HBO's "Sex and The City" director, David Frankel, leaps from little box to big screen with The Devil Wears Prada, based on the novel of the same-title about the fashionistic world of editor Miranda Priestly (Meryl Streep) and her fresh-from-school assistant Andy (Anne Hathaway). "The character of Miranda attracted me to this project," says Frankel. "She's a character we don't see often, if ever. She's strong, powerful, funny and complex, and it was important to take her seriously-not to mock her or her world-because she takes it very seriously."
"So, [screenwriter] Aline Brosh McKenna and I worked hard to create moments in the first third of the film showing characters clearly taking their jobs seriously. That allows-well almost forces-Andy to take it seriously, which encourages audiences to take it seriously and care. If you stand outside the fashion world-or even in it-you see it can be silly, hilarious or self-satirizing. But, in fact, we all worry about what we wear and it's a huge business. Someone has to make fashion decisions and only a handful of people do. So, isn't that an interesting character? And wouldn't working for her be fascinating? That was our approach."
MERIN: How much truth is there that Miranda's based on Vogue's Anna Wintour?
FRANKEL: Meryl based Miranda on a composite of people. We wanted to make Miranda well rounded. Yes, I want to see her warts, and yes, I want to see her be mean. But I also want to see her work ethic, what drives her and makes her excellent, and the sacrifices she makes and how she charms people.
How'd you get attached to Prada?
[Producer] Wendy Finerman sent me the script. She'd been working on it for two years with four writers by that point. I'd never read the book. The script was funny, but it was a movie I didn't want to make-a bit disrespectful, campier in tone, straining for comedy. I felt comedy should come out of the characters. The movie shouldn't be jokey. We had to treat the characters seriously, make a funny movie without making fun of the characters.
Did you reference Altman's Prêt-A-Porter or other fashion-oriented films?
I saw Prêt-A-Porter when it came out but didn't reference it. It seemed to highlight the fashion world's silliness and what's pointless about it. I feel people already know that-it's a preconception. In making our film, I wanted to show reality. Yes, clothes are superficial. We could walk around naked, and if everyone did, our lives wouldn't be that different. But they don't. So, clothes have meaning. They're clues to character. Andy's makeover is a character transformation.
The formative film for me was Unzipped, the Isaac Mizrahi documentary. He's exuberant, flamboyant, funny-revels in some of the silliness of the fashion world, but is also very serious, and his life's very demanding. Unzipped showed how difficult and challenging it is to be excellent every time out-and be judged mercilessly by so many people. Miranda, although not a designer, puts out a magazine every month: judging designers and being judged herself. The magazine that's celebrating this world has to take it seriously.
But doesn't Prada satirize?
Well, yes. But there's a fine balance point. I mean, in the movie, Nigel [Stanley Tucci] says at one of the photo shoots, "I can't believe I talk about this crap all day." And, that's like all of us: You know, I can't believe I'm on a movie set all day worrying about cameras and lenses. It's the same thing.
What would you say is your directorial strength: visual composition, working with actors, storytelling?
I think I'm a good audience. That's the best thing I bring. I'm decent at all the tasks a director must do, and I've done a broad range of work-"Band of Brothers" and "Sex in the City" in the same year.
Most important is to be able to gauge audience emotions and know, yes, this is funny-people are going to laugh here-and, yes, this is where they're going to feel, and the rhythm of this dialogue is good or not. For everything else, I surround myself with excellent craftsmen and let them do their jobs. Like Patricia Fields [Costumes] or Florian Ballhaus [DP].
So, where did you need most help?
I got help everywhere. Great writing support, Jess [Gonchor], the production designer, the producers. Jokingly, I'd say, "I'm just here to get the ball rolling and say when to stop."
What's your shooting ratio?
With Meryl, it was on the lower side because she's good from the beginning, and I didn't want her to get mad at me. I kind of tortured everyone else-I'd say it was probably 15 to one.
How do you know when you're done?
They usually say you have to stop. No, really, you have an instinct; just know the choreography of performance and camera came together. In comedy, it's if you laugh-especially if you're still laughing on take 10.
Often, you have something you're going for, and you drive poor actors into the ground until they give you that. But I have them do what I imagined last-it's more interesting to see what they imagine. That's why I do many takes-I want them to do every variation they can think of. 'Cause that's when magic happens-when they're being the characters, not when they're told who the character is.
Do you set shots in advance?
I like to see what actors do first: That comes from my having seen this great documentary on Stanley Kubrick's passive planning. He didn't say anything to actors-just saw what they did.
Inevitably-well, 99 percent of the time-their instincts are better than anything I'd think of. Then we figure out shots. Shots aren't that important. I mean you want them to be sexy, but the most important thing is the characters.
What's a sexy shot?
When there's intimacy and you have the privilege of getting to know someone who's attractive. A scene's sexy 'cause it's a place I'd want to be. Paris is sexy, New York's super sexy.
Patricia Fields' costumes create characters. Did you and she use color to key emotions or mood?
The biggest design conceit is the whiteness of the office. We wanted it to glow-like the inside of a compact. This was a special cage, dramatically different from Andy's life on the Lower East Side. So the office gives the film contrast-every time you step out of it, you sense you're leaving a rarified world. Beyond that, Pat had full license to do her work, and I think it was the design factor more than color that determined individual styles.
Is there a big difference for you between small and big screen directorial experience?
Well, I got to work with movie stars like Meryl Streep and that was fantastic. Also, film's a director's medium. On "Sex and the City," there were many terrific writers with whom you'd collaborate on set. Here, the studio was supportive and confident and sent me off to make the film. That's a little scary until you sort of find your legs. There is a more expansive budget. The studio managed the film like one of their children. I got everything and everyone I hoped for in the movie.
And, it's really satisfying and fun to sit in a room full of people in front of a really big screen. You don't get that experience in TV.