Jeri Jacquin
Coming to Netflix on April 21st from screenwriter
Chris Roessner, Treehouse Pictures along with director Fernando Coimbra comes a
look at the people and place that carry the realities of war with SAND CASTLE .
The film tells the story of Private Matt Ocre (Nicholas
Hoult), a young man who intended to serve in the reserves to pay for college.
When September 11th occurs, he hurts himself hopefully to be sent
home.
Instead, he is sent back to his regiment to catch up with
Sgt. Chutzky (Glen Powell), Cpt. Enzo (Neil Brown, Jr.), Sgt. Burton (Beau
Knapp) and squad leader Sgt. Harper (Logan Marshall-Green). They are sent to a
local village where insurgents have destroyed their water pump to get it up and
running. While that happens a tanker is filled daily to get water to the
villagers.
The soldiers and the Iraqi people have the same problem,
insurgents who want the American soldiers gone and the villagers under their
control!
Fernando Coimbra is the Brazilian born director who took on
the challenge of making the film SAND
CASTLE . Beginning with
writing and directing short films, his first film A WOLF AT THE DOOR premiered
at the Toronto Film Festival. Recently, Coimbra
has directed episodes of the Netflix series Narcos
and a Cinemax episode of Robert Kirkman’s Outcast.
I had the opportunity to speak with Coimbra
about his reaction to the script, challenges and what was most important for
the audience to know about SAND
CASTLE .
Jeri Jacquin: Hello Fernando, it is a pleasure to talk with
you today about the film SAND
CASTLE . I love the film.
Fernando Coimbra: Thank you, that means a lot.
JJ: This film is really important for everyone to see.
FC: I’m really glad to hear this.
JJ: Tell me your thoughts of the script when you read it?
FC: I was impressed by a few things. The first thing that
caught my attention was the story and the characters. I knew that whoever wrote
it knew the situation of war pretty well. I could feel that it was very
truthful. I think what caught my attention the most was the journey of the
character and the story of this soldier. He wasn’t there because he actually
wanted to be so he’s not the usual military person. He joined because he wanted
to pay for college and tries to get out of that situation. I think people can
relate to this character. The journey I saw for him was very strong and I
believed that the story needed to be told of his traumatic experience. It
wasn’t about being a hero but instead about the experiences that they all go
through. It is about them finding a reason and an understanding of what they
are fighting for.
JJ: I spoke with Chris [Roessner, the writer of SAND CASTLE]
last week and I told him what really intrigued me is that this film tells the
story from both perspectives, the soldier and the Iraqi people.
FC: Yes, that definitely was one of my main goals in
preparing to shoot this film. I wanted to do my best to show both sides. I
wanted to show the Iraqi people as human beings, not just caricatures or
clichés of Arabic people. I see films where they are portrayed as bad guys or
terrorists and in this film that is not the case. They are normal people trying
to live their lives doing the best that they can in the middle of all this chaos.
I wanted to show who they are and how they connected with the soldiers who are
completely different from themselves. They are all human beings so it was
important to have those moments where that connection is there; not just
Iraqi’s or Americans but human beings.
That was a mission in itself.
JJ: When you finished reading the script, what were some of
the challenges you thought you were going to face making the film.
FC: When I decided to make the film I knew everything was
going to be a challenge. A Brazilian making a war film not having been in a war
was going to be different. I was motivated though to read about the war and
research it for myself. I talked with military advisors because it is really
important to me that it was portrayed authentically. I wanted to be fair to the
audience by putting them into the most realistic environment possible. I went
to the military to learn how they move, think and talk because they do have a
way of speaking with codes etc. For me, the challenge was also to be very
authentic and real so I went to people I trusted to help me bring all of that
to the film.
JJ: It can be difficult to understand when they talk
sometimes.
FC: Yes, I had the military advisers with me at all times.
During the prep and during scenes they were there and Special Forces guys
really gave the actors and myself and inside look at their life in this
situation. It was so interesting to experience all of this for myself.
JJ: You were keeping it as authentically military as
possible.
FC: Yes, we really did work hard on that keeping the
military actions accurate and shooting scenes to keep the emotional element
there as well. We always tried to find a way to mix the film making aspect with
the actions of the military. I don’t want audiences to just watch the film, I
would like them to experience it and relate to it.
JJ: I just couldn’t stop watching.
FC: That makes me very happy.
JJ: You worked with an amazing cast, tell us about that
experience?
FC: They were really great and I was lucky to have such very
talented guys and also they were really engaged in making this film. Nick Hoult
was so willing to play this character and Henry Cavill really wanted to play a
military man because of his family connection. All of them were on board from going
to boot camp to learning all the lingo and everything. We became a group,
isolated on the set, from being at home and our regular life routines.
Everybody became close and connected to each other through this experience. We
all became like a military group ourselves.
JJ: Fernando, what do you want viewers to take away after
watching SAND CASTLE ?
FC: That’s a complex question because there are so many
things. We always talk about war in a political way but we don’t dedicate much
of ourselves to understanding soldiers or the Iraqi people. I want everyone to
see the human side of all this with no judgment on who is bad or who is good.
That doesn’t matter and the film involves many other things. To be in a
situation like this is traumatic situation for all of the people involved.
JJ: I appreciate you taking the time to talk with me today.
FC: Absolutely, thank you for your kind words about our
film.
Director Fernando Coimbra took on the challenge of bringing
this intense and human story of soldiers and the Iraqi people during a
dangerous war. Bringing the authenticity of screenwriter Chris Roessner’s story
to film, Coimbra
has embraced every aspect and every scene is brilliantly done.
I encourage everyone to take a moment to view the film SAND CASTLE
premiering on Netflix April 21st.
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