首页
登录
职称英语
What does the man do? [br] [originaltext]W: [1] Today Mr. Boorman is invited he
What does the man do? [br] [originaltext]W: [1] Today Mr. Boorman is invited he
游客
2024-11-30
34
管理
问题
What does the man do? [br]
W: [1] Today Mr. Boorman is invited here to talk with us, about his latest film, his tactics of pushing the audience to the limit. The story of The Tailor of Panama feels like the underside of the Grail myth; it felt like Uncle Benny (Harold Pinter) was a rascal Merlin.
M: Yes. I always have one of those.
W: [2] Are you always looking at the mythological dimension of a story?
M: [2] [5D] Yes, that’s like a security blanket for me. I look at the story, I look at the idea and just try to think of it in terms of that whole body of myth and see where the characters fit in and what they ought to be doing — all those archetypes are there to play with.
W: Is there a specific process you employ when working with actors?
M: [1] [3] My method is to do quite a lot of rehearsal — finding the characters and figuring out the scenes with the actors. Before I start shooting I have all the actors know where we are going with every scene, what the intention is and where we are trying to get to. [3] [5CD] I don’t shoot a lot of takes — very few takes and very little film altogether — but what I do is create an environment — a context in which they feel safe and are able to take risks. It’s an atmosphere of trust, really: when actors are being defensive and defending their position, that is when you get less than good acting. It’s when they feel that they can go beyond themselves and take risks and that they are in safe hands. That is really what it comes down to.
W: Do you do any storyboarding?
M: [1] I only storyboard scenes that require special effects, where it is necessary to communicate through pictures.
W: How precise do you get with the design of your films?
M: The design of the sets and the choosing of locations are vital to me. Sometimes I don’t know how to play a scene until I’ve found the setting because, obviously, there’s always a relationship — a kind of tension between the setting and the foreground. Case in point, people often ask me if it was difficult to do the rape scene in Deliverance. But in fact the difficult thing was to find the location, for me. And I searched and searched until I found this place — which was sort of undulating with these very twisted laurels and with this sort of acid green light coming through these laurel leaves. Once I found that, I knew how to do the scene.
W: What about the design of The Tailor of Panama?
M: [4] There were these contrasts in Panama itself, of wealth and poverty, and I wanted to try to get that sort of sweaty, sickly quality. That’s not very specific, but that’s what we went for.
W: Did you have a sense of the style you were going for with the camera?
M: First of all, I wanted to-work in anamorphic, which is the format I’ve shot many of my films in. The reason being that, because many of the scenes were between Osnard and Pendel, played by Geoffrey Rush, I wanted to have them in the same frame, and it allows you to use the space between them — either to bring them close to each other or to separate them, depending on the emotion involved.
W: Do you have any preferences as far as lenses are concerned?
M: It has to do with whatever the scene is and what you’re trying to achieve. For instance, in Point Blank — which was also anamorphic — Panavision had just produced this 40mm lens, which is a wide angle lens. It was the first one they made and, with it, I shot perhaps 70 or 80 percent of the picture because it was wide and [4] I was trying to get this spatial feeling of bleakness, of emptiness.
W: What was the writing process like on The Tailor of Panama?
M: [5A] This was rather unusual for me because Columbia had a script written before I came into the picture. They bought the rights to this piece and they had a script done by a man called Andrew Davies, and no one was terribly happy with it, least of all the studio. Le Carre certainly wasn’t. Then Le Carre went and wrote a script himself, which were about 180 pages. It was sort of halfway between a novel and a film script really, but it was wonderful — it had all kinds of fascinating things in it. I then talked to Le Carre; we talked about the whole thing. He was just then writing a new novel so he couldn’t really be involved, but he said "You do the script and just call on me whenever you need me," and that’s what I did. I wrote and faxed the scenes to him as I went along and he’d write notes on them and sometimes he’d just rewrite the scene completely himself or he would come up with another idea. That’s how we went along.
选项
A、Excited.
B、Happy.
C、Mysterious.
D、Sad.
答案
D
解析
推断题。录音中虽没直接提及电影内容,但男士提到电影中有巴拿马的贫富对比画面,并说自己想要制造一种令人压抑沉闷的效果,后面又提到电影中有许多表现空虚感的宽镜头,由此推断电影应该是令人压抑伤感的,答案为[D]。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3867340.html
相关试题推荐
[originaltext]AUnitedNationsconferencehasadoptedmeasurestospeedupg
[originaltext]ANewMexicochurchplanstoburnHarryPotterbooksbecauset
[originaltext]ANewMexicochurchplanstoburnHarryPotterbooksbecauset
Whatisthewoman’sbookabout?[br][originaltext]M:Nowourcountitdownto
Whatisthewoman’sbookabout?[br][originaltext]M:Nowourcountitdownto
Whatisthewoman’sbookabout?[br][originaltext]M:Nowourcountitdownto
Whichfilmwonthebestpictureatthe84thOscarawards?[br][originaltext]
Whichfilmwonthebestpictureatthe84thOscarawards?[originaltext][9]
AccordingtoPresidentOmaral-Bashir,ifSudansplits,[br][originaltext]
AccordingtoPresidentOmaral-Bashir,ifSudansplits,[originaltext]ThePr
随机试题
UnusualincidentsarebeingreportedacrosstheArctic.Inuitfamiliesgo
Peoplebecomequiteillogicalwhentheytrytodecidewhatcanbeeatenand
LawrencewilldoanythingforLilyexcept______hermoney.A、lendingB、lendC、borr
Moreandmorestudentswanttostudyin"hot"majors.Beinga【
下列不需要一级负荷供电的是()。A.大型钢铁联合企业 B.建筑高度大于50m
特发性肺间质纤维化肺功能特点是()。A.限制性通气功能障碍 B.阻塞性通气功
A.患者取右侧卧位,检查者用手推压子宫移到右侧而引起疼痛加剧为阳性,可作为区别妊
下列选项中属于孔子教育主张的是()。A.人之性恶,其善者伪也 B.博学之、审问
关于量和单位的书写、印刷规则,以下表述正确的有()。[2007年真题]
某购物公园一楼,出现多尊半裸体、全裸体雕像。有家长表示,尺度太大了,孩子看到很尴
最新回复
(
0
)