Greta Gerwig likens herself to somewhat of a collector: she steals emotions, experiences, and conversations from throughout her life and stores them for future use. In terms of Carl Jung’s personality types, Gerwig is more sensing than intuitive in this particular instance. She uses factual experiences and real internal emotions to craft creative pieces. Consumers of Gerwig’s content feel as if she has captured the intangible experience of living in a complex and emotional world. By using universal human experiences and thus taking a more sensing approach to filmmaking, Greta Gerwig makes her audience feel understood.
During an interview about the making of Little Women (2019), Gerwig shares that she enjoys collaborating with the actors in her films in order to achieve a shared cinematic vision. She believes that differences in experience, skill, and personality foster new ideas and a more accurate depiction of the human condition. In The Creative Spark, AgustÃn Fuentes mentions that the human species began as a homogenous group in which all humans occupied a similar role. As groups of humans increased in size and migrated to different geographical areas, communities became more structured and diversified. In these new societies, humans relied on collaboration in order to function as a combined unit: each individual possessed a unique skillset and social position which the society needed. Creative thought and innovation within the society arose from these different perspectives. Whether or not she is aware, Greta Gerwig uses these primal human methods of creativity to produce innovative films.
Most recently, Greta Gerwig collaborated with her husband Noah Baumbach to write the screenplay for Barbie (2023). Much of their initial process consisted of talking through themes and important scenes which they wanted to include. Then, Gerwig and Baumbach would each take individual scenes to write themselves before editing one another’s work. Gerwig claims in an interview that “writing with someone is more fun than writing alone,” and she and her husband are able to bounce ideas off one another or help the other when stuck.
Greta Gerwig is destined to become one of the directing and screenwriting greats in our time. As she continues to collect life experiences with age, Gerwig will continue to captivate her audience with fresh yet comforting pieces.
Sources:
https://www.elle.com/uk/life-and-culture/a30377643/greta-gerwig-february-2020/
https://screencraft.org/blog/screenwriting-advice-lady-bird-writer-director-greta-gerwig/
https://www.britannica.com/biography/Greta-Gerwig
https://www.biography.com/actors/greta-gerwig
https://nofilmschool.com/greta-gerwig-screenwriting-process
Great post, I loved your connection to Creative Spark since I'm not reading that book but am still interested in it. Anthropology backing the claims of creativity is supe relevant to Gerwig, who may as well be a anthropologist herself.
ReplyDeleteLike you said, Gerwig's films are so insightful on the human condition. Barbie and Lady Bird being polar opposites regarding motive and budget but still achieving the culmination of what it means to live right now is incredible.
I remember watching Ladybird in high school and it felt like the first movie I could really relate to. I went to a Catholic high school (like Ladybird) and my room used to look like hers when I was in high school too. I felt that it was pretty accurate to my experience. I remember the dialogue and the relationships between the characters seeming more “real” to me compared to other shows and movies about high school I’ve seen at the time. It’s very interesting to see Gerwig’s roots in playwriting and “mumblecore,” and how she incorporated these methods into feature-length films to create a sense of relatability and authenticity.
ReplyDeleteLove this post ! Whenever I hear that a movie is directed/written by Gerwig, I immediately know it will be good. I think Lady Bird is especially creative because if you think about the plot by itself, not a lot really happens in the movie. It's fascinating how she can turn a relatively uneventful plot into a film that so many people relate to. She has a way of seamlessly epitomizing the shared experiences of womanhood, and it's both comforting and disarming to witness.
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