You have a real knack for capturing the teenage world, whether it’s in the Teenage Apocalypse trilogy or Mysterious Skin, Kaboom, etc. What are some of your favorite films centered on teenagers?
Like River’s Edge!
[Laughs] River’s Edge is clearly a big one for both of us.
I’m trying to think of any specific movies I saw when I was growing up. I can’t think of a specific one, but I think of the genre in general as being interesting and resonant for me as an audience member, and certainly as a filmmaker. Things like Rebel Without a Cause and stuff.
I think one reason why I’m so attracted to that generation as a subject is because when you’re young and unformed, there’s a world of confusion and possibility. I find that the older you get, like every decade... I mean, I’m in my 60s now, but when you turn 30, when you turn 40, when you turn 50, you get more and more settled, more and more comfortable, more and more comfortable in your skin. Happier, too. I mean, I’m happier than I’ve ever been. But at the same time, I think a movie about my life would be super boring. Nothing really ever happens; you know what I mean?
Whereas when you’re young, the whole world is a scary place, but it’s a world of possibility. You’re unformed, you don’t know who you are, you don’t know who you’re going to be, you don’t know if you’re going to fall in love, if you’re going to be straight, gay, bi, trans: it’s all an open book. As an artist, that is such an interesting power for me. That’s why I’m gravitated towards that.
I’m not really that interested in a movie about certain things. Like, I don’t have kids, so I’m not going to write a movie about a single mother. Or a couple getting divorced, like that Scenes from a Marriage show—that’s just so not interesting to me. Literally, just some middle-aged married people and they have problems. That’s not really my thing. [Laughs] I mean, even in Now Apocalypse, the characters are, like, 25. I pitching it, talking about how they’re all that age where you’re just searching for who you’re going to be. It’s all about the search. Once you turn 30, 40, 50, you find it—hopefully. The finding of it is not interesting. It’s the searching that’s interesting, isn’t it?