INTERVIEW - DAFT PUNK MOVIE
Currently slaughtering festivals all over the world with their amazing robot revue, French dance titans Daft Punk are about to release their first feature film, Electroma, next month. We won't mention the fact that it's an hour of no dialogue, because that might put you off seeing it. We will say that it's a surreal space odyssey in which the robots try to become human. They almost never do interviews but we managed to sit down with Daft Punk to find out more about the movie...
Vice: You've had the robots for a while and have done on all your own music videos. Why bother to do a real deal movie?
Thomas: When we started to work on our first music videos with directors like Michel Gondry, Spike Jonze, Roman Coppola, we were always interested in a hands on approach to the process. On the last album's videos I began directing single scenes myself. When that was done, we started to think it was a good moment to experiment with film, in much the same way as we approached music in the years before, in a very free way, not caring about any rules or what already existed, just having fun creating something in a way that hadn't been done before. There are, of course, influences. We are not inventing but approaching things existing already in a way they had not been done before.
Now that everyone is ripping you off, does it make creating something original hard?
Yes, not only for the creator, but as a consumer it becomes harder to define yourself by what you like. There is no underground, it has become Catcher In The Rye or A Clockwork Orange for everybody. It is good in terms of cultural awareness but it becomes impossible to use what you know as a cultural marker.
There is no dialogue. What's the deal with that?
We were more concerned with imagery than plot and heavily influenced by Surrealism – Magritte for the cinematography and his very physical subjects and Escher, you know, all black and white staircases looping into labyrinths. When we started taking images out of our heads we weren't worried about arranging logical connections between them.
But this isn't video art, it's a movie, right?
Video art is the same all the time because audiences do not know how to receive it. Film is the same all the time, because audiences don't understand what is possible. Both are slaves to the economy and industry which produce them. But, of the two evils, we were more interested in the thrill of going to an old, dark movie theatre to see a cult film at its only midnight showing.
Interesting. Why not give it an original score?
The retro-futurism aspect: we felt our music would betray us. We wanted Electroma to be impossible to date. You can date almost any movie to within 5-10 years of its making so, without it being the ultimate purpose, we liked the idea of really shuffling that round, which is as much to do with style as technology or technique. This is also why we shot in California, we wanted the two extremes of this very cult Hollywood imagery, combining the warmth of Easy Rider to the coldness of 2001…. When you make all these things collide you end up with something people can't conceive.
* Electroma is released nationwide in selected cinemas at the end of July and released on DVD on September 3.
DOM TUNON
wowzer. cant wait to see this.
Posted by: | 20/06/2007 at 16:37
Definitely wanna see this.
Posted by: j | 20/06/2007 at 16:50
i just watched this as i read the interview. its leaked on torrent sites already and is bee you tee full. their right total california sunshine sadness but with the 2001 staring into the silent void effect going on.
Posted by: fweaky shit | 20/06/2007 at 19:14
ahhh i love california. and so do daft punk. you?
Posted by: . | 20/06/2007 at 19:19
c'est super!
Posted by: FResh Rigavich | 20/06/2007 at 20:05
what the fuck...is all i can think of. Believe me Interstella 555 was amazing, but this trailer is a giant question mark.
Posted by: Armandresdin | 21/06/2007 at 02:25
Just watched this... pretty fucking dull to be honest. I just wanted it to turn into a robot disco in the desert, but nothing happens.
Posted by: sam | 21/06/2007 at 04:42
i unfortunately agree more with sam on this. i really liked some parts of the film, like when there was stuff actually happening (i wont spoil it for anyone but elaborating) but i feel some scenes were dragged out, to say the least.
of course this doesn't hinder my love for daft punk, i just wasn't absolutely thrilled at the film.
Posted by: liv | 21/06/2007 at 05:11
enough with the helmets already. just go listen to edwin birdsong
Posted by: hang 10 | 21/06/2007 at 10:06
Apparently if you play the Human After All album in the background they sync perfectly.
Apparently.
Posted by: Andy | 21/06/2007 at 13:21
iv'e seen parts of the movie here and there on the internet and have to say that some of the shots were incredible. I wouldn't say it was a film as much as i would a piece of art work. within art there are some parts that would compell you more then others. but overall i thought it to be quite the experience.
Posted by: Remus | 10/09/2007 at 16:19
The best movie, Daft Punk Rocks!!
Posted by: beast bros | 28/09/2007 at 04:13
feel free to put this dvd out any time.
Posted by: faggggits | 03/10/2007 at 19:22
Just love it
Posted by: kepha | 18/12/2007 at 08:11
well it sounds different from what i expect...hope they will do others.waiting for'em in mauritius.
Posted by: warren oh | 13/02/2008 at 13:26
So if you listen to Human after all it totally is in synch but you have to play it at the very begining at first it doesn't seem like it synchs but when the title screen comes up you'll see.
Posted by: William | 28/03/2008 at 05:55
In your opinion, what's the best movie ever created?
Posted by: talapoku | 07/08/2008 at 14:43