Toronto
International Film Festival Webcast
- 1997
interview > Ray
Pride
source > Harmony
Special K
::
Korine expresses disappointment that more journalists had not
been rude to him if they don't like his work.
Harmony Korine: I would
like that instead of these polite questions like, 'Do you feel
like you're exploiting people?' Exploiting people, I don't know
what they mean.
I wondered how he reacted to
critics who will drag out the dread label, "self -
indulgent" to describe Gummo.
Harmony Korine: How can an artist be expected not to be
self - indulgent? That's the whole thing that's wrong with
filmmaking today. Ninety nine percent of the films you see do not
qualify as works of art. To me, art is one man's voice, one idea,
one point - of - view, coming from one person. Self - indulgent to
me means it's one man's obsession. That's what great artists bring
to the table. When fucking critics or whatever say, 'he's self -
indulgent,' I don't know what that means. The reason I stopped
watching films is because so many people lack any kind of self -
indulgence. But I don't believe in being boring.
So 'boring' is a scarier word?
Harmony Korine: Oh much more. Entertaining, to me, is what
it's all about. We can talk about aesthetics and influence but in
the end when I go to see anything all I want is to be entertained
in a different way. It could be informative or shocking but I want
to be entertained. I don't want to be bored by the bland and
generic. Film is like a dead art because of people not taking
chances.
What kind of film is Gummo?
Harmony Korine: Oh, it's completely Southern, it's totally,
one - hundred percent Southern. I'm a Southern boy so how would it
not be? I'd say Gummo is an American film; it's Southern,
but it's strange. But it fucks with it, it's a genre - fuck. I
love the South, love it, love it. I didn't leave until I was 18. I
had to move out to understand it. I couldn't have made that film
if I hadn't left Tennessee for those four or five years.
Gummo is overtly an
experimental narrative, and under the Time Warner name as the Fine
Line logo unfurls, a child chants the film's first words, "Peanut
butter, peanut butter, motherfucker."
Harmony Korine: I love it, I love it. To me that's the most
exciting thing. That to me is the future. The most subversive
thing you can do with this kind of work, the most radical kind of
work, is to place it in the most commercial venue. I have a novel
coming out in April called "A Crackup At The Race Riots,"
from Doubleday, and that's Michael Crichton's label. It's the most
fucked - up book, but to me that's exciting. When Godard did Breathless,
the reason it became influential and changed the cinematic
vernacular is that it came out in a commercial context. I only
think things change when they're put out to the masses, regardless
if somebody dislikes them. The Velvet Underground put out their
first album, and almost nobody bought it, but everyone who did
started a band that sounded just like them. For me to put it out
to as many people as I can get it to is much more subversive than
if you're giving it to the same three theatres with the same crowd
that always goes to see this kind of film.
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