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Intervista video a Julia Roberts, Andrew Garfield e Ayo Edebiri sul film di Luca Guadagnino

ArtsLife Tv

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[0:00]What about the layered and complex relationship among people nowadays, which is another aspect which is really interesting in the movie?
[0:00]It's Luca Guadagnino is the the person that I admire the most in his absolute devoted interest in human beings.
[0:00]He is so curious about people and why people do things, why they don't do things.
[0:00]He's so knowledgeable and fascinating and I think that him seeing each of these characters with his unique point of view is what brought us together as a collective.
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[0:00]What about the layered and complex relationship among people nowadays, which is another aspect which is really interesting in the movie? Well, and I don't think it's nowadays. I I'm I'm now talking. Hell yeah. It's awesome when you talk. Well, it's Luka. It's Luca Guadagnino is the the person that I admire the most in his absolute devoted interest in human beings. He is so curious about people and why people do things, why they don't do things. He's so knowledgeable and fascinating and I think that him seeing each of these characters with his unique point of view is what brought us together as a collective. Um, and he created this universe for us to perform within and I I think the result is is completely Luka. in the tenderness. I mean, he plays a song in this movie seven times. What movie have you ever seen that plays the same song seven different times? And that song is about forgiveness. It's astonishing. In your opinion, what we lost during the politically correct era and when what we have to expect in Hollywood after the Me Too movement and the Black Lives Matters are done? The two of you, Andrew and Julia. Um, well, okay. You can you repeat that? And I I with your sunglasses on, I can't tell which of us you're talking to. So, So the question was for Julia and Andrew. Uh, now that the me too era and the Black Lives Matters are done, what do you have to expect in Hollywood and what we lost if we lost something with the politically correct era? It's not done. Sorry. I yeah, I know that that's not for me and I don't know if it's purposeful, but I I just am curious. I don't think it's done. It's not done. I don't think it's done at all. I think maybe hashtags might not be used as much or but I do think that there's work being done by activists, by people every day that's beautiful, important work that's not finished, that's really, really, really active. Um, and that and that work isn't finished at all. Maybe if there's like not mainstream coverage in the way that there might have been. Daily headlines. Daily headlines in the way that it might have been eight or so years ago. But I don't think that it means that the work is done. That's that's what I would say. under the movements have been halted anyway. like the the movements are still absolutely alive. As you say, just maybe not as um, uh, labeled or covered. Yeah, or like witnessed as as mo or or kind of magnified as much in this present moment.

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