). We also have a competition running which gives you the opportunity win the movie on DVD which you can enter here.

We’ve managed to get an exclusive interview with it’s director, Ang Lee on his experience filming the movie and on the Woodstock festival itself plus we take a look at his interests in the music scene.

Ang Lee Q&A Interview

Do you remember Woodstock yourself?

I remember seeing it on the news, there were some big hairy guys jamming on their guitars and a sea of people. Very brutally, they said, “Woodstock is happening in the States, in New York.” That’s all I can remember. But that music was in the air The baby-boomers were about to take the world to another chapter of history, so, as an adult, I could not escape from that. It’s still in the air. And over the years, Woodstock has become a legendary symbol: of freedom, a new generation, and many many other things.

Why did you cast Demetri? Was it because he was a comedian?

Ironically, when we cast him, we thought he might be funny. But, in person, when I shot him, I realised he provided something else, something totally different. He’s a new person to movies. What he does onstage doesn’t translate to the movie. In my movie, he doesn’t play funny. Onstage, he ‘s known to be funny and he’s taking control. He plays on the persona of being awkward, but he’s very smart. That’s how it works. But it doesn’t happen in this movie – in Taking Woodstock, you, the audience, know more than he does, and that’s the funny part. He provided the right vibe for the movie, and you do go along with him – we weren’t wrong about that. But I was nervous; I knew I couldn’t take advantage him being a comedian to make the movie funny. It would have ruined him and the movie. Instead, I found something else in him, something more moving.

What appealed to you about the book that you based it on?

To be honest with you, it was more about Woodstock than the author’s family drama. But Woodstock itself is very a grand idea – you cannot capture it, and I wasn’t going to redo the documentary, which is a classic in itself. That wasn’t gonna happen. So if you want to capture the end of the 60s, or even Woodstock, you have to anchor it somewhere. And I just found the angle of that little motel, the personal change that Elliot goes through and the change the family goes through, by taking Woodstock into their heart, was one way of approaching Woodstock. I just saw the possibility of doing something small but with the feeling of Woodstock. That’s what got me hooked. And then I get into the family drama, and I always do family drama. (Laughs) That’s actually part of the job.

Why do you keep exploring this issue? What draws you to families?

Well, it’s something you can’t resolve. The movie has a resolution, but in art, I think, we can only make a presentation of the phenomenon. I’ve always been interested in the conflict of people looking for freedom. It’s kinda stupid to stick together in a relationship, but then when you find freedom, it’s kinda sad. You lose the bond. So that kind of mood I very much like to portray again and again. It’s at the centre of human art, I think. And relationships.

How true is this story?

That’s a big question. That’s a very good question. It’s from an autobiography, of course. But how much I can trust the writer…? (Smiles) He did make the phonecall to Michael Lang. And when I went into the historical accounts, and traced an oral history of Woodstock, I talked to Michael Lang himself, and I talked to Joel Rosenman himself. And I heard different stories. It’s really like Rashomon. For example, who found that meadow? I heard at least four accounts. Everybody says, “When I saw that meadow, that was it. It was destiny.” They’re all the first person who found that piece of land, that amphitheatre. So that’s a very good question. I did a version of the book, that’s all I can tell you. Woodstock is faked in the movie anyway. It’s off-screen.

Did you immediately see the connections with The Ice Storm?

Yes, I did. When I heard the word Woodstock, I remembered doing a hangover Woodstock. Woodstock was the peak of the innocence, of the happening. And that passion was sinking. And when you sink things, it leaves a terrible, bad taste. And that’s The Ice Storm.

Were you aware of the 40th anniversary of the festival?

I think something was in the air. How come this material came to me a year before the 40th anniversary? I did take the effort to purposely take the risk of the potential actors strike and decide to make the film anyway, just so we could hit this year for the anniversary. But last year, I think it was simply fate.

Have you ever been to a rock festival?

No. The only thing I’ve been to on that scale was Simon And Garfunkel’s reunion in Central Park. I was there.

So you’ve never had the festival experience?

No, I’ve never taken acid. I’m almost ashamed to say!

Are you a music lover?

When I was young I was more hooked into classical music. I was not a particularly hip person. But if it’s in the air, I’m aware of it. I’m like the average person. Not particularly cool! (Laughs) But making a movie is something else. I have to get in there and learn my stuff then. Painfully enough, sometimes after making a movie I have to talk about it, and I don’t really remember the research materials. They sort of come and go.

When you make a movie that’s set in the past, do you deliberately choose a style that is appropriate for the movie? The Ice Storm looks like a 70s movie, and Taking Woodstock looks at times like an end-of-the 60s movie…

I think there are two parts of history. One is the actual history, the other is the culture. And I think movie-making is somewhat closer to the reality, because that’s what we remember. So I had to take care of both things. In my earlier career, when I did Sense And Sensibility, I would go for the real thing, with my historical research, and I would run into problems. People thought it didn’t look British enough. Then I realised that there’s a theatrical combination, too, that’s part of the culture. And I learned from those experiences. I’m kind of torn between the two. Sometimes I walk away from them, sometimes I embrace them. On this film, it was a conscious decision to go with split-screen, 16mm, shaky camera and a lot of zoom lens work. The biggest decision was whether to use that zoom lens or not. I think it’s already 40 years out of fashion – once you’ve used a zoom, you can’t cut around it. It’s hard to back off. So that was probably the toughest decision I had to make.

Do you foresee any problems with the censor?

I think I’ll get some raised eyebrows about the drugs and nudity. Officially, in terms of releasing it, we’ve already got an R rating in the States, not an NC-17! (Laughs) In some countries we might have problems, but in the States it’s up to the audience, how much they can take it. I had to be sure that the nudity was for fun. It wasn’t erotic, I had to be very careful about that. And the acid trip was just the acid trip. I had to go for it.

Why did you have the acid trip distract Elliot from getting to the stage?

That’s how most people saw Woodstock. It’s not like the documentary, where you’re right by the stage. Most people experienced it the way they do in the movie.

Were you nervous of shooting a trip scene?

I was nervous, yes, but at the same time I was excited, because I saw the chance, as a filmmaker, to do something, cinematically, very ambitious and interesting. That’s how I saw it. I saw the old movies about drug experiences, and they were limited by the old optical ways of doing things. And usually they’re cheap B-movies, that don’t really represent the experience as people have explained it to me. So that became an ambition; it was a wonderful chance to do something cinematically.

What did you find out in your research?

The  first thing I heard from people was that things bend. And another thing, that was very important, was that they see the essence of things. So I had this idea that I would shoot the sequence in 16mm – in the dark – which is why it’s really rough, like a hippie 60s movie. But the trip I shot in 70mm, so it’s super-clear, and rendered in 4K, digitally, which is where we started to manipulate it. So that was something I was very proud of.

You mention Altamont, which was the end of the hippie era, right at the end of the movie. Were you tempted to explore that side of the story more?

Well, The Ice Storm is sort of that. I’m sort of doing the prequel to The Ice Storm. But we did feel that we needed to mention it, even though that might put a slightly risky factor in what’s supposedly a feelgood comedy.. But to ignore the history is probably wrong too.

Do you think the memory of Woodstock has any resonance for America today, after the election of Obama?

I hope so. I don’t wanna be didactic or anything. I think the reason we got attracted to Woodstock, and wanted to make the movie to share with everybody, was part of that psychology. I think so. I believe in fate, some bigger track that’s going on, without our consciousness. I do think that. Although I don’t think I was conscious of it. It was something that was in the air.

Are the gay scenes in the film a thank-you to Brokeback Mountain’s supporters?

(Shrugs) It was in the book. We didn’t go as heavy as it does in the book, where he goes to the these Times Square movie theatres. There’s a lot of dirty stuff! But that’s not Woodstock, that’s his life and it has nothing to do with Woodstock. So certain gay parts had to be lightened up. It’s just a fact of life that he’s gay. It’s like the character that Liev Schreiber plays. You can’t even say he’s gay, cross-dressing or queer, you just cannot categorise him. And he’s so at ease with every aspect. That’s kind of Woodstock to me.

And when Liev says, “I know what I am”, is that perhaps the theme of the film?

Indeed.

TAKING WOODSTOCK IS OUT ON DVD AND BLU-RAY MARCH 8

About David Sztypuljak

David Sztypuljak is the Co-Founder and Editor of HeyUGuys. He loves all things movies, often even the terrible films that others hate! Since starting HeyUGuys, he's been able to interview and meet some amazing people and hopes this continues going forward!

  • Jack McDevitt

    I did not see Taking Woodstock until it just came out on DVD. I was 8 at the time of the real Woodstock and it really took me between the mid seventies and well into the 90s to try all the things suggested in the movie… I was lucky to get it all in before Jerry died. I was so moved by this film… and yet Lee does not push things too far… its not like I see Lee as some artsy sterotype of a minimalism but more like 'just enough' that makes things so real…just enough to make me laugh and just enough to help me to see….and how to experinece certain thoughts and feelings…. one review commented on how the film was a story that was not told down to you… I agree but want to say it invited you into the experience…. like was woodstock really about being so snotty about whether you were there or not or whether you saw the movie in the theator or you waited for the DVD… Woodstock… because in reality no one really experienced Woodstock as we see it in photos and docs, but the real experience had to have been in pieces….and those sweet isolated incidents… like without the “issues” of Woodstock there is not the miracles we need everyday….and the music… I love so the music of that time do not get me wrong… but the music is just a canvas for a happening and that happening is not what we see in documentories but in truth life happens in pieces and what is meaningful in various moments of lucidity…. That is truely like an acid trip…. most of the trip I admit is like mushy silly stuff but the epiphany is what really stands out… I am glad I am old enough to admit my favorite part of acid was the next day because of the change it left in me…. I was not at Woodstock but goddamnit Woodstock was a fucking free concert and it is still free today and Lee just opened the gates to the public…It does not matter whose idea it was to use the fucking dairy farm…. in truth it just came from the universe and that is what i really think this movie does…. Taking Woodstock is not some history but the happening (the boundaries of the existential and the esoteric blurring just long enough to make the universe work) of events….and these happenings never stopped happening but maybe people have stopped noticing them…. and maybe people can notice them again if they want. I think people are greatly mistaken about the “optimism” making things happen in the 60s…. I think because people were open to something good happening that it happened and could happen…. There are times when we get things right and for one The Sixties —with all the unrest etc.— was so preferable to the American Civil War or even the Vietnam Civil War…. That is how vietnam could have happened if the vision could have spread…. I am greatful to all involved in this film, because for me it is giving me that “trip” into the magic…. its like I did not know the author had been at Stonewall but while watching the movie found myself thinking about the Christopher Street Revolution so long ago (and how it is really funny the super right these days are having “tea parties”…lol) and how beautiful it is when people become brave and things start happening…. I was not there for the real woodstock… but I can say I experience everyday what i call “grand coincidences” that seem to show how there is a recurrent theme everywhere…. I do not know if Einstien's dream of an interconnected universe exists, however it warms my heart to think if the unververse is not interconnected it is pretty damned awesome that these silly strings of reality (or whatever) work in tandum to produce such greatness…. thank you Ang Lee and all the cast and crew and writters and author…. for so sweet sweet connectivity and bits of lucidity giving up relavance for our time based on where we have traveled… and where we are going and (more to the damned point) where we are right now baby…. SHANTIH! jack mcdevitt: Culpeper VA