Release Date:April 20, 2007
Studio: Warner Bros. Pictures
Director: Jonathan Kasdan
Screenwriter: Jonathan Kasdan
Starring: Adam Brody, Kristen Stewart, Meg Ryan, Olympia Dukakis,
Makenzie Vega, Clark Gregg, Elena Anaya
Genre: Comedy, Drama, Romance
MPAA Rating: PG-13
****
1.
SYNOPSIS
2. ABOUT
THE STORY
3. Interview:
Adam Brody
4. Interview:
Kristen Stewart
5. Interview:
Makenzie Vega
6.
THE LOOK AND LOCATION
THE
LOOK AND LOCATION
Production Designer Sandy Cochrane and Costume Designer Trish Keating were
brought on as key collaborators for ensuring Kasdan's vision was translated
onto the screen.
The two key sets in the movie, the Hardwicke house and Grandma's house, were
brought to life by Cochrane. After an exhaustive search that took the filmmaker
scouting various cities across Canada,the city of Victoria, located on Vancouver
Island, had all the elements that Kasdan was looking for.

Adam Brody as Carter, Kristen Stewart as Lucy,
and Makenzie Vega as Paige
"Jon
wanted a slightly heightened reality and we spent a lot of time talking
about that when we were driving around looking for locations," says
Cochrane. "The story starts off in Los Angeles then shifts to
Michigan, so when you arrive in the suburbs of the mid-west, there's
an overwhelming sense of green as opposed to the overexposed, sun-parched
landscape of Los Angeles."
"Both Jon and I are from Southern California, which doesn't have the most
traditional suburbs,'Brody says, "To us and to Carter, the suburbs are this
pristine place you've seen in movies - football games, prom - sort of John Hughes
meets Norman Rockwell. Jon's got a great crew and they've found and transformed
our location into this ideal suburb. My character's curiosity of wanting to explore
this other side of the world, in a way, is satisfied when he runs away to Michigan,
in search of something he's seen in movies."
"The pairing of the houses was the most critical element to finding the
locations we wanted. For Grandma's house, we needed to find a house where the
owners would allow us to take their beautifully kept home and make it a visually
distressed residence. Then we needed to find a house directly across the street,
where there couldn't be any impediment view-wise, which had to have a certain
kind of architecture that presented a completely different aesthetic."
Once the houses were found, movie magic stepped in and both houses were transformed.
The entrance to Grandma's house was dressed with overgrown shrubs and weeds
to give it the appearance of a dark burrowing world. The interior of the house
was completely redone to reveal a home that had been neglected, where newspapers
and mementos cluttered every inch of space. Across the street where the Hardwicke
House stood, immaculate green lawns and an abundance of carefully groomed flower
beds presented the opposite impression a family that was very concerned about
outward appearances.
The
rest of the locations needed; a mall, ice cream shop, a hospital among
others, posed no problem and Victoria easily doubled for the Michigan
suburbs. For the Los Angeles portion of the shoot,Kasdan already had
real landmarks in mind that he wanted to shoot at such as the 101 Coffee
Shop and the Santa Monica Pier.
Cochrane explains that Kasdan's clear vision of what he wanted, meant "asking
the right questions, listening very carefully and taking every opportunity
to bounce ideas off him. Jon has a vast knowledge of film, he has a long list
of films that he can reference so that you can go back, look at these films
and know exactly what he's going for."
But besides providing the physical locations needed for In the Land of Women's
intimate world,the Uplands neighborhood where the Hardwicke House and Grandma's
House were located, also became much more of a home away from home than anyone
had expected. An experience not lost on Meg Ryan."I loved shooting in
Victoria and this neighborhood was just crazy! I couldn't have made it up!"
the actor remembers. "They were so cool to let us into their neighborhood
night after night, day after day.They would walk their dogs and wave to me,
then they started baking things and bringing them by the trailer I got chai
tea from someone's grandma. It was the biggest, open-armed hug all the time.
Adam would leave his dog at one the neighbor's house who left the door open
so that when we stopped shooting around 3am, Adam would just go inside and
call `Penny, Penny' and Penny would come out their dogs would hang together.
It was just so sweet!"
Producer David Kanter adds, "The neighborhood of Uplands was incredibly
accommodating to our shooting and it took some leading people in the neighborhood
to get everybody to allow us to come in and disrupt their lives for five weeks.
These neighbors became part of our crew and every night people would come out
at cocktail hour with their glasses of white wine and watch us shoot, which
sometimes is like watching paint dry. We met some incredible people on this
film and we're so grateful."
In the Land of Women is a character-driven story and Kasdan wanted the wardrobe
to enhance and reflect the reality of each character. "Jon had done a
lot of tear sheets himself from magazines," says Keating."He had
a very clear idea of what each character's wardrobe should be how it ties into
and tracks the progression of the character."
With Sarah's wardrobe, the objective was to capture the character's shift from
a very contained and repressed person to a woman that begins to reconnect to
her sensuality and becomes more emotionally available.
"Sarah plays the part of a very frustrated, upper-middle class wife and
mother," observes Keating."As she meets Carter, a certain awareness
comes to her about life and she loosens up considerably, which we reflect in
her clothing. We'll see a change from cooler colors at the beginning, to warmer
colors toward the end, as well as more casual styles."
As for Carter's character, both Kasdan's and Brody's love of true vintage clothing,
was utilized to express this young man's physical as well emotional journey
to Michigan."We wanted to get as far away from what he wears on the O.
C. as possible," says Keating. "We also wanted to take Adam to an
older level of clothing, so that he would be playing twenty-five, which is
his real age."
For Grandma Archer, the process of inhabiting that character was a little more
involved and carefully constructed. "I like to have a lot of input in
the costumes and had really good conversations with Trish Keating, The first
thing I asked for was a hump," laughs Dukakis. "So they built me
a little hump,then I asked for all the sleeves to be a shorter so that my little
bony arms would stick out. I wore these droopy bright colored crocheted sweaters
I didn't want her to be drab."
Transforming the vivacious actress to that of a much older octogenarian also
involved over two hours of make-up every morning. Dukakis found the experience
rewarding as an actor but also a little unnerving on a personal level, as she
explains. "We put latex on my face to create deep wrinkles and I also
put a wig on. People say that if you want to know what you'll look like when
you're old, look at your mother. After this show, I know exactly what I'm going
to look like and it's going to be much worse. It was a really interesting journey."
Rounding out the talents Kasdan enlisted to make In the Land of Women is editor
Carol Littleton. Even at a young age, Littleton says Kasdan's curiosity and
talent as an aspiring filmmaker were self-evident.
"I've known Jon since the day he was born. Ever since he was a little kid,
Jon was very tuned in,very smart and very funny. He used to hang out in the cutting
room and always have the most extraordinary questions about the process. When
he came into the editing room, I'd give him a piece of film to experiment with
and after a while he'd suggest cutting a scene in a certain way so I'd stop what
I was doing, and do it his way so he could see why something would work or not
work.
"The biggest challenge in this film is the mixture of tone. It's definitely
a comedy but there is a serious undertone to the whole movie a basic humanity
we must preserve. It's this constant changing of gears that is challenging but
inspiring for an editor. I'm so impressed by Jon's talent the writing is extraordinary
and he knows exactly what he wants, that's very rare, yet alone with someone
so young.He's a very committed and serious filmmaker."
NEXT
SYNOPSIS
Aspiring writer Carter Webb has just been dumped by his true love Sophia. Heartbroken
and depressed, Carter escapes Los Angeles to suburban Michigan to care for
his ailing grandmother and to work on a book he has always wanted to write.