Robin Wright, Demian Bichir on the Power of Filmmaking in the Wilderness on ’Land’

In her directorial debut “Land,“ Robin Wright stars as Edee, a woman who searches for meaning in the harsh American wilderness following a near-death experience. The film takes place across two-and-a-half years, and the cast and crew pulled it off in just 29 days. “There were a number of times where we’d be shooting a summer scene or an early scene and all of a sudden: 75-mile-an-hour winds,” Wright told senior film writer Matt Donnelly at the Variety Studio, presented by AT&T TV at the Sundance Film Festival. “We’d have to run back to the tent and change into winter wear and shoot year two in winter in a matter of 20 minutes.” Not only did the wilderness set the pace, but it helped Wright get into character. She lived in a trailer on the film’s mountainside location and was able to wake up to the peacefulness of nature. A self-described “city rat“ himself, Bichir reveled in the wilderness’ beauty. “Every time I have a chance to be in front of nature… you’r
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