Alfonso: "The collaboration with Chivo is from start to finish, it is not only in the image. It goes beyond that." It was Chivo's idea to bring in Bruno Delbonnel as an alternate camera, who "was tasked mostly with shooting the sections that are told in the third person, which pertain to people in Catherine's life", using hand held and zooms. The stuff in Catherine's present were shot in long takes with Chivo learning to 'dance' with Cate Blanchett. "Chivo is an alchemist," Cuaron says. "He challenges creative and technological limitations." (LA Times.) They don't consider it a series but a 'long movie' in 'chapters'. Cuaron's 300 page screenplay was written like that. It also contains extraordinarily detailed information about the light in a scene, the angle of the sun, the colour of the sky.
Stunning opening on train as the light bounces around the carriage. Alfonso's gone back to using iris dissolves!
The only thing is, we didn't really see why Alfonso needed these explicit sex scenes. Even the seduction - excuse me, we'd best start talking about actors here - the scene where Leila George as the young Catherine seduces Louis Partridge just is horrible, the poor kid looks so uncomfortable, she's so the vamp. And then - we got it, and I was thinking of Hitch's controversial 'lying flashback' in Stage Fright - a director we know Cuaron loves, and it all makes horrible sense. And why the first girlfriend doesn't want to know him. And even the Kylie reference is in there.
Have to mention the ever-present cats. And those skies!
With Cate Blanchett (she does this kind of role so well, cf. Blue Jasmine) are Sasha Baron Cohen and Kodi Smit McPhee (The Power of the Dog), Kevin Kline and Lesley Manville, Jung Ho-yeon, Liv Hill, Gemma Jones and Indira Varma as the narrator. The second person narration is an intriguing idea.
It's incredibly done, particularly the rescue of the boy (presaged by an umbrella floating along the beach, shades of Azkaban) and drowning - what seemed like 20 minutes of riveting television. (Like the end of Roma.)
With its sub-text of fake news and faked narratives, it couldn't be more timely.