- hoy
Esta semana llegaron los grandes estrenos de Jefes de Estado, Smoke y Jurassic World. Conoce todos los detalles de la mano de Susana Moscatel e Ivett Salgado.
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00:00Gracias por estar con nosotros en M2.
00:09Como siempre, hay tantos estrenos que estamos corriendo para traerles todo.
00:14Yvette Salgado, hola.
00:15Hola, Susi, ¿cómo estás?
00:16Muy bien, muy contenta y un poco envidiosa.
00:19¿Por qué? Cuéntame.
00:20Y Dri Selva, Yvette Salgado.
00:22Y Dri Selva.
00:23Yo pensé que ibas a decir John Cena.
00:25John Cena es un tipazo, es más, hasta nos seguimos en Next.
00:28Claro, sigue a todo el mundo.
00:30Exacto.
00:30Pero Idris, los dos, los dos son encantadores, los dos son...
00:33Bueno, Idris Salva es un actorazo y John Cena es simpaticísimo.
00:37Exacto.
00:37¿Y platicaste con ellos por...?
00:38Están estrenando justamente esta semana en Prime Video Jefes de Estado.
00:43Es una comedia de acción.
00:45La verdad es que yo no me imaginaba que Idris podría tener como este rango
00:49después de verlo en series tan...
00:52Intensas.
00:53Sí, digamos, con personajes completamente distintos a los que están interpretando acá.
00:56Claro, yo voy a salvar a mi familia del león.
00:58Yo voy a salvar a Inglaterra de todo.
01:01Por algo lo queremos de James Bond.
01:03Ahora van a salvar al mundo juntos en algo que se llama Jefes de Estado.
01:08Idris es el primer ministro de Reino Unido y John Cena es el presidente de los Estados Unidos.
01:14Ay, mamá, me encanta.
01:15¿Qué mejor mundo sería si eso fuera realidad?
01:18De verdad que sí, porque están hablando de una colaboración internacional que creo que no se podría dar de esta forma que se está dando en pantalla,
01:26pero además hablan de liderazgo, de poder y de lo que eso representa hoy en día.
01:31¿Yankies?
01:32No, no, no, no, no, canadienses.
01:33¿Por qué dices eso?
01:34Todo el mundo los ama.
01:35Si aman a ustedes mismos, hoy somos canadienses.
01:37E intentan evitar la tercera guerra mundial, aunque haya que chupar pezones de ovejas.
01:42¿Quién les chupa los pezones?
01:43¡Nadie les chupa los pezones!
01:46Uy, qué genio.
01:47¿Entendieron?
01:48Bien, que suene la música.
01:49No, no, no, no, no, no.
01:50So, we know this isn't your first time working together, so I really love to hear what was it like being back on set,
01:57and what was the most fun or challenging part of making an action movie together?
02:03A great question.
02:04I think from my perspective, the most fun was just getting the band back together.
02:08That's something that's very rare in the entertainment industry.
02:10You usually jump from one project to another.
02:12So, getting to see and work with friends you have a great time with and professionals you admire, that's good.
02:18Challenging, I think, trying to curate the style of the movie.
02:22We were working with Ilya, who this was his first foray into big, large-scope cinema, and he did a great job.
02:29He is a little particular, which requires a little bit of patience.
02:32So, the right crowd to do that, thank you, Idris.
02:35And I think, like I said, the most fun was just making a movie with friends.
02:40I think that that makes every day a good one, even the tough ones.
02:43Absolutely.
02:44I'm going to go with John with the same answer, but I will say that one of the big challenges for me was trying not to laugh when John would go off on these incredible improvisational tangents that felt like they were written, they're so good.
02:57And, you know, trying to keep a straight face was a bit of a challenge.
03:01Absolutely.
03:02Idris, this story starts with a kind of competition between two leaders, but ultimately it's about cooperation.
03:08In a time when tensions are running high, do you think the film also sends a message about the importance of working together for the common good?
03:19I don't think the film is intended in sending messages.
03:25It's meant for entertainment.
03:26I think that if you drew that from the film, that's good, especially, as you say, now.
03:32And I think generally films find ways to, you know, just reflect society in some way, somehow, whether that's society's good parts or society's bad parts, you know.
03:43And John, from your perspective, what do you think defines a good leader today and how much of that did you find in your character beyond being a Hollywood star?
03:54So that's a two-parter, man, I think the ability to put the needs of others first and empathy, I think, are important qualities.
04:08And as far as character traits, I had fun playing my version of the President of the United States because I got to be a little aloof.
04:22I got to be an action hero who is kind of out of place, someone who has issues with when people don't like them.
04:34Those were all fun things to explore and, like, easy traits to lean into.
04:39So, I mean, I got teed up pretty good with all the backstory for this character.
04:43It was really fun to just be in over my head in a bureaucratic sense.
04:47Perfecto, y como son tantas las plataformas, ¿esto es en...?
04:53Esto es en Prime Video, ya se estrenó, justamente, ya la pueden encontrar por ahí.
04:57La verdad, vale muchísimo la pena, se van a divertir.
05:00¿Como para perdonarle la boda en Venecia a Jeff Bezos?
05:02Le perdonamos absolutamente todo.
05:04¿Por esta película?
05:04Sí, esta película, sí, no vale.
05:07Perfecto, y luego tenemos algo de Apple TV.
05:11Exactamente.
05:11Ya me enseñaste el adelanto, se ve espectacular.
05:14Yo llegué a oír el podcast.
05:15Es completamente diferente.
05:16Sí.
05:16Se llama Smoke, está protagonizada por Tarone Ayrton.
05:21Elton John.
05:21Pasa de Elton John, justamente, a dar vida ahora a un investigador de incendios.
05:27No quiero decir mucho de la historia, porque la verdad es que es de esos personajes que nada es lo que parece.
05:33Nada es lo que parece.
05:34Está inspirado en una historia real, que es el podcast que ya estás escuchando, Susi.
05:38Sí, me encanta.
05:39Y la verdad es que esta historia es una de esas historias tan oscuras y tan profundas que hablan, más allá de lo que ocurre en la pantalla con los incendios, de cómo estamos consumidos como seres humanos.
05:49Ouch.
05:50A ver.
05:50No, no.
05:52No.
05:52No.
05:53No.
05:53No.
05:53No.
05:54Before one of them kills again
05:58Serial arsonists tend to be powerless in their own lives
06:01They want other people to know what that feels like
06:04Don't let them in your head. That's not the kind of guy that gets in my head
06:09How you feeling lately?
06:12You seem a little...
06:14Off
06:16The first thing that I would like to know is something about your character because it's a big complex guy
06:32He's an answer investigator a husband, but also he wants to be a writer
06:37So what do you what made you to want to play him and what was most surprising challenge in playing him?
06:46Well, I think I
06:50Love that he wants to be all of these different things, you know
06:53He he wants to be the hero. He wants to be a a successful
07:00Sought-after author and I
07:04You know the things that those things have in common is they're about being adored or liked or
07:10You know craved in some way and I think they're
07:14They're an extension of
07:17Some sort of
07:19Deficit in how he feels about himself
07:22I think Dave
07:24Dave's ego is out of control because he's kind of
07:27Got this pit of self-loathing at deep at the base of him
07:31And yeah, he he's kind of irresistibly complicated in terms of being, you know
07:40Irresistible in the sense that it's a great prospect for an actor someone in my position
07:46Yeah
07:47And as both as an actor and a producer on this story based on true events
07:54How do you handle the responsibility to to tell you something so sensitive?
07:59Um
08:04Well, I think you know
08:07It's a really interesting question
08:10I I I I take my work quite seriously I think and I um
08:16I spend a lot of time
08:19Probably
08:21Considering things to the point of being quite obsessive about them
08:24Um, and
08:28I suppose in a sense, you know, um
08:32Even through a character like Dave
08:35I am still expressing something about me
08:38I think that's the thing about acting
08:40It doesn't matter who you're playing
08:42You're still expressing you
08:45In through a different mode
08:47And uh
08:48And so that feels like something that feels like serious business somehow I guess because it's
08:53Me
08:56Relaying something of my experience to whoever's watching
09:01Me encanta y vámonos de un fenómeno natural con las particularidades humanas a un fenómeno pues no antinatural pero aún
09:09Aún todavía de ciencia ficción y las particularidades de los humanos
09:13Y la genética la la inteligencia artificial
09:17Y todo lo que tiene que ver con la ciencia lo permiten
09:19Parque jurásico algún día será una realidad pero bueno ahora que se estrena una película más y ya la pueden ver mañana
09:26Exactamente
09:27Que que que platicamos platicó más parda de nuestro compañero con el elenco comparte el elenco
09:32Exactamente con jonathan bailey rupert fran que justamente están platicando lo que representa esta saga hoy en día
09:40Pero sobre todo esa esencia de de el animal versus el ser humano que eso siempre ha estado presente ahí estás de acuerdo
09:48Absolutamente el todo a ver quien haya leído las novelas originales sabe perfectamente que esto es una crítica a la sociedad con dinosaurios ahora son divertidísimos a mí me encanta y una de las franquicias más exitosas de
10:02Venga Jurassic Park 237
10:05Let's go
10:07If we get this DNA millions of lives are saved
10:13Maybe we should make this quick huh
10:18Time to move
10:21We put ourselves in a place where we don't belong
10:29Survival is a long shot
10:31That's kind of our specialty
10:32She's scared
10:35She's scared
10:37She's scared
10:39Come on
10:40Run
10:41To be in Jurassic anyway is one thing but then to be able to play a paleontologist
10:47I mean um Sam Neill I think was my hero growing up um and what comes with playing the paleontologist is a sort of
10:55An access to a um such a passion and academic um arguments I think which is what makes um Jurassic so brilliant and obviously the novel and the original source material and also playing a paleontologist means that I get to play opposite Martin Krebs, Rupert Friend and uh and that thing of like just because we can should we and the love of the natural world I think is something that makes me sort of quite emotional
11:09And as Johnny said you know this idea of just because we can should we and I think Martin Krebs' sort of character maybe represents this thing where it's like right it's for the good of the world or it's for money or it's you know and so that debate has been at the center I think of Michael Krebs'
11:26sort of character maybe represents this thing where it's like right it's for the good of the world or it's for money or it's you know and so that debate has been at the center I think of Michael Crichton's novel back in the beginning is like extracting DNA and cloning dinosaurs is that a good idea just because we can and I think we've taken it to the next step of evolution with this movie
11:48Yeah, claro, esto es Jurassic World porque del parque ya no salimos hace décadas
11:52hace mucho tiempo gracias Steven por eso pero ahora es renace también
11:57así renace Jurassic World renace porque la vida y el dinero encuentran el camino correcto exactamente y los dinosaurios siempre lo van a hacer muy bien en la pantalla los amamos gracias y ver gracias como siempre un gusto oye próximas semanas yo creo que haremos un recuento de todo lo que hemos hecho en este año porque ahorita que nos pusimos a ver la lista fue como no esto se tiene que compartir llevan tarea para este fin de semana pero lo que se ha hecho aquí en este espacio es maravilloso
12:22estamos felices de compartirlo por aquí nos vemos gracias hasta pronto
12:26y
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