En même temps, j'ai cru que Godzilla serait une bombe après avoir vu le trailer
On n'est pas à l'abri d'un nouveau trip avec Bale qui tire la gueule sur la plage et nous balance du prêchi-prêcha en voix off.
Modérateur: Alegas
Waylander a écrit: et puis v'là le casting de dingue
We know the movie is about excess in Hollywood, but Kao filled in a few more details. “Christian Bale plays Rick, who is a screenwriter and filmmaker living in California,” he said. “From the outside, it looks like he has everything. Inside, he's empty in a lot of ways, and this is his journey of figuring out a way to fill the void.”
Malick’s long-time editor, Billy Weber, suggested in 2013 that “Knight Of Cups” is less experimental and less dialogue-free than “To The Wonder,” but the first trailer for the film looked just a lyrical and rather similar. Maybe it is?
Antonio Banderas recently told Collider he’s not sure if he’s playing himself in the film or what. “I arrived to the set and basically what [Malick] said to me, ‘Antonio, we didn’t send you a script because we don’t have a script and so this monologue that I gave you,’ which literally didn’t make sense whatsoever, ‘I’m gonna shoot it in nine different locations and I’m gonna just improvise with you, and I’m gonna send you something that I call torpedoes.’ And these torpedoes, they were people that came in the middle of the monologue and started improvising with me. He sent me a beautiful woman, he sent me an old lady, he sent me a bunch of three guys that are rappers. I ended up in a pool with three ladies with my tuxedo.”
Asked whether he read the monologues as himself or the character, Banderas said, “I don’t know, actually. I don’t know. But I am very curious to see what this genius of movies did.” We’ll know more soon. “Knight of Cups” makes it world premiere at the Berlin Film Festival in February.
Rick is a slave to the Hollywood system. He is addicted to success but simultaneously despairs at the emptiness of his life. He is at home in a world of illusions but seeks real life. Like the tarot card of the title, Rick is easily bored and needs outside stimulation. But the Knight of Cups is also an artist, a romantic and an adventurer.
In Terrence Malick's seventh film a gliding camera once again accompanies a tormented hero on his search for meaning. Once again a voiceover is laid over images which also seek their own authenticity. And once again Malick seems to put the world out of joint. His symphonic flow of images contrasts cold, functional architecture with the ageless beauty of nature. Rick's internal monologue coalesces with the voices of the women who cross his path, women who represent different principles in life: while one lives in the real world, the other embodies beauty and sensuality. Which path will Rick choose? In the city of angels and the desert that surrounds it, will he find his own way?
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