Modérateur: Alegas
Heatmann a écrit:j'ai l'impression que depuis quelque jours c'est devenu le jeu des 7 famille , trouver le plus d' "influence" a revenant possible comme le disait je croit alegas ( jpeut me trompeur , ca se trouve c etait toi way ) , la plupart des "influence" que nous , devant l ecran on resent , ben a mon avis ces souvent inconscient de la part des real , tu croit que sur le plateau , enfin , au fond de ces bois , inaritue et chivo quand ils preparait une scene ils se disait ou pensais a herzog/tarko/malick/conrad/et tout les autre truc citer depuis mercredi ? ...
DiCaprio has also taken an active role in finding movies he wanted to star in via Appian Way, from "Aviator," which took ten years to get made with Scorsese, to "The Wolf of Wall Street," which clocked seven years from start to finish. "It's getting the right writers involved," he told me at the time, "getting the right director from the onset and creating a story that hopefully takes some chances that doesn't hit the necessary beats that studios deem worthy for financing films."
In today's market it is not easy to get these big-scale movies made, even for DiCaprio. "I could not get 'Aviator' or 'Blood Diamond' financed now," he said. "I know the ebbs and flows of this business, these are epics, but they are not appetizing to studios."
Thus after developing "The Wolf of Wall Street" at Warner Bros., the studio passed and DiCaprio chased the freedom of independent production. When he told Scorsese he had lined up financing from foreign sales company Red Granite, it was now or never. Scorsese knew that the movie could never have been made with a studio hovering over every bad word. So he agreed to do his fifth film with DiCaprio. Paramount may be more indulgent of DiCaprio's ripped-from-headlines interests than Warners.
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