‘We want to close out the year properly’ — Siya Kolisi
“He’s a great kisser so it was fun to kiss him in my 20s and it was fun to kiss him against at almost 80,” Fonda said Friday of her famously handsome co-star in “Our Souls at Night.”
The Netflix production had its premiere Friday at the Venice film festival, where the veteran stars were to be presented later with Golden Lions in recognition of two of the longest and most successful careers in US cinema.
Based on a Kent Haruf novel, the film sees Indian director Ritesh Batra, a talent fostered by Redford’s Sundance Institute, delve into a world of creaking bones and reading lights that is increasingly a focus for a film industry chasing the disposable income of retired baby boomers.
“The way the film biz was going it was very much towards the younger audience and there were very few opportunities for films to be made that would satisfy the older audience,” Redford said.
“And I wanted to do another film with Jane before I died. We’ve had a long history in film and I wanted us to be able to have another chance. We were getting older, and I thought ‘wait a minute here is a film that can satisfy our genuine age’.”
– Better sex –
Fonda said the film sends an important message about the potential for love and sex to improve with age.
“I think it gets better because we are brave, what the heck do we have to lose,” the multiple Oscar winner said.
“So my skin sags,! So does his. I know what my body needs and I am not afraid to ask for it,” she said, chiding the director for cutting the film’s solitary sex scene too short.
“It will be in the DVD extras!” Batra responded.
Fonda and Redford play Addie Moore and Louis Waters, a pair of retired, widowed neighbours living quiet lives in small-town Colorado.
They have known each other for years, but never really known each other.
That changes when, on the instigation of Addie, they begin sharing a bed — on the basis that company and conversation will help Addie’s insomnia and ease the loneliness they both feel most acutely after dark.
As the friendship develops, the nighttime chat becomes more serious. It emerges Addie and Louis share lingering regrets over how they handled traumatic moments in their married lives and consequent strains in their relationships with their adult children.
The bond between the two deepens when Addie’s seven-year-old grandson comes to stay with her while his newly-single father struggles to keep his life on track.
Soon the question of what kind of relationship they are having, and where it is headed, becomes more pressing.
– Older trend –
The film is Batra’s third feature, after 2016’s “The Sense of an Ending” and his award-winning 2013 debut, “Lunchbox.”
The director was born in the same year that Redford, now 81, and Fonda, 79, starred in Sydney Pollack’s 1979 western, “The Electric Horseman.”
Prior to that, the pair played young married couples in 1966’s “The Chase” and the following year’s “Barefoot in the Park.”
On all three of the films, Fonda fell for her co-star, she said. “On Barefooot it was me who couldn’t keep my hands off him,” she joked. Although both actors were married at the time, Redford suggested the sexual chemistry on screen was not just about acting craft. “There were things spoken and things unspoken and the unspoken carried a certain weight, that is all I can say,” he said.
Also showing in Venice, and tipped as a potential contender for the Golden Lion, is “The Leisure Seeker”, which sees Helen Mirren and Donald Sutherland play a free-spirited older couple who embark on a Boston-Florida road trip to get away from their doctors and bossy grown-up children.
The issue of loneliness after bereavement also provides the backdrop to “Victoria & Abdul,” Stephen Frears’s handling of the true story of the elderly Queen Victoria’s friendship with an Indian clerk.
“Our Souls at Night”, which was shown out of competition here, will be released by Netflix on September 29.
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