NEW YORK, NY.- Periods of personal crisis have often yielded writing sprees for Goran Stolevski, a Macedonian filmmaker who has made three critically acclaimed features in three years.
Although his recent spate of theatrical releases all by Focus Features could make it seem as if success has been quick to come by for the filmmaker, it has been proceeded by long seasons of debilitating professional uncertainty.
Right after turning 30, Stolevski wrote four feature screenplays in a nine-month period he spent living in Bristol, England. Writing gave shape to his days as an unemployed artist who couldnt get any of his projects off the ground. Two of those screenplays became his recent features You Wont Be Alone and She explored the struggles of young women in the novel The L-Shaped Room but found her biggest success with a childrens book about a magical cupboard..
Then, after his 2017 short film Would You Look at Her won a prize at the Sundance Film Festival, Stolevski was out of work for another two years, and wrote four more screenplays.
Stolevski, now 38, had written at least 10 scripts before making his 2022 feature debut, You Wont Be Alone. An evocative tale about a shape-shifting witch in a 19th century Macedonian village, it premiered at the Sundance Film Festival. His sophomore effort, the 1990s-set Australian gay romance Of an Age, opened in U.S. cinemas in early 2023.
I wouldnt make every film Ive written, but there are some Im obsessed with; they need to exist outside of my head, he said in a video call in January from this years Palm Springs International Film Festival where his third feature, Housekeeping for Beginners, screened.
Out in theaters on Friday, Housekeeping chronicles the chaotic everyday interactions of an unconventional queer family. Dita (Anamaria Marinca), a lesbian in Skopje, North Macedonia, marries her male best friend, a gay man, to adopt her late partners two daughters.
Watching the film feels like being dropped in the middle of an unfamiliar universe that slowly begins to make sense, and while they are tonally distinct, Stolevskis features all teem with untidy emotions, as ostracized characters assert themselves on their own terms.
After initially growing up in North Macedonia, a country in southeast Europe bordering Greece and Albania, Stolevski migrated to the northern suburbs of Melbourne, Australia, at the age of 12. There, with access to movies on home video from the local library and a nearby cinema, he became a voracious movie nut, he recalled.
On top of his status as a migrant in a foreign land, Stolevski came out as gay as a teenager. Avidly watching stories centering on homosexual characters such as Pedro Almodóvars Law of Desire or Wong Kar-wais Happy Together had slowly made him comfortable enough to accept his own sexual orientation, he said.
Instinctually, he is interested in telling stories centering outsiders. Stolevski said he doesnt feel at home anymore when he visits North Macedonia. There, hes now considered a rich girl, he joked, despite having grown up in a densely populated and economically disadvantaged neighborhood. While Melbourne is a much more multicultural society, and accepting of queer people, Stolevski never felt connected to its laid-back culture and the countrys vast empty spaces.
Being an outsider is really useful to being an artist, he said. Your life forces you to think in someone elses shoes, to think of how a mainstream person would process something.
Increasingly, though, his films are entering the mainstream. In 2022, You Wont Be Alone represented Australia at the Academy Awards in the best international film category, and last year, Housekeeping was the Oscar entry from North Macedonia.
I was Miss Australia and then Miss Macedonia at the Oscars, he said, laughing.
That Focus became such a supportive partner for his idiosyncratic art house films, two of them not in English, seemed unusual. Its been a miracle! Stolevski said. You dont expect these films to have much of a life in terms of an American cinema release much less by a reputable company.
But it was precisely the outside-the-box originality of Stolevskis concept for You Wont Be Alone, and how responsibly he took his movies financing, that convinced Focus working with him would be an asset rather than a risk.
Goran makes films that are deeply humanist, said Peter Kujawski, chair of Focus Features. Every single time that Ive watched the first cut for these three hes presented us, I feel like I just learned a lot about who we are.
Housekeeping for Beginners, which premiered at the Venice Film Festival, is only the fourth Macedonian film to do so. Marija Dimitrova, the films producer, believes that by making movies in his homeland, Stolevski can help Macedonian cinema evolve.
According to Dimitrova, only three or four local feature films are produced in North Macedonia each year, the majority of them dramas. Its very important that this film is set in Macedonia, Dimitrova said. We dont have many LGBTQ+ stories in films here.
Housekeeping had a small release in the country last year, and will return to Macedonian cinemas following the U.S. release.
Im really happy that Macedonian audiences are really hungry for this type of cinema and for the cinema that Goran is presenting, Dimitrova said.
For the time being, however, Stolevski wants to keep his camera away from both the place of his birth and his adoptive home, to capture as-yet-unexplored horizons.
The next three films I want to make have nothing to do with the Balkans, he said. None of them are set in America, Australia or England either.
And he also needs a break from self-examination. I want to make movies to live lives I dont get to live otherwise, not just see myself reflected in my films, Stolevski added.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.