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The Making Of Unorthodox | Netflix

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    [Soft music.]
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    And action!
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    It's huge.
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    It's mind blowing.
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    I have to keep reminding myself
    that they're not real.
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    It's like a historical movie, actually,
    what we are doing here.
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    This is 90 percent of my filming
    experience, here?
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    Is like this.
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    Come over here to do a show
    set in Williamsburg,
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    to do it in Berlin, it kind of,
    you know, plays with my head.
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    A series in Yiddish, for me also,
    personally, I think it's a great thing.
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    Going to be dealing with a language
    that no one understands.
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    I mean, we're dealing with costumes
    and rituals no one understands.
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    But the essence of what's happening,
    that's universally understood.
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    This very beautiful and unique story
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    that shows kind of like, both worlds.
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    I don't think it's a story about
    the existence of God, or something.
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    It's more about...the right to
    have your voice.
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    And people like me never really
    had that opportunity.
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    We never saw ourselves reflected back
    in the stories being told
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    in popular culture.
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    So we didn't really know
    how to create our own stories.
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    I think this is the first show, ever,
    to accurately portray
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    the Hasidic community.
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    These are real people, and their
    experiences are very universal,
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    and very relatable.
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    When the community watches it,
    and there is somebody like me,
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    watching it, and sees, this girl
    lived exactly like she lives.
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    And, she was able to muster
    the courage to follow her dreams.
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    Maybe this girl can, too.
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    When I met Ann and Alexa,
    and I became friends with them,
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    I realized, if anybody is ever going to
    really be able to grasp
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    what the story is about,
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    and to really execute it in a way
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    that is going to have a
    positive cultural impact,
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    it's these women.
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    After I met Deborah,
    I read her book,
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    and I thought it was amazing.
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    I mean, I read it in one sitting.
    I couldn't put it down.
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    And then, she said:
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    "Well, why don't you make my book
    into a TV show?"
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    Anna and I wanted to make a show
    for a while,
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    in which we could work through
    a lot of the topics
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    we discuss a lot, especially
    about being Jewish in Germany.
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    To me, the story is about
    a young woman, who
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    is searching for herself,
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    and she is searching for
    her community in the world.
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    Esther is a 19 year old girl.
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    She was born and raised in
    Williamsburg, Brooklyn,
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    in the community called Satmar.
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    - Don't forget, Esty.
    He speaks first.
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    She grows up in a very
    religious neighborhood.
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    And, frees herself from an
    unhappy arranged marriage,
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    and flees to Berlin.
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    Her story is unique, and romantic.
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    We just felt it was so different,
    that somebody would leave
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    this very insular community
    in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, New York,
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    and find their way here,
    out of choice.
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    From a very young age,
    she always felt very different.
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    She's always been told
    that she is very different,
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    because of the fact that
    she always has questions within her,
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    and she has that 'chutzpah,'
    you can say.
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    The Satmar Jews are a
    Hasidic community,
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    originally from the town of
    Satu Mare, in Hungary.
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    They are mostly descendants
    of Holocaust survivors, and
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    started by Holocaust survivors,
    in New York, after the war.
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    This kind of makes them
    a little bit different
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    than a lot of other
    Hasidic communities,
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    because they really developed
    what they were about, after the war,
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    and not before.
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    It is founded by people who are
    struggling
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    with the most immense trauma
    we can imagine.
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    For the first generation,
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    I would say even for the first
    two generations,
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    this trauma was a very driving force
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    behind the ideological structures
    of this community.
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    The Satmar community is also special,
    in that Yiddish is their native language.
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    I think they can be credited,
    to some degree,
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    with keeping Yiddish alive.
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    - But why Berlin?
    - Think about it.
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    - What?
    - Her crazy mama lives in Berlin!
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    It was very important to us,
    to make changes in the present-day story,
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    from Deborah Feldman's real life.
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    Because she is a young woman,
    she is a public figure,
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    she is a public intellectual,
    and we wanted Esther's
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    Berlin life to be very different
    from real Deborah's Berlin life.
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    So, in a sense, the flashbacks
    are based on the book,
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    but the present-day story
    is entirely made up.
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    You have to go beyond cliché,
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    beyond our projection
    onto what the life might be
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    in a community like this.
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    It was very important to us
    to get not just the look and feel
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    and costumes, and rituals,
    and everything correct, but
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    to inhabit the ideas of
    these characters' worlds,
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    in a way that felt authentic,
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    but also heightened,
    because it's television.
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    I just, in general, feel like,
    when you're showing
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    different communities,
    especially communities on the margins,
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    you want to get the details right.
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    We knew it was so important
    to get people on board,
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    not just as actors, but behind
    and in front of the camera,
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    who are from this community.
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    So one of the first people we hired
    was Eli Rosen,
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    who is an actor, translator,
    and kind of specialist,
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    when it comes to Yiddish.
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    Eli Rosen was like our guide.
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    He was our spirit guide.
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    He not only translated the scripts,
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    he coached the actors in Yiddish,
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    he helped us with all the
    cultural details,
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    and he played the rabbi.
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    When I was given the opportunity
    to help ensure
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    that it was representative,
    and that it is authentic,
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    um...I, uh...
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    jumped at it.
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    Directing the scenes
    which are set within or
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    in the ultra-Orthodox world,
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    I would have been lost,
    without this advice.
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    We had two research trips
    to New York,
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    with our entire team,
    to not just watch and look,
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    and touch everything we saw,
    but we got access
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    to meeting people who are
    still in this community.
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    We really tried to offer
    our heads of department, as much access.
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    These trips, of course,
    are like a hunt, for impressions,
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    for feeling atmosphere,
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    for just watching,
    just taking things in.
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    It was a kind of
    image-based research.
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    We looked around.
    We took so many pictures.
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    And we tried to inhale this world
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    by the visual impressions we got.
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    While we were taken around New York,
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    we went on a tour of Williamsburg,
    by an ex-Satmar woman,
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    who had grown up there,
    she had her first child there,
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    and had been married, and everything.
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    She walked us through
    a lot of Williamsburg,
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    and the traditions within
    the exterior buildings.
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    Silke was taking lots of notes
    for her world,
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    and I was taking lots of notes
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    for the characters
    that I was going to be building.
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    We started shooting the past,
    like the Williamsburg parts,
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    and then, we moved to Berlin.
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    So, suddenly, something felt different.
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    Also, it's moving from Yiddish to English,
    and different outfits and makeup.
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    Suddenly, the hair -- and there was
    so many different hairs, right?
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    There is bald, and there is this,
    and there is the wig, and --
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    Esty has so many faces.
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    I had spoken to Deborah Feldman,
    before we started the project,
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    about her personal experience
    of transitioning
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    from Satmar modesty clothing,
    to Western clothing.
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    She said it took her a long time,
    and it was a slow process,
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    and she pushed herself
    to experience
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    wearing T shirts,
    and showing her arm,
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    and showing more flesh.
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    She said it did take a long time.
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    So, I wanted to show that.
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    I wanted to reflect Deborah's experience,
    with Esther.
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    It was so hard to create, in a way,
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    a production that is much like
    a period film,
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    that plays in the world of today.
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    To create the costumes for that
    was a very big challenge.
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    Much like the sets that played
    in two worlds,
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    we had costumes that played
    in two worlds.
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    Plus, a character who has an arc,
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    not just in her character,
    but in her looks, and in her clothes.
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    Our production designer
    knew which exterior locations
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    we were going to be using there,
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    and built, made to measure,
    the sets here,
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    to sync with those exteriors.
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    We have complicated locations,
    because we shot
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    most of the New York part,
    here in Berlin.
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    - Why Germany?
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    The other movies that I did before,
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    we came through the windows,
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    and now, we do everything inside.
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    So, maybe, this is a very first
    experience, for me. Yeah.
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    Wolfgang is an incredible
    cinematographer.
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    He has shot some of the most
    incredible documentaries.
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    He is able to work with natural light.
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    He is able to work spontaneously.
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    We joke that he is like
    the hand held steadicam.
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    He is good at combining
    different kinds of light,
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    which, because we were matching
    set interiors with real exteriors,
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    the lighting was very delicate,
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    and Wolfgang was
    incredible at that.
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    When I watch material
    in post production,
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    I think it is very difficult
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    to see what was inside,
    and what was outside,
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    what was in New York,
    and what was shot in Berlin.
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    - She's not here?
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    Shira Haas is a talent.
    What a face.
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    I mean, she only needs
    to move a part of her face,
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    and can make you cry,
    or laugh.
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    Shira is just an
    enormous, enormous actress.
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    So talented. So gifted.
    Such a hard worker.
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    It was pure joy.
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    Every day, it was pure joy,
    to work with Shira.
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    I think that what is really
    beautiful in Esty,
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    I think that she
    really really really,
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    even though she has been told
    all her life that she is different,
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    even though she feels like
    she is different,
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    she always tries very, very hard
    to fit in. Really.
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    And, she really wants to find
    that feeling of belonging and happiness.
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    We have, sort of, four main characters.
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    I mean, Esther is the main character,
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    but the other main characters
    are all Satmar characters,
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    who are dealing with being
    inside and outside at the same time.
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    The thing is, she was kicked out,
    or left the community 15 years before.
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    It is that role, that attracted me,
    really, to the whole thing.
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    With Amit Rahav, we had never
    seen him act in another project.
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    We just saw him in the audition.
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    We were all just blown away
    by him, as well.
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    He just kills it, in every scene.
    He is a natural talent.
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    I think that he is just
    very naive, and innocent.
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    It's not weakness.
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    He has one truth, and this is
    the one truth he knows.
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    - It's around here somewhere.
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    - There it is!
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    - In this section.
    Next to the fallen tree!
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    With Jeff Wilbusch,
    a crazy thing happened.
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    Our German casting director,
    said:
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    "Oh, we have this German actor,
    who speaks Yiddish."
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    It was the end of the day,
    and Alexa and I were really tired,
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    and we were sitting here in the office.
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    So, this guy comes in,
    and we were like:
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    "Yeah, so this is what the show
    is about," and everything.
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    He was like:
    "This is my story."
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    And we were like:
    "I'm sorry?"
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    And he was like:
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    "I am from the
    Satmar community.
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    Yiddish is my native language.
    This is my story."
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    I think Moishe is
    a tragic role.
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    He has a lot of issues.
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    Personal issues,
    that he needs to fight.
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    He is hunted.
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    And he is also a hunter.
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    So, he comes to
    bring Esther back.
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    - Say it. Where is Esty?
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    - Where is Esty, telephone?
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    - You're crazy, Yanky.
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    [Aerosol spritzes.]
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    For us, the challenges
    of creating this Satmar wedding,
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    here in Berlin, began with
    finding enough extras,
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    who had big enough beards,
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    and were willing to get
    all the hair and makeup.
  • 13:25 - 13:28
    The joke on this show
    is that the men required
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    way more hair and makeup
    than the women.
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    - Mine is grown now.
    I wasn't allowed to cut it.
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    It's a very complex
    cultural ritual.
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    We wanted to get it right.
    There are a lot of details.
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    I'm just placing everybody in
    sort of gender and age order,
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    as well as imaginary relationship
    to the bride and groom.
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    So, there is kind of
    a system to it.
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    It's incredible pageantry.
  • 13:56 - 13:57
    It's a moment of great joy
    for the family.
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    But, they don't necessarily
    express their joy,
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    the way other communities
    express it.
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    I paid for everything.
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    So really, everything
    has to work out.
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    I check everyone's behavior.
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    I am having fun,
    but not too much.
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    It was very important for us,
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    to strike the right tone
    with the wedding.
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    Then, also, we had
    a hundred extras.
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    Costumes.
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    Well, the first challenge,
    and the biggest challenge,
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    was to shoot it all
    within two days. [Laughs]
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    For us, it was our
    big Hollywood moment.
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    It was very hot
    when we were shooting.
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    Unfortunately,
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    for all of the extras,
    and actors,
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    they were wearing
    a lot of costume,
  • 14:41 - 14:43
    and makeup, and hair,
  • 14:43 - 14:44
    in 100 degree Farhenheit
    weather.
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    - Every day on set,
    it's like this. Normal.
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    - That's what I'm used to.
    - He's the king.
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    It's hot in there.
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    It's too hot. Please,
    don't send me in there, again.
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    We had an incredibly talented
    costume designer, Justine Seymour.
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    She has worked all over the world.
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    She is incredibly flexible.
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    It was challenging, because
    some of the actual clothing
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    is not for sale here, so some things
    were sourced in Williamsburg.
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    They wear these furry hats
    called shtreimels.
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    We couldn't afford them.
    They cost more than 1000 Euro each.
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    Each hat involves the fur
    of six minks,
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    which seemed unnecessary to us.
    We needed a lot of them.
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    So, a theater company in Hamburg
    made them out of fake fur.
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    So, no minks were harmed
    in the making of this TV show.
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    Right now, I am spraying
    and stroking the shtreimel,
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    in order to make the fur flat,
    and look more realistic and shiny.
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    We have had to fit them,
    to make them work,
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    for every individual actor, yes.
    Even all of the extras.
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    There is a tent, over there,
    full of shtreimels.
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    We call it our shtreimel tent.
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    Our head of hair and makeup
    department, Jens,
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    managed to create our peyots,
    in a way that I've never seen on screen.
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    One hundred percent
    the best peyots I've seen.
  • 16:08 - 16:10
    It's quite interesting.
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    Yesterday, we were laughing
    very much.
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    When we had 150 Hasids outside,
    it was a very funny picture.
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    Someone was saying: "Look!
    The Jews are back in Berlin."
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    [Music.]
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    We always talk about trying
    to portray reality in film.
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    There is no more reality
    than diversity.
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    That's -- just walk
    across the street.
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    So, for Berlin,
    we really wanted
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    to create a very colorful
    lightness,
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    to the architecture we chose.
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    We kind of returned to
    West Berlin.
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    Kind of little locations and areas,
    and certain type of architecture,
  • 17:05 - 17:09
    that, um, were built in the
    1970s and 1980s.
  • 17:09 - 17:13
    I wanted to have something
    more with a freer space.
  • 17:13 - 17:15
    More rhythm in it.
  • 17:16 - 17:21
    Silke found a most incredible location,
    right next to the Philharmonic.
  • 17:21 - 17:25
    No one had ever shot there, and
    it was the perfect location.
  • 17:25 - 17:29
    It was for the music academy,
    it was built in the 1960s.
  • 17:29 - 17:35
    It was supposed to be
    a much lighter, open architecture,
  • 17:35 - 17:39
    post-war. It was about
    communication.
  • 17:39 - 17:42
    It was about low hierarchy.
  • 17:42 - 17:45
    Um, mirrored by architecture.
  • 17:46 - 17:49
    We created our own
    music academy, where
  • 17:49 - 17:52
    Jews and Muslims
    are playing music together.
  • 17:52 - 17:56
    It's also this crazy,
    post-colonial paradox.
  • 17:56 - 17:58
    Like, why are people
    from the Middle East
  • 17:58 - 18:00
    playing German music,
    at all?
  • 18:00 - 18:05
    It has this crazy bringing together
    of unexpected worlds.
  • 18:05 - 18:10
    That gets to the spirit
    of the show, on every level.
  • 18:10 - 18:14
    The concept of this music academy
    is that different talented musicians
  • 18:14 - 18:18
    from all over the world come together,
    to practice their specific instruments.
  • 18:18 - 18:31
    [Instrumental music.]
  • 18:31 - 18:33
    Television is aspirational.
  • 18:33 - 18:36
    We like the idea of showing
    a version of Berlin
  • 18:36 - 18:37
    that was full of music,
  • 18:37 - 18:42
    that merged music from the past,
    with young people from the future,
  • 18:42 - 18:45
    against this amazing backdrop.
  • 18:47 - 18:50
    There is a kind of
    doubling back on history
  • 18:50 - 18:51
    in this show.
  • 18:51 - 18:53
    We have a Jewish character.
  • 18:53 - 18:57
    In order to escape
    the confines of her own life,
  • 18:57 - 19:02
    she returns to the source of
    her community's trauma.
  • 19:02 - 19:05
    - Do you see that villa?
  • 19:05 - 19:08
    - The conference, where the Nazis
    decided to kill the Jews,
  • 19:08 - 19:11
    - in concentration camps,
    took place in 1942 in that villa.
  • 19:11 - 19:13
    - And you swim in this lake?
  • 19:13 - 19:16
    - A lake is just a lake.
  • 19:17 - 19:20
    Of course, seeing her
    being confronted
  • 19:20 - 19:22
    with our world,
  • 19:22 - 19:26
    it makes us question our world,
    too.
  • 19:27 - 19:32
    Shooting a series in Yiddish,
    um, in Berlin,
  • 19:32 - 19:39
    which has, ironically, become
    a kind of new diaspora,
  • 19:39 - 19:41
    in the sense that you have
    all these young Israeli Jews,
  • 19:41 - 19:44
    all these young American Jews,
    coming back to Berlin,
  • 19:44 - 19:47
    this is a movement.
    This is not the story of one person.
  • 19:47 - 19:49
    Um, it just fit.
    It makes sense,
  • 19:49 - 19:52
    that this is the place
    where we would rediscover this language,
  • 19:52 - 19:54
    outside of a religious context.
  • 19:54 - 19:58
    So there will be art in Yiddish.
  • 19:58 - 20:00
    There is theater in Yiddish, so.
  • 20:00 - 20:04
    But like, a real, Netflix series,
    in Yiddish?
  • 20:04 - 20:06
    This is something amazing.
  • 20:10 - 20:14
    You know, Berlin really
    wears its trauma on its sleeve.
  • 20:14 - 20:18
    It's what makes the city so raw,
    and interesting.
  • 20:18 - 20:23
    Esty coming here, um,
    she does the same in the city.
  • 20:23 - 20:26
    She adds to those layers.
  • 20:26 - 20:31
    That was really important for us:
    to close that circle,
  • 20:31 - 20:34
    as we say in German.
  • 20:34 - 20:49
    [Soft instrumental music.]
Title:
The Making Of Unorthodox | Netflix
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Captions Requested
Duration:
21:01

English subtitles

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