Known for his work as a stand-up comedian, Mike Birbiglia is showing an immense talent behind the camera with his second feature film, Don’t Think Twice.
Film
‘The Birth of A Nation’ is not βjust another slave film.β This movie is revolutionary, it speaks volumes to the nation we live in today.
Salima Koroma and Jaeki Cho took a chance with Bad Rap.
Everybody has an opinion about Banksy.
Director Bill Purple Talks ‘The Devil and the Deep Blue Sea’ At Special Lincoln TFF Screening
On Friday, April 15th the Tribeca Film Festival in collaboration with the Lincoln Motor Company hosted a private screening of The Devil and The Deep Blue Sea with cocktail reception at the Tribeca Grill.
Keegan-Michael Key and Jordan Peele, a.k.a. the hugely popular comedy duo Key & Peele, star as Clarence and Rell, two cousins who live in the city but are far from streetwise.Β
Vincent Lindon has won a Cèsar for his starring role as Thierry Thaugardeau in Loi du marchè, having made its way to the States now as The Measure of a Man, playing through the 21st of April at the Metrograph and Lincoln Plaza theaters. Sitting down with the veteran French actor on a bustling Thursday afternoon, we settled in for a chat that soon revealed Lindon as not only a brilliant artist, but one passionate about his craft and his cause.
I know we’re here for Loi du marchΓ¨, but I just saw Pater actually last night at the Metrograph. It made me think. You mention in that film, since you are playing yourself, you mention- that people always think in the short term, never in the long term. You have a very varied filmography. So when you accept roles do you think about the longterm effects on your career or do you just take them as they go?
Itβs kind of a way of thinking. Itβs not a long term or a small term, itβs something about organic. I canβt present myself on set if I am not crazy about the story and the character. Itβs cinema, and what you do and the picture in which you are is too important. Itβs not a game, itβs my job. Itβs not like I have nothing to do these two months, Iβm going to do that shit movie, maybe I can build my swimming pool this summer to pay my bill, and after I will do a good movie, I hope I will receive a good movie. No. I donβt think like that. When I choose a movie, I can die for the story. I have to go in my room before sleeping and say how lucky Iβm going to be that guy. And even if the producer says to me, Iβm sorry Vincent, we donβt have too much money to pay you, I want to be able to answer him: I donβt care. I take what you have. I donβt care. I want to be in this story. I want to share a month with this director, those actors. Thatβs my life. In the cinema, if you donβt succeed, everyone knows it. Not just your family. Someone will be walking in the street and say, Oh, etc. Sometimes a friend comes to me and says, I have a small part, three days, come, do it, weβll have a good time. I donβt want to have a good time. Itβs my job, I want to do a good movie. I want to live a good movie day to day. And I want my son and daughter to pick up the one they want and say anyways, my father only did good movies, to at least movies in which he believed before doing them. Itβs a way of looking at [the] long term. But in Pater, I was speaking about politics. If you want to change the world, make big changes, it will be an unpopular decision. If you take decision that you want to see the results in two or three years to be reelected, itβs small decisions. Itβs small moving and the world is worse and worse. Itβs just an adjustment. You canβt leave your name in the history of France or history of America if you just do small things. If you want to be in a history book, do something. Do something heavy, and to do something heavy itβs going to be a big change. Itβs going to be very unpopular, and people donβt like change. But maybe, in thirty to forty five years, people will speak about you the way they speak about Churchill. But Churchill did things very difficult to do- and he succeeded, but he said something I think everyone should print in his wallet or put on the wall of his kitchen, he saidβ¦ You have the choice between the war and the dishonor. You choose the dishonor, and you will have the warβ¦thatβs the long term. Donβt bend. Stay like that (gestures). Itβs gonna hurt, but watch more than the end of your nose. The best champion skier, he is never looking at the signs he passes. This is sometimes what I want to say to people, and many times to my childrenβ¦hey, wake up. Look over. Stop complaining about whatβs going on just right now, whatβs around you. Think about what you will think about that in one year.
Speaking of the long term now, Iβve noticed that a lot of your films had a theme of inequality, including Measure of a Man. Is that a specific choice youβve made, or just something you keep coming back to?
No, itβs a mix. Iβm well known for doing movies like that, so directors bring me films like that, and because I like when the movie makes a jump between culture and society. I think to do a movie today, to play a movie, art in general, is a way of doing politics. By the arts, you can try to say to most people: here is what I think. I am not more clever in the world, and Iβm not the owner of the truth. Thatβs my thinking, just watch it. Maybe itβs gonna ring a bell in your head. Like Mustang, a film like that? Even if one person, just one human being, changes because of a movie, itβll be a good reason to have done the movie. You understand? Everything is good to do if you can just change one mind. Better to change a lot of minds, but just one. Someone comes to you and says once I was thinking like that, and I saw a movie, and it grabs my attentionβ¦whoa. Je sais Γ quelque chose- Iβm useful for something. I have a purpose. Thatβs the best.
Along those lines, I noticed [The Measure of a Man] is a little fatalist. Itβs more like a psychological exploration than it is really inspirational. Do you think itβll be received differently than it was in France?
I donβt know. I donβt know because I donβt think like you. I think there is a lot of open [endedness] in the movie. I think that guy, he is so courageous, more than not having a job, more than being in misery, I think unconsciously people can say itβs worth it to have problems like him, if I am sure I would behave like him. He is a kind of hero. When I see that guy, sometimes I think to myself I would like to be him. He is better than me. He doesnβt have any job, and I am a very famous actor, but if I can change, why not? Why not? He has a big space of progression, which is not my case. Everything just arrives for that guy. He is so down, so near the ground. What do you want worth from him? Nothing. And heβs rich, isnβt he? He has a wife. They are in love since twenty-two years, which is very sexy now. Everybody is divorced, everybody is going from here to there, the children are going- so now, today, when you see a couple and say how much time have you been together? And one of them says, well tomorrow itβs going to be twenty-five years-wow. Itβs sexy. So heβs rich, and heβs crazy about his son, he loves him so much. He likes himself, heβs in love with himself watching what heβs doing for the other one. When you love people, when you give love to somebody, you get it back. So I think that guy is very proud about the image he sees of himself coming back from other people. So he is lucky. He is lucky to be like this. So I donβt know how American people will get the movie. But if people see that, maybe it will be a success like it was in France- and in France it was a huge, huge success.
Yes, and I know part of the reason is because it speaks to the economic downturn. So do you think this film could have been made a few years ago, do you think itβs a sort ofΒ movie that will remain relevant in our time?
Well, I think if you make this movie in fifteen years, it will work too. Itβs really a pity, because the dream is that this movie will be completely unfashionable because that would mean everyone has found a job. Unfortunately, in fifteen years, people will see the movie and say wow, itβs exactly h same now. And there will be people who say, no, itβs worse. Itβs the way or the world. I think, what is more desperate- not the movie, itβs our lives. You asked me do I think the movie will work in the United States. It depends on the way you are living in your lives. Do you think people want to go and see a movie like that, with the life they have in real life? Are you okay after your day job to go back to your house, take yourwife or your husband and see Measure of a Man? Oh no, come on darling, you sure? But the moment you are in the theatre. Itβs like running. Before, you donβt want to go. You say, oh s—, I have to run 55 min, Iβm so f—— tired. But when you finish, you say wow, Iβm happy. You did the footing [running]. But the day after, itβs the same problem. You donβt have any memory. Itβs crazy. People are crazy. Itβs like Mustang. People go and they say wow, I want to see movies like that. But the next day, they forgot. Itβs the effort. So I donβt know whether people will make the effort or not. If they do, yeah. It will work. If not, it will not work.
You were speaking about how you admire the main character of this film. So when you were playing him, did it make you reflect back on your own life and the sacrifices youβve had to make?
Itβs not exactly like-I will explain. Itβs like doing that character, plus the one in Pater, plus the one in Welcome, itβs like a tree. In my own country, when you are all of those characters, I am obliged to a certain way of living in my own life. If I am Thierry in Loi du marchΓ¨ (Measure of a Man) and afterwards I drive a Porsche, and I go to the Ritz, and afterwards I speak to the waiter like hey! I asked for whiskey, come on. People will ask, whoβs that f- a-? Whoβs that guy? He wants to be Thierry, but not in real life. And itβs bad for me, itβs bad for Thierry, itβs bad for the director, very bad for the movie. It comforts people in their idea that everything is fake, everything I people, everything is s—. Thatβs what those movies change in my life. They oblige me- I donβt need them to try to be a good man, but plus those movies, if ne second I thought of doing something quite silly, the movies are here to say hey Vincent, wake up. What are you f- doing? Oh sorry, and put me back on the path. Thatβs good. I like that. But sometimes, there is stupid reflection. Once I was in the restaurant for my sonβs birthday. We went to a quite good restaurantβ¦two days after, they said Vincent Lindon, Loi du marche, in real life he was in this restraurantβ¦.that day I was sad. But I donβt care about that day. I am happy to be obliged to follow a certain way of life. Iβm sure that unconsciously I do movies like that to keep me awake.
Stay woke, cinephiles. Such awareness comes highly recommended.
Pater,Β a French film from 2011, pokes fun at the movies. Yes, all of them.
Ice Cube, Common, Cedric the Entertainer, Eve, and newbies Regina Hall and Nicki Minaj have the shop on fleek in its third franchise rendition, Barbershop: The Next Cut.
New thriller/drama starring Morris Chestnut and Regina Hall coming to the big screen in September.