FEATURE Rosencrantz & Guildenstern Are Undead
If you’ve
recently seen David Slade’s arctic blood bath, 30 Days of Night, you
may be in the mood for a vampire themed movie with a little more class,
for vampires you’d actually want to go out with for a drink – maybe a
bite. If that’s the case, you’ll want to check out Joradan Galland’s
eclectic brainchild, Rosencratz and Guildenstern are Undead, which
somehow combines Shakespeare, Vampires, and a quest for the Holy Grail
in a modern-day setting. “How,” you may rightly ask? We sat down Galland, to get the skinny.
by LARS BOHR

I understand the film draws a connection between Hamlet, the Holy Grail, and vampires. Care to say how that works? Oh,
yes ... well when you look at Hamlet, you notice a lot of similarities
between his behaviour and a vampire’s. He’s always dressing in
black and stays away from the sun. Plus, there are some lines
from Hamlet that have some pretty strong vampiric undertones.
Really? Like what? Off the top of my head, there’s a quote that reads:
“Tis now the very witching time of night, When churchyards yawn and hell itself breathes out Contagion into this world: now I could drink hot blood, And do such bitter business as the day Would quake to look on.” – Hamlet, Act 3, scene 2.
(Later, Galland got back to us with some other interesting fragments:)
“I am too much in the sun,” – Act 1, scene 2.
“Be thou a spirit of health or goblin damned ... Thou comest in such a questionable shape That I will speak to thee. I'll call thee ‘Hamlet,’” – Act 1, scene 5.
Neat. How big a role does Shakespeare play? Is a lot of the screen time filled with lines from Hamlet? Oh no not at all. I didn’t want the audience to have to come into it with a lot of prior Shakespearian knowledge.
But
it does allude to ideas that Shakespeare wrote into some of his
plays. I have great respect for him as a writer; I’m not trying
to insult his memory at all.
Is there anything Shakespearian about the script or the plot of the movie itself? It’s
a movie about people putting on a play, so there’s that…Hamlet is like
the actor’s bible. In a sense it’s a literary bible. Moby Dick references Hamlet, and so does James Joyce.
What kind of vampires are we dealing with here? Each
new vampire movie that comes along creates a new rule for vampires, and
all of them are built on what came before. Some of the
conventions are based on tradition – killed by a stake through the
heart, aversion to garlic and sunlight, et cetera – but a lot of them
come up randomly. In this film, if a vampire drinks from the Holy
Grail, the curse is lifted
How does Jake Hoffman think of his role? He
was really excited to do it. We had a lot of fun. He’s really funny,
brought a lot to the table. Him and I had met each other several times
before that and had hung out. He’s done several short films himself, so
the production had that quality of life referencing itself.
Is there anything that’s happened on-set that you’d like to share? It
was such an amazing experience, I just feel like I’m incredibly lucky
to have worked with the people I worked with. The actors were so
surprisingly great. When I wasn’t intensely directing everyone, my jaw
was just dropping to the floor at what we were doing.
The
film has been shot in the East Village of New York, and features Jake
Hoffman, Devon Aoki and Waris Ahluwalia. Galland aims to have
the film premiere during 2008, in Hollywood.
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