PARK CITY, Utah (AP) ā when he was writing his new film āA Real Pain.ā But his sister Hallie Eisenberg knew from years of watching Roman Roy that .
The film, which premieres at on Saturday, follows two very mismatched cousins, one anxiety ridden and rule following and the other a more spontaneous spirit, on a trip to Poland. Theyāre reuniting to see where their late grandmother was from and also explore some Holocaust locations.
Eisenberg had wanted to play the spontaneous one, which was similar to a character he'd played on stage in āThe Spoilsā in England. But he was gently talked out of it. It was, he realized, a taxing role that might be too much to handle while also directing. And so, Culkin became aspirational.
Theyād met previously through their who also produced āA Real Pain,ā but he really didnāt know him well. And heād quickly discover that casting Culkin and directing him, even getting him on set, was a different kind of challenge that he hadnāt expected.
Three weeks before shooting, when Eisenberg was āknee-deep in securing locations,ā Culkin told him he was thinking of dropping out. He didnāt drop out, but he also arrived on set only a day before filming, telling Eisenberg simply that he understood the character and that he also works best without blocking.
āI had spent months blocking out the scenes with Polish actors,ā Eisenberg said. āHalfway through day one we had to change our plan. And it was completely to the advantage of the movie because Kieran is such a live wire. Heās such a spontaneous actor and heās so brilliantly funny. To kind of hem him in with my pre-planned shot list would have killed the spontaneity and the energy of the movie.ā
It both āflummoxed and elatedā his cinematographer who had never worked with an actor who didnāt adhere to marks. But, Eisenberg said, the scenes where they could ditch the dolly and just follow Culkin āsparkled.ā
āI love both characters so much,ā Eisenberg said. āI suspect audiences will just assume Iām very much like the character I play. But both are people I know. At once I am kind of the nervous person in the room who wishes I can get out of my own head. And on the other hand, I am a performer.ā
āA Real Pain,ā which is seeking distribution at the festival, is both funny and profound ā an odd couple trip and an exploration of ideas of modern pain in the face of historical family traumas.
Eisenberg has been wanting to set a movie in Poland for about 18 years. The first play heād written was about a self-centered young American who goes to Poland to stay with his cousin, a survivor of the war, to take advantage of a free room in an exotic locale. It was based in part on an experience heād actually had. On stage, Vanessa Redgrave played his cousin.
āI tried for years to adapt that into a movie, and it was never good,ā Eisenberg said.
It took on various iterations too, including one about cousins who are more contemporaries going to Mongolia for Tablet Magazine. But it wasnāt until he saw an advertisement that said āAuschwitz Tour (with lunch)ā that the story cracked open.
āI remember thinking, oh, thatās the story. Itās these kind of middle-class trips to the most horrific places on Earth where the interpersonal dynamics of the group could be explored against a backdrop of real historical trauma,ā he said āYou can explore the dramatic irony of taking one of these trips, but staying in the Radisson Hotel. Seeing Auschwitz during the day and drinking wine at night with your group.ā
He enlisted the help of renowned Polish film producer Ewa Puszczynska, who was fresh off āThe Zone of Interest,ā which would be essential both in legitimizing this American production abroad and in managing logistics for a very complex shoot.
āWe are in a different location every day and every location has challenges. We are in airports, on trains, in city centers, at monuments, at a concentration camp. The first feature film to be able to film at this concentration camp,ā he said. āIt was just this incredibly ambitious production. And thank goodness we had the best producers in the country shepherding it.ā
Those in the tour group, led by a character played by āWhite Lotusā star Will Sharpe, are mostly retired Jewish Americans (Jennifer Grey among them). But Eisenberg also wanted to broaden the story and included a character, Eloge, (Kurt Egyiawan) based on a friend of his who survived the Rwandan genocide and later converted to Judaism in Winnipeg. His hope is that āA Real Painā speaks to a cross-cultural, universal experience ā though heās also worried that sounds too much like a commercial. What he really wants, though, is for audiences to find it funny.
āIt plays lighter than the themes might imply,ā he said.
āA Real Painā is his second as a director, after the mother-son film which premiered at the festival a few years ago. Itās a busy Sundance for Eisenberg. In addition to trying to sell āA Real Pain,ā Eisenberg is also starring in āSasquatch Sunset,ā about a family of Sasquatches. And on opening night , who said she hopes that he gets behind the camera more often.
āHe been a real reluctant filmmaker. Heās always like, āOh, I could never,āā Stewart said. āIām like, no, no, you are a born storyteller. And thatās the way that his acting comes across. Like some actors really service other peopleās stories. And then some people are writers themselves, even within their acting. Jesse is just like a kind of virtuoso artist.ā
Lindsey Bahr, The Associated Press