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Talking
TEETH with Director Mitchell Lichtenstein
In the new indie film Teeth, Dawn, a young teenager who leads
her school’s abstinence-only group, discovers to horror that she is
the living embodiment of the myth of the “vagina dentata”- literally
“toothed vagina.” At first, horrified, Dawn discovers that she is
uniquely empowered to strike back at the various predatory males she
finds herself surrounded by.
Vagina dentata may definitely seem to be an outrageous concept, but
it is one that the film’s director Mitchell Lichtenstein found to
have deeper cultural roots than one might initially expect.
“I was really intrigued by the myth of ‘vagina dentata,’ which you
hear in the movie is a really pervasive myth in many cultures,” says
Teeth writer/director Mitchell Lichtenstein, adding that he was
surprised by how widespread the myth turns out to be. “I thought it
said something about certain fears men have about women on certain
levels and I thought that because of the pervasiveness of [the
myth], it would be fruitful to investigate.”
Lichtenstein was speaking to a packed theater in Philadelphia, after
a raucously received screening of the film, the audience responding
favorably to Teeth’s genre-bending nature. It is almost a
year to the day from when the film premiered at the Sundance Film
Festival to rave reviews and it snared a nomination for the
festival’s Grand Jury Prize.
“I, luckily, was not obligated to channel [the movie] into a certain
genre,” confesses Lichtenstein. “I think one unusual thing about the
movie is that it hasn't been [channeled]. It really does genuinely
take from [several genres]. It's a horror movie, it's a dark comedy,
it's a coming-of-age film. I was just trying to tell the story in
what was the most entertaining and interesting way to tell it
without worrying about how it would ultimately be categorized.”
With its subject matter, a Mulligan’s stew of different genres and a
first-time director, one would think that Teeth would have
been a tough sell to potential investors of the indie film.
Lichtenstein reports that those who were approached for money had
immediate reactions.
“One thing you find out often with scripts, is that they lay in
limbo as people kind of decide whether they might or might not be
interested,” he states. “With this one, they were either instantly
not interested or very interested.”
Although there is a certain amount of blood, gore and severed male
appendages in the film, Lichtenstein says that he made a conscious
decision not to show Dawn’s “mutation” on screen. “I was trying to
create a heroine, not a monster. The teeth would have been probably
a violent and ugly image that I didn't want to associate with her.”
And for Jess Weixler, the young actress who plays Dawn, Lichtenstein
has nothing but praise. “I think she's great,” he gushes.
Evidentially, the judges at the Sundance Festival agreed with him,
as they awarded her the Dramatic Special Jury Prize for her “juicy
and jaw-dropping performance.”
“She was just out of Juilliard and we had a casting director who
thought she'd be great for it,” Lichtenstein elaborates. “We saw
many young women for the part, but the thing I loved about her is
that she's a trained actress and she, to me, had the believable
innocence and inexperience that was essential to the character.
She's actually a really wonderful comedian but can also play it
straight without winking too much at the audience.” |