Passer au playerPasser au contenu principalPasser au pied de page
  • hier
✩ Les Films à VOIR ? Ils sont ICI ► https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL843D2ED8D80FA673

La trilogie Pusher de Nicolas Winding Refn, dans une version restaurée 4K, le 9 juillet au cinéma

FilmsActu X Nicolas Winding Refn (Interview)
© 2025
Transcription
00:30...
01:00...
01:02...
01:04...
01:06...
01:08...
01:12...
01:14...
01:16...
01:18...
01:20...
01:22...
01:24...
01:26...
01:28...
01:30...
01:32...
01:34...
01:36...
01:38...
01:42...
01:44...
01:46...
01:48...
01:50...
01:52...
01:54...
01:56...
01:58...
02:00...
02:02...
02:04...
02:12...
02:14...
02:16...
02:18...
02:20...
02:22...
02:24...
02:26...
02:32...
02:36...
02:38...
02:40...
02:42...
02:46...
02:48...
02:50...
02:52...
02:58...
03:00...
03:02...
03:04...
03:06...
03:08...
03:14...
03:16...
03:18...
03:20...
03:22...
03:24...
03:26...
03:28...
03:30...
03:32...
03:34...
03:38...
03:40...
03:42...
03:44...
03:46...
03:48...
03:50...
03:52...
03:54...
03:56...
04:28...
04:30...
04:34...
04:36...
04:38...
04:39...
04:40...
04:42...
04:44J'ai décidé de devenir Hans Christian Andersen et d'utiliser les faeries de l'hôtel comme l'opposité.
04:51C'est comme un coin, comme un yin et un yang.
04:55Vous avez un documentaire et vous avez une fantaisie.
04:58Et j'aime l'extrême, donc j'ai pensé que je vais partir de l'autre à l'autre.
05:03Et je pense que travailler dans la fantaisie a été beaucoup de plaisir.
05:07J'ai décidé de faire Pusher 4 a few years ago, mais comme un TV show.
05:13Et ça s'appelle Copenhagen Cowboy, qui est vraiment Pusher 4.
05:17Il a des mêmes personnages et des mêmes mondes.
05:21Mais je n'étais pas plus intéressé comme je l'avais l'habitude.
05:26Parce que social media dominait cette narrative maintenant.
05:31Tout est accessible.
05:33Et la plupart des choses sont réelles, ou à l'aise peut être très réelles,
05:38capturées de moment à moment.
05:40Et ce sont beaucoup plus efficaces.
05:42Et je ne peux pas faire ça.
05:44Mais ce que je peux faire, c'est que je peux manipuler ça dans mon propre version.
05:48C'est fantasy.
05:49Et ça, j'ai été plus intéressé.
05:51J'ai perdu l'intention de vivre dans le monde réel.
05:55Et j'ai été plus excitée par stepping dans le théâtre,
06:02c'est un espace de l'unreality, comme un stage.
06:05Et donc, c'est comme l'évolution, vous savez.
06:09Qu'est-ce que tu veux faire ?
06:12Je pense que si les directeurs veulent revenir et changer leurs films,
06:16je suis sûr qu'il y a une raison.
06:18Je n'ai pas besoin de faire.
06:20Je n'ai jamais eu de la liberté créative de faire,
06:23pour faire le film que je voulais faire.
06:25Donc, il n'y a rien à changer.
06:27Je fais un peu de temps.
06:28Je fais un peu de temps.
06:29Je fais un peu de temps.
06:31Je fais un peu de temps.
06:32Je fais un peu de temps.
06:34Il n'est pas encore plus dans mon corps.
06:36Je dois de continuer à aller dans mon autre.
08:07Cinema, and television for that matter, has had a very tough time in the last 10 years or so, 10-15 years.
08:16Gaming, social media, VR canvases are exploding, and they're constantly evolving because technology is allowing them to evolve.
08:24Movies and television, TV is becoming more and more just content that you almost look at while you're doing other things.
08:33And movies are still that window of exclusivity of the collective experience.
08:39But I think that movies also need to re-evaluate themselves.
08:44I remember when we were in Cannes for Only God Forgives, and I, after everyone had been booing me for so long that during my stay, I did say, look, you can be angry with me and about my film.
08:58But I am from the future, and I'm going to make something that's going to predict what it's going to be like if you want to make films in the future.
09:07And I was right, because right after Only God Forgives, the industry changed because of Netflix.
09:14Netflix was the game changer, and it changed not so much what we were making, but it's how we experienced film and content, essentially, how we viewed it.
09:24And I think that to justify or for a movie to exist in longevity, you have to see what a film can become, rather than what it used to be.
09:37Violence is like sex.
09:39It's all about the build-up.
09:40Bang, bang, and then it's to the other wall.
09:43Now, make it dirty, unique, interesting, never seen before in violence.
09:46I'm not that strategic, but I will say that everything is an evolution of something.
09:58And there can be a tendency when something is liked that everyone wants the same same.
10:08But I don't necessarily think that's true.
10:09It's better to give them something else or something different or something that destroys your past.
10:16in order to make something new, to transition.
10:20You know, obviously, the two films are very different, but what ties them is myself and Ryan's interaction.
10:29However, I find that interesting.
10:31It's like taking something and turning it on its head.
10:34It's taking the ultimate superhero in one movie and emasculating him in the next.
10:39It's taking one movie that's very poppy and another movie that's very esoteric.
10:45And that, I think, is what makes the world interesting, is that things can become different.
10:52It can evolve into other components, rather than just always staying in the same repeat lane,
10:59because you very quickly run out of steam, in my opinion.
11:03I was very happy, but obviously, you know, a lot of harsh reactions and a lot of booing and screaming.
11:12But then I was like, that's kind of cool, because then you're like the sex pistols of cinema.
11:18You know, you're like the one everyone throws bottles at, but you can't deny it existence.
11:23You can't really criticize it, because I did it my way.
11:27The world will see it as it continues to evolve, and you just have to be, you have to just to be, trust yourself.
11:35So you never lose your vision, when you have that strong reaction?
11:38No, on the contrary, you're like, it's like energy. It's like, just wait for the next one.
11:43I love that.
11:44I'm like you. I have no regrets about Only God Forgives. I think it's a masterpiece, and it is.
11:50I just didn't make it very expensive.
11:52Is there a doctor in the house? We need to get a medic in here. Is there a doctor around?
12:00When you were mentioning 2001, you forgot to add Drive. We'll let that slip.
12:06We won't know about Drive for another 30 years.
12:1030 seconds.
12:11Whether it lives or dies. I'm talking about films. 2001 was made in 1968.
12:18I made this film about four years ago. So it's about time.
12:20Four years is a zip. It's not even a blip. It's not a pimple on the asshole of humanity.
12:28What was funny about talking to Billy Friedkin was that it was, he had a man who had struggled a lot in Hollywood.
12:36And started very successfully at a young age. And then gone into sorceress.
12:43And, you know, was still traumatized by that experience after so many years.
12:49And I think that was what was so sad, in a way, that it had such an effect on him.
12:54It was a little bit like Michael Cimino doing Heaven's Gate.
12:57These amazing films, both Sorcerers and Heaven's Gate, are probably their best films.
13:04For some reason, get so destroyed. And then they lose sight of themselves.
13:10Or they lose their confidence. And it affects all the other movies they make afterwards.
13:15And I was like, I'm never going to be like that. Because I'm right. You're wrong.
13:20I mean, I've done two shows. One with Amazon, one with Netflix. And I like what I was making, obviously.
13:30But I don't know how much I want to continue. I may want to take a break and go and make movies again.
13:41I've decided to do more visual arts, you know, and trying to find other areas of creativity.
13:50But I think it's time to go make a film again.
13:54You said you work on two shows, but you work on The Famous Five or something.
13:57The Famous Five was a television show that I just, how do you say, executive produced or created.
14:04But I had no involvement in it. Otherwise, I just created the kind of concept and the story.
14:10Based on these very famous books. The Famous Five was more because my kids would read the books when they were young.
14:16I remember my mother reading me the books. So it was more like a past history thing that came up as an opportunity.
14:27Well, I mean, if something is interesting, you know, why not look at it?
14:31I've had some wonderful meetings in Hollywood, met wonderful people.
14:35But in the end, I like my freedom. That's all I really want.
14:39It's just to be free. When you work in Hollywood, there is a contract.
14:44Some people love that and can work within that.
14:47It's maybe not so much my thing right now, but who knows?
14:51Maybe next year I'll do a big, you know, big superhero movie.
14:56That could be fun maybe. I don't know.
14:59I'm pretty open to anything, but at the same time, at the end, you should just make what makes you happy.
15:05It's one thing having creative control, which is easier enough.
15:10But it's where all the money that's invested puts a burden on you.
15:15Because all that money has to get, you know, recouped.
15:18And then you have to make a certain type of movie.
15:21You don't have the freedom to do whatever you want because you're a slave to the economics.
15:26If your film costs $200 million or $100 million, you need to make $300, $400 million to break even.
15:33That already puts a strain on what kind of movie can you make.
15:36And I don't want any conditions on me at all.
15:41You have to be completely free.
15:43I mean, in the beginning, a lot of people were talking about another drive, but it was like that would be the worst idea I've ever heard of.
15:55So never?
15:56Never.
15:57Never?
16:06I've been very lucky to live a fun life.
16:11It has nothing to do with fame.
16:14You realize very quickly.
16:17C'est que j'ai eu l'occasion et j'ai pu travailler avec des gens,
16:21j'ai rencontré des gens, j'ai parlé avec des gens et ça a été beaucoup de plaisir.
16:27Mais je pense que quand j'ai commencé, l'idée d'être venu,
16:32était très essentielle, l'idée d'être fame.
16:34Et fame, c'est comme une opportunité, c'est comme un stage.
16:39Une chose qui devient fameuse, l'autre chose à faire avec ça.
16:43Et évidemment, comme tout le monde, c'est une opportunité.
16:46Je n'ai pas de faire ni affection.
16:51Je me suis toujours à l'aider.
16:54Je me suis aussi à l'aider.
16:57Je vais rester ici dans six mois.
17:01Il va y'en à l'aider de la la son film, et là je fais cinq mois.
17:05Il est très bon, nous nous sommes avec lui.
17:10J'ai mis en train de la faire avec ses enfants avec des enfants.
17:14Je suis allé à 10 mois.
17:16C'était trop dur d'un autrement.
17:21Mon quotidien est une routine.
17:23Je me réveille. Je fais deux heures de sport chaque jour.
17:27Je me disait à l'heure.
17:30Je me disait à mes enfants.
17:33Je travaille à l'heure.
17:35Je me disait à ne pas d'un trop tard.
17:39Et puis, le frère arrive et c'est le week-end,
17:42et tu as essayé de relaxer un peu plus, et puis le prochain jour, c'est le mois d'août.
17:47Tu regardes les films ?
17:48J'ai regardé beaucoup de films quand j'étais beaucoup plus jeune,
17:52mais maintenant, c'est plus difficile et plus difficile.
17:54Il y a d'autres choses que je trouve intéressantes.
17:56Comme quoi ?
17:58J'ai fait ma première expérience qui s'ouvre à Tokyo,
18:02et ça a été beaucoup de plaisir.
18:04Une collaboration avec Hideo Kojima ?
18:06Oui.
18:07Pouvez-vous parler de ça ?
18:08J'ai créé une expérience qui s'ouvre à la semaine dernière,
18:15en Tokyo, où j'ai créé cette installation entre nous.
18:20J'ai vu ma femme et ma fille dans la procession.
18:24Hé, c'est moi !
18:31Où vas-tu ?
18:33WAIT !
18:38Don't leave without me !
18:41No !
18:44Don't go !
18:45Please !
18:45Don't go !
18:46And you are in Death Stranding 2 also ?
18:50I am Heart Man, and Heart Man is forever in Death Stranding.
18:55I think that you don't believe everything you read on the internet.
19:04OK.
19:05Can you tease us something ?
19:06Well, believe everything you read on the internet.
19:08OK.
19:09I think Ben connaît.
19:59...