'Furiosa: De la saga de Mad Max' - Entrevista Any Taylor-Joy

  • 4 months ago
Transcript
00:00 The first time I saw this movie I liked it so much and I became such a fan of this universe
00:04 that I swear my dog's name is Max.
00:05 No, really?
00:06 Yes, because of Mad Max.
00:07 I wanted to start by asking you, talking about this part of the movie that I find super interesting,
00:22 which is how the power structures can cause so much damage.
00:25 My question is, do you think that this movie, beyond a story of origin,
00:30 is the journey of a woman trying to survive a world of men?
00:33 Totally, you did it perfectly. I swear that's my answer. Totally.
00:37 I think there was a moment in this story where I told George,
00:41 "Look, it's very important that this situation becomes physical,"
00:44 because at that moment it was written in a different way.
00:48 And I think that spending all the time in this set,
00:52 feeling what she was feeling and not being able to explode,
00:55 we needed a moment where she could explode.
00:57 So I'm very lucky that George did it.
00:59 I think Mad Max is a movie that focuses more on how corrupted the world was,
01:05 but would you say that Furiosa is a story that focuses more on how corrupted the protagonist's soul is?
01:11 I think it's a little bit of both.
01:14 The thing that I like the most about Furiosa is that it has an impossible hope,
01:18 and I think we need that if we're going to survive this world.
01:22 Light the engines!
01:24 Start your engines!
01:27 I think Furiosa also talks about the power of children to overcome extreme situations.
01:39 It doesn't seem to me like a story completely out of reality.
01:44 It doesn't seem 100% fiction to me,
01:46 because in real life there are many children who develop incredible skills to overcome.
01:51 They have that resilience.
01:53 What do you think of this part of the story, which is a good part of the movie,
01:57 and which has a lot of emotional weight, at least for me?
01:59 I was very moved by your version, girl.
02:02 Thank you.
02:03 Yes, no, totally.
02:04 I think it's very important for the story to understand why it is the way it is.
02:09 George always said, "She's a person who only has to learn something once,"
02:13 and I think you see that in the movie.
02:15 And speaking of your first contact with Mad Max, I want to tell you
02:19 that the first time I saw this movie I liked it so much and I became such a fan of this universe
02:23 that I swear my dog's name is Max.
02:25 No, really?
02:26 Yes, because of Mad Max, I swear.
02:28 It's also very pretty.
02:29 So, what was your first contact with this story,
02:32 and how was your first contact on set as part of it?
02:36 My first contact was watching Fury Road.
02:40 I fell in love with this movie so much, I thought it was so risky and incredible and unique.
02:46 And then I saw the rest of the movie when we were shooting it in the places where they had shot it.
02:54 So, I felt that story.
02:56 And also, a lot of the people who worked on Furiosa are people who worked on the first Mad Max,
03:02 on the second, on Fury Road.
03:04 Yes, it's a family.
03:05 Ah, very good.
03:06 And lastly, how would you like the audiences, especially in Latin America, to receive this story?
03:13 I would like you to tell them what it is beyond a story of origin, you know?
03:17 Totally.
03:19 I want them to have fun and think a little bit about what it would be like to live in this world,
03:26 and how we treat each other.
03:28 That's very important to me.
03:30 Very good, time is up. Thank you very much.
03:32 Thank you.
03:33 You have it in you to make it epic.
03:35 [MUSIC]

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