Mastodon Bong Joon-Ho Knows Mickey 17 Reflects Our World, Toni Collette And Naomi Ackie Know How To Survive It [Exclusive Interview] - SlashFilm Trending Global News - Trending Global News
0

Bong Joon-Ho Knows Mickey 17 Reflects Our World, Toni Collette And Naomi Ackie Know How To Survive It [Exclusive Interview] – SlashFilm Trending Global News

Share





After Bong June-Ho’s “Parasites”, the Home Four Academy Awards (Best Picture, Best Picture, Best Director, Best Original Screenplay and Best International Feature Film), became the first non-English-language-language film to win the best picture and in this process the first South Korean film, the first South Korean film, the first South Korean film, the first South Korean film, the first South Korean film, the film’s admirers became the first South Korean film, the first South Korean film, the first South Korean film. Was surprised what was for the director. The answer came in 2022 when it was announced that he was following a science-fi black comedy about a person named Mickey 7, “Mickey 7,” who is “spent,” or again, and again, retires to become a person, and again, to become a person. And thenIn the line of work – made with its memories each day with a new human printed copy.

The result of this is that I strongly believe that director Bong’s best English language film, and a scary of egoistic politicians and the manner of capitalism, your face will be accused of death. “Mickey 17” is subtle as a sledaimmer, but is fully corresponding to all their functions. While human printing (Venus) does not exist, and we have not attempted to collect another planet, such as a sect-like political figure at the behest of a big belief system and a cult like the following (Still, Ugh), Director Bong’s latest a satire and play as a warning, what to come if we are not careful. He is not a stranger to walk a tonal hiwire, with an existential horror as well as the top-top camp with the top-tops villain, and he and his actors knew that the mixture was important for the effectiveness of the film.

I was honored and privileged to speak with director Bong (with a long -term interpreter and filmmaker/dialect coach Sharon Choi) with Tony Cole and Naomi Ekki, who to say what to say about the current situation of society about “Mickey 17”, and what we all can learn from this. Below are parts of these interviews, but for full discussions (as well as my conversation with Star Steven Yehun), today /tune in the episode of the Daily Podcast.

Bong June-Ho knows that people will see themselves in Mickey Barns

Fantasy writer Terry Prachet once wrote that evil begins when you begin to treat people like objects. Do you agree And is this a main pillar of “Mickey 17”?

Director Bong: This is an ideal quotes for this film. I wish I knew it soon when I was writing it, because it is actually associated with the underlying subjects and questions that investigate the film. The concept of human printing, it is a major element of the film, and this quotation is actually human printing.

Because humans should not be printed. This is a combination of words that should not actually exist. And that setup itself presents the tragedy and ridiculing and the inhumanity of that world. And if you think of Robert Pattinson in that situation, you also feel sorry for the character. If you look at Mickey, he is great for his own good, always takes the small end of the stick. And this actually emphasizes the unfortunate prediction of Mickey’s story.

I think people often feel spending even without the concept of human printing, and it is really emphasizing how it can feel in a hostile society. Do you see the story that many of us are living showing the current scenario?

Director Bong: In Korea recently, there was a young activist who unfortunately died at the workplace. And it happens all over the world. And whatever is tragic, it is that when John dies during an extreme job, you come to Freddy to change it. And then if Freddy dies, you come to Tom to change it. Therefore, the job remains the same. It is just people, the person changes continuously and takes the place of anterior. And it is quite terrible and unhappy. In the film, you see Mickey just take it on it. He is a person who takes all these missions and dies continuously. And I think the setup actually reflects our current reality, just shows it in a more extreme way because it is a person who is handling all this and he dies and is printed and really reduces the crime of his community because they can only be, “Oh, this is your job. We will kill you properly.”

We can avoid poor political leadership

What lessons are you expecting that American audience can learn from looking at the characters living under a ruler like Marshall?

Director Bong: I think your question has a clear intentions with the character of Marshall played by Mark Raffalo. [laughs] If you ask us, is it a satire of a particular character? I think it would be difficult to say mark and I would be difficult, “No, of course”. [laughs] But in Korea too, there was some political upheaval recently, and No-good things happenedYes. And in the modern era, we have gone through all bad leaders and political sufferings. And I wanted all this to be added to this character.

“Mickey 17” is clearly a story about Mickey Barns, but it is also set in a society that fulfills the craze of fascist, ego, blowhard. Both of you play women who are present under the type of administration. What lessons you are expecting to learn the audience from your characters that they may be able to include in their lives if they were … Hypothetic ever A creed-like fascist, ego, is present under the administration of blowing itself?

Naomi Ekki: Wow. Good question.

Tony Cole: See, my character is really interesting because I am marrying Blohard. [laughs] But by the end of it, I think she learns that everyone goes through the same experience as a human and you cannot escape the difficult item. But in reality she is very narrow, I don’t think she will actually change the way she is! [laughs] But eventually I think the Techwae is that everyone matters and hopefully we can be aware that we have personal power to know because it is not naturally nurtured in the society. This is not – people have not actually been asked to take care of that stuff, but it is in each of us.

Ackie: I think [my character] Drugs, like that if you fight for a person, you are fighting for many people. I think there is something, “[Is there] Is anyone needed? Help him, “because she could stop something else. I don’t think the drug was intentionally. The final result is not what she started. She wanted – I did not want to give anything.

“Mickey 17” is now in theaters.