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The Illusionist
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A supernatural mystery that combines romance, politics and magic,
The Illusionist is the latest film from the producers of the Oscar
winners Crash and Sideways. The film stars Academy Award nominees
Edward Norton and Paul Giamatti as two men pitted against each other
in a battle of wits: Norton as mysterious stage magician Eisenheim,
and Giamatti as Vienna's shrewd Chief Inspector Uhl, with Jessica
Biel sharing the screen as the beautiful Sophie von Teschen.
When word of Eisenheim's astounding illusions reaches the powerful
and pragmatic Crown Prince Leopold (Rufus Sewell), the ruler attends
one of the magician's shows in order to debunk Eisenheim during
the performance. But when the Prince's intended, Sophie von Teschen,
assists the magician onstage, Eisenheim and Sophie recognize each
other from their childhoods - and a dormant love affair is rekindled.
As the clandestine romance continues, Uhl is charged by Leopold
to intensify his efforts to expose Eisenheim, even while the magician
gains a devoted and vocal public following. With Uhl doggedly searching
for the reasons and the man behind the trickery, Eisenheim prepares
to execute his greatest illusion yet.
The Illusionist is written and directed by Neil Burger, and features
top-notch production values, including a haunting score by master
contemporary composer Philip Glass.
The Illusionist is now playing in theaters!
On behalf of Yari Film Group, a very magical contest featured on
the official site for The Illusionist is up and running!!!!
If you think you are as talented as The Illusionist then show us
your best illusion and you could appear on The Illusionist DVD release
displaying your talent.
Find the contest details here: http://www.theillusionist.com/promo
Rating: PG-13
THE ILLUSIONIST
Running Time: 109 minutes
MPAA Rating: TBD
www.IllusionistTheFilm.com
Writer/Director: Neil Burger
Cast: Edward Norton
Paul Giamatti
Jessica Biel
Rufus Sewell
Eddie Marsan
Jake Wood
Tom Fisher
Karl Johnson
Producers: Michael London, Brian Koppelman, David Levien and Bob
Yari
Executive Producers: Jane Garnett
Co-Producers: Tom Karnowski, Matthew Stillman,
David Minkowski
Director of Photography: Dick Pope BSC
Production Designer Ondrej Nekvasil
Editor Naomi Geraghty
Costume Designer Ngila Dickson
Composer Philip Glass
Casting Deborah Aquila, CSA, Tricia Wood, CSA,
Nina Gold
The Illusionist
-Production Information-
In a world where nothing is as it appears, an illusionist and a
police inspector face off in a challenge of wills that attempts
to determine where reality ends and magic begins…all the while blurring
the line between power and corruption, love and devotion, vigilance
and mania and ultimately, life and death.
A supernatural mystery that combines romance, politics and magic,
The Illusionist is the latest film from the producers of the Oscar®
winners Crash and Sideways. The film stars Academy Award® nominees
Edward Norton (Fight Club, American History X) and Paul Giamatti
(Cinderella Man, Sideways) as two men pitted against each other
in a battle of wits. Norton plays a mysterious stage magician, Eisenheim,
who bends nature's laws to his will in front of awestruck crowds.
Giamatti co-stars as Vienna's shrewd Chief Inspector Uhl, a man
committed to uphold the law and for whom magic holds no place in
his ordered world. Jessica Biel (Elizabethtown) shares the screen
as the beautiful and enigmatic Sophie von Teschen, who finds her
future inexorably altered when she encounters the man called Eisenheim,
and Eisenheim comes dangerously close to unlocking the dark secret
of the monarchy that she holds.
When Eisenheim begins to perform his astounding illusions in Vienna,
word quickly spreads of his otherworldly powers…even reaching the
ears of one of Europe's most powerful and pragmatic men, Crown Prince
Leopold (Rufus Sewell, Dark City). Certain that the illusionist
is nothing more than an accomplished fraud, Leopold attends one
of Eisenheim's shows, convinced that he can debunk him during the
performance. But when the Prince's beautiful fiancé and companion,
Sophie von Teschen, assists the magician onstage, Eisenheim and
Sophie recognize each other from their childhoods-and a dormant
love affair is rekindled. With Eisenheim and Leopold vying for Sophie's
affection, it quickly becomes apparent that both will go to any
length to claim and keep her love.
As the clandestine romance continues, Uhl is charged by Leopold
to intensify his efforts to expose Eisenheim, even while the magician
gains a devoted and vocal public following. With Uhl doggedly searching
for the reasons and the man behind the trickery, Eisenheim prepares
to execute his greatest illusion yet.
The Yari Film Group presents a Michael London/Koppelman Levien Production,
In Association with Contagious Pictures, of A Film by Neil Burger:
The Illusionist. The film is written and directed by Neil Burger-who
received acclaim and award recognition for his debut feature, 2002's
Interview with the Assassin-and is based on Pulitzer Prize-winning
author Steven Millhauser's short story "Eisenheim the Illusionist."
It stars Edward Norton, Paul Giamatti, Jessica Biel and Rufus Sewell.
The Illusionist is produced by Michael London (Sideways), Brian
Koppelman (Interview with the Assassin), David Levien (Interview
with the Assassin) and Bob Yari (Crash), and features top-notch
production values from a team of superlative artisans, including:
director of photography Dick Pope BSC (Topsy-Turvy); editor Naomi
Geraghty (Hotel Rwanda); production designer Ondrej Nekvasil (Emmy
winner for TV's Anne Frank: The Whole Story); costume designer Ngila
Dickson (Oscar®-winner for The Lord of the Rings: The Return
of the King); and composer Philip Glass (Academy Award®-nominated
for The Hours). Casting is by Deborah Aquila ASC, Tricia Wood ASC
and Nina Gold. The executive producer is Jane Garnett, with Tom
Karnowski, Matthew Stillman and David Minkowski serving as co-producers.
About the Production
Transforming Word Into Film
According to an ages-old chemical philosophy known as alchemy,
one can transform one element into another, such as a base metal
into gold. Yet alchemic processes can and do happen in our day….
When Neil Burger first read Pulitzer Prize-winner Steven Millhauser's
short story "Eisenheim the Illusionist" (published in
the collection The Barnum Museum), he was duly impressed with the
story, but wasn't quite certain how to go about instigating his
alchemic transformation from story into film. He remembers, "It's
a beautiful gem of a story, lyrical and transcendent. The images
and tone of it are quite cinematic, but the story itself is more
of a fragment and somehow, not a film. I loved the story, but it
wasn't immediately clear how to solve the narrative puzzle and transform
it into a full-blown movie."
While Burger was in the process of editing his debut (and later
to be award-winning) feature, Interview with the Assassin, he happened
to be talking with the film's producers, Brian Koppelman and David
Levien, about the difficulty of depicting magic on-screen. "I
mentioned there was a short story I had always wanted to make into
a film, and they both finished my sentence by asking, 'Is it "Eisenheim
the Illusionist"?' They knew the story well, but admitted to
being unsure about how to make it into a film. Bluffing somewhat,
I assured them that I knew exactly how."
Koppelman and Levien then set out to acquire the rights to the
short story. David Levien says, "We were delighted to find
the rights were available, but there was no time to lose. We called
Neil and told him there was good news and bad news: the good news
was we had the rights; and the bad news was that we had a short
option period…and the script had to be written in six months."
For Burger, the challenge was to preserve what was beautiful and
mysterious about the story, but also create a dramatic context for
it all. He invented new characters for the story-Crown Prince Leopold
and his fiancé, Sophie von Teschen-and greatly expanded the
role of Inspector Uhl, who receives just a few mentions in the original
story. Burger continues: "The question was, how do you tell
the story of Eisenheim, a man who is an enigma, a mystery? How do
you get inside his head without giving away his secrets? I decided
to tell his story from Inspector Uhl's point-of-view. Everything
we see is something Uhl has witnessed or one of his agents has told
him. At other times, his story becomes conjecture, what he imagines
might have happened, and not necessarily true at all…but still loosely
from his point-of-view. He's creating the legend even as he tries
to figure it all out. It's a subtle but fairly rigorous organizing
principle for the storytelling."
Additionally, Burger conducted extensive research into magic,
as well as the setting of the story: fin-de-siècle Vienna.
"I read everything I could about the Hapsburgs, about the Secessionist
movement, and about the magic from that time-both the illusions
themselves and the social world of the magicians. Most of the tricks
that ended up in the film are based on real illusions done at the
time, and the characters I invented are also based on real people.
I wanted it all to be as believable and honest as possible, all
the more so since the story examines the idea of how we perceive
truth and illusion…and blurs the boundary between those two concepts.
If you're going to exaggerate certain elements, to have it be dreamlike
or surreal or uncanny, you have to make sure that the rest of it
has a rock solid foundation in the period."
Eisenheim the Illusionist's performances call into question everything
the audience (and ultimately, moviegoers) take for granted-his illusions
challenge the laws of nature and the universe. As Neil Burger explains,
"I'm interested in that moment when you come face to face with
something unexplainable, incomprehensible, and how that event changes
your perceptions about everything. To that end, the magic in The
Illusionist is not about 'How does he do it?', but rather about
the uncanny sense that nothing is what it seems.
Burger continues, "There's a quote in the story that says,
'Stories, like conjuring tricks, are invented because history is
inadequate to our dreams.' That goes for the art of cinema in general
and The Illusionist in particular. My goal was to have the film
completely inhabit that realm of dream and mystery."
With the script in place, Koppelman and Levien approached producer
Michael London. "Because of our filmmaking career and our commitments,
we realized we needed a producer who had a real artistic sensibility,"
explains Koppelman. "We didn't just want to be partnered with
somebody who would merely treat this as business, but somebody who
was really in tune with how to make a film with integrity. As producers,
our main mandate is to make sure the director gets to make the film
he wants to make, so it was very important that we partnered with
someone who shared that ethic, and we knew that Michael would bring
that to the table."
"I was already a fan of Neil Burger," begins London.
"I had seen his film [Interview with the Assassin] and I very
much liked the script for The Illusionist. I got involved in the
middle of the development process. We did a few more drafts of the
screenplay until we were all happy with what we had, and then we
began to approach financiers." (The Yari Film Group soon stepped
up with funding.)
Producer Michael London admits that he usually responds more to
contemporary stories, "but there was something really timeless
and universal about this one, that it made it feel very contemporary,"
says London.
Part of that is due to filmmaker Burger's intent to make the setting
period, but the themes timeless. He explains, "I wanted to
be true to the time period, but not a slave to it. It's not a story
about the morals or manners of the time. Instead, it seeks to explore
larger themes about power, perception, truth and illusion."
A Magician, A Policeman, A Countess And A Prince: Conjuring A Cast
"I don't tend to write with actors in mind for some reason,"
says writer/director Burger, "but I knew I needed someone who
could embody the mystery, as well as the romantic side, of Eisenheim.
Edward Norton, of course, is a powerful presence, extremely intelligent
and passionate about his craft, as well as life in general…just
like Eisenheim. And I hadn't seen Edward in too many romantic roles,
and certainly not in period. I liked the idea of seeing him in a
new role and I knew he'd bring a fresh perspective to the part.
In general, it was a pretty easy choice. I knew he'd be great-he
always is."
Koppelman and Levien, also writing partners, have enjoyed a long
relationship with Edward Norton, and wrote the film Rounders (in
which Norton starred alongside Matt Damon and John Malkovich). "We
showed Edward an early draft of the script," explains Levien,
"and we always felt that he would be the perfect choice to
play Eisenheim."
"Edward's presence is always magical. On-screen, he always
looks like he is holding something back, that he knows something
special. For us, our biggest contributions were involving Edward
in the casting and developing the story with Neil," adds Koppelman.
Michael London explains, "When it really clicked for Edward
that this was not going to be just another period movie, he got
really obsessed-Edward is great in that way. The moment he commits,
you get this insane level of attention and focus, and that is pretty
extraordinary."
"He completely inhabits the role," continues Burger.
"He threw himself into learning the magic, and conducted himself
as those magicians did, in such a perfect way. We tried to do all
the magic in the movie as closely as possible to how the tricks
were done at the time, so Edward is actually 'performing' the tricks
that you see him do. He's so dedicated, he learned how to do them
all."
Edward Norton admits to not having been familiar with the story
upon which The Illusionist is based. "I became aware of the
story through this project, and I was attracted to it because I
thought it was a compelling, romantic story" Norton begins.
"There were also a number of different elements that appealed
to me.
"Eisenheim is darkly romantic, an enigma," he continues.
"He is mysterious and withholding, but at the same time, he
is an incredible showman. As a person, he is highly impenetrable,
but onstage, he really comes to life and has this amazing presence-that's
an interesting dynamic. I am really also a big fan of magic and
it was fun to contemplate the idea of learning all that. Also, the
story is a love story, and I hadn't done anything that was directly
a romance before."
Adding to the lure of playing Eisenheim was the slow revelation
of who the character is and exactly what he is trying to achieve:
"Eisenheim is kind of like the prodigal son, or the dark return.
He is a guy who has gone away from his home for a long, long time,
looking for secrets and knowledge. When he returns, he seemingly
possesses these incredible powers or skills. For much of the movie,
the viewer does not know who he is, where he has been, or what he
has been doing, and one of the things I liked about the way the
script evolved was that it eventually came around-he reveals himself."
The Illusionist has four main characters, all inter-related and
each in possession of his or her own version of power. Yet, the
relationship between Eisenheim and Inspector Uhl is a particularly
dynamic one, which Norton describes: "Inspector Uhl is a great
character. He is the point-of-view for the audience, through whose
eyes we see all the events unfold. He prides himself on not becoming
involved in his cases, but by the end, the opposite has occurred,
and Eisenheim has brought him around to his point-of-view. They
have a mutual respect for each other, and also relate because they
are from the same class. They are trying not to become adversaries,
but in a way, they have to, ultimately. There is a very strong thematic
line between Uhl and Eisenheim that I like."
"For the role of Inspector Uhl," says Burger, "I
wanted someone a bit different, unexpected. The investigating detective
is a pretty common role in movies and I though Paul Giamatti could
put a different spin on it. We haven't seen Paul in this kind of
role before, and yet he has a quiet power that was perfect. Inspector
Uhl is the eyes, ears and heart of the story. He has a good soul-even
if not much is left of it after years of decadence and corruption.
In the movie, there are not a lot of expository scenes about Uhl's
character, and yet, we understand all of his inner conflict and
turmoil just by looking in Paul's eyes."
Norton, who was a year behind Giamatti at Yale, offers, "He
has been one of my favorite actors for a long time, and even back
in those college days, Paul was tackling roles way beyond his years.
He is intellectually intense, and he has a really volcanic energy.
I remember seeing him perform in One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
a long time ago, and he was just staggering. I think this role has
more of that edge, and it is really cool to see him exercise it
a little."
Giamatti was cast in The Illusionist just as Sideways was heading
into the awards season. Michael London, who produced the hit film,
says, "It was a great thing, because when I first started working
on The Illusionist, Paul Giamatti didn't mean enough to financiers
to get him cast. By the time we were ready to cast the role of Inspector
Uhl, there was this huge excitement in America about his work in
Sideways. The moment Paul read the script, he was in. It is an unusual
role because it is not a very glamorous one, and in typical Paul
fashion, those are the things that he looks for. He looks for parts
that other people would not be attracted to where he can give a
lot of humanity to someone who seems an unlikely character. The
combination of Edward and Paul is something that you wait around
for, and maybe do once in your life: intense actors of that calibre,
who know each other, who challenge each other, working opposite
each other-it's a great thing."
"The script came to me in the normal way, through my agent,"
remembers Giamatti, "and then I met Neil Burger. I thought
the script was great-an interesting period, and the setting is fascinating.
I was very excited about doing this and although I have played Americans
on the stage during this period, I have never done anything as European
as this before."
Chief Inspector Uhl is put on Eisenheim's trail to expose him
as a fraud, but the more he discovers about him, the more interested
he becomes. "At a certain point in the movie," explains
the actor, "he does become fascinated by Eisenheim, and as
an amateur conjurer himself, he is also fascinated by the magic.
Throughout the movie, there are a lot of class issues, and Uhl and
Eisenheim are the same sort of working class guys. Eisenheim has
to debase himself somewhat to the aristocrats quite a bit, and Uhl
has sympathy with that. Also, he admires what the illusionist is
able to achieve-the inspector lives in this incredibly secretive,
bound-up world, and Eisenheim is free."
When Neil Burger met British actor Rufus Sewell, he immediately
knew he was the one to play Crown Prince Leopold-the representative
of that aristocratic world in which both Eisenheim and Uhl must
function. The writer/director remarks, "The movie is really
a battle of wills between the three male characters, with Eisenheim
and the Crown Prince each trying to leverage Uhl for their own ends.
The actor playing the Prince had to be a formidable foe for Norton's
Eisenheim. Leopold is a strict rationalist and has no patience for
superstition or talk of 'magic.' It was vitally important that he
be played as fiercely intelligent and truly powerful, even as he
is flawed or ruthless. Rufus has an amazing intensity, a fierce
cerebral quality, and he certainly doesn't suffer fools…just like
the character."
As the story unfolds, Eisenheim becomes a two-fold threat to the
Prince-he pursues a relationship with Sophie, and he is able to
(seemingly) conjure powers that Leopold cannot obtain. Norton observes,
"I think what is interesting about this period, the turn-of-the-century
in that part of the world, is there were so many opposing forces
working within it. You had the last gasps of aristocracy, the imperial
class, and the growing movements of what would become socialism
and Republicanism. You also had rationality and modern scientific
thought competing with this whole resurgence of spiritualism-so
there are many big forces competing with each other. I think that
Leopold is frustrated that his father never dies. He is not getting
his chance to rule, and yet he has all these progressive ideas and
wants to make the empire more modern. And then along comes this
guy who in some ways is captivating people's sense of wonder, and
the idea that maybe he has supernatural powers, or spiritual powers,
or that he is a mystic-and this causes unbelievable tension between
them. One of the questions the movie raises is 'Does Eisenheim really
possess these powers or is he just really very clever?'"
Sewell considers the Crown Prince to be a very complex character.
He says, "I have to say that I don't see Leopold as a villain.
When I first read the script, I realized the function he serves
in the story is to be the 'villain.' But the more I read it, the
more I didn't believe that to be true. Although I hate the term,
it is about his journey and he changes quite a bit during the course
of the story, and it was a very interesting and worthwhile role
to play."
In addition to the conflict between Eisenheim and Leopold is the
ongoing power struggle between the Prince and his Chief Inspector.
Giamatti describes it this way: "There is an interesting dynamic
between Uhl and Leopold. In a way, Uhl has gotten ahead by doing
the dirty work of the Crown Prince-yet even in his corruption, he
does have a good heart, and he is astonished and amazed at what
Eisenheim does. In a way, Uhl loves what Eisenheim represents. So
really, Uhl is between a rock and a hard place when Eisenheim and
the Prince come into conflict. His duty is to the Crown Prince,
and yet, his true allegiance, his heart and soul are with Eisenheim."
Norton admits to having long been a fan of Sewell's, and found
working with him to be truly enjoyable. He says, "I saw Rufus
years ago when he was appearing in one of my favorite plays, an
Irish play by Brian Friel called Translations, in the company that
came to Broadway. He was so fantastic in that play. I always love
working with Brits; they are all such studied professionals. They
are blasé about their professionalism in some ways. Eddie
Marsan [who plays Eisenheim's manager, Josef Fischer] was the same
way. It was a great cast and it was fun for me working with people
who are peers. Rufus, Eddie, Paul and I had all been through a lot
of years in theater and worked our ways into film, so there was
a lot of common ground."
Sewell states his own take on Prince Leopold: "To Leopold,
I think Eisenheim represents everything he thinks the world must
leave behind in order to move forward. The world is changing, and
if the royal family doesn't move with it, they are in danger of
becoming the dinosaurs of their age, and will soon be extinct. What
Leopold is trying to do is to move away from superstition, and as
far as he is concerned, Eisenheim represents everything that is
old-fashioned and outdated. As the illusionist becomes more popular,
he sees that Eisenheim is striking a chord in his country, and the
more that happens, the further Leopold gets from actually gaining
power."
The British actor greatly enjoyed working with the ensemble of
actors, and says, "Edward is an actor I have always admired
very much indeed, and I found him very easy to work with. Jessica
is fantastic, a real natural, a good actress and a very nice person.
Paul Giamatti is also a fabulous actor as everyone knows, but he
is also a very nice, very funny guy, and I really enjoyed myself."
Jessica Biel was the last leading member of the cast to join and
admits the role of Sophie is, "so very different from anything
I have done before or anything I have ever had the opportunity of
doing."
Director Burger was looking for someone with a classic beauty
who would be believable for the time period. He also wanted a relative
newcomer, someone with whom the audience wouldn't have clearly formed
associations. He says, "Jessie has a timeless beauty, but more
importantly, she has a fearless sense of adventure. I saw Sophie
as someone who had been raised in a very strict and refined world,
but who also had the boldness to break out of it if given the opportunity."
Producer Michael London recalls, "I remember we did a reading
with her and Edward, and it was late on a Saturday night in Los
Angeles. Everyone was exhausted and we were concerned that she might
not be able to hold her own with Edward, just based on our preconceptions.
When she walked in the door, she had on this amazing, cream-colored
period gown. Now, it was Saturday night in the middle of Los Angeles,
and she just looked like she had stepped off the streets of Vienna
a hundred years ago. I remember thinking, 'What a lot of nerve she
has to come in transformed like that!'…and we never really thought
of her as Jessica Biel for the rest of the evening. It was apparent,
when she started to work with Edward, that she could indeed pull
it off. She was passionate and persistent, and eventually we decided
she was the best actress for the role."
Norton remarks, "She came into the process really late, and
stepped up to that challenge admirably. She is an incredibly hard
worker and really put in the hours with the dialect coaches. Jessica
also looks very much of that period-you can see her as a country
girl or as a Slavic princess. When I first saw her dressed as Sophie,
she looked like she had stepped out of an old painting. She didn't
look like a modern girl at all."
Biel welcomed the role departure that Sophie represented, and
went after the part with zeal: "One day, out of the blue, I
was asked to audition, and soon I found myself reading with Edward
and it was a bit of a whirlwind actually! Suddenly, I found myself
in Prague…it was all last-minute and very, very exciting.
"Playing someone like Sophie is completely new for me,"
Biel continues. "She is very different, very fresh, and I felt
like every day I was discovering a little bit more about her. Neil
urged me to read Alma Mahler's diaries-a composer herself, she was
a young woman in her twenties in 1900 in Vienna. I read her diaries
to really get a sense of what it was like to exist at that time;
what women thought about and what in particular this woman thought
about. She was very modern and very different from most of the women
from that time. That is how I think of Sophie, in a way. She is
a modern woman stuck in the past."
So determined was Biel to inhabit her challenging new role that
she also immersed herself in books such as The Unbearable Lightness
of Being and films like Amadeus and Age of Innocence. She even went
so far as to keep a journal as her character, Sophie, to achieve
what she called, "the calm, still layer on the surface and
a bubbling brook of emotion underneath. That is how it felt like
for me, to try and be a woman who lived during this time in history."
Also joining the cast of Norton, Giamatti, Biel and Sewell were
such talented actors as Eddie Marsan (Vera Drake, 21 Grams, Gangs
of New York), Jake Wood (Vera Drake, Flesh & Blood), Tom Fisher
(Van Helsing, The Mummy Returns, Enigma), and 15-year-old British
actor Aaron Johnson, who plays the young Eisenheim.
Turning Back The Clock: Shooting In Prague
To re-create the world of The Illusionist-Vienna at the turn of
the 19th Century-filmmakers turned to Prague to provide a period-appropriate
setting, with principal photography beginning in and around that
European capital in March 2005. Burger comments, "Prague is
a perfect stand- in for 1900 Vienna-most of the streets are still
paved in cobblestones and lined with gas lamps. The locations in
and around the city are incredible. For example, we were able to
use Archduke Ferdinand's home for the Crown Prince's hunting lodge.
Ferdinand was an obsessive hunter, shooting something like 15,000
animals in his life, and the character I had written was the same
kind of killer. The place is covered in trophy heads, dead animals
everywhere. It's an unbelievably strange and opulent place-it couldn't
have been more perfect." (Filmmakers were also able to magically
find two theatres to use as practical locations for filming-one
in Prague and one in the nearby rural town of Tabor.)
All of Prague's atmosphere physically represented the mental look
Burger was after: "I wanted the film to have an almost 'hand-cranked'
feel to it, not that we were actually going to use a hand-cranked
camera…although for a time I did consider it. I wanted that look,
not to make it seem old, but rather to take it out of time, beyond
the world of rationality and into the realm of mystery and dream.
Everything you see is real, recognizable, but somehow heightened.
I wanted it to have a kind of sinister beauty-lovely on the surface,
but with a disturbing, unnerving undertone.
"My other main reference for the look of the film,"
continues Burger, "is an early color photography process called
autochrome. It was invented by the Lumiere brothers, who, in the
late 19th Century, were instrumental in creating all sorts of early
cinematic effects. And they were also magicians! Autochromes have
a very different kind of color and contrast palette. Some people
think they're hand-tinted, but they're not. They are indeed photographic
color, but what I like is that they have the emotional impact of
black and white. I showed these references to [director of photography]
Dick Pope and then together we translated it into the particular
look for this story."
Autochrome photography flourished from 1903 to the 1930's and
is unique in that each autochrome is a singular transparency image-there
is no negative. Each image is captured on a specially-prepared glass
plate that has been coated with tiny, colored starch grains (of
red, green and blue), which is then covered in a layer of carbon
black, filling in the spaces between the grains. Finally, a silver
gelatine emulsion is applied over the color screen. When the plate
is exposed, the base side is turned towards the subject being photographed,
and the color screen acts as a filter over the emulsion. The developed
plate renders a positive image with delicate color qualities.
Award-winning cinematographer Dick Pope (Topsy-Turvy, Nicholas
Nickleby, Vera Drake) tells of the book that Burger showed him that
contained color photography from the early 1900's: "Neil had
obviously been carrying this book around with him for some time
that explained the autochrome process, which very simply consisted
of glass negative slides with a primitive kind of emulsion. The
book contained really wonderful images and he had a very strong
desire to make The Illusionist look like that."
The look Burger was trying to achieve was also reflected in the
costumes and makeup: "Often, the photography can only be as
beautiful as what you're pointing the camera at. In this case, the
look we were after depended on a very strict color palette, primarily
golds and greens that would interact with our particular camera
filtration. The production and costume design would follow that
look."
Academy Award®-winning costume designer Ngila Dickson explains:
"I have to admit that when Neil and Dick started talking about
autochrome, it put the fear of God in me! I was nervous because
I was aware that whenever you start a film without knowing what
the end result is going to be, you can find that the palette you
set as a designer can go horribly wrong. However, Dick Pope and
I had long discussions about it, and so we have ranged from very
light colors to the very rich mid-tone colors that we knew would
be lifted [lightened] in the final process."
Neil Burger comments, "Ngila is incredible-she he knew I
wanted to be true to 1900 Vienna, but not be a slave to it. The
movie isn't about 1900, it isn't about Vienna-it's about this uncanny
mystery and this magical experience. She, of course, got all this
and took it much further. I had done a lot of research, but then
Ngila added her own influences, and it just made the process incredibly
inventive and fun."
In addition to the principal actors, there were hundreds of extras
to dress on the days when scenes were shot in the street or in a
large theater. Burger adds, "Everyone was dressed brilliantly
for the time period and the scenes looked incredibly beautiful and
unique because of her."
Head makeup artist Julie Pearce also played a large part in creating
the right look for the film. She says, "I read the script at
least three times, trying to get a feel for the makeup and the look.
I did a lot of research into the period and also looked at research
that Neil and Ngila had put together-the main thing about 1900 in
Vienna is that there was so much facial hair, and I ended up coming
over from the States with probably 300 pieces of moustaches and
beards. Also, we kept the ladies' makeup very light, because in
that period there was no makeup as such."
For Sophie's makeup, the image of a porcelain doll was also kept
at the forefront of the artist's mind-minimal, enhancing the lips
and eyes. (In her more romantic scenes with Eisenheim, that look
would be altered slightly, making her appear more earthy.)
"It is a dark, complicated little story," offers costumer
Dickson. "I am a huge fan of Edward Norton and Paul Giamatti.
So I already had the visual images needed for the characters. The
period, 1900, was a very complicated time in history, particularly
in this part of the world, where you had a very militaristic society…but
at the same time, you also had this very modern bohemian thinking
going on. So there was a bit of a clash of ideas.
"The first thing I did," continues the designer, "was
read a lot about the royal family of the empire, Emperor Franz Joseph,
and get a sense of that very rigid society. Rufus' character Leopold
is a classic, and I made him militaristic, even though he was quite
a modern thinker. That was one of the things that fascinated me
with this time-people were caught up in this very rigid world even
though they were trying to change things. In a way, I feel that
Leopold and Sophie are the same. Both want to change something:
she wants a different kind of life, and he wants a different version
of their society. Sophie would rather be hanging out with the interesting
thinkers, artists and writers of her time instead of her own class
of aristocrats. I always felt that about her, that she was resisting
the world that was part of her family, her tradition, her history,
and Eisenheim was the key for her to be able to break out of that
world."
Dickson had spoken at length to Norton prior to embarking on finalizing
Eisenheim's costume designs, and found that both were after the
same character delineation for the illusionist: "Neither of
us wanted the stereotypical 'magician' costume, with a top hat or
a swishy satin cloak. I thought of him as an inventor and an artist
more than a magician, and we both knew the character was going to
work best if we could make him quite cerebral, as if he wasn't actually
interested in clothes."
That kind of forethought and preparation also extended into Norton's
makeup design, executed by head makeup artist Julie Pearce (whose
ongoing working relationship with Norton began when the two collaborated
on Fight Club). "Edward had a very specific idea, which we
developed during the makeup tests, giving him a more period look,"
explains Pearce. "He knew he wanted his hair darker, with a
dark goatee beard, but we didn't want it to look contemporary, so
we gave it added hair and I filled the beard up to his lips. At
the beginning of the film he looks very healthy, and as we move
through the story, he starts to look more intense."
Overall, fabrics were kept natural and there was a lot of lace.
"I have an aversion to polyester," laughs Ngila, "and
I am interested in texture and layers. With Jessica, we started
to break down the rigidity of the costumes once her character meets
Eisenheim. She starts to do things which are very anarchic to her
upbringing, so we started to make her clothes much looser, like
an unbuttoned collar, which then, of course, was not proper at all.
Also, Eisenheim is more interested in the science of illusion than
in appearances, and therefore we kept his wardrobe very simple.
There is no flamboyance to it, which I think makes the tricks so
much more evident and interesting. There is certainly no swish of
the red cloak to this piece!"
Biel's beautiful costumes were handpicked by Dickson to reflect
the time. "My costumes were so incredible," says Jessica.
"They were stunning, all of them, and it made me feel like
a princess to be on those sets in those gorgeous clothes. The only
downside was that I had to wear a corset everyday…having said that,
although it is tight and horrible actually, for some strange reason,
it makes you feel really sexy and feminine. You can't breathe or
eat lunch, but it's a small price to pay!"
Illusion Versus Reality
"The role of any magician is to remind us of the mystery
of existence and inspire awe and wonder at that mystery. Seeing
a great magic trick or illusion gives you a kind of chill and makes
you think that perhaps there are powers greater than those of man,
regardless of whether the magician possesses them or not,"
offers filmmaker Neil Burger.
But what if a magician could actually do real magic…could really
return us to the dark and troubled heart of magic?
"The question throughout the movie is, does Eisenheim truly
possess supernatural powers or is it all a trick?" continues
Burger. "We never really know for sure. That was a challenge
in creating the magic for the movie, to walk the fine line of that
question."
Burger wanted the illusions to appear to be the result of a supernatural
phenomenon but, at the same time, to seem to have a practical method
behind them. "You should be able to read them either way. All
the performances are based on real stage illusions of the time-then
I pushed them to a slightly more fantastic level.
"The first person I thought of when I was writing the movie,"
continues Neil Burger, "was Ricky Jay. He is not only an incredible
magician, but also an amazing scholar and historian of magic, especially
magic of that time. I had met him quite casually some time before
when he had done a simple, sleight of hand trick with a playing
card two feet from my eyes. As I stared at the card in his hand,
it changed into a different card. I'm sure it was a basic trick
for him, but it sent a chill through me that was completely unnerving…in
a way, mind-blowing. It's the reaction I described when I would
tell people how I wanted The Illusionist to feel."
The writer/director met with the magician/historian, gleaning
all he could about the mechanics of the tricks, the stage practices
of the time and the old illusions popular during the 'Golden Age
of Magic'-all the while, mindful of pushing the illusions to make
them scale-appropriate for filming. "I worked with him closely
for several weeks, during which time we worked everything out and
fine-tuned things that were in the script; he was an invaluable
resource."
Prior to filming, Norton also studied with Jay, immersing himself
in the technique and performing style of magicians of that time.
"He learned all the sleight of hand tricks and became an expert.
All of those tricks you see, Edward did himself. As in all his roles,
his ability to completely transform himself, to fully inhabit the
character, is impressive. In this case, you absolutely believe that
he has these sleight of hand skills, but more importantly, that
he could possess supernatural powers or that he could bring down
an empire. He's completely convincing," says Burger.
Once on the set in Prague, British magician James Freedman (a
member of the exclusive Magic Circle and a stage 'pickpocket' by
profession) acted as magic consultant to continue coaching Norton
and Aaron Johnson, who plays young Eisenheim, in mastering the art
of sleight of hand for their roles. "We did a lot of research
to make sure the methods and the effects to the magic that we use
in the film are authentic to the period," explains Freedman.
"Actually, when you have been involved with magic for nearly
a lifetime as I have, you tend to know a lot of the secrets and
methods already. One of the tricks we perform in the film is based
on an established trick by a man called Jean Paul Robert-Houdin.
He has been called the 'Father of Modern Magic,' and he did an illusion
where he borrowed a handkerchief from a lady in the audience. He
made it disappear and then an orange tree blossomed, and two butterflies
rose from the tree carrying the handkerchief. It was an amazing
trick, but we have taken it a stage further in the film so that
what you see on-screen is just bordering on the impossible. That
is what good magic should be."
Norton was enthusiastic to work with the remarkable magicians
and also drew knowledge and research from several sources of literature.
"One of my favorite things I read was the memoirs of Robert
Houdin. Although he was a French magician who performed more in
the middle of the 19th century, he was peerless in that period.
He was the person who took magic from a kind of travelling minstrel
show to the high stage, and to the high society of Paris. In a way,
a lot of what we do with Eisenheim is based on some of Robert Houdin's
particular illusions. For me, there was a certain amount of historical
research, and then the practical work with Ricky, and I felt relatively
well-prepared. Having James around was incredible and really helpful.
It was the best part of the job, working with these men, people
who are the ultimate all-stars in their field today."
In what could only be termed an amazing coincidence, Norton had
met magician Ricky Jay when Norton was a student. He recounts, "I
had just left college and was doing some theater ushering. Ricky
had designed a stage show of his own that he did in New York, and
I started ushering those shows, which I must have seen around twenty
times. Once or twice, Ricky would invite me to the stage to help
with a trick, and many years later, when I met him, he said he was
a fan of mine, and I said, 'Well, actually, I used to come up on
your stage and help you with your illusions.' And he couldn't believe
it. So it was funny the way the circle came back round. He was one
of my heroes in that world. I thought he was the greatest ever,
and it was really fun to trade insights with him, because there
are a lot of things about magic that have to do with acting, and
vice versa."
James Freedman-known professionally as 'The Man of Steal,' who
has appeared before royalty, heads of state and celebrities throughout
the world-takes up the story: "I started magic lessons with
Aaron in London, before we came out to Prague. I taught him some
sleight of hand, and also the psychology behind the tricks he would
be performing, which actually are all classic tricks: the rising
card, the ball vase, that sort of thing-things I learned as a boy.
He loves magic and would sit up all night practicing…just like I
did. I started at about four-years-of-age like most boys, when I
was given a magic set for my birthday."
But more than just filmic tricks, some of the illusions executed
during principal photography proved magical to even the cast and
crew. Burger closes, "The first week of filming, we were in
a theater with about 350 extras in period dress for the stage performance
scenes, and Edward performed a trick he had learned-and he fooled
everyone in the theater, and all of us behind the camera. And it
wasn't a fluke, because later, during a different scene, where he
had to produce something out of thin air, he got genuine reactions.
Even Jessica and Rufus came up to him afterwards and asked, 'How
did you do that?!?' There is still that little core in all of us
that wants to genuinely believe in magic, which is a testament to
the power and lure of it all."
* * *About the Cast
Two-time Academy Award® nominee Edward Norton heads the stellar
cast of The Illusionist in the lead role of Eisenheim. Norton rose
to prominence starring opposite Richard Gere in Primal Fear, for
which he gained his first Academy Award® nomination, and he
has gone on to star in numerous Hollywood blockbusters. Norton has
headlined in the films Primal Fear; Everyone Says I Love You; The
People vs. Larry Flynt; American History X; Rounders; Fight Club;
Keeping the Faith; The Score; Death to Smoochy; Frida; Red Dragon
and The 25th Hour.
Norton was nominated for his second Academy Award® for his
performance in American History X. He won a Golden Globe for that
performance, and has won numerous other awards for other performances.
The film Frida, for which he wrote an uncredited screenplay, was
nominated for six Academy Awards® and won two. He also won the
Obie Award for his performance off-Broadway in a revival of Burn
This by Lanford Wilson.
Norton produced and directed the film Keeping the Faith and is
currently producing five other films, including adaptations of Mark
Helprin's A Soldier of the Great War; Somerset Maugham's The Painted
Veil; and Jonathan Lethem's Motherless Brooklyn, for which he is
currently writing the screenplay. Down in the Valley, which he produced,
edited and performs in, was recently released.
Norton also recently created Class 5 Films in partnership with
his brother Jim Norton, writer Stuart Blumberg and producer Bill
Migliore. Class 5's feature division will produce films through
a first-look deal with Universal Pictures and the documentary division
will produce nature and science films. Class 5's first documentary
production is a film for the Outdoor Life Network, The Great Rivers
Expedition, about a historic white-water adventure that took place
in China last winter. Class 5 is also collaborating with the Sea
Studios Foundation on their multi-million-dollar series about earth
system sciences for National Geographic, Strange Days on the Planet
Earth, which Norton hosts and narrates.
Norton is also a committed social and environmental activist.
Oscar® and Golden Globe nominee Paul Giamatti stars alongside
Norton in the role of Inspector Uhl. Giamatti's illustrious career
includes starring roles in Man on the Moon, Duets and Cinderella
Man (Academy Award®-nominated), and award-winning leading roles
in American Splendor and Sideways, for which he received a Golden
Globe nomination.
With a diverse roster of finely etched, critically acclaimed performances,
Paul Giamatti has established himself as one of the most versatile
actors of his generation.
Giamatti's critically lauded Sideways garnered him several accolades
for his performance including Best Actor from the Independent Spirit
Awards and New York Film Critics Circle, and a Golden Globe nomination.
Giamatti also starred in Ron Howard's Cinderella Man and recently
completed work on the independent feature The Hawk is Dying, as
well as lending his voice talents to the animated features Robots
and Ant Bully.
Giamatti won outstanding reviews and commendations for his portrayal
of Harvey Pekar in American Splendor, and he first captured the
eyes of America in Betty Thomas' hit comedy Private Parts. His extensive
list of film credits also include Man on the Moon; The Cradle Will
Rock; The Negotiator; Saving Private Ryan; The Truman Show; Donnie
Brasco; Storytelling; Planet of the Apes; Big Momma's House; Confidence
and John Woo's Paycheck.
Jessica Biel, fast becoming one of Hollywood's most sought after
actresses following starring roles in Blade: Trinity, Stealth and
most recently Elizabethtown, stars opposite Norton as Sophie, the
beautiful noblewoman with whom Eisenheim falls in love.
With a wide range of talent, Biel has become a notable emerging
actress to watch. Her television series-acting debut on the WB's
number one rated show, 7th Heaven, helped her emerge as a breakout
star.
Biel was recently seen in Cameron Crowe's Elizabethtown, starring
opposite Orlando Bloom, Kirsten Dunst and Susan Sarandon. Biel portrays
Ellen, the girlfriend of Drew Baylor (Bloom), in the film that takes
place during an outrageous memorial for a Southern patriarch, where
an unexpected romance blooms. Jessica was also seen in the film
London, co-starring Jason Statham, Chris Evans and Kelli Garner.
London is a drama that follows the warped relationship of two young
adults.
Jessica Biel starred in Sony Pictures' Stealth alongside Josh Lucas
and Jamie Foxx. This drama is about three pilots in a top-secret
military program struggle to bring an artificial intelligence program
under control before it initiates the next world war. Jessica was
also seen in New Line Cinema's Blade: Trinity, in which she co-stars
with Wesley Snipes, Kris Kristofferson and Ryan Reynolds. Biel's
other film credits include New Line Cinema's Blockbuster hit remake
of Texas Chainsaw Massacre; New Line Cinema's Cellular co-starring
Kim Basinger and Chris Evans; Lions Gate Films' The Rules of Attraction
for director Roger Avary; the Warner Bros.' romantic comedy Summer
Catch, co-starring Freddie Prinze Jr.; and the Disney holiday film,
I'll Be Home For Christmas with Jonathan Taylor Thomas. In an impressive
display of versatility, Jessica garnered rave notices for her portrayal
as the rebellious daughter in Victor Nunez's critically acclaimed
film Ulee's Gold, with Peter Fonda. The film was selected as the
Centerpiece Premiere for the '97 Sundance Film Festival and presented
at Cannes.
She will soon be seen in several upcoming projects, including
Irwin Winkler's Home of the Brave and Lee Tamahori's Next.
Rufus Sewell's extensive film credits include Kenneth Branagh's
Hamlet; Dangerous Beauty; Dark City; Illuminata; In a Savage Land;
Bless the Child; A Knight's Tale; Extreme Ops; Tristan and Isolde;
and more recently The Legend of Zorro, alongside Antonio Banderas
and Catherine Zeta-Jones.
His stage performances include Pride and Prejudice; The Seagull;
As You Like It; Making It Better; Arcadia; Translations; Rat in
the Skull, Macbeth; and Luther.
About the Filmmakers
Neil Burger (Writer / Director) is the writer and director of The
Illusionist, starring Edward Norton and Paul Giamatti. His screenplay
is based on "Eisenheim the Illusionist" by Pulitzer Prize-winning
author Steven Millhauser.
Burger also wrote and directed Interview with the Assassin (2002),
winner of Best Feature Film at both the Woodstock Film Festival
and the Avignon Film Festival and nominated for three Independent
Spirit Awards, including Best First Film and Best First Screenplay.
Before that, he directed commercials for the likes of Mastercard,
IB, and ESPN. Burger was also chosen to create a series of television
spots for Amnesty International and their campaign for 'prisoners
of conscience.' He began his film career by creating and directing
the award-winning "Books: Feed Your Head" campaign for
MTV, promoting language and literature.
Michael London (Producer) is the producer of The Family Stone,
which was written and directed by Thomas Bezucha. The film was released
by Fox 2000 in December 2005 and stars Diane Keaton, Sarah Jessica
Parker, Dermot Mulroney, Luke Wilson, Claire Danes, Rachel McAdams
and Craig T. Nelson.
Michael London produced the Alexander Payne film Sideways, which
was one of the most critically acclaimed films of 2004 and the winner
of a Golden Globe for Best Picture, an Independent Spirit Awards
and a Critics' Choice Awards. Sideways was a Best Picture nominee
at the 2005 Academy Awards®, where it won the Oscar® for
Best Adapted Screenplay. It was named Best Picture of 2005 by the
New York Film Critics, the Los Angeles Film Critics, the London
Film Critics and the Chicago Film Critics among many others.
London is set to start production on his next film, King of California,
which he is producing with Alexander Payne. The picture stars Michael
Douglas and is written and directed by Michael Cahill.
In 2003 London produced House of Sand and Fog, starring Jennifer
Connelly and Ben Kingsley for DreamWorks, and Thirteen, starring
Holly Hunter and Evan Rachel Wood. Both received Academy Award®
nominations and 2004 Independent Spirit awards. Thirteen also won
Best Director honors at the 2003 Sundance Film Festival, where Fox
Searchlight acquired worldwide distribution rights to the independently-financed
production.
Prior to that, London produced Michael Lehmann's comedy 40 Days
and 40 Nights, which starred Josh Hartnett and Shannyn Sossamon,
and The Guru, Universal's Bollywood-themed comedy starring Heather
Graham, Jimi Mistry and Marisa Tomei.
London currently has a three-year, first-look deal with Paramount.
Previously, he held a first-look deal with Universal Focus after
spending five years as a production executive at Fox, which he departed
as Executive Vice President of production. Films under his supervision
included Alien 3, Die Hard 2, Sleeping with the Enemy, Hoffa and
the Sandlot.
London began his film career as Senior Vice President for Simpson-Bruckheimer
Productions, where he worked on Beverly Hills Cop, Top Gun and other
projects. He started his career as a staff writer for the Los Angeles
Times after receiving his undergraduate degree from Stanford University.
The writing/producing/directing partnership of Brian Koppelman (Producer)
and David Levien (Producer) has been quite a productive one. Since
1997, the duo has written the films Rounders, Runaway Jury, Walking
Tall and Knockaround Guys, which they also directed. Last year,
the duo created the critically acclaimed television series Tilt
for ESPN, writing and directing the pilot episode.
The Illusionist marks a continuation of their producing career.
Koppelman and Levien also produced Neil Burger's first feature film,
Interview with the Assassin. Separately, each has distinguished
himself-Levien as a novelist, whose Wormwood and Swagbelly, A Novel
for Today's Gentleman, garnered strong critical response; and Koppelman
in his previous career as an A&R man for various record labels
and as an essayist.
Bob Yari (Producer) is President and founder of the Yari Film Group
(YFG), dedicated to film financing and production. With over 18
films produced over the last 2 years and over 22 projects currently
in development, YFG has emerged as one of the most successful independent
film companies in Hollywood, with a creative output that varies
in both genre and budget, but always attains mass commercial appeal.
The Yari Film Group's most recent films include the Oscar®-winning
Best Picture Crash, the acclaimed ensemble drama directed by Paul
Haggis and released by Lions Gate Films; House of D, David Duchovny's
recent directorial debut, also released by Lions Gate; last year's
A Love Song for Bobby Long, starring John Travolta and Scarlett
Johannson; and the Miramax action thriller Hostage, starring Bruce
Willis. Other films include The Matador, starring Pierce Brosnan
and Greg Kinnear, which was acquired by Miramax upon premiering
at the 2005 Sundance Film Festival; Sony Pictures Classics' Thumbsucker,
starring Lou Pucci, Tilda Swinton, Vince Vaughn and Keanu Reeves;
and Focus Features' Winter Passing, starring Ed Harris, Will Ferrell
and Zooey Deschanel.
Additional BYP productions include: Prime, starring Meryl Streep
and Uma Thurman; Find Me Guilty, a dramatic comedy starring Vin
Diesel and directed by Sidney Lumet; Jump Shot, starring Danny DeVito
and Kim Basinger, and directed by Mark Rydell; and First Snow, starring
Guy Pearce.
Yari began his career with Edgar J. Scherick Associates in Hollywood
after receiving a degree in cinematography, and has served in a
variety of positions including as director of Mind Games; as executive
producer of Agent Cody Banks, starring Frankie Muniz and Hilary
Duff; and of Laws of Attraction, starring Pierce Brosnan and Julianne
Moore.
Yari is also a well-versed real estate executive, with projects
spanning syndication, construction, development and redevelopment
of commercial and residential assets throughout the United States.
Steven Millhauser (Based on the Story by), novelist and short story
writer, won the 1997 Pulitzer Prize for his most well-known novel,
Martin Dressler: The Tale of an American Dreamer (1996), which chronicles
the life of an entrepreneur whose career peaks when he builds a
fabulous hotel in turn-of-the-century Manhattan. Time magazine described
Martin Dressler as "an urban fable about civilization and its
discontents," and praised Millhauser for "lowering the
barrier between realism and myth."
Millhauser impressed both critics and readers with his fresh approach
to childhood and adolescence in his first two novels, Edwin Mullhouse:
The Life and Death of an American Writer, 1943-1954, by Jeffrey
Cartwright (1972), which won the Prix Médicis Étranger
Award in France for the best foreign novel, and Portrait of a Romantic
(1977). In a Washington Post review of Portrait of a Romantic, William
Kennedy described the book as "written in immaculate prose.
. .a prodigious feat of memory, with an enormous density of felt
and observed life."
In addition, Millhauser has published a fourth novel, From the
Realm of Morpheus (1986), and three collections of short stories,
The Barnum Museum (1990), In the Penny Arcade (1986) and Little
Kingdoms (1993).
Millhauser received the Lannan Literary Award for Fiction in 1994
and an Award in Literature from the American Academy and Institute
of Arts and Letters in 1987. He is a Professor of English at Skidmore
College in Saratoga Springs, New York.
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