When your subject finds himself hallucinating Kylie Minogue in the back of his Jaguar, you know you’re not watching a regular rock doc. New film ‘20,000 Days on Earth’ is an unsettling but hilarious portrait of an unsettling but hilarious star: Nick Cave, who co-wrote the script with directors Iain Forsyth and Jane Pollard. We asked the man himself to break down how the film was made.
‘I had no interest in making a film about myself. It always felt like something that would get in the way, and I’ve never liked a lot of music documentaries. Then Iain and Jane came to me with something that looked like it had a larger purpose than “telling the Nick Cave story”.’
‘I’m friends with Iain and Jane, and a fan of their work. It always feels very comfortable to have them around. And weirdly we still remain friends – that’s not often the case with me.’
‘I had final edit. That freed me up to do anything I liked – anything they asked. I was extremely dubious about starting the film with me in bed – it felt a very vulnerable scene – but because we had this policy where things didn’t have to be used, it was okay to try it out and it seemed to work.’
‘All the scenarios are fake: the shrink’s office, the archive, the idea that I’m driving around in a Jaguar. It’s all artifice. But we thought that, within that, I would be able to relax or be protected enough to be open. They knew I wouldn’t be able to be that way if they just walked into my house with a camera. I wouldn’t have allowed it.’
‘I thought: would anyone be interested in the film if they weren’t familiar with what I did? I think it should interest people more than a lot of rock documentaries out there that are vanity pieces. Someone was telling me they came out of a screening, and there were two people outside going: “I’m really confused, where’s Nic Cage? But hey, it was really good anyway.”’
‘20,000 Days on Earth’ opens in UK cinemas on Fri Sep 19.