Spotlight on...Kelsey Eichhorn '08
Melissa Marshall
Issue date: 11/1/07 Section: Arts
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The Middlebury Campus: What do you hope viewers will take away from "What I Do Has to be Great?" Did you have a specific message in mind during filming?
Kelsey Eichhorn: The story really struck me because it's off the beaten path. John Putnam was originally a lawyer, but one day he looked at his boss, and was like, "That's not what I want to be when I'm 65." So he went to Switzerland, got a copper vat custom-made, bought a farm in Vermont and started making cheese. This theme of an alternative route is one that's emerging in my film work. There's this whole societal plan where people expect you to do certain things with an education from somewhere like Middlebury, and the idea of forsaking that and doing what you have to do to be happy is really interesting to me. When I start making a film, I definitely have a target audience in mind - someone that I'm speaking to. And that doesn't mean that the film won't appeal to someone outside of that, but there's always some kind of message that I'm trying to get through. I don't want to beat people over the head with it - it's not supposed to be didactic, but it is supposed to make people think. If I can have people leave the theater thinking, then I've done my job.
TC: What was the biggest obstacle in terms of the creation of the film? Did you struggle more with the productional aspects or with the construction of thematic elements?
KE: The weather didn't really cooperate last spring - it snowed late into the season, and I had to drive an hour and half through the Green Mountains. Travel and all the logistics of production were difficult, and I ended up having a lot less time to edit than I would have liked. But at the same time, the biggest challenge, if I had to choose one, was getting that message across. I knew why I was attracted to the story. It was because of the idea of being strong enough to make the choices that will make you happy, and not judging your own success against outside influences. It's about making success a personal thing rather than a public thing. And that really appealed to me, but it took me a long time to be able to articulate that. I was having difficulty structuring the film to convey that message. I ended up actually adding an inter-monologue piece to it. It's a biographical documentary in its simplest form, but then it's broken up by an inter-monologue poem of sorts. It tries to take the topic of cheese making and those decisions that John made throughout his life and really present them as decisions that we can all make as well. We can all say that we don't have to do what's expected, we can go our own way if it makes us happy.
2008 Woodie Awards
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