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tv   Arts Unveiled  Deutsche Welle  April 21, 2024 2:30pm-3:00pm CEST

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i'm going to have you as a one does start doing the different quotes, the deposit response and unexpected side supplies. hi ma'am. nice sean milan and you're watching hollywood best film directors. i'd like to think of myself as a craftsman that you know like that i'm a sure person across the perfect chair. that's my goal for me. pre production is how you win the game before the game starts. first, dad met him. it was scary cuz i remember i was sitting with kathy and the assistance like goose bosses in the oliver and, and i was like, oh my god. he was only 22 when he directed his 1st movie, praying with anger, which he followed with a family future wide awake and achieved great success as a rider on stuart little after that, he directed a string of international successes with sy fi thriller. as mike's fun, breakable, starring bruce willis and samuel jackson signs with mel gibson,
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the village star and your keen phoenix lady in the water with paul's jamante and the happening with mark wahlberg. he was also no stranger to the fantasy genre directing huge blockbusters like the last air vendor. and after what he may always be best remembered for introducing that little boy who saw dead people in the 6th sense the we're actually, you know, where we are in now is my office you on a farm? i live in pennsylvania just outside philadelphia, and i think it used to be a kind of of the hurdle to get over that. i don't live in in hollywood, but then pretty quickly it became an asset in that it informed my writing and it made it 1st and i'm very quiet over here and you know,
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generally the door is closed and i right, right. every day i come in and i write for 6 months, and then in the barn where the cow is used to be r r a is a theater, and a and a post facility. so that's where we added all the movies and the screen them. and we have previews there and you know, it's very much like i put, you know, like to think of myself as a craftsman that you know, like that i should person across the perfect chair. that's my goal. and uh, we both do our work in a barn. in retrospect, i guess that was maniacally driven. as a kid, i don't remember a single reading moment where i was in trying to become the rubies cube champion, or the ping pong champion, or the spelling, the champion, or the number one in the class. just to drive to that or a tennis player, you know, when it's some tournament or this, or that, you know, and i guess i,
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there was this weird kind of desire to be excellent at something. and what was really interesting was i was doing feel making on this side because i loved it and didn't apply this kind of maniacal drive to that. it was something that i just loved doing. and then i looked up at like 15 and i go out of and this is all i do is make movies. maybe i should think about doing this for a living. and then i read spike leaves, but it was like a really profound moment. i've actually told spike desk, but it was a profound amount and we were at the airport at j. f. k. and so i went in the bookstore and on the carousel was like 8 bucks. but one of them was spike leaves. she's got to have it and making them that movie. and i just at the moment when i was thinking this got i, i spent a lot of time making little movies. you know, this is something i'm interested in and then i read that. but which, for me was a pivotal moment. it gave me permission to make movies because up until that point, i thought that was something that
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a magic tribe of people did out in some magic land called los angeles. and, you know, didn't seem like it was a feasible thing, but spike didn't know anybody either. and spices. went to school for a movie making and became a filmmaker. and as us all right. can go to this place and why you and learn filmmaking? so literally, as soon as i finish the book, i'd like to my parents, i'm like, this is what i'm going to do. the wide awake was my, my 2nd movie, technically. but really was my 1st you estimate of the and was really the 1st movie done with a studio. and i got that by submitting a screenplay to all the studios. and 2 of them were interested in making it. and nearer max, at the time was kind of the, you know, the archway that young filmmakers came and the new filmmakers came. and they saw my
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movie that i shot in india and thought it was pretty good. i remember driving home how happy i was, you know, it was literally, you know, it's like that's the shape. seeing rate, every song on the radio was perfect and i was singing and on the way back and i was making a movie for me or macs, and it was very sad. i was $23.00 at that time the connection, the, i believe, you know, the, the under failure of the 1st 2 movies, i gave me a sense of nothing to lose. the next time out of the camera. her to go, i went away and i wrote the screenplay. now we skipped the the staff which is
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after wide awake i, i wrote a screenplay called labor of love which became like this phenomenon. script in height with everybody wanted to buy it. and i, they bought it and then they fired me off as director as soon as they bought it. and it was a real tragic moment for me and my life at that time. so the next script i wrote, i, i swore i was going to write it and if they don't guarantee that i'm directing it, i'm not selling it to anybody. i was not bluffing. i was ready to not make this movie. so i called maintenance. and i said, i wanted to have a new screen play. i'm going to send it to you on sunday. i went to auction it off on monday, and i want you to tell everybody it's $1000000.00 minimum that and guarantee directing. made is a great actually they called up everybody and said, nice guy, this needs to be in play. it's selling on monday. you have to make yourself available. it's $1000000.00 opening that minimum bed and he's guaranteed to interact and they said well what's it about?
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and he goes, i don't know, i haven't read it. and they were like, as bullshit, they just didn't believe it and they didn't believe it. they, you will be crying because now i'm ready yet any guys. and they got any made, everybody get available. so then we went out on monday, monday and i flew out and i got a suite at the 4 seasons which i could not afford. my wife and we had a baby in the bid started coming in and like 2 hours after the 1st screenplay was deliberate and one's duty after another a bit against each other. and at dinner at dinnertime, at 6 pm, we sold it for $3000000.00. and you know, went from, i was living in my living in my parents guest room and, and that it was an amazing experience. amazing, amazing space. and again, i don't remember the to the thrill of the, of the money as much as the opportunity to make it properly. and that everyone, we're going to hopefully let me, let me make this, you know, in a, in
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a real way. and i was, i felt this time i felt ready like i was, i was ready. i sold that when i was 202522 at 2625. and i just felt i felt like i was ready to direct ways before 100 percent. i was a writer who was learning how to direct this time. i felt like a writer director. i'm ready action that point my mentality. what was strange about the success of that movie? i didn't believe it. so i just kept my head down and i was immediately writing on breakable life. i was an on it. i was an 6 inches in the theaters for so long that we were in preproduction on break. about $0.06 was still in the theaters in the same year that i'm breakable came out in that same year. so it was in the same your, i to movies in the movie theaters. and so i was in deep reproduction. i remember having the leave reproduction to go to some award ceremony or something for the movie. it was, it was just all very on top of that,
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i felt like someone was going to, it didn't happen to me so much as a kid that movies failed and that was on the precipice of having that thing. and it was, you know, i, i didn't trust the field at all, which is a really healthy thing to do to, to have as a point of view. so i just put my head and i was like before they decided that i shouldn't be in this, in this club anymore. i'm gonna make another movie for sure. it's getting at least one more movie before they kick me out. and so i put my head down and made unbreakable action. and what ended up happening, i think. and over the last 67 years is i started to leave making movies for young males adult males. and it started to move towards teen girls because i was raising golf. i had 3 girls in their interest were important to me. and so things like the last there been, there was, it was a cartoon that they loved and related to them was a very empowering to it had
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a leader all. and i, you can see my movies generally moving towards kind of young females in the last 67 years because of, of being a parent of a, of the children. so last year. but it was absolutely for my kids to make a family movie for them. the from the pre production is how you and how you win the game before the game starts. and i need to, 1st of all, because i right, my movies they have to, i can feel that when it's when they're still a problem or when i'm trying to figure it out later, i don't have the answer. so when i can get piece on the screen play, that's phase number one, which doesn't always happen if you get close, but you don't. but if you're lucky enough to feel peace, then the 2nd phase would be the crewing casting and story boarding, that group of 3. and i've really come to believe is that for me it's almost like
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being pregnant. you want to be in the right mindset whoever feels precincts on the path here. i got to as well as the star in 6 sense because kathy kennedy and frank marshall asked him, have they flew? i've met with them. i felt that movie was shooting and they, they asked me to read the screenplay and i told them about me and he read the screen by then he saw wide awake. and then he agreed to do the move in. then we met and i was scared to death. the 1st time i met him. we're very close now and by the 1st day i met him. it was scary cuz i remember i was sitting with kathy and the assistance like goose boss was in the oliver and, and i was like, oh my god. and then she, she was like, she must be never too cuz she was like, tell me what you're going to say. don't let's, let's role play and i'm like i and,
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and then i didn't know what to do. oh, you know. and then the elevator goes doing and then he gets off and he comes in the room says hi kathy. i think frank, my think frank was as well as that. i had frank and then he comes around the table to me and you know, whatever i was going to say or do, went out the window because he gave me a hug. and when he gave me the high get really he had already had a relationship with me based on the screen plan, the movie he saw. and he was super gracious to allow that to be his opinion of me. and so he just mediately became friends and he took an incredible stance of i believe in you, whatever you say goes and nobody mess with them. and so he was like my protective umbrella for the making of the movie. i see that in the last days, oh you did it. very easy to read. ok. let's go to the video 0. it was very normal casting process and success. we just checked out kids from both coasts and they
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ended up being like 3 finalists and i went and met with the 3 finalists. and haley, joel osment was one of them. and when he came in and sat with me and he did the scenes, i just, i didn't even want to make a movie. and i called the counselor address, i didn't want, i don't want to make a movie unless it's this kid jackson. yeah. he did. she broke her, but you can see that's where she standing next to my window. i knew it full lightning. it does lightning when it hit man. and i remember it like to this day i made fun of everybody that was on lakeland producers and things like that. where like i'm not sure about this kid and like a get interesting stag. so i show the tape of to it's everybody and they're like, wow, this gives amazing. so it was very,
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very lucky. the right kid at the right time walked in. i got a lot better to do the type of cell making that i do on that scale. would require 5 years to do that movie. that's the trip. and those to makers that do that, whether it's peter jackson, when he did it with the rings or even for example, i'll find with gravity all that time that was taken on those movies. i can see that working for years 5 years or to do it, but to do it in a compressed timeframe of 2 and a half years to 3 years, which is what these movies are. it's. it's scary and you're just keeping up and just physically, a lot of stuff. and there are a lot of filmmakers that love that kind of stimulation. you know, spielberg and michael bag and all those guys and cameron, i'm the king of the stimuli. i don't have the intellect that they have for those things. and so it's, it's a very scary time and i'm always pulling it back to minimalism,
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which is probably you advised for those movies because i'm always kind of making it as simple as can be the now, uh, gibson is a, is a, is a, a jokester. he, he'll tell he does weird invitations, but the, i guess the funniest thing that happened was one of the funny thing. there was a lot of funny things, but one was my wife and her girlfriends came to the set of signs. and he said, let's play gag, you know, there's a dog in the movie and as a dog there says, while we're talking, let's just pick up the dog ball and start eating the dog foot pin. the dog food was actually just regular food and we had dropped off but they didn't know that. so he's talking with the girls and he picks up the bowl and my walk in and i am mallor
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talking and with the girls that came her girlfriends and their giggling and all that stuff. and then he that he picks up the ball and doesn't mention he's is talking and he starts eating out of the ball and they're like, and they're walking starts eating as of all and they're like, they're so like offended to why they like, what do they do and i'm like, what i'm crazy to, i'm crazy like mouth like are my any dog food? i don't make a particular protein very well. it makes my bones very low intensity. very easy to break to sam jackson is, as you probably know, is very funny guy. and he's very kind of, he'll make funny a lot and i, we were doing the last scene and i'm breakable and he's in a wheelchair and he did, he did the scene and i came over and i forget what i said to him. it was harsh. i said something like, you didn't, you weren't, you didn't, you didn't bring it so that was not sure what that was for you. you're going to need to, you're going to need to bring it right now,
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because it's the end of the movie. and you have the end of the movie you're, it's, it's, this is about everything. why you did all this, this character. why, why the care to did all this? and he stared at me and was like ice in his eyes. and he said, you think i'm gonna bring it for you? and it was like the stand off. and we just stared at each other and nobody said anything after that for a 2nd and was like, it's probably better just to roll cameron, see what happens because i definitely provoked them and we will cameras. and he gave this incredibly poignant performance. that's at the end of unbreakable, this kind of, you know, thing about wanting to be a villain and how it least is somebody important. the know, you know, why the, i'm not
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a mistake. it all makes sense. comic you know, you can tell with the art billings going to be exact opposite and so funny and witty. but inside him is all this cauldron emotion. and instead of provoking something, i saw him on the the street uh the other day and los angeles. we were driving and he pulled up next to me and he was like, when he gonna put me in another movie. and i was like, yeah, that's how he talks by the delta, the, my mom i said, the going to los angeles at any time, was going to like oz from me. it was a big deal. this is where they lived, you know, steven spielberg live somewhere there, you know, is like a big deal. and so the, that when i went out to, to go take some meetings, you know, i got an age and this was agents that come out and take some meetings. and i stayed
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with a families, family, friend and, and you know, using and a guest room and i was terrified and i rented a car was, you know, the classic you rented the big white car and i was so nervous. um, every at that i locked my keys in my car 3 times. um is on that same trip to los angeles. i mean i was terrified. i was absolutely terrified. luckily one was that in mcdonalds, so that was good. so i didn't have to deal with too much of the embarrassment, but the worst one was i went to visit an executive at universal, you know, and on dr. automate yet everything ment. lot, you know, i drive into the guard booth that the, that the gardens as you come in see, and you say hi, i'm nice online, you know, i'm like, whatever 2122 years of this is awesome. you know, being able to say, you know, and executives waiting for me, but i'm so nervous and the guy says, you know where to go, you turn rather stay to be and you do this. so i do all that. i find this and he's like, she's in bungalow blah, blah, blah. so do that. i park in front of the bundle i,
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i'm not sure i know where i am and of course i've passed ambling at the time. i mean this is, i was out of my mind a little bit feeling like a fraud. can i get the car and i stand? i'm like, i'm not sure i know where i am and then the exact lady's like hi, how are you? i are you are you night and i'm like yes, close the door and i come in and like great, great. and she's like will come on it and i'm like okay, and i go to the good now the doors lock, the car is running. and so just remember that the, the meta of this, which is, i'm meeting this lady to let me direct a movie. she's supposed to give me millions of dollars to put in my responsibility . you know this kid and she sees me like the door and she's like, did you, did you lock your keys in the car? and i'm like, yes she goes but it's running. i'm like, yes, it's running and it's locked. and she's like, oh my goodness and i'm like, i'm so sorry. and then she's like, well let me call maintenance. so they had to cause he's on the phone there. her assistance on the phone. yes. yes. and then doing all the same conversations 4
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times. yes, he locked his keys in the car, the car is running. no, the keys are inside, they keep the car was running when he locked the door and they this been constantly retailing my ridiculousness over and over. and then so i'm in the meeting and i'm not even thinking about what i'm saying. i'm so this is with, this is a disaster. and then finally, the janitor breaks into our meeting and is that guy, you're the one that locked the keys in the car while it's running? yep, that's me. i go out and then the jimmy pop it and i take it and she's like, well, it's really nice meeting you everything else is great. the you know, have on my wall here in my office, a bunch of my favorite movies. you know, i the 3 movies i have up here at my desk when i, where i write is the exorcist the godfather. and just, you know, those 3 movies are really kind of a, of a bell for me to, to, to remind myself of what can be achieved in terms of making entertainment. but
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without compromising at all the integrity of your voice and your integrity of how you see are you can kind of trying to listen in this area of, of this tree to like past 10, you know, you know, i, you know, it's funny i, there's something about the box office of my movies have no correlation at all to how i feel about my movies. or they confuse me a little bit actually. and because that's related to cell ability, which is a separate fact or what. so from, from the actual and movie what the movie is, you know how, how sellable is 5 easy pieces today. i don't know if it's a sell a bit, a sellable at all. right? but it doesn't mean that the movie itself isn't fantastic or meaningful for me. there's some, there's something about lady in the water that i felt i felt like i was really
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close to something super poor. there was a, as a fan that was dying and watched lighting the water every single day in his last days. and i sent him, i heard about him and i sent him a script and i signed it. and he died holding the script to a lady in the water. and when i mean people on plains and stuff like that, it just is there's something religion about that movie and to me as well. cause i was really trying to be pure when making it without regard to protection, without regard of selling and without garbage genre. i wasn't thinking about any of that. in fact, i let it all go the, you know what i tell you say about fans and people that i've seen my movies and things like that that enjoy the film making. uh that was one set up at a civil and i was, i was talking with an actor and people started coming up to us and
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this ticket accurate the fans of this actually kept coming up and they were, they were being silly and they didn't really know them very well, and the people that were coming up to me, they come up and they say something really specific about this movie of that movie and what it meant to their life. and what they thought about what i was saying, or the mentor for this, or the colors of this and what that meant. and it was all about, keep, you know, like every single one over and over and over, kept coming up to me and saying, you know, we hear you, we, we love what you're doing, keep going, keep doing that's keep going, don't give up kind of 5. and he lives over, i mean, goes like, you know, your fans or, you know, there's so you, you mean a lot to them, mine just want to take a picture with me and you mean a lot of them and it really was touching because for me i when i went home that day by the my team last year instead of when i went home that day, i was thinking how lucky i was to have made a career where i can look at it. and almost every single idea i,
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every single movie, it was an idea of mine and represents it either my for judy, my ingle, all my questions. and so there's an honest relationship with the audience. that's who i am. you know, the collective thing of the vc lady and the order number a couple on signs and $0.06. you're going to get a good sense of who i am and what i, what i think about it, what i believe about family and life and what's out there and few years. and so it's, it's been in a, you know, an incredibly uncompromised and precious thing to have this relationship with you guys and hope to just honor it and honor and honor it with purity. so thank you very much. i the
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korea ruling was an iron just the policy. i'm surveillance every day and i for the people that really look like how does the reading so many govern the icon a state exclusive in size, into the world? jim died in 15 minutes on the w. that's been kind of how the woman but i'm not a man either. not a 3rd option or anything else. i just don't have a gender. it's robin has fair to become. domestic held in family
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and friends react to the change. and the partner not a man, not a woman, a gender in 19 minutes www. the . 7 daniels in june. you belong to the 77 percent to come to i just got on $65.00 last last those top 5. and here's 3 reasons why. 1115. we're here to help you make up your mind. we are here on please find your mind. so all of the topics i'm much up to you from couple fixed a new culture and then 15 minutes left side of our
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community life on the service. the research is now on the top name project. cassandra re determined that has below was operating like a global drug course. the objective to financially drain has gone up and bring them down. the team agents from the american drug enforcement agency they had criminalized themselves. he didn't reveal that so world. why did the us government suddenly shut down project cassandra in 2016? i was 3 thought documentary series and most skiing has paula stats may 4th on d, w. the
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. this is the w news. why from berlin renewed hope in ukraine after us lawmakers approve a new package if urgently needed military aid? the 61000000000 dollar package promises fresh weapons and ammunition for keen fasick fights to hold back. russian forces also coming up pakistan and ready to send hundreds of thousands of refugees back to afghanistan. the plan leaves thousands of women fearing for their future under taliban rule, the .

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