Wim Wenders Talks “Every Thing Will Be Fine”

Director and writer Wim Wenders sat down with THR during the Rome Film Festival to promote his new documentary but he also talked about his upcoming feature film “Every Thing Will Be Fine” in which Rachel co-stars. He reveals the movie will be in post-production for at least another 6 months which means we don’t be seeing it in 2014.

One of the secrets to the film’s success according to Wenders was his taking his time with the film, spending one-and-a-half years on the editing process alone. Wenders has spent an even longer time on his upcoming narrative film Everything Will be Fine, a 3D family story that takes place over 14 years, starring James Franco, Rachel McAdams and Charlotte Gainsbourg. Franco plays a writer who accidentally causes the death of a child, an event that haunts him over the course of his life.

But the director’s decision to spend more time on projects wasn’t entirely voluntary. “Fiction is getting more and more complex, and the process of making a movie is so much more time-consuming than when I started out 30-40 years ago,” Wenders told The Hollywood Reporter. “When I was a young man, I made a new film every year like clockwork orange, like only Woody Allen is still doing. And today, a normal fiction film takes four, five, six years.”

Wenders started writing Everything Will be Fine while working on the Oscar-nominated documentary Pina, his 3D dance film. He overlapped shooting with Salt of the Earth, going back and forth between Canada and Brazil. The new film will need at least six months to complete, which means it may not be ready until next spring, after Wenders receives a lifetime achievement award at the Berlin Film Festival in February. “I don’t know exactly because as it is a 3D film, the post-production is slower than normal, and it’s quite complex,” he said.

“It’s a very intimate story, and my whole idea was to show that you can tell in 3D also something very intimate, because it enhances very much the presence of the actor,” he said. “And even in an intimate story, 3D has its value.”

The director’s success with Pina didn’t pave the way for more personal 3D stories as he had predicted. “When we started it, it was right after Pina, and I thought when this movie’s going to come out, there’s going to be lots of intimate 3D movies, but I was wrong.”