Are you gonna run for president . I think i just got an f from you, actually. laughing this is over. applauding jeff nichols, welcome. Thank you for having me. Good to be with you. No shame in losing to emma stone, i suppose. laughs right. If you in fact, lost. For all we know, theres another card some place. laughing and ruth negga won. We can just assume, its possible. I did wake up this morning thinking if ruth had won, would loving have been announced as best picture winner . Oh god, that wouldve been great, huh . I think there wouldve been less confusion. Let me say, i thought it was one of the best pictures of the year. I suspect you probably feel the same way, although youre partisan, as far as that goes. Im certainly partisan, but im also very selfdeprecating, so in equal share, it all makes sense but however it turns out, youre good. I, pretty much, yeah. Im very proud of this film, you know. [evan] yeah, its a big film. Im proud of this film in a way that even it separates from the others simply because its not my story. Its richard and mildreds story. Well, its vastly different than the others in many, many ways, beginning with the fact that as you point out, it is not your story, it is a story ripped from the pages of history and from what i can tell, because i went back and was curious to see, well, how much was embellished . How much was condensed . Youve told this story almost to a point, exactly as it went. As best we could. Yeah, given the time constraints, right . Certainly. You know, were covering nine plus years in two hours. I made a rule for myself, which was to not create anything that i couldnt point to fact. So, there are some things that were condensed, some things that were combined, but i have some reasoning behind each of them and i think the result is more than fair. Well, anybody who knows the history of this case, which as we sit here, the Supreme Court case was 50 years ago, as we sit here, so were kind of at a milestone moment. Anybody who knows the circumstances of that case, what led up to it, and the resolution of it, would look at this film and say, this is pretty much the story. Sure. Right, i mean, and that was at least, the other thing thats different i think is the tone of this film is different from the tone of your previous films. This is an understated film and your other films, for whatever the reason, were a lot bigger and louder and more action and this was more quiet in the telling. Well, for sure. I mean, each film has attached to a genre. Im a fan of genre. I grew up in little rock watching movies at our local theater, so i grew up watching everything that hollywood had to produce. And so, it made a lot of sense in my early films to attach to genre and then, try to twist that genre or view it with some type of independent voice. When i got to loving, my voice didnt matter as much. I certainly have a style. I certainly have a wheelhouse, but i was trying to pay tribute to the integrity of richard and Mildred Loving. You know, to what they did. And that seemed to be the defining fact when i started to break down the story. The tone, the pace, it well, it matches their story. Their story is actually a story of kind of quiet, persistent heroism. [jeff] for sure. Theyre not flashy people. What they did, they did not to get in the headlines, necessarily. They were just living their lives and in some ways, the tone of the film matches the tone of their actions or activities through this period, which is think is a very nice, you didnt turn them into people who they were not. Certainly not. I remember someone asked me the question, do you consider them activists . And i said, no. And they were taken aback. I think they were slightly offended and i didnt have a chance to really explain myself, which was this is pbs, all we have is time, so you go ahead and explain yourself. laughing good, good. You know, was that they werent activists in the traditional sense. They became activists by benefit of their place and by their choices, but they did not choose this position that they were put in. It was thrust upon them. And they did accept it and in that sense, they are activists, but i thought it was very important that it be known, and this is my belief, the whole film is my interpretation of the events, but that it be known that they fell in love sincerely. They did not fall in love as a way to resist or to make a point. This wasnt a stunt. Not at all. And i think its important because of the way the audience receives the story. If they feel like theyre being preached to, if they feel like these are two people that are trying to make them change their minds about something, rather race or equality of marriage, equality, whatever it is, then i think we identify with richard and mildred differently. The reason theyre such Beautiful People is that they really didnt have an agenda. They didnt care what you and i thought about them. They felt this one thing very deeply for themselves. But to your point about, you know, they accepted their role in this, but it was not the thing that necessarily motivated them. Theres a scene in the film where mildred gets the phone call from the aclu attorney. Shes written a letter to Robert Kennedy and Robert Kennedy has passed this on to the aclu attorney, whos played by nick kroll in this film. Calls her and says, look, id like to meet with you. Wed like to represent you. Its not gonna cost you anything. Ive got an office in washington. That turns out to be only partly true. Come see us. And she pauses before she answers and then, she eventually says, okay, well come. And you see sort of, thats really the crucial moment. She mightve decided, actually, nevermind. And then, none of this happens. For sure. She made the decision, nope, were going to accept this. We sort of set this in motion. And they go and even when they go to meet with him, theyre kind of reluctant, you know. The Joel Edgerton character, loving, says, well, cant you just go back to the court in virginia and deal with this . The scope and the magnitude of it is not lost on the aclu attorney, but theyre not entirely sure that they want to go. I love that because the genuineness and the authenticity of those characters is so evident in their ambivalence. Well, and it answers a big question, which is, how could these two people go down this path and think they could get away with it in the jim crow south of the 1950s and 60s . And the answer is, they didnt think they were important enough to be bothered or to bother anyone. Right, although, they knew, as its been pointed out, not only in connection with your film, but its been pointed out in the telling of the actual story, they went to washington to get married because they couldnt get married in virginia. They at least were aware of the barriers richard was. Richard was, so the lives that they wanted to lead, so they went to washington to get married. Then they return. [jeff] correct. The police bust in on them at night. The fact that theyre legally married, in terms of washington d. C. s does not matter. Doesnt make a difference. But theres an interesting point there, actually, and its a fact that told me a lot about richard loving. He hung his marriage certificate up. Up on the wall. He framed it. And that was, you know, that story had been told by several people many times and that was a fact, that happened. Who does that . You know, who hangs their marriage certificate up . And i think it was his view that he went to d. C. , he got this piece of paper and, were good. I think that was his proof, you know, cause he was preparing for the worst. Little did he know, you know, the intricacies of the law was, well, actually, if you leave the state to get married and return, thats actually the law that youve broken. So, it was actually the proof of his guilt, according to the law, but it says something about a guy that he understood that legally, there might be trouble here, so ive got my certificate, im gonna take care of it. And it was his undoing. Well, but from his perspective, as the saying has become commonplace these days, love is love, right . From his perspective, that was it. And the relationship is so nicely portrayed by the actors in this film. Joel edgerton is loving and ruth negga, who got the oscar nomination as mildred, they are themselves as understated as the film is. Maybe the film is understated because their performances are understated. And how amazing that you have an actor born in new south wales, australia and an ethiopian irish actress playing credibly, southerners. Right. American southerners. Right. How much voice coaching or accent coaching did you have to subject to to get them to be there was a lot, but you know, that became of part of the decision. So, when i wrote mud, i wrote that in Matthew Mcconaugheys voice, even intending for him to be the guy, even though you had not got him. I didnt know him. Did not have him for the film. I wasnt important enough to be connected to him, but i did that and when we were on set and he spoke those lines for the first time, it was this, it was just a wonderful moment because its what i had heard in my head for so long. When i wrote richard and Mildred Loving, i was writing the real people. I had this documentary footage, this archival footage that was unearthed and i could hear em, i could see them move and so, i needed to find richard and mildred and you know, ruth was the first person to audition for this part. She had not had a particularly long career as a leading actress in films or i had no clue who she was. She had done some stuff but i actually went back and looked her up because i was so interested in who she was. Shed had a bigger presence in the uk. But not here, not known to audiences in this country. Certainly not. And so, she walks in, we were in la. Francine maislers my casting director. Shes big time, shes really important. And ruth was the first person she brought in. And ruth walks in and immediately, i say, well, thats unfortunate. Shes just too short. Because mildred was quite tall. In fact, they called her string bean because of it. And i thought, well, ill just listen anyway. Well give her a shot. And her posture changed and her face changed cause mildred would always do this thing with her lips where she would purse her lips and i thought, snaps thats interesting. And then, this voice came out that she had already had built. Little did i know, she had spent, i think, the last 48 hours locked in a hotel room just listening to mildred over and over and over again. [evan] oh wow. And she just, she had mildred built as a person, as a character, as a voice. And then, joel and i had been working on Midnight Special together and i got to see the mechanics that ruth had applied in that hotel room behind the scenes, i got to see joel do that in front of me in Midnight Special. He was playing a texas state trooper and you know, i live here. You know what a state trooper sounds like. Im a fair judge and we did this really cool thing with joel. He likes to have a real world example to build his accent off of, even though that was a fictitious character. So we watched the thin blue line by errol morris, which is the documentary right, the Randall Dale Adams story. Exactly, outside of dallas. And there was a detective from vidor, texas that had this great natural texas accent. So we pulled all of his words and i would hear joel before a take in Midnight Special and hed be reciting the thin blue line, which i know backward and forward, and he would get into this voice and then go. And so, i knew that i had enough of richard loving speaking, just barely, cause he never spoke very much, that joel could probably build this voice and so, with hindsight, it makes sense that you would actually cast foreign actors when youre not just trying to get an accent right, youre trying to get the way these two people spoke very specifically and you have examples of it. Well, they did extraordinary work at that and of course, you say youve worked with joel before, hes a terrific actor, he was wonderful in Midnight Special. This is a jeff nichols film, so by law, Michael Shannon has to be in it. laughing he is. And so, he was briefly in this film. The casting of it was great. Actually, bill camp, who was also in Midnight Special, right . Midnight special. Was incredible. Was in it. People now know better from the night of, the detective in the night of and should know even more. I think hes one of the greatest actors. Well, you have a really good eye for actors and actresses. Why has it been so good for you or so successful for you . Youve built very quickly, like a Repertory Company almost. Certainly and i plan to use them for a very long time, if im lucky. It started with Michael Shannon and you know, ill take some credit for it. You know, mike, i witnessed for the first time on a video cassette from a professor of mine in college had been at the sundance labs. And the sundance labs is a workshop where you have a script that youre workshopping and you videotape scenes from it. Well, my professor in college, gary hawkins, wanted to show me some of his scenes, kinda show off what hed done. But Michael Shannon had been there at that workshop acting and i just was like, who is that . Whos that guy . And hes like, oh, thats mike. And so, i wrote shotgun stories for him, very much like writing mud for mcconaughey, even though i didnt know the guy. And luckily, he showed up and shotgun storiess my first film he was the lead in. And honestly i think, since then he took a chance on a new director, did he not . Oh, 100 . I remember he asked me, you know, well, do you have any short films i could see . And i had made four of them in college. And i said, no, theyre not good enough. And he still showed up, you know. It was a miracle. But, i think mikes an actors actor, whatever that means. I think actors respect him and that has led me down this path to work with really terrific actors. I remember jessica chastain, one of the big draws she told me about for take shelter was working with mike, you know . So i dont discount the fact that hes given me some credibility. Well, its impressive that you have these people who are so much in your films and in your life and theyve been as much a part of making these movies successful as anything else and theyve come to be associated with you. You know a jeff nichols film now when you see one, which is great. You have a distinct thing. Does the fact that this film, loving, was based in the south and is around the idea of civil rights, tie back in any way to the fact that you grew up in the south . You grew up in little rock. You went to Central High School in little rock, which is where school desegregation, you know, draw the line back, its a historic school. Did that speak to you personally . Is that why you ended up gravitating to this story . Um, certainly, you know, i graduated in could a nonsoutherner have made this film, i guess . Sure. But i wouldnt have liked it as much. laughing yeah, i bet. You know, i graduated in 97 and the desegregation crisis at central happened in 57. We were inundated with civil rights history. But when this story comes to me in 2012, i never heard of it. So, i never heard of richard and Mildred Loving and that, i was confused by that. I was disappointed in my knowledge gap, but more importantly, in regard to my career and the idea of race in the south and race in storytelling about the south, i had purposefully avoided it. And the reason was because i had been reading a ton of larry brown and harry crews and Flannery Oconnor and William Faulkner and i felt like i wanted to tell a contemporary southern story that wasnt simply about race and its very hard in the south because race is such an issue. If you have a black character and a white character, all of sudden, thats going to start to absorb the trajectory of the story. In mud, for instance, that happened to be a community where on that river, i actually just, we didnt encounter a lot of black people and a lot of black characters, so it made sense for that. But, i always knew i needed to address the topic of race. I always knew i wanted to. I always knew it was integral to the fabric of the south, but how do i do it . How do i make a comment of it . How do i, a middle class white kid born in 1978, talk about this . What do i have to say that someone else couldnt say better and with a better point of view . When loving came to my attention, it felt like the right story. It felt like the right time. I identified greatly with richard loving. He reminded me very much of my grandfather, who obviously was not in an interracial relationship, but was very much this type of man and i could see how painful it would be for that type of man to have to annunciate his love for his wife in public. That just seemed like a tortuous thing for someone like my grandfather and definitely someone like richard. It felt like this was the time. It also felt like a comment on Marriage Equality. It felt like a way to talk about race without having to be an expert on the civil rights movement, even. I just really needed to be an expert on the relationship between these two people and the love they felt for one another. And you said 2012 was when this story came to you first. [jeff] yes. So, 2012 was very different from 2016 or 2017, in terms of the conversation were having about both race and Marriage Equality in this country. In many respects, this film comes out at a moment that is perfect to be contemplating these issues, not because we knew it would be, but just because of the circumstances or the accident of politics. Now suddenly, this is, its a hot issue. Well, its been fascinating for me. We premiered in cannes in may of 2016 and that was one conversation. And then, by the time we kind of, were launching into our fall awards campaign and release in november, were in another version of that conversation because in may, there was so much aggression and the conversation around the black lives Matter Movement that then you have the shootings in dallas and baton rouge of the police officers, i think everyone, it just woke everyone up to the power of this conversation, how important it is. And the lack of resolution after all this time, right . 100 and how we, as a society, need to figure out a language to talk about it. I wa