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Let's Talk About Sox
by Curt Holman
Creative Loafing, June 9, 2005
Let's Talk About Sox
The world's first sock-puppet feature film
BY CURT HOLMAN
(the following was taken from
the online version of the article available at creativeloafing.com)
A tough, trench-coated detective investigates a mysterious disappearance
and an alluring femme fatale in a city on a wartime footing. The
Lady from Sockholm unspools familiar plot threads from film noir,
only the 70-minute feature is entirely populated by, um, sock
puppets. Writer/director Lynn Lamousin, winner of the festival's
2004 Southeastern Media Award, talks about sewing up the Atlanta-based
production, co-directed by Evan Lieberman and Creative Loafing
contributor Eddy Von Mueller, and filling the shoes of Lambchop
and Pets.com's spokespuppet.
Creative Loafing: Why devote a feature film to sock puppets?
Lamousin: I wasn't initially interested in sock puppets - I wanted
to do a spoof of film noir and detective movies. I wanted to write
a short script that I could easily make. I thought about using
inanimate objects, and then hit on the idea of sock puppets. I
thought it would be creative and easy to do, but it was creative
and really hard to do.
The film finds far more funny puns on feet, socks and
laundry than I'd expect. Did you write with a thesaurus on your
lap?
When I work on a project, I become hypersensitive to the subject
matter. I remember watching a cop movie and hearing the line "I'm
going to take you downtown as a material witness" and thinking
"I've got to write that down!" I went online and got
ideas from sewing terms and types of fabric. I tried not to use
any pun twice - I had pages of additional puns that I couldn't
find places for.
Were the sock puppets difficult movie stars?
The actors are essentially just as long as your forearm, so I
had to find someone who could build in miniature. Jeffrey Zwartjes,
who I call "the mad genius," used to work for the Center
for Puppetry Arts and really saved us by making lots of our sets
and puppets. Since the puppeteers had to stand, everything was
raised off the ground about 6 to 8 feet. Plus, we had a set built
out of paper and hot glue, and our actors were made of fabric,
so it was easy to break things, and the scenes where we lit stuff
on fire were incredibly risky.
Did people think you were crazy to make a sock puppet
movie?
Fortunately, right after I finished, the script was a finalist
in the Slamdance and Cinestory screenwriting competitions, which
gave me something to back it up. Whenever I'd tell strangers about
it outside the film industry, I'd get two very distinct reactions:
It's either the funniest thing they've ever heard, or it's crickets
chirping.
I understand the story has a 9/11 inspiration, which
isn't what you'd expect from sock puppets.
My hero had to investigate something, and I thought, "Of
course, a missing sock!" It needed to be more involved than
that, though. This wasn't long after 9/11 and my mother in Baton
Rouge was really freaked out, telling me, "Don't tell anybody
you're Lebanese!" Which sounded crazy, but people who looked
foreign had been victims of violence or vandalism. Film noir often
involves war and espionage, so I thought, "What if it's Wool
War II, and America's fighting the Wool army, but the hero, Terrence
Cotton, is secretly a cotton/wool blend?"
How far can sock puppets take you?
The Lady from Sockholm has been accepted at film festivals in
Orlando and Ontario, so that's where it goes next. I've written
other screenplays, but lately I've been thinking about a sock
puppet Western. I love the idea of doing more films like this
and having the same "actors," like Terrence Cotton,
play different roles. It would be like Wes Anderson's films, in
which the same players keep turning up. Only the puppet version.
The Lady from Sockholm plays Sun., June 12, 5 p.m., at the
Rialto Center for the Performing Arts, 80 Forsyth St. www.rialtocenter.org.
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