In 2020, mid-pandemic, Megan Park skilled an existential disaster like so many others that yr. She was holed up in her childhood bed room, grappling with nostalgic emotions and present-day anxieties involving her months-old daughter and a COVID-delayed transition from actor to filmmaker. That collective unease would set My Outdated Ass in movement, her markedly totally different follow-up to her Jenna Ortega and Maddie Ziegler-led function directorial debut, The Fallout (2021), which chronicled the aftermath of a college taking pictures.
Now streaming on Prime Video, the coming-of-age story with a touch of fantasy facilities on 18-year-old Elliott (Maisy Stella), who’s within the strategy of having fun with her remaining lakeside summer time earlier than heading off to the College of Toronto. Recognizing that her adolescent days are dwindling, she opts to eat magic mushrooms, which end in a stunning encounter together with her future 39-year-old self (Aubrey Plaza). Older Elliott then tries to steer her youthful self away from making the identical errors she made.
The eye-grabbing title of My Outdated Ass is verbalized within the film when Elliott asks Older Elliott if she “can contact her outdated ass.” However previous to its reference within the dialogue, Park wrote the title first on a lark. Produced independently by the Margot Robbie co-founded LuckyChap Leisure and Indian Paintbrush, the My Outdated Ass crew turned so connected to their unconventional title that it turned a dealbreaker through the eventual bidding struggle at 2024’s Sundance Movie Competition. Amazon MGM Studios in the end acquired worldwide distribution rights for $15 million, which included a theatrical launch this previous September.
“Initially, I titled it that as a result of I simply wished to see my lawyer writing contracts and e mail titles that stated My Outdated Ass. And now my complete inbox is nonstop titles of My Outdated Ass,” Park tells The Hollywood Reporter mid-laugh. “It was dumb, actually. It was a dumb, silly factor. However then it labored.”
Park’s movie doesn’t over-explain, nor does it must, Older Elliottt’s twin skill to time journey by means of the usage of hallucinogens and text-message from the long run. She additionally wrote a pair traces to justify the truth that Stella’s Elliott and Plaza’s Elliott will not be spitting photographs of each other within the slightest. For Park, she simply wished the actor who might greatest promote the 39-year-old character’s unaddressed ache and disenchantment.
“With Older Elliott, we actually obtained hung up on who seems to be essentially the most like [Stella’s Elliott]. So there have been conversations in regards to the largest names attainable,” Park remembers. “However on the finish of the day, we have been identical to, ‘Who do we would like within the function? Who cares in regards to the bodily stuff? I can write jokes round it.’ And so I simply stated, ‘I need Aubrey.’”
Under, throughout a current FYC dialog with THR, the Canadian filmmaker additionally discusses playing on Plaza’s casting mid-produciton, in addition to the surprising means wherein she re-teamed with Ziegler.
***
One of the common interview questions of all time is, “What recommendation would you give your youthful self?” And lately, I’ve opted for the inverse: “What steering might your youthful self provide your present self?” So I deeply linked together with your film as a result of that’s precisely what it’s about — as Elliott (Maisy Stella) teaches Older Elliott (Aubrey Plaza) the final word lesson. Had you additionally been pondering how your youthful self may be capable of assist your present-day self?
I discovered that ending takeaway as I used to be writing it, nevertheless it began extra with the thought of getting to return and inform my youthful self one thing. I had simply change into a father or mother, and I used to be staying at residence in my childhood bed room through the pandemic. So my household dynamic had all modified, and it was only a lot. So I used to be extra within the place of “outdated ass” within the film, feeling depressed and nostalgic. So it got here from that place, however in the end, by means of writing it and positively by means of making it, there’s loads that I might take away from my youthful self. You need to undergo the issues that you simply undergo to get the place you’re. I had a bizarre path to writing and directing, and I really feel like I discovered my ardour at 34 once I switched careers. However I by no means would’ve discovered this had I not discovered it the way in which that I discovered it, so it’s higher late than by no means. I began writing it very a lot from the place that Aubrey begins the film in, after which I figured that in the end therapeutic lesson out as I used to be writing.
My Outdated Ass is about on a lake in Canada, which is a specific setting you’re aware of from your personal childhood in Ontario. How autobiographical is that this film?
It’s zero % autobiographical by way of the precise characters. That setting [Muskoka Lakes] was a spot that I went to each summer time, nevertheless it wasn’t the place I grew up. I additionally didn’t develop up on a cranberry farm. So I had a really totally different household dynamic. I’ve an older sister, my dad is a dentist and my mother is a retired trainer. So I had a really totally different upbringing, however regardless of not being remotely autobiographical, there’s a part of me in every of those characters. The one exception is that Elliott is Canadian like me, however she is so totally different than I used to be at 18. Probably the most autobiographical scene within the film is the scene between Elliott’s mother and Elliott when she’s speaking about rocking 2-year-old Elliott all the way down to sleep and singing “Twinkle, Twinkle [Little Star].” That was a really private second within the script for me, however apart from that, it’s actually not that autobiographical.
On this period of restricted consideration spans, did you need a title that might immediate a double take?
I began with the title of My Outdated Ass as a joke. I used to be like, “Clearly, somebody goes to make me change this. They’re by no means going to let me preserve this title.” After which, once we have been going to Sundance, we have been like, “Nicely, let’s preserve the title. Now we’re into it.” So it turned part of the bargaining as a result of we have been fortunate sufficient to be in a scenario the place we had a number of bidders on the film. So if anyone wished to alter the title … However folks actually preferred it, and it made sense at that time. Initially, I titled it that as a result of I simply wished to see my lawyer writing contracts and e mail titles that stated My Outdated Ass. And now my complete inbox is nonstop titles of My Outdated Ass. (Laughs)
Superb.
It was dumb, actually. It was a dumb, silly factor, however then it labored.
Did you incorporate the phrase into the dialogue to bolster your argument for it?
We did. I added one line in as a result of that was a advice. It was really useful for the trailer too so that individuals understood it, and I used to be like, “I really feel prefer it doesn’t matter if folks perceive it or not. They’ll get it as soon as they see the precise film.” However the title turned the most important concern solely within the advertising and marketing of the film, honestly. Each different step of the way in which, it was a non-issue. However it did change into a bit of tough, as a result of, if you see that title and two younger ladies on a film poster, you would doubtlessly assume the film is one factor.
I hate the phrase “4 quadrant,” nevertheless it’s been actually superb and exquisite to see that it’s that type of film. Younger and outdated dudes — actually males over 70 — are simply wrecked by this film, and so they wouldn’t sometimes click on on a film known as My Outdated Ass. So we knew that the title would in all probability be good for the youthful era. However the query was, “How will we let folks realize it’s a extra sentimental, heartfelt movie than it could appear?”
I appreciated the intelligent explanations you wrote to justify the characters’ bodily variations. Older Elliott can be moderately jaded, and whereas Aubrey Plaza performs that high quality so effectively, I’m assuming she additionally strikes the needle with financiers. Had been you prepared to forgo an uncanny resemblance between the 2 Elliotts for all of these different advantages that Aubrey brings?
It actually wasn’t monetary in any respect. We made the film independently with LuckyChap and Indian Paintbrush, and the latter, our financiers, have been superb. We have been actually adamant that it was essential to forged youthful Elliott first as a result of she’s in each body of the film. We needed to discover the fitting individual, and though she’d been on a TV present [Nashville], Maisy hadn’t labored in a few years. So she didn’t carry any field workplace worth, per se, nonetheless they quantify that. So it was her first film, and so they have been completely prepared to take that threat.
With Older Elliott, we actually obtained hung up on who seems to be essentially the most like [Stella’s Elliott]. So there have been conversations in regards to the largest names attainable, however on the finish of the day, we have been identical to, “Who do we would like within the function? Who cares in regards to the bodily stuff? I can write jokes round it.” And so I simply stated, “I need Aubrey.” It was only a matter of if she wished to do it at that time, after which she actually responded to it. She was actually the one individual we talked to, and the financiers have been identical to, “Yeah, nice. If you’d like Aubrey, Aubrey is a good match.” So it was a dream scenario that we had a lot freedom with casting. We weren’t constrained to a listing of names: “Right here, you must forged one in every of these 5 folks.” It’s a testomony to creating the movie independently.
What number of days did it take to shoot out Aubrey?
She got here in for per week, so it was possibly 4 days [of shooting] and sooner or later of fittings and stuff. So it was quick, and it obtained all the way down to the wire by way of who we have been going to forged. The character of Older Elliott was additionally in her fifties within the first draft, and at that time, it was nonetheless like, “Nicely, who seems to be like her?” So we have been getting all the way down to the wire, and so they have been nonetheless negotiating her deal as we have been in manufacturing. So we have been like, “Hopefully this works out.” She was simply ending White Lotus in Italy, and so she got here straight from there and was simply sport. However it was tight to get all of her stuff in that many days.
You talked about your producers at LuckyChap, and I figured Tom Ackerley and/or Josey McNamara could be working level with Margot Robbie off conquering the world elsewhere. However then I noticed an image of her on set with a laptop computer, so that you really had the complete LuckyChap expertise?
Yeah, Josey really wasn’t my level as a result of he was on Saltburn within the U.Ok., and so my factors have been Tom, Margot and Bronte Payne. Bronte was bouncing between Saltburn and our Muskoka set, however Tom and Margo have been on set and proper in the course of it. Throughout prep, Margot additionally did pre-production conferences in her Barbie wardrobe from her trailer within the U.Ok. So she was very hands-on with this undertaking. It was unimaginable.
The Justin Bieber “One Much less Lonely Lady” sequence took place after you couldn’t clear some Disney music, however if you happen to couldn’t clear Bieber’s music, did you might have one other backup plan?
No. (Laughs) We type of obtained it cleared in script kind. We wrote all of it out, and we talked in regards to the scene with their crew. They cherished the script, and so they have been actually excited in regards to the crew behind it. So we hoped that we wouldn’t mess up the precise taking pictures of it, as a result of they’d final-final say as soon as they noticed it filmed. So it was positively a threat, however as a result of we had the OK based mostly on the script, we have been enthusiastic about it understanding. So I don’t know what we’d’ve actually finished had they rejected it. There would’ve needed to be a reshoot, or Jen Vecchiarello, the editor, would’ve discovered a strategy to repair it in publish.
The film jogged my memory of Arrival, as you’re each taking part in with, “Tis higher to have cherished and misplaced than by no means to have cherished in any respect.” How instrumental was that theme total?
In fact, there’s the thought of, “It’s higher to have cherished and misplaced than by no means cherished in any respect.” However the sentiment of time changing into so scary to me got here earlier than that. My relationship with time felt prefer it was altering a lot. Summers used to really feel so lengthy, and time used to really feel so limitless. It’s not in any a part of the film, however honestly, changing into a father or mother for the primary time made time pace up in such a means that scared the shit out of me. And I simply began pondering, “How can I savor each second and in addition be within the second?” I noticed that I used to be getting older and time was changing into my biggest enemy, so all these conflicting emotions made me need to make this film. However making this film has softened that for me, and it’s inspired me to only make peace with it not directly. Now, I’ve two children, and I’m like, “Oh, cool. Time actually simply does go quicker and quicker and quicker.”
The film does have a heavy story level that’s tucked away for some time, however have been you continue to in a position to get some reduction popping out of The Fallout?
Understandably, making The Fallout was a very heavy headspace to be in for 2 years. And though My Outdated Ass ended up being fairly emotional, it’s a distinct feeling. It’s a sentimental, emotional and, hopefully, a feel-good cry, not an terrible cry. The top of The Fallout is a devastating cry. So I deliberately wished to make one thing in a lighter headspace, with a lighter power on set. I wanted that after making one thing very heavy.
American films typically shoot Canada for the U.S., so I preferred that you simply made a degree to set your movie in your homeland. Have you ever gotten bored with seeing your nation dressed as America?
What’s humorous is that Canada has been silent. I’m like, “Canada, I simply made a film about you guys. Come on! What’s up?” However the American love has been so nice. I wished to make a film that showcases a ravishing place that I assumed was so particular and hasn’t been masqueraded as another place on the planet. Additionally, I don’t imply any shade, however Canadian films can really feel so overtly Canadian or so particular to Canada that different folks can’t relate to them. I grew up right here and I’ve spent a number of time right here, and I used to be like, “It’s not that totally different from America. Why can’t it really feel the identical?” So it was positively intentional, and it was enjoyable to not have to cover the “sorrys” and the “abouts” and people different little Canadian touches.
However lots of people miss that it’s Canada till midway by means of, which can be cool. I wasn’t making an attempt to pressure it, however then they’ll discover the Canada flag within the background. Elliott then says “grade 8” as an alternative of eighth grade. She can be going to the College of Toronto, not NYU. So I simply wished to make one thing that was subtly Canadian, but additionally a love letter to Canada.
Whether or not it’s Bruce Campbell for Sam Raimi or Michael Caine for Christopher Nolan, administrators typically have good-luck charms. At this charge, is Maddie Ziegler going to pop up in all of your films?
I completely adore Maddie, and that’s such a cute strategy to put it. I might love for her to be in all my films, and one of many subsequent issues I’m making has a dance ingredient, so I might be an fool to not ask her to be part of that to some extent. Her casting [in My Old Ass] was a contented accident. Clearly, Maddie was unimaginable in The Fallout, however the function of Elliott’s buddy, Ruthie, was smaller. After which, as soon as we forged Maisy, she was like, “Do you know Maddie and I are greatest associates? We’ve been greatest associates since we have been eight years outdated.” And I used to be like, “What!?” Maisy was then like, “We’ve all the time wished to do a film collectively. Do you assume she’d play Ruthie?” And I used to be like, “Let’s ask her.” And since she was already in Canada, taking pictures her film Becoming In, she was like, “Yeah, I’m down.” So she dipped over to play and have enjoyable, and it was only a pleasure that she was prepared to do that with us.
You touched on it a bit already, however I’d as effectively carry issues full circle: What pearl of knowledge might your youthful self present you as we speak?
I might remind myself to deal with the joyous moments and never fear a lot. Ninety-nine % of the issues that you simply fear about are by no means going to occur. Simply be within the second, as a result of a few of these moments solely occur as soon as.
***
My Outdated Ass is now out there on Prime Video.