Fingernails, which arrives on Apple TV+ this Friday, is one of the most unique romantic comedies of the year. We spoke to its director, Christos Nikou, about smell tests, Yazooās Only You and the Hugh Grant that got awayā¦
Would you sacrifice a fingernail to find the love of your life?
Thatās the question posed by Apples director Christos Nikouās new film, which takes a Black Mirror-style concept (romantic compatibility can be measured by putting a coupleās fingernails in fancy microwave) and makes something a whole lot lovelier than Charlie Brooker normally aims for.
With Jessie Buckley and Riz Ahmed taking pride of place on the rom-com poster, we sat down for a chat with Nikou about 2023ās most rom-com-literate rom-com.
Where did the idea for Fingernails come from?
It started a few years ago when I was trying to understand “what is love?”. And Iām still trying to understand what love is, I donāt know what is love, actually. Because love is the most elusive thing, itās not something that we can analyse, but we need to feel it. And sometimes weāre projecting things onto other people because we need to feel it. Or weāre just creating this fake emotional need in order to believe that we feel it. But itās something that we all need in our life.
And at the same time, I was seeing so many people, and especially from the younger generation around me using all these dating apps; swiping right or left with their finger and their name in order to find the perfect match. And I understand that thatās a different way of doing it, but at the same time, I feel that we cannot just expect an algorithm to suggest people to us. We need to look at something more instinctive.
Jessie Buckley stars as the perpetually romantic Anna in Fingernails. (Credit: Apple TV+)
Thatās a huge part of the filmās message, I suppose it’s that contrast between an algorithm or a scientific explanation for love…
Yeah, and it’s that idea that we’ve created this test machine to find true love. That’s why weāre trying to completely remove all other kinds of technology in the film. Weāre letting only one technological device give all the answers to people. Itās like how weāre all using technology in order to meet people right now, to find love. For me, itās very crazy when Iām seeing people texting for two weeks, if theyāre connecting through a dating app, and then they are meeting in person and the same chemistry isn’t there. Thatās what is more important, to meet people in real life and not through a screen.
That really comes across in the film, it’s so physical and tactile. It’s all shot on 35mm, and obviously thereās the very visceral pulling out of the fingernails. Was that sort of physicality something that you were really trying to get out of the script?
Yeah, everything. Even if we donāt have, letās say, the physical connection through sex scenes in the movie, we are having all this… I mean, I donāt know how many times Jessie and Riz are looking each other in the eyes in the movie ā I might need to count. But we tried to access it in that way. Because itās always missing in our life. Weāre not looking at each other. You’re going to a restaurant and youāre seeing a couple sitting next to each other, and most of the time… Yeah.
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You mentioned chemistry as well. In terms of casting Riz Ahmed and Jessie Buckley, theyāve got fantastic chemistry on screen, but is that quite a scary prospect going into a film like this, which really lives and dies on whether the audience believes in that connection?
We were very lucky. I love both of them, and I think that they’re amazing actors, but I hadn’t seen them on something romantic before. But I felt that they’ve always given such warm performances. I thought theyād be nice people, and they’d bring that to the set and on screen.
But also, to maintain that chemistry on set, I was always playing a different song the whole time before shooting each scene to convey the feeling that I wanted the scene to create. And because they were both listening the same song all the time before shooting every scene, so this was connecting them even more and more and more and more and I think that it worked very well.
Relationships are tested, as they so often are, by the functionality of a microwave (Credit: Apple TV+)
I was going to ask about the soundtrack as well, because thereās a lot of really great needle drops in there. I think ‘Only You’ comes up a few times…
Yes, three times: there’s a French version, an acapella version, and one at the end.
Was that one of the songs that you were playing on set? Or was that something that came in later?
No, we mostly used songs that are not in the movie, actually. As I was writing I had songs in mind for the film, we had to change a few of them for budget reasons, but I couldn’t tell you that I chose the songs to create something very specific; I just chose them because I loved them.
And then Christopher Stracey’s score is absolutely beautiful. What was that collaboration like, if music’s so integral to the writing process?
He’s an amazing, amazing composer, I think within the future, he will win a lot of Oscars. Heās very young, he just started composing for films, and I think that he has a lot of talent. I mean, what I loved about working with him is that how he created the perfect balance between all these folk songs, with the piano cradle to bring the more melancholic side in sometimes. And he was great with the comedy that the movie has to bring as well, because we were trying all the time to create this sort of “melancholic smile” tone. And I think that he really understood that. I love the score so much.
Jeremy Allen White stars as Annaās current boyfriend, Ryan. He hates Nina Simone, which should have been a red flag (Credit: Apple TV+)
You’ve mentioned that ‘melancholic smile’ tone in interviews before, what do you mean by that? Is that where you find that balance between the comedy and the drama?
Yes, because life is like that. And to be honest, itās how I am as a person. I know that sometimes Iām in a very melancholic mood, but at the same time Iām trying always to be funny or to take everything in an optimistic way and with a smile. So I think that thatās what we tried to do. And in my previous movie, Apples, and in this one we tried to make that tone that feels more like a balance between comedy and drama. But I will say Fingernails is more comedic with some melancholic moments in the film, and I think that the movie has that balance.
In terms of defining Fingernails, then, your film straddles a lot of different genres – it’s part rom-com, part sci-fi, all that sort of stuff. Is that anything youāre thinking about in terms of inspirations and things?
No, to be honest. Iām not a big fan of genre films that’re only doing one thing because I prefer when films can do many things. Those are always my favourite films, like The Truman Show, Eternal Sunshine Of The Spotless Mind, they are doing so many different things.
But at the same time, I love romcoms. I think that itās my guilty pleasure. I was saying yesterday that actually, because you mentioned rom-coms and science fiction, I think that Notting Hill is more of a science fiction or a fantasy than a rom-com. I mean, owning a bookstore and having the most successful actors in the world come in and tell you she’s standing in front of you? Itās definitely science fiction.
Luke Wilson plays Anna and Amirās boss, and the man in charge of the love company. (Credit: Apple TV+)
There’s a lovely moment in the film where you say “No one understands love better” than Hugh Grant.
We tried to cast him! He was going to have Luke Wilson’s role [the owner of the love company]. We were thinking that it would be nice for the creator of the test to be the only guy who always gets the girl at the end. But he couldnāt do it. We were already doing a retrospective on romantic movies, so I decided that since we don’t have him, weāll put his name on the marquee.
So that love of rom-coms that youāre talking about is present throughout the film: would you describe yourself as a romantic in that way?
More than I should be, I think. We were having so much fun actually, coming up with all these different tasks and different activities. Somehow people believe that they can connect through different things, but also it’s interesting that they can believe romance only works in the rain or through French language or whatever. The only one I would ever consider doing one day is the blindfolded smell test: I would love to try to find my partner in between other people. Because itās crazy! Weāre living with a person 24/7 and maybe we donāt remember how this person smells, you know?
That would scare the hell out of me. But one of the things that I really liked about Fingernails is itās almost as much about the end of one relationship as it is the start of another. Thereās a lot of focus on Ryan, who I think is a really interesting character. Where did he come from?
I think that all the all the characters are coming from different places. With Ryan, we were trying to create the character who doesnāt try so much in the relationship, who’s getting into a routine. And heās just leaving himself there and doesnāt try to work on it. Yeah. And while Jessie and Riz are trying to find something real, heās the guy who has already proved it. He doesnāt want to prove it again.
Whatās up next for you?
Iām trying to make a movie following a group of background actors in famous movies from the 1980s.
Brilliant. Thank you so much!
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