So, what advice would Fletcher now pass on to other aspiring first-time directors?
“Something I learned really early on was to be aware of things that you can capture in a moment – the sun appearing from behind a cloud, a train going past on the railway line, for example – which can later be used to give you a little respite from your story and allow you to make a transition from one place to another.
“The other big thing is: you can never work hard enough, you can never be over-prepared. Also don’t ever be afraid to say to the people you’re working with, ‘What do you think?’ Oh yes, and make sure you always wear a pair of sensible shoes as there’s a lot of standing about.”
Fletcher was also fiercely pragmatic when it came to the scale of the film he was trying to put together.
He says: “For me, it was always important that the script had heart and warmth and that nothing would be sugar coated or sentimental. I wanted the themes and characters to be strong, and most importantly for a first time director, whose main strength is working with actors, no big expensive set pieces.
“As a first time director I knew the huge risk people were taking financially. I was untried and untested, a complete ‘unknown’ in that sense. I knew, however, that I could bring my own friends to the party – people like Andy Serkis, Olivia Williams and Jason Flemyng – but I also had to be aware that if I started getting too big for my boots in terms of money that it would seriously reduce my chance of getting the film made. This isn’t microbudget, but then again, it isn’t exactly a multi-million pound film, either.”
“Don’t ever be afraid to say to the people you’re working with, ‘What do you think?’”
It is also clear that Fletcher relishes the actual nuts and bolts of filmmaking, especially its collaborative nature. This is perfectly illustrated in a scene of which he’s perhaps proudest, one also which he puts down “to the great skill of George Richmond.”
It begins with Bill, whiling away time in his high-rise flat, making paper planes, trying to stay out of trouble. When his younger son returns home, they begin slowly, finally to bond while launching the plane together from the window. “For me,” says Fletcher, “that scene was cinematic in its purest sense; it was a poetic way of telling the story about those characters in that particular moment. I don’t think I could ever have achieved that with dialogue.”
For him, the hardest moment was probably was trying to shoot a sex scene between two of the young actors, Will Poulter and Charlotte Spencer.
“It was very hard for all those involved. I’ve done those scenes myself, and they are never easy even at the best of times; you’re sitting in front of a bunch of hairy crew saying things like, ‘Hey guys when you kiss, do you mind using tongues?’ It feels like you’re moving into a whole different area of filmmaking,” he laughs.
Surprisingly, on that first day of shooting, Fletcher was feeling nothing but excitement. “The train was now moving and you just had to keep moving with it. I found that very engaging. It was the week before shooting I found most difficult – the nerves, the pressure. The moment, if you like, before the bubble of preparation finally burst.”