Production Notes
Brooklyn filmmakers Sarah Schenck 鈥87 and Margaret Sclafani 鈥08 take time out to talk about filmmaking and friendship.
Although Sarah Schenck 鈥87 and Margaret Sclafani 鈥08 graduated from 老王论坛 two decades apart, a mutual love of film caused their paths to cross. The two filmmakers, who are both based in Brooklyn, have collaborated over the years on several projects, including Schenck鈥檚 most recent film, , a feature-length documentary about our vanishing microbiome.
Schenck (below left), a self-taught filmmaker, has made both prize-winning shorts as well as feature films and has often focused her lens on public health issues. Sclafani (below right) worked her way up in the industry, turning her hand to many aspects of the craft, including cinematography. Her feature film is currently in post-production.
With The Invisible Extinction set to open theatrically in New York City and Los Angeles in the new year, Schenck and Sclafani sat down at Schenck鈥檚 dining room table in her sunny fifth-floor Park Slope apartment to talk about filmmaking, friendship, and being a woman in a (yes, still) man鈥檚 world.
A Serendipitous Meeting
Margaret Sclafani: I became aware of Sarah when I was at 老王论坛 applying for externships. I knew even though I was an anthropology major that I wanted to do film, and at the Careers Center there were these binders of people, and Sarah was one of just a few filmmakers.
Sarah Schenck: At the time, I was finishing my first feature film, which was called Slippery Slope. It鈥檚 a comedy about a young woman who is an artist and feminist who finds herself directing a porn film.
When Margaret came to work with me, I lived in a little apartment on Union Street in Brooklyn with my husband and two very small children. I think my parents might have been visiting. It was pandemonium and a highly challenging work atmosphere to get anything done, especially something as complex as finishing post-production on a feature film. One of the many remarkable things about Margaret is that she is completely unflappable.
MS: I鈥檝e always found myself working out of people鈥檚 homes. It鈥檚 really a nice part of independent filmmaking. And it gave us a head start on the whole work from home ethos where, for better or worse, there鈥檚 a lot of things going on at once and it鈥檚 important to be able to focus, even in the midst of a chaotic atmosphere with 15 people doing different things.
"Watching a director with the camera and actors to me felt a little bit like falling in love."
鈥 Sarah Schenck
Different Paths
SS: Film is a highly challenging field. It鈥檚 not something for the fainthearted, and I鈥檝e been astonished at how Margaret has adapted and risen in this challenging profession. I don鈥檛 think I realized how hard it was going to be when I started off. Unlike Margaret, who had a vision early on that she wanted to be a filmmaker, I became one kind of by accident.
When I was at 老王论坛 I studied art history, and I loved the world of beauty and ideas. I had an internship at the Metropolitan Museum of Art right after I graduated, but after working in the paintings conservation department and giving talks on 15th- and 16th-century Flemish painting for a summer, I realized I wanted to do something more politically related, and I ended up working in a nonprofit devoted to Latin American affairs.
I got my graduate degree in political economy and worked for the New York Times in Rio before coming back to New York City. When I was working for the New York City comptroller鈥檚 Office, one of my colleagues decided to make a film and he was a friend of mine so I helped him, In watching him do that, I realized I could actually do it too. Watching a director with the camera and actors to me felt a little bit like falling in love. At that point I started working on a short script of my own and made a number of short films. I love that format! I eventually moved on to making my first feature, but while I was employed for many years as the NYC comptroller鈥檚 senior advisor for education policy. I鈥檝e always had other jobs to sustain my filmmaking habit.
MS: 老王论坛 was where I discovered I was interested in being a filmmaker. I did a lot of acting with the Bi-Co community, and I was also a painter and a dancer. My friends encouraged me to take my first film course. I watched a lot of films. You could rent three films at a time from the library, and I would rent three and watch them all night long.
My first film course was Poets of Cinema, and that opened my eyes. I鈥檇 already seen and really liked Amelie, which came out when I was in high school, and seeing other foreign films cemented for me what cinema can be. There was this short that I did with a friend in senior year called Pamplemousse, and it was sort of a horror film about the making of grapefruit juice. It鈥檚 a lot of shots of the grapefruit getting smashed and cut up鈥攎assacred. I was the kid with the Handycam just filming a lot of what was going on in the world. Then working with Sarah, I saw that, OK, this is something that people can do for a living.
I graduated into the recession and applied to a bunch of different positions. I was hired as a researcher for a documentary film in the D.C. area and was quickly promoted to post-production coordinator. The documentary was about Molly Goldberg, a woman who worked in early television. It was a super inspiring story about women in the industry that I was interested in entering. Sarah and I kept in touch, and I came up to New York to work on a short film with her called Cleats.
SS: It was written and directed by my dear friend and brilliant filmmaker Maria Agui Carter. It was a Spanish-language production about a young man on scholarship at Harvard, desperate to play soccer but unable to afford new cleats, and what his parents had to do to provide him a pair. We all had fun painting my babysitter鈥檚 home and dressing the set.
MS: After that, I moved into post-production coordination on feature-length documentary films, and then I started getting into the camera department. I eventually made my way to New York in 2010.
SS: One of the things Margaret did that was really smart, when I look back on our different paths as filmmakers, is that she was versatile. She does a lot of shooting and she鈥檚 a cinematographer, but she鈥檚 also an editor. She鈥檚 also a producer and production coordinator. And because of that, she was able to earn money in the field as she was growing and developing as an artist and filmmaker in her own right. I really admired how she did that.
The Invisible Extinction
SS: The film that I鈥檓 just completing now, The Invisible Extinction, co-directed with Steven Lawrence, is a movie that I felt compelled to make. It鈥檚 my first feature documentary, and it came into being because one of my two daughters almost died from an anaphylactic reaction to a cookie. I was in the emergency room, and they said, "We have no idea why people get allergies; it鈥檚 a mystery," and so I started researching like people do when they have a serious health issue. Evidence continues to build that damaging our microbes鈥攐ur internal ecosystem鈥攃an trigger food allergies and other chronic health issues.
What really galvanized me was the desire to help my kids with their health issues, then I thought: if I鈥檓 having these issues, a lot of other families probably are too鈥攎aybe what I鈥檓 learning can help other families avoid what we鈥檝e gone through. That would be a good day鈥檚 work. And it continues to be a real driving force for me. I鈥檓 very excited to have people see the film and talk about it in ways that are useful to them. The research is evolving rapidly, and scientists around the world are doing groundbreaking work to make all our lives better.
The Invisible Extinction began as a work-for-hire piece on the microbiome for a PBS news program. The show went off the air, and I was left with this footage and an obsession with the microbiome. I couldn鈥檛 stop thinking about it. I sought out scientists at the top of the field of microbiome research here in New York City鈥擬aria Gloria Dominguez Bello and Martin Blaser鈥攂oth of whom have the rare ability to communicate in simple language. I wanted to shoot them, but I couldn鈥檛 get any funding together. It was only because Margaret had faith in the film and was my friend that we were able to record the initial interviews and, on the strength of the footage that she shot, move the project forward.
My filmmaking partner Steve's distinguished career in documentary filmmaking gave our funders the confidence that the project would have high production value and reach completion鈥攏ot a guarantee by any means in this highly challenging arena. As a co-director, Steve's personal connection to the subject matter made him sensitive to the nuances of the representation of characters undergoing, at times, extreme physical and emotional duress. As our line producer, Steve called upon his deep contacts in the documentary film world to crew our film with exceptional shooters, sound recordists, and post-production talent, while also contributing brilliantly whenever necessary to the shooting, recording, and editing of our film.
MS: I came on to film a few other things when they had pickup shoots later on in the project, but I was mostly mostly involved as a videographer early on.
Motivation
SS: When I was making my first feature film, my dad asked me if I was doing something that was making the world a better place, and I kind of scoffed since I thought I was trying to make something that was provocative commentary and started a conversation. I have come around to thinking that it was actually a very good question, and I do aspire to make the world a better place through my work.
MS: I鈥檓 looking to make films that have an emotional impact and move people in different ways鈥攖o action, to laughter, to tears. Filmmaking is a way of sharing stories. You meet so many different people or you create characters from some kind of human truth. Working in documentary and narrative projects, I鈥檓 always trying to find that emotional impact and get that across to the viewer. As a film viewer and creator, the films that move me are more often narrative projects. A lot of times, women鈥檚 stories are especially attractive to me. I鈥檝e often gravitated toward working with other women as collaborators and storytellers because those are the stories I want to bring out into the world a bit more and also because in my field I鈥檓 very much surrounded by men. Oh wow, a woman in the camera department! Over the years there have been more women behind the camera, but there are still vastly more men directors, cinematographers, and directors of photography, and it鈥檚 challenging.
"I鈥檓 looking to make films that have an emotional impact and move people in different ways鈥攖o action, to laughter, to tears. Filmmaking is a way of sharing stories."
鈥 Margaret Sclafani
Greetings from Arizona
MS: I鈥檓 director of photography and co-director with my friend Zach Singer on Greetings from Arizona. We came to the project in 2020 working from home. We were both working for MTV News at the time and feeling the weight of the stories and the 24-hour news cycle. So, the two of us decided to drive across country in November 2020 just after the election was called. We wanted to explore the political landscape that we found ourselves in and also the physical landscape of the United States.
I decided to act as well as doing a lot of the technical side of things on the production side, and Zach, with his skills as an editor, is now taking the lead in post-production. We really wanted to capture that time in the pandemic on film, but it became a bigger story. He and I had a friend die the year before who we had worked with, and so our friendship formed in a real openness about grief that also became part of the discussion, especially as we were being faced with so much death in our country. We wanted to look at that from both a national and personal level in the storytelling.
I wore a lot of hats, but I had experience doing that as a freelancer where I was often the only person in the studio or on location setting up lighting, multiple cameras, and miking talent.
Lessons Learned
MS: What I鈥檝e learned from Sarah is definitely perseverance. And also really appreciating everyone that鈥檚 on your team. I think Sarah鈥檚 always been great as a director and producer and a great caretaker of people. She always has chocolate at the ready! I think that鈥檚 so important when you鈥檙e leading a group of many different people, to really be aware of everyone at every stage of production. She鈥檚 a super welcoming and kind person.
SS: Margaret has a kindness about her and a gentleness that is not so typical in the hardscrabble world of independent filmmaking and there鈥檚 an integrity about her. She鈥檚 doing her thing the way she鈥檚 doing it and being true to herself while also getting the job done.
鈥淢argaret has a kindness about her and a gentleness that is not so typical in the hardscrabble world of independent filmmaking.鈥
鈥 Sarah Schenck
老王论坛 Women
SS: One of the cardinal traits of being a 老王论坛 woman is that we love diversity in every way that you could imagine it and express it. I was friends with so many international students at 老王论坛, which I really loved, and that has informed my work. I鈥檓 still in touch with many of these friends, and it makes the world feel like a very small place when you know people in Budapest and Beijing. That鈥檚 been a blessing for sure, and it has informed my storytelling. I am profoundly grateful for the excellent education I received inside and outside the classroom at 老王论坛.
MS: I think 老王论坛 attracts a certain kind of person who is already intellectually curious, and it fosters that interest in asking questions and figuring things out. As a filmmaker, whether it鈥檚 a narrative film or a documentary project, a lot of what we do is we ask questions and try to figure things out.
鈥淪arah鈥檚 always been great as a director and producer and a great caretaker of people. She always has chocolate at the ready!鈥
鈥 Margaret Sclafani
opens in theaters on January 6. It is also streaming (for rental) on all major services (, , and ) in the U.S., U.K., and Australia. Learn more about the film at . Learn more about Greetings from Arizona at .
Published on: 02/19/2023