How the âbillionaire lifestyleâ at a Park City, Utah, mansion fueled a new movie by the creator of âSuccessionâ
How the âbillionaire lifestyleâ at a Park City, Utah, mansion fueled a new movie by the creator of âSuccessionâ
The old saying in real estate â that the three most important things are âlocation, location, locationâ â also applies to making movies, as evident in the new film, âMountainhead,â shot this spring near Park City, Utah.
The dark comedy â which debuts Saturday evening on HBO (at 6 or 9 p.m. Mountain time, depending on your provider) and starts streaming Saturday at 1:01 a.m. Mountain time on â centers on four tech moguls, three multibillionaires and their half-billionaire host, during whatâs supposed to be a luxurious guysâ weekend in the Utah mountains.
The fun stops when news comes in of global riots and turmoil, all blamed on misinformation generated by new social media tools just released on a platform owned by the richest of the four men (Cory Michael Smith).
Smithâs character, Venis (pronounced âVeniceâ), tries to minimize his responsibility, all while trying to talk his friend-rival, Jeff (Ramy Youssef), into selling his new A.I. system, which Jeff says is less prone to spewing lies and fascism.
The groupâs elder statesman, Randall (Steve Carell), muses about how they can leverage the impending apocalypse to take over a few countries, while the houseâs less-rich owner, Souper (Jason Schwartzman), pitches a meditation app â as if it can help fend off the toxicity boiling out of everyoneâs smartphones.
If the story feels close to current events, thatâs because writer-director Jesse Armstrong worked on a fast schedule. The âSuccessionâ creator wrote the script for his first feature film in January and February, then filming happened over five weeks, mostly in March. The movieâs release date, Saturday, is for this yearâs Emmy Awards.
Central to the movie is Souperâs house, named Mountainhead.
The house sits at 3566 W. Crestwood Court, in the gated Deer Crest neighborhood on the northeast side of Deer Valley in Wasatch County. when it was listed at $65 million â then considered a record for a single-family home in Utah.
At 21,000 square feet, the house boasts an NBA-regulation basketball court, a two-lane bowling alley and a two-story climbing wall, all of which are deployed in the movie. Whatâs not in the movie is one of the houseâs signature amenities: a private ski gondola.
In interviews last week, Schwartzman and Smith each said âthe house is a characterâ in the movie. They, along with Carell and Youssef, remarked on how it added to Armstrongâs examination of the super-rich â a subject that fueled âSuccessionâ over four Emmy-winning seasons.
The Salt Lake Tribune interviewed the actors over Zoom â Carell and Schwartzman in one session, and Youssef and Smith in another. Their comments have been lightly edited for clarity.
What makes Park City a good place to ride out the apocalypse?
Smith: Park City is adorable, and these people are not. It was nice to be in a cute, charming, sweet place.
Carell: I love it there. Iâve been going up there for years. My kids learned to ski up there. It was icing on the cake, in terms of doing this movie, that we got to shoot there. Itâs beautiful, itâs serene. Itâs the best skiing Iâve ever had in my life. The people are kind and nice. ⊠If I could film everything in Park City, I would.
Youssef: The sheer altitude, right? The whole thing is an allegory. I think about how many of us are in the comfort of our homes and watching suffering happening on our phones. And these guys are in a home that is at a much higher altitude, and the stakes of that suffering are much higher, because theyâre actually directly responsible for it. So there was something about that luxe isolationism that was really symbolic.
What was your impression when you first walked into that house?
Schwartzman: The first thing I thought when I walked into the house was, âWhich is the first floor?â Because thereâs not just one front door. Thereâs many different doors. So I was always disoriented. Most houses have the main part. There were so many main parts.
Youssef: It was just, âWhoa. This is crazy.â A few questionable design choices.
Smith: Thereâs nowhere for art to be hung â well, thatâs not true, but there arenât many. Itâs like everything is textured in material, which is just really a fascinating way to design. ⊠I think 60% of the house is built for recreational areas. You donât need to leave. If you want to play basketball, you can play basketball on your full court downstairs. Or if you want to go rock climbing, you can go rock climbing on your wall. Or bowling, pingpong, shuffleboard.
Youssef: It is so nestled in nature, despite being this incredibly man-made structure. Itâs the most man-made house Iâve ever been in, in terms of just the sheer opulence. But then itâs nestled right in the heart of nature. So that juxtaposition was cool.
Schwartzman: Itâs so funny, that in the beginning we walked in and were like, âWhoa, mama mia!â Steve even said, âNo oneâs going to think this is a real place that weâre shooting in, because this house and that view are so perfect, people are going to think itâs fake.â ⊠We left the house for a few days and shot at Snowbird. Itâs funny, we came back and I was, like, âAh, home.â
Carell: We acclimated very quickly. We could very easily embrace the billionaire lifestyle.
Did the house help you get into character?
Carell: My character is very passĂ© about all of it. Seen bigger, seen better. None of the trappings mean anything, really, to any of these guys, except maybe [Schwartzmanâs] character. Material things just have no meaning, the nice cars or whatever. Theyâre so far beyond that, their lives arenât even about that. Thatâs just incidental.
Smith: Jesse [Armstrong] said this early on: âWhen you walk in, thereâs nothing impressive about this.â As the wealthiest man in the world, youâre just constantly in impressive environments, so youâre numb to being wowed by a $65 million overpriced piece of real estate, because itâs on a mountain with its own private ski lift. Like itâs cool, convenient, fun. But itâs not an amazing house. [When Armstrong said] that to me early on, when I was walking in, I was, like, âOh, thatâs just really helpful.â Just for a person to have lost all sense of awe over really extraordinary things.
Carell: It [has this] vastness, and thereâs a solitary nature to that house, too. You feel like youâre away from everything in that house. It is your own world, right there. As the story progresses, and they become more and more isolated from the rest of the world, you really feel like this is their bunker, in a way.
Schwartzman: It has a feeling like itâs the only home there, at the top of the mountain. It has an unobstructed view, which I always found haunting in the movie. You just see the emptiness, and when we cut outside and you see the camera coming in, thereâs like this creeping feeling. When we read the script, the whole thing was in this house. And when they showed us the photos of the house, I was, like, âThere it is. Thatâs done.â If it wasnât that house, it wouldnât have been this movie.
Carell: It benefited the story and the shooting, because there were so many different places to film in the house. Different vibes, different rooms, for different types of scenes.
Schwartzman: That spiral staircase that goes from floor 1 to 7 in a straight shot â it just became a weird physical metaphor of the movie for me. Kind of a downward spiral. That shape is the movie to me.
was produced by and reviewed and distributed by ±ŹÁÏTV.