Noah Baumbach Breaks Down the ‘Marriage Story’ Courtroom Scene
Released on 01/28/2020
Hi, I'm Noah Baumbach, I'm the writer and director
of Marriage Story, and today we're doing
a one scene breakdown of the courtroom scene
from the movie.
Norah, I have to say that your account of this marriage
takes place in an alternate reality,
by suddenly moving to L.A,
and insisting on an L.A residence,
Nicole is withholding Henry.
[Judge] Counsel, please be seated.
Alienating him from his father,
which has turned Charlie's world upside down.
And the scene that's mentioned a lot to me
about the movie is the scene actually that comes after this
which is the scene where, Charlie and Nicole
end up having a fight in Charlie's apartment.
And I've done many discussions and breakdowns
of that scene, but actually I think that scene
really relies on this scene.
Because this scene is where the lawyers
sort of take control of the situation,
and Charlie and Nicole both, in essence,
lose their voices, they've hired these people
to speak for them, and it starts to go beyond
where anyone could've imagined.
They are voiceless, even though
they're being given voice,
which was an irony in the scene.
The principle reason people came to the theater.
Well, that may have been true 10 years ago.
Because Charlie and Nicole are largely silent
in this sequence, I deliberately didn't put in
a lot of direction for their characters.
I try to keep it very spare, so like, you know,
the things, it's a lot of just, physical,
like Norah turns and stares at Charlie,
Norah turns to Nicole who shrugs.
Here, we said Charlie looks humiliated.
The judge wipes his runny nose and interrupts.
It's a lot of just, very physical direction.
And I did that deliberately because,
I didn't wanna push emotion, even in the script
onto the actors, I wanted them to be present
for what was being said and to
ring themselves to it, which, of course,
we see that they do in the movie.
Nicole is withholding Henry.
[Judge] Counsel please be seated.
Alienating him from his father
which has turned Charlie's world upside down.
Counselor. It amounts to an ambush.
Withholding Jay?
Just one thing to point out is,
that's the first time we hear the judge,
which is the only time it suggests
that there's somebody else in the room with them.
'cause the experience of watching it is
almost as if it's just these people.
Chris Garbosio did the sound with me.
There's some coughs you hear,
placed like little squeaks of chairs,
'cause, you know, we didn't wanna make it
so intimate but we don't see anybody
except for them, up until this point.
Most often, the focal length is gonna be
on the lawyers and you're gonna have,
the protagonists, Charlie and Nicole,
are often out of focus in the background,
which I do like, in these sequences, because,
Laura and Ray are so dominant and also just,
such powerhouses as actors,
that you're watching the lawyers,
but if you actually think to look or do look,
there's almost this sort of slightly out of focus
expression in the background, which I think, in a way,
is more effective and more moving, because,
it does make you project at lot onto them
of what you think they must be feeling or thinking.
Actually, when we were rehearsing it,
that we had even sort of played around
with Norah standing too, but we found that, Norah,
either way, was gonna be more powerful,
staying where she was and Laura came up
with the great, taking off her coat,
and that's something that came in a costume fitting
where she was like, maybe I could have this coat
and I could take it off.
So she, in some sense, reflexes her power there,
where as Ray kinda needs to stand and point.
His character is more aggressive in that way
and more physical in that way.
Alienating, all right, those are fighting words,
and it's simply false and does nothing
to further this settlement.
[exhales loudly]
Your recap of this situation is outrageous,
and although California is, without doubt, a no fault state,
it bare mentioning in the accurate recap of this situation
that Charlie had had extramarital affairs.
An extramarital affair.
Actually a movie that we looked at,
as reference for this sequence was Dr. Strangelove
the Stanley Kubrick movie, partly because you have
so many people at tables in that movie,
there's all that stuff at the war room.
And going into this movie we knew
we were gonna have a lot of scenes
of people in either mediation, conference rooms,
courtroom, and that movie, obviously has a different tone
but it is both absurdist comedy and horror at the same time.
And I feel like what there low angle shots have
that we did our versions of if it's, you know,
Ray Liotta, there is a kind of both, I think,
an absurdity and also a menace to it.
And here, with Charlie or with Nicole,
I think there's more Pathos in it.
'cause you really feel them, sort of at the mercy
of, obviously the situation but also these rooms.
You know, this room has no windows, those lights,
the asbestos probably up there on the top of that ceiling.
It's just so impersonal, and so, again,
one way of describing this sequence is intimate,
but it's also so un-intimate at the same time.
Do you really want me to go there?
Also this scene posed a challenge
both in the writing and the directing,
because I feel like we've seen so many court room scenes.
I wanted to figure out a way of shooting a court
and really place it in the experience
of both Charlie and Nicole.
So, Robbie, the DP and I, what we did,
is we always had, the camera was always
going down the table both directions,
which always keeps you both in Charlie
and Nicole's perspective, always, which is,
something that's true in the whole movie, but,
it's maybe more notable in this scene because,
you don't see anyone behind them,
you don't see the judge until the end of the sequence,
and it's people in a row,
so they're all facing outward, it's almost Prossenium like
which also spoke to sort of themes, or performance
that are part of this movie,
they come from a theater background, and, in this case,
it's the lawyers performing, in a sense,
but there is this sort of formalized way
where everybody is standing looking forward
but they're all talking down the table.
So by flattening the space
it actually puts Charlie and Nicole closer together,
in a sense, even when they're far apart.
And I wanted to connect them always,
so that you really do feel this connection,
even though everything in the space between them
is designed to break this connection.
It was something we always talked about.
This sort of presence of love is in every scene,
no matter what.
And in this case, I think it is more,
it does have humor in it, for sure.
You also have these like, take out coffee cups,
and the water cups, just sort of all the,
transitional rooms where there are all these people
just doing their jobs but for you,
for Charlie and Nicole it's their lives.
So, even having just these coffee cups
that are gonna make a journey through this room
and then just be thrown out on the way out,
I find something touching about that.
Yeah, let's go there.
Okay. [chuckling]
Nicole has admitted to hacking Charlie's computer
and reading his emails, which, if proven, is a felony.
And Norah, I don't think you'd be too happy
if I asked Nicole about her alcohol consumption.
We shot the movie in one, six, six, which is,
a slightly narrower on the sides aspect ratio.
When we were testing that movie,
it really was shots like this
that lead us to that decision, because,
I find it frames the faces just beautifully
and this is a shot that is not dissimilar
to shots that we've seen previously in the movie
where Charlie is out of focus in the background
and Nicole is in focus or vice-versa.
You feel Charlie there, even though
he's really just a blur, maybe even just his hands there,
you know, but this is also something, I mean,
without these two actors,
these shots are kind of meaningless,
you have just how much they convey and express silently,
I think it's really beautiful.
And this framing is not new, at this point in the movie too
because even in earlier sequences,
even when it's just Charlie and Nicole in a room
we've often lined them up in profile.
One of the opening scenes in the movie,
when they come home and relieve the babysitter
and there's early tension between them.
They're standing quite far apart from each other
while they're having a conversation
and we shoot very deliberately through her face
to him and his face to her.
Of course, then at times,
we go very close on them.
In a way, I feel like we almost go inside them
I mean it was like we get so close
that you can really project it to what they're thinking.
Her alcohol consumption in the evenings.
What?
She confided in Charlie one night recently,
having just carried Henry to bed,
that she was having trouble standing
while walking down the staircase, and from what I understand
I actually generally don't like rack focusings
'cause it's, I don't know, I feel like it's used
so literally, there was something about this scene
that I felt almost pushed us to the point
that we had to do this, that because of, you know,
the previous shot we were looking at
where this sort of notion of connection
even if one person's out of focus in the background.
On one hand, you're so with Scarlett
and her anteriority, but again,
Adam is sort of just suggested in the background.
And then here we go and we kind of match it
with Adam's anteriority and you just see
the feeling and the depth of feeling
on his face, it is one of those things
where sometimes, I feel like a movie pushes you
and challenges you to change style.
The emotionality of the movie frees something up technically
that we're able to do something
that we weren't able to do previously,
and that's what happens here.
It's gotten to a certain point in this scene, where
I felt like I wanna see her in connection with him,
and I want them both in focus,
but we can't keep them both in focus,
unless of course, we did a split diopter,
which we're not gonna do.
It's almost like the camera is trying
to keep them both in focus but can't.
Like, where technical and emotional meet.
A rack focus I always liked from another movie
Is in The Graduate when, Elaine discovers that
her mother and Benjamin have been together.
She turns around and we rack focus to Anne Bancroft,
and then she turns back around, and she's in the foreground.
It doesn't rerack yet, so she's out of focus,
but we know and can project what her reaction is
now discovering that her mother has been
in a relationship with her boyfriend,
and so when it does catch up to her,
it's more moving, it's very emotional.
The rack we did is not, doesn't imitate that,
but the, you know, the earlier sequences, again,
of projecting onto the person you can't quite see.
We're having this moment between the two of them,
it's quite intimate, or at least,
our observation of it is, but meanwhile,
all this crap is going on in the middle.
They're still talking.
You see even their hands, like Ray's hand
and Laura's hand, that they're all still,
going at it and saying stuff and we have this,
sort of silent moment that isn't even really between them
it's our connecting them,
it's not them being connected themselves.
This is not an isolated event,
so you let me know Norah, we'll go there as needed.
Charlie, can I ask you, how you expect to have more time
with Henry when you don't exercise
the time you already have?
We've seen, previously in the movie,
this sort of every day events of these people's lives
that are now being used as sort of weapons
by the lawyers in this scene,
things earlier in the script where,
they're trying to put the car seat into the car
or Nicole confesses to maybe have had
a little too much wine because she was nervous
before she had to serve Charlie.
And I watched both court procedural
and also thrillers, I watched a lot of Hitchcock movies
just because I wanted to see,
sort of how things are layered in,
things that are gonna come back later.
So like, on page 51, when Nicole and Charlie
are walking down the stairs,
they both head down the stairs,
Nicole sways for a second and clutches the banister,
Charlie takes her arm.
Woop, I'm sorry, I drank too much wine.
We shot it very particularly and you know,
you see her foot go down because I wanted it,
unconsciously, to be something that would stay
in the audience's, you know, memory,
because it's gonna come back later in the courtroom
that she drank too much, it's gonna become, again,
weaponized, where as, at this point, this is, you know,
two human beings just having regular conversation.
He's totally understanding, he says, I can imagine,
stressful time, and, but later, it becomes this other thing.
Oh wait no it's not in.
What's not in?
The seat's not connected.
The other thing that's mentioned,
where Charlie now has come back out to L.A
and he's got a rental car and Nicole discovers
that the seat's not connected and you know,
Charlie leans in, the car seat isn't connected to anything.
Charlie and Nicole both crouch closely together
in the back seat, share a small laugh.
[both chuckling]
It's just two human beings talking, it's not,
there's nothing extreme or, we all can understand
what happened there and they're fixing the problem.
But it's gonna become something later
that the lawyers use and again that they weaponize
in this negotiation.
It was just sitting in the back seat.
You have to buckle in the car seat, it's the law.
I know that, I thought the car rental place did it.
No they can't do it, it's a liability.
I know that now.
Once we discovered that, we fixed it.
Counsel, I'm fairly certain you haven't exhausted,
in good faith the arguments in the case of this child.
In the meantime we'll keep the status quo.
This remains an L.A family for the time being.
So I'm going to appoint an expert.
We go from the judge to the judge,
it's a strange cut, but I feel like it connects them
more than if we did it more elegantly.
It's all about their perspective, you know,
and it's in the opening sequence,
with a mediator as well, played by Robert Smigel.
For it to really work, you both have to.
You're cutting on the same person,
it's a very strange way of cutting.
So we're over Adam's shoulder here to the judge
and there was subplot that the judge had a cold,
which I'll just point that out, there's a tissue box,
and then we go over Nicole's shoulder.
In a sense, it almost looks like a mistake.
Now we're over her shoulder to the judge,
so we're going from the judge to the judge,
so we're just staying on him,
there's the tissues again.
And there are his used tissues, again, subplot.
It really aligned them,
it keeps it always, it keeps telling that story
of Charlie and Nicole and keeping it in
in their perspective, that they're seeing
the same thing at the same time,
and so much of the story, both visually,
in the writing, but also very much visually
was designed to always remain in
one or both of their perspectives.
[book clapping]
Starring: Noah Baumbach
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