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The Cosa click-bait: Gia Coppola on her YouTube culture satire

  (Agence France-Presse)
Venice, Italy
Tue, September 8, 2020

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The Cosa click-bait: Gia Coppola on her YouTube culture satire US director Gia Coppola arrives for the screening of the film 'Mainstream' presented in the Orizzonti competition on the fourth day of the 77th Venice Film Festival, on September 5, 2020 at Venice Lido, during the COVID-19 infection, caused by the novel coronavirus. (AFP/Alberto Pizzoli)

H

er grandfather Francis Ford Coppola made "The Godfather", so it's hardly surprisingly that family plays an outsized role in Gia Coppola's life and her blossoming career as a director.

As the niece of Sofia Coppola -- who directed "Virgin Suicides" and "Lost in Translation" -- Gia Coppola spent a chunk of her childhood on her aunt's sets.

And it clearly rubbed off.  

Screenings for "Mainstream", her satire on YouTubers and the often toxic culture of social media influencers, booked out at the Venice film festival before you could say click to subscribe.

And for once the festival's hottest ticket did not disappoint, with a mesmerizing performance by British actor Andrew Garfield as a charismatic drifter who becomes an online sensation.

Read also: Don't call me an actress, says Cate Blanchett

'Victim to validation' 

Made from the gut, and using YouTubers' own graphic tricks and emojis -- the female lead vomits broken hearts when her boyfriend cheats on her -- Coppola said she felt compelled to recount what she was witnessing around her.

"A friend of mine was representing influencers and I just couldn't get it. She said there are so mainstream but mainstream doesn't get it yet," Coppola told AFP.

"These people have millions of followers and a huge impact. I was a curious about the power these people can hold.

"All of these questions about how we are victim to validation through likes and what constitutes popularity were floating in my head" as she wrote the script, she added.

"Do we want to come together or are we just going to be selfish and bullying?" she asked.

"There was a lot of feeling alien in the current cultural climate, and where do you fit on social media," the 33-year-old said. 

'Fun to work with family' 

Garfield is no relation to Coppola but it sometimes feels like everyone else involved in the movie is somehow related in one way or another to Hollywood royalty.

Maya Hawke, the eldest child of Uma Thurman and Ethan Hawke, is the film's heart, a struggling Generation Z bartender trying to break through as a YouTuber. 

After she chances on Garfield, the star of Netflix's "Stranger Things" gets a helping hand from an online svengali played by Jason Schwartzman (Coppola's cousin, and son of "The Goldfather" and "Rocky" stalwart Talia Shire, nee Coppola).

Coppola's mother, Jacqui de la Fontaine, did the costume design.

"It's fun to work with your family,  especially Jason," Coppola told AFP, who roped in a bunch of the Kilmer clan for her well-observed 2013 debut film, "Palo Alto". 

"We are making small films and we want to make a little family out of it," added the director, whose friend Autumn Durald was behind the camera for both movies.

Like "Palo Alto", set in the California town that gave the world some of Silicon Valley's biggest names, "Mainstream" could be taken a parable of what happens when a good girl meets a bad boy.

"It is an old story for women, but it's true. When you love someone and you want to be loved, and you let go of your morals and your instincts to put your energy into someone. When that person is dangerous, that gets scary," she said.

Coppola insisted this was not drawn from her own life. "I really don't have experience of dangerous charismatic men, but I like those sort of characters on film.

"'Palo Alto' felt like a coming of age story of your teens and this to me feels a coming of age story of your 20s," she added.

"I am not making movies for movies' sake. It is where I was at in my life. I can only work with things that I'm connected to."

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