|
||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||
DR: Yeah. I think actors are lucky to have a job, which becomes more fun as it becomes more challenging. We can do a day of me shooting me shutting doors and opening stuff, and it would be the easiest day of my life, but it wouldn’t be any fun (laughs). I think particularly the break-up scene, it isn’t so much, “Will I be able to do that,” but for me I go, “We can’t not do that right. It has to be perfect.” The breakup scene in the diner is replayed several times through different perspectives and is a real key element in the film. But that’s a great time when you have a director like Alexandre and a screen partner like Juno where you can work off each other. How reliant were you on Alex for the tone of this? There are scenes that are silly and fun and other stuff that is very serious and you really nail it. JH: One thing that I find interesting about Alexandre is that he’s made a lot of really disturbing films full of upsetting sequences, but he is a real sweetheart who gave a really lush, gentle romantic arc to this story. And with the scenes in this film, the man’s romanticism comes through – it glows. There is a real affection for the characters, even when they are admitting some really, ugly painful things. There is a feeling that these people are cared for. The storyteller has an emotional attachment to them.
|
|
|||||||||||||||||
Friday, November 1, 2024 © 2024 Box Office Prophets, a division of One Of Us, Inc. |