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Film

The director who sent Brad Pitt into space

James Gray's Ad Astra is about the father-son relationship

September 11, 2019 15:07
Brad Pitt in Ad Astra

ByStephen Applebaum, Stephen Applebaum

4 min read

James Gray emerges from a bathroom in a London hotel room with his face and hands dripping cold water. Surprised to see I’ve already been ushered in by a publicist, he explains that he’s been in Europe for a while, presenting Ad Astra, the film we’re here to discuss, and, following a sleepless night, is fighting to keep himself awake. He’d hoped splashing his face before our interview might help. “So, hello!” he says brightly, settling onto a sofa.

He hits his stride quickly and in no time is lucidly pondering the connection between himself as, “dare I use a dirty word, an artist”, and his films. “History and myth begin in the microcosm of the personal,” offers Gray. “You try to remove the wall between yourself and the work.”

One of his favourite filmmakers, Martin Scorsese, achieved this with his fierce exploration of masculinity, Raging Bull, he suggests, by way of illustration. “It looks like he took his self-destruction of the late 70s and he said, ‘Here’s what it is: I almost killed myself with everything I did.’”

Gray, who grew up in a Jewish family in Queens, New York, similarly infused his doom-laden, 1994 directorial debut, Little Odessa, with the pain he was carrying following his mother’s death from brain cancer. He developed the story for his fourth feature, Two Lovers, after tests before the birth of his first child revealed, to his “shock and embarassment”, that he was “positive for a whole host of genetic disorders [including Tay-Sachs and Gaucher’s disease] that I would have passed along to my children, if my wife had had them too.”