Studio system still alive with Henry Jaglom
By Martin A. Grove
NEW YORK (Hollywood Reporter) - There's little that's independent about indie filmmakers since they're dependent on distributors and financiers.
Exception: writer-director Henry Jaglom, whose 17th film "Irene in Time" is expanding after its mid-June L.A. launch. Jaglom has achieved his own form of independence by recreating on a mini scale at his Rainbow Film Co. the studio system that prevailed in Hollywood's Golden Age.
First, he's got an actress under contract, Tanna Frederick, whose career he's developing. He introduced her in his 2006 romantic dramedy "Hollywood Dreams" and now she's starring in "Irene." They're already on their second three-year contract.
"In four years she's done three plays, two movies that have come out and a third that we've shot," he explained, referring to his upcoming "Queen of the Lot." "I'm trying to find roles that excite what I think is her talent."
That approach used to be routine in Hollywood.
"I'm in my David O. Selznick phase," is how Jaglom describes it. When he discovered Tanna he thought, "Okay, I've been directing films for quite a while. I've never wanted to do this before, but she has something magical -- but it needs a real push."
Translation: She doesn't look like the kind of girl next door that studios sign for TV series. Still, Jaglom says his reaction to Tanna's potential is what Selznick must have felt with Jennifer Jones or Ingrid Bergman.
"Irene" reflects Jaglom's love for 1940's movies "where there is some magical element of love beating time." Hence, this romantic dramedy about a father who died early in the daughter's life and the daughter who can't find anyone able to fulfill the kind of love she felt from her father.
In the end -- there are multiple interpretations -- time is defeated as father and daughter are happily reunited.
Jaglom's putting his money where his mouth is to make Tanna a star. Most filmmakers couldn't do that because they'd have to answer to a studio or to moneymen who'd complain she's not bankable.
"The financing has worked out for years from a very simple formula," he said. In the early '70s Jaglom went to Cannes where Francis Coppola was selling foreign rights to "The Conversation." "He was going around selling a film that didn't exist yet."
Jaglom was there with a 16mm print of his first movie, "A Safe Place," which had failed in the U.S., and saw how Coppola was raising money territory by territory. Jaglom asked his actor friend Zack Norman, who'd raised the financing for his first three films and has appeared in Jaglom's movies ever since, "Why can't we just do this on a smaller level? If Francis is getting $300,000 from Germany, maybe we can get $60,000 from Germany."
He cobbled together a million bucks for his 1976 drama "Tracks." "My films started getting awards and doing well at art cinemas in Europe," he recalled, but he "couldn't get anybody to come in America."
As his reputation in Europe grew, distributors started advancing him money: "I remember one contract was called Jaglom's Number 6, 7 & 8."
He's been following that pattern happily ever after. Holding the line on budgets -- "Irene" cost a little over $2 million -- maintains Jaglom's filmmaking independence. Continued...




