Some jobs — catching fastballs, singing pop songs, dancing en pointe — are a lot easier when you're young.
Add to that list directing independent movies, where it's not the physical demands that wear out many filmmakers but the financial stresses. At some point, most indie directors tire of the never-ending hustle for the money to make and release their movies and repair to the more lucrative worlds of television and studio fare.
That's what makes the career of John Sayles so remarkable. At 63, Sayles, an endurance athlete in the punishing sport of independent film, has just released his 18th movie and fourth in a row that is primarily self-financed, a character-driven, border-set whodunit called "Go for Sisters."
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Though some critics have called the film a return to form for Sayles, who received Oscar nominations for his "Passion Fish" and "Lone Star" screenplays in the 1990s, the director has hinted that he may not be making movies this way much longer.
Sayles has outlasted most of the companies that released his movies over the years and been witness to radical transformations in his industry, from the introduction of video to Netflix.
"It's easier than it ever was to make a movie," he said. "If you're talented and the breaks go your way, you can make a good movie. The toughest part is getting any money back from it. When people say, 'the independent movie business,' I say, 'There are independent movies. I don't think there's an independent movie business.'"
Sayles' audience is loyal but small, and his socially conscious movies aren't particularly fashionable in an independent film world that is driven mostly by stories of attractive young people and their ennui.
Like most of Sayles' work, "Go for Sisters," which he also wrote and edited, infuses its narrative with issues of race, class and moral dilemmas. As children, Bernice (LisaGay Hamilton) and Fontayne (Yolonda Ross) were close friends who bore such a resemblance people said they could "go for sisters." As adults, they have followed starkly different paths but serendipitously reconnect when Bernice, a strait-laced parole officer, is assigned to monitor Fontayne, a recovering drug addict fresh out of jail.
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Though tempted and professionally obligated to keep her troubled old friend at arm's length, Bernice finds Fontayne's extra-legal history useful when a crisis hits — her son is missing on the Mexican border. Together with former police detective Freddy Suárez (Edward James Olmos), the women head south to find him.
The movie, which has already opened in New York and Los Angeles, is expanding over the next few weeks to theaters in Atlanta, Austin, Chicago, Columbus, San Diego and other cities.
"I had this idea for a while, thinking, 'How much money do I have left in the bank?'" Sayles said over breakfast in Austin, Texas, last spring, where the movie premiered at the South by Southwest film festival. "I made a half-assed effort to raise some outside funds but it's almost impossible.... I don't know if I've actually done this before ... a movie where I actually didn't feel like I had enough money and time. It's not that the movie suffered that much, it's that I wish I'd been able to pay people more and the hours weren't so long."
Sayles shot "Go for Sisters" on his own dime for less than $1 million. The production, lasting a mere 19 days and hitting 66 locations in the San Fernando Valley and Mexico, had its share of nail-biter moments, including a 117-degree day in Mexico and the moment when Border Patrol agents stopped a cameraman trying to capture a shot of a Mexicali border crossing.
"The guy called and said, 'Well I didn't get arrested, but it's a shaky, 7-second thing,'" Sayles said. "I said, 'Yeah I can slow that down. It's just an establishing shot.' A lot of the way I'm able to do a movie in four weeks is having done 17 movies before."
Sayles, 6 feet 4, broad-shouldered and casual, could easily be mistaken for a guy who came to fix the sink — not a guy who won a MacArthur "genius" grant in 1983, though he did.
While shooting, he relies on what will be his own crafty editing to keep the production moving. "I'll say we're moving on," he said. "An actor will say, 'But I blew a line every take' and I'll say, 'But you blew a different line every take.'"
Olmos, who has straddled the studio and independent worlds for much of his career, found Sayles' schedule breathtaking in its ambition. "I've never done a faster movie in respect to the location," Olmos said. "If you don't know what you're doing, you're never gonna make your day.... The beauty of it is total artistic control, to the blink, to the breath."
Sayles said he would prefer not to finance his own movies but has been able to because of his uncredited work polishing scripts for others.
"In the last 10 years, because most things have more than one writer on them and they do that adjudication, I've taken my name off more things than I've left them on," he said. "Sometimes it's like, well it's fine, it's just this isn't my work anymore so I shouldn't get credit and sometimes it's, I don't want to take the rap for this."
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