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Interview Movie Review
Interview Review
"Interview" Overview

Rating: R
2007
Cast and Crew
Director : Steve BuscemiProducer : Gijs van de Westelaken,Bruce Weiss
Screenwiter : Steve Buscemi,David Schechter
Starring : Steve Buscemi,Sienna Miller
On November 2, 2004, Dutch filmmaker Theo van Gogh was murdered on a bustling
street in Amsterdam as he rode his bike to work. Van Gogh's murderer, a radical
Islamist, shot him eight times, slashed open his throat, and left a five-page
letter pinned to his chest with a knife. The attack was a savage response to
van Gogh's 2004 short film, Submission, a ten-minute lamentation on the problem
of violence toward women in certain Islamic societies. Thus was born the legend
of Theo van Gogh -- suffering artist, free-speech martyr, persecuted prophet.
Before his death, van Gogh resolved to remake three of his previous films, this
time in English and set in New York City. Now, with the help of three notable
actor-directors -- Steve Buscemi, Stanley Tucci, and John Turturro -- van
Gogh's vision is being realized in the form of the Triple Theo Project.
Interview, Buscemi's contribution, is the first film in the series.
The original Interview is little more than an enjoyable trifle, and so it is
with Buscemi's remake. The film is for the most part a two-person show, a
feature-length dialogue between a seemingly vapid Hollywood starlet, Katya
(Sienna Miller), and the cynical political journalist, Pierre (Buscemi),
assigned to interview her. Their initial meeting gets off to a rocky start when
Katya shows up an hour late to the restaurant where they've agreed to meet,
whereupon Pierre reveals that hasn't seen any of her movies or done a whit of
research on her life and career. Not long after, Katya decides to end the
interview and leaves the restaurant in a huff.
Katya's character is an amalgam of Paris Hilton, Lindsay Lohan, and every other
celebutante flashing her crotch on the pages of the gossip rags. Her talents
are questionable, her drug intake is steady, and her love life is the subject
of public fascination. Pierre, for his part, is a man of quick intellect and
sharp elbows. He'd rather be covering the latest Beltway intrigue than drinking
overpriced scotch in a trendy Manhattan hotspot, and he isn't afraid to let
Katya know it.
With his interview shot, Pierre hails a cab to take him home, but the cabbie is
too busy gawking at the sight of Katya to notice a truck parked in the street.
He rams into it, leaving Pierre with a shiner from the impact. Katya offers him
a drink and an icepack at her nearby apartment. It is in this setting -- a
capacious, smartly appointed Manhattan loft -- that the rest of the film's
action takes place.
Interview is basically an actor's showcase. The script works subtly to reveal
the core of Katya and Pierre's characters, placing a heavy burden on Buscemi
and Miller's performances. Their characters repeatedly creep toward some type
of delicate intimacy and then find ways to withdraw from it. Buscemi plays
Pierre with restraint. His movements are awkward and self-conscious. The
expressions on his face are bridled by a lifetime of hassles and
disappointments. Miller's work is much more expansive. She gambols and frolics
around the apartment in a seductively feline way, delivering every line as if
it were perched on the edge of deceit.
It's a tall order to maintain an engaging story with the same two faces filling
the screen from start to finish, but Buscemi succeeds in doing so. Interview's
slight 83-minute running time has something to with it, but so also does his
skill as a director. As a tribute to van Gogh, Buscemi apparently adopted his
technique of filming. Buscemi shot with three cameras running simultaneously --
one on each of the actors and the other devoted to master shots -- and the
results are dynamic. From its opening frame to its final revelation, Interview
hums with life.
Why can't she be Mr. Pink?
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Review by Matt McKillop
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