Jaylan Salah interviews Biosphere director Mel Eslyn

Jaylan Salah Interviews Director Mel Eslyn on her recent film “Biosphere”

Sterling K. Brown and Mark Duplass in Biosphere directed by Mel Eslyn. Photo courtesy of IFC Films

Billy (Mark Duplass) and Ray (Sterling K. Brown) are lifelong best friends, brothers from another mother – and the last two men on earth.

It didn’t take more than that line for me to sink my teeth into Biosphere. The first thing that comes to mind while watching this movie is how breathless it leaves you. A creative mix between the sci-fi and buddy comedy genres, Biosphere is a movie for comedy lovers, but also those who want to sink their teeth into something beyond their average Cup O’ Joe on screens recently.

I had the pleasure of talking to Mel Eslyn, director and co-writer of the film with Duplass, and tried getting inside the mind of the genius behind this tale of biology, camaraderie, survival, and evolution. The world as we know it might not stay like this forever, there are a million things that threaten its existence and stability. If people are not careful about how they treat their planet, civilization in its most recent form will decline, eating away with it what remains from the land, the soil, the crops, and the greenery.

Biosphere is not only about the dying planet but about the surviving few humans living on whatever remains of life form. Using a few symbolic Darwinian objects, Mark Duplass’s humor, and Sterling K. Brown’s charisma, Eslyn keeps the movie momentum monotonous and easy-paced.

I had to ask Eslyn what compelled her to tackle a story that seemed simple yet complex plot with as much thoughtfulness as there is also humanity and compassion,

“I’m trying to keep the plot under wraps because I miss the authentic experience of walking into a movie theater and knowing nothing. So much of the film today is that we’re having these conversations before seeing it, and I’m like I wanna those after, cuz there’s so much that I wanna talk about that I won’t. But what I can say is: Mark Duplass came to me with a little kernel of an idea. He had a great half-formed idea and what I did with it is that I kinda finished the sentence. So we threw in all these things we loved, and I threw in some themes that I am the most interested in which are science, magic, humanity, evolution, gender, and toxic masculinity [and kinda dismantling it]. I really found a way to put that all in but for it to feel cohesive and it all makes sense together. I think that was the biggest challenge.”

Jaylan Salah talks with Mel Eslyn

Speaking of comedy, not once will the viewer be able to stop laughing. As the plot progresses and the two leads sit down to talk something out or run in a marathon to discuss it with the camera tracking them, or simply watching them from a steady pace as they pace and cry and shout, the dialogue keeps the viewer both on edge and entertained. The bizarreness of the situation that the two leads find themselves in is constantly disrupted with a joke or a perfectly thrown punchline. The comedy doesn’t only come from Duplass whom everybody is used to seeing as a big-time jokester, but also Brown whose calm demeanor and perfect line delivery makes his character both charming and engaging as the voice of the wisdom of this strangely matched duo.

Working with both actors must have been a treat but also a challenge. Both actors come from completely different schools and mindsets. Those who are familiar with Sterling K. Brown know that he has a thing for complex, serious roles, whether as hunter Gordon Walker in Supernatural, Randall Pearson in This is Us, and domineering but loving father Ronald in Waves. Mark Duplass on the other hand, is the master of loose, improvisational comedy and for that combination to occur, it must have been one gigantic mount for the director to climb,

“The crazy thing is that Sterling [K. Brown] is actually so funny and you would never know it because a lot of the roles he played are so serious. When I wrote this role for him it was because I saw him in this indie film Waves and he was so great in it, also in the O.J. series [The People v. O. J. Simpson: American Crime Story], but then I was like can this guy be funny and lighthearted? So I googled him and found a video of him super goofy and dancing so I thought yes, he’s got it in him. I took them to dinner. Mark [Duplass] is one of the closest collaborative relationships of my career. So we brought Sterling in and took him to dinner and I left them to create this energy and this kind of bro-ship and they really clicked. It worked. It feels like they have different energy, but it was actually weirdly similar and they fit perfectly together.”

Eslyn compared Brown’s and Duplass’s styles, with the latter being more improvisational as opposed to how Brown takes his lines seriously. Having to find the middle ground between the two of them was her accomplishment and success as a director, and that was what gave the movie this air of freshness without losing their polarizing natures in between.

Biosphere‘s quest to dismantle toxic masculinity exposes male vulnerability, especially in Duplass’s role. I had to ask Eslyn about creating a safe environment for her actors, not just in terms of physical safety but also from an emotional standpoint,

“It’s all about choosing the right collaborators and setting a tone on set. You know because this film is in a biosphere, you physically can only have so many people with us on set. Everybody else was outside of it at different video villages. So that really helps. The intimacy. And also most crew members I have worked with for years ended up being on this film, and really brought together a group of amazing people. They were all super-talented, loving humans. That just set the tone. For all of us to come in knowing each other, and for Sterling to be the new addition, it made it more comfortable for him [Mark] and he had the safe space to explore.

I think the fact that Mark and I have worked together for so long, he feels very comfortable with me. I feel that I am Mark’s safe space. Sterling saw that and recognized it, and kinda slid in.”

Eslyn also made sure to let everyone have fun by bringing everyone on set and turning on Footloose in the biosphere so that people would just burst dancing together. That must have swept off the tension immediately, not to mention having a video of Sterling K. Brown dancing which all his fans would pray to the film gods that it finds its way somehow into the BTS footage.

Biosphere is an important, small film with big ideas. It’s made with love and passion, the team behind it is an incredible ensemble of artists and thinkers, comedians and professionals, and to support the arts audiences need to tune in and keep these movies being made.

More about the film Biosphere here.

Poems from J.D. Nelson

Seven Untitled Monostichs



soft lentil meteor heavenly



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corrugated headlock votive



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morning frog too soon



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a week in that stew no mention of athens



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big tree sun



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background water self-programming



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show me a mile away



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bio/graf

J. D. Nelson’s poems have appeared in many publications, worldwide, since 2002. He is the author of ten print chapbooks and e-books of poetry, including *Cinderella City* (The Red Ceilings Press, 2012). Nelson’s first full-length collection is *in ghostly onehead* (Post-Asemic Press, 2022). Visit his website, MadVerse.com, for more information and links to his published work. His haiku blog is at JDNelson.net. Nelson lives in Colorado, USA.

Poetry from Jerry Langdon

Black and white headshot of a white man with short dark hair and a white collared shirt.
Jerry Langdon

Power

Power is destruction

A turbine of corruption

The cesspool grows

Out of control

The waste overflows

Takes its toll

Sometimes I feel

Everything is unreal

Like I’m the one awake

While the world is dreaming

With so much at stake

I’m the only one screaming

Following Nephilim among men

We pay the demon

In the fabric of confusion

We choose our chains

Living the freedom illusion

Which soothes our pains

Still building Babel

Where heaven fell

Needing to tear it down

Bring the gods to fall

Knowing if we bring them down

It might end us all

Power is corruption

Power is destruction


Can’t Adhere

I’m so broken the dust flies away.

No shards to cause any pain.

Nothing to put together again.

The winds blow me away

Until only memories remain.

Atoms no longer cohere.

Existence can’t adhere.

So what keeps me here?

Broken; I disappear.


From South-Western, Michigan, Jerry Langdon lives in Germany since the early 90’s. He is an Artist and Poet. His works bathe in a darker side of emotion and fantasy. He has released five books of Poetry titled “Temperate Darkness an Behind the Twilight Veil”, “Death and other cold things” “Rollercoaster Heart” and “Frosted Dreams” Jerry is also the editor and publisher of the literary magazine Raven Cage Zine poetry and prose. His poetic inspirations are derived from poets such as Edgar Allen Poe, Robert Frost and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. As well as from various Rock Bands. His apparently twisted mind, twists and intertwines fantasy with reality.

Poetry from Annie Johnson

Light skinned woman with grey curly hair and a black floral top.
Annie Johnson

You Are

You are my silent thoughts;

My heart’s rhythmic beating;

My soul’s deepest yearning

When loneliness tries to own me.

You are the resounding bells

Of church spires remembered

From girlhood’s cherished dreams.

You are the sunlit snow of winter –

Bright, silent diamonds sparkling

Like memories of coming years.

My love lives in the shadow

Of your smile and the lightness

Of your high-spirited laughter.

For a time, we shall walk together

While fate is generous and kind

And the love we share is strong

Against the grasping hands of time.


My Time to Dream

Night like a bully has chased the sun away.

All is darkness; there’s no more light of day.

All day long I’ve been a prisoner to duty

With little time to devote to things of beauty.

Now has come the time I devote to pleasure

When thoughts of you abound beyond measure.

In the innocent state of dreams, that are so few

The stars beckon surrounded by midnight blue.

In soft, hand-holding sweetness with soul so true

I fly among the singing stars searching for you

Until your voice on the wind of whirling spheres

Whispers past the solar silence to fill my ears

Saying, “Darling, you are mine for a million years.”


Annie Johnson is 84 years old. She is Shawnee Native American. She has published two, six hundred-page novels and six books of poetry. Annie has won several poetry awards from world poetry organizations including; World Union of Poets; she is a member of World Nations Writers Union; has received the World Institute for Peace award; the World Laureate of Literature from World Nations Writers Union and The William Shakespeare Poetry Award. She received a Certificate and Medal in recognition of the highest literature from International Literary Union for the year 2020, from Ayad Al Baldawi, President of the International Literary Union. She has three children, two grandchildren, and two sons-in-law. Annie played a flute in the Butler University Symphony. She still plays her flute.

Poetry from Maja Milojkovic

Light blond white woman with long hair and reading glasses wearing a floral scarf and green top.
Maja Milojkovic

LOVE AND FEAR

Love requires an open heart

Fear makes the mind tied in knots

The sword serves to cut the knots, and only the ignorant take a sword to an open heart.

They laugh in your face when they hear: I love you!

They do not see for pride, they do not see because of stubbornness,

They renounce everything while crying and attribute everything to the temptations of the Devil, Their souls have been poisoned by religions, they do not know that God is above all religions.

They write love poems that I don’t believe in,

They talk about God’s love but in fact they are wrapped like a silkworm in a cocoon

They have woven themselves and at the end they bless you and call you: Sister, God’s blessing! They use words of lies and hide behind a prayer that contradicts what they feel and by praying

They drive out sincere feelings as sin.

They do not see the golden grains sent by God to transform into golden jewelry,

They reject all that is unknown because love is the transformation from a caterpillar to a butterfly,

If you kill a caterpillar you will never see a butterfly fly.

Love gives you eyes to see more clearly

Fear closes your eyes, the choice is yours,

Do you want darkness and fear or light and love?

SOUL AND SENSES

No one can see or love the soul, that which is of spiritual nature rejoices in the spiritual.

There is no longing, there is no suffering, there is nothing that we feel.

If we have feelings, it is up to us, it is not from a soul that does not speak.

With words we should express what we feel,

If we remain silent it is pride that prevents the words from being expressed.

.

Maja Milojković was born in 1975 in Zaječar, Serbia.

She is a person to whom from an early age, Leonardo da Vinci’s statement “Painting is poetry that can be seen, and poetry is painting that can be heard” is circulating through the blood.

That’s why she started to use feathers and a brush and began to reveal the world and herself to them.

As a poet, she is represented in numerous domestic and foreign literary newspapers, anthologies and electronic media, and some of her poems can be found on YouTube.

Many of her poems have been translated into English, Hungarian, Bengali and Bulgarian due to the need of foreign readers.

She is the recipient of many international awards.

“Trees of Desire” is her second collection of poems in preparation, which is preceded by the book of poems “Moon Circle”.

She is a member of the International Society of Writers and Artists “Mountain Views” in Montenegro, and she also is a member of the Poetry club “Area Felix” in Serbia.

Poetry from Graciela Noemi Villaverde

Light skinned woman with earrings and straight light brown hair.
Graciela Noemi Villaverde

GUILTY

The music of hell springs

Through the pores of the earth

A tribe of purslane words patrols space

Far away a voice is heard

Like copper wire, shiver in the corners.

The human destroys…

You can still hear the roar of the blades

At night…

The poet’s voice disappears in the roar

Of the air, that goes hunting carrying words

And he thinks…

Instead of a river, a hand grenade Instead of a sown field, a hungry child

Guilty!!!

Can’t stop the jagged voices

With its jaws full of tender words


GRACIELA NOEMI VILLAVERDE Poet writer from Concepción del Uruguay Entre Ríos Argentina, based in Buenos Aires Licentiate in letters author of 7 books genre poetry. She has been awarded several times worldwide. She works as the World Manager of Educational and Social Relations of the Hispanomundial Union of Writers UHE and World Honorary President of the same institution. Activa de la Sade, Argentine Society of Writers. MEMBER OF THE HONORARY CABINET EXECUTIVE OF THE COMMISSION FOR PEACE, JUSTICE AND STRONG INSTITUTIONS OF SOUTH AMERICA ARGENTINE CHAPTER OF UNACCC UNITED NATIONS UNIT FOR CLIMATE CHANGE CENTRAL, SOUTH AMERICA, MEXICO AND THE CARIBBEAN, IN THE EDUCATIONAL AND SOCIAL RELATIONS DIVISION .

Poetry from Azemina Krehic

Image

White woman with long dark straight hair in a short sleeve top holding flowers and standing in a field on a sunny day with a tree and hills in the background.
Azemina Krehic

YOUR FACE

In the evening,

in the restless garden of this body,

your fingers pluck the young flowerbeds,

which under those messengers of light

like fireflies lit up.

I trembled and whispered:

The brightest star in the night sky,

I longed for the darkness just so I could

saw your bright face!

The starry sky is the greatest mystery,

and you, Sirius, are my love verse

sent by God.


Azemina Krehić was born on October 14, 1992 in Metković, Republic of Croatia.

Winner of several international awards for poetry, including:

Award of university professors in Trieste, 2019.

„Mak Dizdar“ award, 2020.

Award of the Publishing Foundation of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, 2021.

„Fra Martin Nedić“ Award, 2022.

She is represented in several international anthologies of poetry.