https://www.serieously.com
A l'occasion de la sortie du film Oppenheimer, on a rencontré Matt Damon et Emily Blunt. Ils nous parlent de l'ambiance sur le tournage et de l'importance de leur personnage.
Retrouve-nous sur :
TikTok : https://www.tiktok.com/@serieouslyfr
Facebook : https://www.facebook.com/serieouslyfr/
Twitter : https://twitter.com/SerieouslyFR
Instagram : https://www.instagram.com/serieouslyfr/
Interview : Romain Cheyron
Montage : Stella Capitaine
A l'occasion de la sortie du film Oppenheimer, on a rencontré Matt Damon et Emily Blunt. Ils nous parlent de l'ambiance sur le tournage et de l'importance de leur personnage.
Retrouve-nous sur :
TikTok : https://www.tiktok.com/@serieouslyfr
Facebook : https://www.facebook.com/serieouslyfr/
Twitter : https://twitter.com/SerieouslyFR
Instagram : https://www.instagram.com/serieouslyfr/
Interview : Romain Cheyron
Montage : Stella Capitaine
Category
🎥
Court métrageTranscription
00:00 He doesn't want everyone walking around going,
00:01 "I'm in a very important movie."
00:03 There's none of that on set.
00:05 (upbeat music)
00:08 Margaritas, a way to unwind, right?
00:12 - I think the experience of reading the script
00:16 was very intense and I was devastated at the end.
00:19 But making the film, we were very focused, I think.
00:22 You walk on one of Chris's sets and everybody,
00:25 nobody says it out loud,
00:26 but everybody really feels lucky to be there.
00:28 So everyone's so dialed in and there's no chaos.
00:31 It's a very quiet set, it's intimate.
00:34 It's a really wonderful place to work.
00:36 The script, of course, was heart racing and so intense.
00:40 The movie itself destroys people.
00:42 But I remember that being a happy set.
00:45 - Well, Chris and Emma have done so much work.
00:47 - So much prep. - Yeah, so much prep
00:48 that you can feel the hundreds of hours of work
00:52 that they've put in, kind of creating and curating the set
00:56 so that when you get there,
00:57 it's almost a casual environment.
01:00 One of the reasons why the acting in his movies
01:02 is always so good is because he creates a relaxed atmosphere.
01:06 - Like he doesn't want everyone walking around going,
01:08 "I'm in a very important movie."
01:10 Like there's none of that on set.
01:12 - Because really mainly of Killian's
01:18 just extraordinary performance
01:20 that pulls you right into the full spectrum of the man,
01:23 this is a very human story about the trauma
01:25 of living with a brain like that
01:27 and what that did to him.
01:28 I didn't know anything about the bouts of depression
01:31 and PTSD and anxiety
01:33 and everything he struggled with psychologically.
01:36 Then the atonement he sort of felt he had to go through
01:38 after creating this bomb that changed the world
01:41 and changed us forever.
01:43 There was so much to mine within the character
01:46 and within the people around him.
01:48 I think we all knew sort of the basics.
01:50 And it's insane that we just know the basics
01:52 because this is such a looming problem
01:55 that we're still living with.
01:56 And so once you see this film,
01:58 I think it will be the full reality
02:00 that this is something we're still living with today.
02:03 - It's a Chris Nolan movie,
02:08 so you know it won't be a linear story.
02:10 He's just not interested in telling stories that way.
02:13 I think that's just too easy for him.
02:14 So he builds almost a mystery around the atomic bomb
02:19 and you're moving around in time
02:21 through the life of Oppenheimer,
02:23 but it's very grounded and intimate
02:25 in the sense that it's a very human side of Oppenheimer.
02:28 So you feel connected as an audience member.
02:30 The architecture of the script is really incredible.
02:33 - I think you see maybe the humanity of him
02:40 through our characters.
02:41 I mean, we were both playing,
02:43 they were very colorful characters
02:45 and certainly rich on the page,
02:47 like exciting and complicated.
02:49 I knew what my purpose in the scenes were
02:52 'cause of course it lives on Killian,
02:54 this whole movie,
02:55 but I think you see him when the sky goes dark,
02:58 you see him behind closed doors with her
03:00 and you see the full shadows of what he's dealing with.
03:03 They had such a tumultuous marriage
03:05 and she was a complicated and flawed person,
03:09 but his greatest champion.
03:11 So I think it was important to see the intimacy of him
03:14 and the human side of him,
03:15 so you don't just see him as this colossal brain.
03:18 - Yeah, Chris was really clear from the outset
03:20 that this, you know, to exactly your point,
03:22 that the movie was gonna live or die.
03:24 - Based on Killian and Oppenheimer.
03:26 You know, the book is called "American Prometheus"
03:28 and he said, "I'm not calling it,
03:29 I'm calling it Oppenheimer because, you know,
03:32 to your point, we have to come in through his eyes.
03:34 We have to connect to him.
03:35 I need the rest of you to be in support of that."
03:38 And so I think the other characters,
03:40 they're very historically accurate,
03:41 but they're there to tease out
03:42 these other sides of Oppenheimer.
03:44 I mean, it is one of the great screen performances.
03:46 I think Killian's just--
03:47 - Extraordinary.
03:48 - Extraordinary.
03:49 And watching Killian and Chris together,
03:52 kind of as a partnership, kind of build that character,
03:54 was really, that was a highlight for me.
03:58 (upbeat music)
04:00 (upbeat music)