Child Soldiers, Child Actors
A film director talks about choosing his battle-tested cast
interview by Jonathan Romney, from Sight & Sound
March-April 2010
The powerful film drama Johnny Mad Dog tells the story of a band of child soldiers who fight in an African civil war. “This may be one of the most disturbing films you’ll ever see,” writes Linda Ruth Williams in the British film magazine Sight & Sound, “but it tackles its grim subject matter with such innovation and exhilaration that glimpses of beauty shine through the mask of terror.” The film owes its unsettling realism in part to its cast: Liberian children who have actually been soldiers. Sight & Sound’s Jonathan Romney spoke with director Jean-Stéphane Sauvaire about the film and the ethical paradoxes of his casting methods.
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You shot in Liberia, but the film never specifies a particular setting.
It could just as well be set in Sierra Leone or Uganda, anywhere that children were used in conflict. I didn’t want to make a historical film. I wanted it to be about child soldiers—the same things are still happening in Colombia, in the Middle East.
How many of your young actors had actually been child soldiers in the war?
All the young people in the film have only known war. The boy who plays No Good Advice, the youngest (Dagbeh Tweh), I found him in photos from 2003, among the combatants on the bridge at Monrovia, there in the middle of the shooting and the dead. The oldest ones fought, like Christophe Minie, who plays Johnny.
How did you find your cast?
There are certain districts, the ghetto really, where the military was easily able to recruit soldiers. I did casting sessions asking them to tell me whatever they wanted, in front of the camera—not necessarily war stories, but they’d inevitably talk about war. It was fascinating: Some were obviously lying, telling stories they’d heard, others were clearly telling me things they needed to tell. You sense the trauma when they tell you these things—they’ve persuaded themselves that it’s just what happens in war. As far as they’re concerned, they were fighting as soldiers, not just killing gratuitously. That’s why they recruit children to fight, because they get caught up in a sort of madness, without being aware that they’re killing.