OFD: Clooney/Pfeiffer interview
source: Flicks, AU, date: 1997
Patrick Stoner: In order for the witty repartee
in ONE FINE DAY to work, the dialogue's pacing has to be much
faster than we're used to hearing, doesn't it?
George Clooney: Yes. In fact, we had
to keep speeding it up. We would do a scene, and then we would
look at the tape, and Michelle would say, "It's got to be
faster." And I would agree. So, we would do it again, and
it would still need to be faster when we looked at the tape.
We just kept speeding it up until it felt VERY strange while
we were doing it, but it looked and sounded right when you
viewed it. Strange, huh?
Stoner: It IS, but the director, Michael
Hoffman, has a theory about that. Let me run it by both of
you: He says that when we're in a room like this one, just
talking, we're getting data from a lot of sources -- out of
the sides of our eyes, things heard around the corner -- extraneous
information that we barely notice. BUT, when you FRAME a shot
and isolate attention to, say, two people verbally sparring,
you can take in that limited information much faster because
you don't have all of the competing stuff. Not bad, huh?
Clooney: Not bad at ALL. That must be
why it felt so different when doing it but worked when you
viewed it on playback. Of course, that's the way I like to
work anyhow -- just throw the lines away, not try to fill
the space with anything. On E.R. -- whatever I do -- I'm always
just throwing them away because I'm not good enough to fill
the spaces with anything else. That's just what makes ME comfortable.
Michelle Pfeiffer: That's also why everything
had to be so PRECISE. If you're going to speed through the
dialogue, everything -- every movement, every nuance -- must
have a purpose. It should LOOK casual but BE precise. For
example, in this film there are split-screen phone calls --
George on one side of the screen, me on the other, talking
to each other. Every move had to be choreographed so it would
match what the other was doing. That's the kind of thing that
can drive an actor crazy. You know, "Tilt your head this way.
No, just a little more. Then look up THERE and left THERE."
A lot of meticulous planning went into looking spontaneous.
Stoner: And the echoes of those old
movies were everywhere. Did you have a particular favorite?
Pfeiffer: I just LOVE Katharine Hepburn.
I think she's just about the perfect actress. I would watch
her old films on TV -- I never got to see them in the movies
-- and would just marvel at how good she was. Of course, the
parts she played were attractive too -- strong but feminine,
independent but not competitive. She played women who were
comfortable with themselves, and she seemed to attract men
who were comfortable with that. I miss those films, and that's
why I wanted to do this one.