Highlights
Season 2 • 15 | 10 | 2024
Shah Rukh Khan: The King of Bollywood
There are no words to introduce Shah Rukh Khan, the Baadshah of Bollywood, recipient of the Pardo alla Carriera Ascona-Locarno Tourism at the 77th edition of the Locarno Film Festival. He is one of the biggest and most beloved movie stars in the world; for billions of people around the world, his name is virtually synonymous with legendary films of all descriptions – romances, comedies, action films.
When we caught up with SRK in Locarno – for this episode of our podcast Locarno Meets – we asked him about that range, about what he missed about filmmaking during the pandemic, and whether short-form storytelling on social media will ever be a rival to the big budget epics on which Shah Rukh Khan has built a name.
Season 2 • 07 | 11 | 2024
Jane Campion: Every Film is a Long Love Affair
One of the most beloved and influential directors of the past half century, Jane Campion – recipient of the Pardo d’Onore Manor at the 77th Locarno Film Festival –, joins us on Locarno Meets.
Campion’s is a career of remarkable firsts, whether as the first woman to win the Palme d’Or or the first woman to be nominated twice for the Academy Awards for Best Director (winning for “The Power of the Dog” in 2022). But her body of work is full of artistic risk-taking and daring pivots into uncharted territory. With Campion in our studio, we looked back together at her career, reflecting on her early days of film-going in London, on the genesis of many of her best-known projects, and on techniques for keeping the flame of inspiration alive.
Season 1 • 26 | 09 | 2023
Ken Loach on His Last Film: ‘The Old Oak’
Outside of perhaps Alfred Hitchcock, it’s arguable that there has never been a film director as significant in Britain as Ken Loach. In his seven decade career, Loach’s unrivalled filmography has been the most potent, artistic voice for the dispossessed in his native England. It is a tragedy for both the art form and the country that his new film will be his last. At 87, the man is drawing a line under this remarkable career, which began in the 1960s and has enjoyed multiple peaks. His final film, ‘The Old Oak’, marks a completion of a trilogy of social dramas set in the north-east of England and is as touching and as human as either of the two that came before it.
Subscribe to Locarno Meets for lively conversations about art, culture life and everything in between with the likes of Lambert Wilson, Ken Loach, Harmony Korine, Marianne Slot, Luc Jacquet, Zar Amir Ebrahimi, and more.
Subscribe on Spotify:
https://open.spotify.com/show/55tbpML40KtHJJQUrmXosq?si=QhYzMW6pR0-uX_r0qWXQMQ
Subscribe on Apple Podcasts:
https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/locarno-meets/id1705681701
Season 1 • 16 | 10 | 2023
Harmony Korine: Films Should Be A Sensory Experience
Harmony Korine is a skater, a painter, a cigar aficionado, a computer game designer and one of the most important independent American directors of the last 30 years. In the 90s, almost overnight, he went from being a teenager drinking at skate parks to the generationally heralded screenwriter of Larry Clark’s legendary Kids (1995) and then, just as quickly, he became a visionary and brilliant director in his own right.
This year, we honoured Korine with the Pardo d’onore Manor for a career that’s produced six unique feature films, dozens of shorts, music videos, experimental work and documentaries.
Subscribe to Locarno Meets for lively conversations about art, culture life and everything in between with the likes of Lambert Wilson, Ken Loach, Harmony Korine, Marianne Slot, Luc Jacquet, Zar Amir Ebrahimi, and more.
Subscribe on Spotify:
https://open.spotify.com/show/55tbpML40KtHJJQUrmXosq?si=ebe5131caae74a1c
Subscribe on Apple Podcasts:
https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/locarno-meets/id1705681701
Season 2
Season 2 • 26 | 11 | 2024
Payal Kapadia: “A Night of Knowing Nothing” to “All We Imagine As Light” to Jury Duty at Locarno77
After “All We Imagine As Light” triumphed at Cannes this year, taking home the Grand Prix, Indian filmmaker Payal Kapadia headed to the Locarno Film Festival to serve on the main competition jury alongside the likes of director Jessica Hausner and star Luca Marinelli. While she was in town, we invited her to join us for a chat on Locarno Meets.
Kapadia took us through her journey from “A Night of Knowing Nothing”, her non-fiction masterpiece that won the Best Documentary Prize at Cannes in 2021, through to her new film, which marks a decisive turn to fiction. For Kapadia, the very act of making cinema is a political one, springing from the urgent dynamics of real life in a complex social, political, and class system like India’s.
Season 2 • 19 | 11 | 2024
Paz Vega: Keeping the Adult World Out of the Frame in “Rita”
Actress Paz Vega – one of the most recognizable faces of Spanish cinema – joins us for a conversation about her directorial debut: the piercing childhood drama “Rita”. This remarkable work, for which Vega served in a multitude of capacities – director, writer, executive producer, and in a prominent lead role – had its world premiere at the 77th Locarno Film Festival to acclaim from the audience and the press.
During the Festival, we caught up with Paz Vega to dig into this impressive first foray behind the camera. Set in the innocence of a childhood in Sevilla in 1984, and the domestic abuse that devastates that world, “Rita” is a bold work that deserves to be seen and discussed for a long time to come.
Season 2 • 12 | 11 | 2024
Nick Frost on “Timestalker” and Playing a Self-Described Horrible Beast
One of the most recognizable faces of British cinema – known best for “Shaun of the Dead” and “Hot Fuzz” –, actor Nick Frost stopped over at Locarno to show his latest film, the centuries-spanning time travel romantic comedy “Timestalker”, on the Piazza Grande.
While in town, he sat down for a conversation on Locarno Meets to discuss the genesis of this one-of-a-kind new movie, expound on his admiration for director Alice Lowe – another beloved staple of British television comedy – and reflect on what it means to play a pretty evil dude across dozens of historical eras on screen.
Season 2 • 07 | 11 | 2024
Jane Campion: Every Film is a Long Love Affair
One of the most beloved and influential directors of the past half century, Jane Campion – recipient of the Pardo d’Onore Manor at the 77th Locarno Film Festival –, joins us on Locarno Meets.
Campion’s is a career of remarkable firsts, whether as the first woman to win the Palme d’Or or the first woman to be nominated twice for the Academy Awards for Best Director (winning for “The Power of the Dog” in 2022). But her body of work is full of artistic risk-taking and daring pivots into uncharted territory. With Campion in our studio, we looked back together at her career, reflecting on her early days of film-going in London, on the genesis of many of her best-known projects, and on techniques for keeping the flame of inspiration alive.
Season 2 • 29 | 10 | 2024
Alfonso Cuarón Moves Between Hollywood and the Real World
On Locarno Meets, we're joined by five-time Academy Award winner Alfonso Cuarón, who shared some candid thoughts about his singular career while in Locarno to accept the Festival’s Lifetime Achievement Award.
In an in-depth conversation with the podcast host Alex Miller, Cuarón opened up about his new Apple TV series “Disclaimer”, starring Cate Blanchett, taking breaks from Hollywood with “Y tu mamá también” and “Roma” – that allowed him to refresh his practice –, coping with the reality of the world that hasn’t improved much since he made “Children of Men” almost twenty years ago, and the weight of being known as a visionary artist who also makes blockbusters, like “Gravity” or “Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban”.
Season 2 • 22 | 10 | 2024
Tarsem Talks His Gonzo Masterpiece “The Fall” Restored in 4K
A film 28 years in the making and shot across 24 countries, Tarsem’s gonzo masterpiece “The Fall” has long been woefully unavailable. The 77th edition of the Locarno Film Festival saw a new 4K restoration, done in collaboration with MUBI, premiere on the 8,000-seat Piazza Grande in Locarno.
For this episode of our podcast Locarno Meets, Tarsem sat down for an in-depth discussion of this great UFO of film history, telling the epic story of its making, of the reasons for its long-time unavailability, of how it was rejected by studios and critics but revered as a cult classic by fans, and how seeing it on the big screen at the Locarno Film Festival is the best kind of validation.
Season 2 • 15 | 10 | 2024
Shah Rukh Khan: The King of Bollywood
There are no words to introduce Shah Rukh Khan, the Baadshah of Bollywood, recipient of the Pardo alla Carriera Ascona-Locarno Tourism at the 77th edition of the Locarno Film Festival. He is one of the biggest and most beloved movie stars in the world; for billions of people around the world, his name is virtually synonymous with legendary films of all descriptions – romances, comedies, action films.
When we caught up with SRK in Locarno – for this episode of our podcast Locarno Meets – we asked him about that range, about what he missed about filmmaking during the pandemic, and whether short-form storytelling on social media will ever be a rival to the big budget epics on which Shah Rukh Khan has built a name.
Season 1
Season 1 • 16 | 10 | 2023
Harmony Korine: Films Should Be A Sensory Experience
Harmony Korine is a skater, a painter, a cigar aficionado, a computer game designer and one of the most important independent American directors of the last 30 years. In the 90s, almost overnight, he went from being a teenager drinking at skate parks to the generationally heralded screenwriter of Larry Clark’s legendary Kids (1995) and then, just as quickly, he became a visionary and brilliant director in his own right.
This year, we honoured Korine with the Pardo d’onore Manor for a career that’s produced six unique feature films, dozens of shorts, music videos, experimental work and documentaries.
Subscribe to Locarno Meets for lively conversations about art, culture life and everything in between with the likes of Lambert Wilson, Ken Loach, Harmony Korine, Marianne Slot, Luc Jacquet, Zar Amir Ebrahimi, and more.
Subscribe on Spotify:
https://open.spotify.com/show/55tbpML40KtHJJQUrmXosq?si=ebe5131caae74a1c
Subscribe on Apple Podcasts:
https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/locarno-meets/id1705681701
Season 1 • 20 | 09 | 2023
David Krumholtz: Comedy, Child Prodigies and Embracing Death
After a career stretching back to childhood, defining Christmas for a generation of American kids in ‘The Santa Claus’ and shining in the brilliant ‘Adams Family Values’, for a long period as a supporting actor and comedian, American actor David Krumholz has now moved into the centre of the cinematic frame with ‘Lousy Carter’ - the story of a man with unrealised potential, confronting and embracing death as an excuse to try one last time to achieve something small in his life. We sat down with Krumholz to talk about how to get out of the way of the role and service the script, feeling comfortable in the characters skin, and setting artistic standards for yourself.
Subscribe to Locarno Meets for lively conversations about art, culture life and everything in between with the likes of Lambert Wilson, Ken Loach, Harmony Korine, Marianne Slot, Luc Jacquet, Zar Amir Ebrahimi, and more.
Subscribe on Spotify:
https://open.spotify.com/show/55tbpML40KtHJJQUrmXosq?si=QhYzMW6pR0-uX_r0qWXQMQ
Subscribe on Apple Podcasts:
https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/locarno-meets/id1705681701
Season 1 • 08 | 10 | 2023
Zar Amir Ebrahimi: Iran, Women & Overcoming Trauma
Fifteen years ago facing facing prison and corporal punishment Zar Amir Ebrahimi was forced to give up a successful acting career and flee her home in Iran. Ebrahimi’s last two roles are fierce criticisms of Iranian patriarchal culture. Firstly, with the terrifying satire Holy Spider (2022), which won her the Best Actress in Cannes 2022 and now in Shayda (2023) a gut wrenching story of a mother trying to protect her family from an abusive husband.
Away from starring roles, during the Woman, Life, Freedom movement, which arose in the wake of the murder of Mahsa Amini by the Iranian morality police, Ebrahimi has acted as a journalist collating the experiences of young female protesters. Hers is a career with meaning and purpose.
Subscribe to Locarno Meets for lively conversations about art, culture life and everything in between with the likes of Lambert Wilson, Ken Loach, Harmony Korine, Marianne Slot, Luc Jacquet, Zar Amir Ebrahimi, and more.
Subscribe on Spotify:
https://open.spotify.com/show/55tbpML40KtHJJQUrmXosq?si=ebe5131caae74a1c
Subscribe on Apple Podcasts:
https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/locarno-meets/id1705681701
Season 1 • 26 | 09 | 2023
Ken Loach on His Last Film: ‘The Old Oak’
Outside of perhaps Alfred Hitchcock, it’s arguable that there has never been a film director as significant in Britain as Ken Loach. In his seven decade career, Loach’s unrivalled filmography has been the most potent, artistic voice for the dispossessed in his native England. It is a tragedy for both the art form and the country that his new film will be his last. At 87, the man is drawing a line under this remarkable career, which began in the 1960s and has enjoyed multiple peaks. His final film, ‘The Old Oak’, marks a completion of a trilogy of social dramas set in the north-east of England and is as touching and as human as either of the two that came before it.
Subscribe to Locarno Meets for lively conversations about art, culture life and everything in between with the likes of Lambert Wilson, Ken Loach, Harmony Korine, Marianne Slot, Luc Jacquet, Zar Amir Ebrahimi, and more.
Subscribe on Spotify:
https://open.spotify.com/show/55tbpML40KtHJJQUrmXosq?si=QhYzMW6pR0-uX_r0qWXQMQ
Subscribe on Apple Podcasts:
https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/locarno-meets/id1705681701
Season 1 • 28 | 11 | 2023
Brian Newman: Are Brands the Future of Cinema Funding?
Dive into the future of cinema in our latest podcast with Brian Newman, former Tribeca CEO and founder of Sub-Genre, as he looks at the future of film, festivals and streaming platforms through a new way of funding.
Through his company Sub-Genre, Brian explores the ever-evolving relationship between brands and cinema, working to bridge the gap and turn brand engagement into a new form of cinema, with Patagonia and Saint Laurent as great examples of how it could be done. Brian's aim is to explore the power of cinema to amplify brand values, reach underserved communities and navigate the delicate balance between commerce and art, opening up new avenues for marketing films beyond the traditional streaming model.
Subscribe to Locarno Meets for lively conversations about art, culture life and everything in between with the likes of Lambert Wilson, Ken Loach, Harmony Korine, Marianne Slot, Luc Jacquet, Zar Amir Ebrahimi, and more.
Subscribe on Spotify:
https://open.spotify.com/show/55tbpML40KtHJJQUrmXosq?si=QhYzMW6pR0-uX_r0qWXQMQ
Subscribe on Apple Podcasts:
https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/locarno-meets/id1705681701
Season 1 • 09 | 01 | 2024
Revolutionary Routes: 'On the Go' as a Queer Feminist Road Movie
This week on LocarnoMeet filmmakers Maria Giselle Royer and Julia De Castro, who presented "On the Go" at Cineasti del Presente. A bold homage to Spanish cinema of the 1980s, specifically Gonzalo Garcia Pelayo's "Corridas de la Gria".
Shot in 16mm, this daring road movie weaves an adventurous narrative around a burnt-out nightclub, motherhood and surreal encounters. Renowned for its eclectic soundtrack and cultural exploration, On the Go is a visually stunning cinematic experience, enriched by its thought-provoking exploration of social issues.
The film introduces a campy cast into a vibrant and irrational realm, showcasing the directors' harmonious blend of creativity and mutual understanding.
Subscribe on Spotify:
https://open.spotify.com/show/55tbpML40KtHJJQUrmXosq?si=QhYzMW6pR0-uX_r0qWXQMQ
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https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/locarno-meets/id1705681701
Season 1 • 02 | 01 | 2024
Dancing Through Decay: Sofia Exarchou's On 'Animal'
Greek filmmaker Sofia Exarchou discusses her second feature film, "Animal", which looks at the lives of so-called "animators" at beach hotels in Greece.
The film explores the challenges these employees face in a demanding job that requires constant high energy and unwavering smiles. These people use their bodies to convey raw emotions, making their physical movements a central aspect of the film's storytelling and choreography.
In our conversation, Exarchou touches on the difficulties of funding creative films like "Animal", capturing the physicality of the scenes and her sensitive portrayal of the tourism industry in her native Greece.
Subscribe on Spotify:
https://open.spotify.com/show/55tbpML40KtHJJQUrmXosq?si=QhYzMW6pR0-uX_r0qWXQMQ
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https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/locarno-meets/id1705681701
Season 1 • 27 | 12 | 2023
From Locarno to LA: Amos Sussigan's animated journey
Production designer Amos Sussigan, who served on the festival jury, engages in a thoughtful conversation about his work on Animal Farm and broader insights into the animation industry. He delves into the intricacies of character design, highlighting the challenges of capturing individuality while avoiding cartoonish stereotypes, drawing on his varied experience, including Space Jam 2.
Sussigan also touches on the (at the time) ongoing strikes in the industry and concludes with profound reflections on his preference for the role of production designer over that of director, citing the complexities of the latter in a committee-driven feature film environment. The interview offers a deep and nuanced perspective on animation and filmmaking.
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Season 1 • 20 | 12 | 2023
Eduardo Williams: Redefining Filmmaking in Motion and Meaning
In a rich and provocative conversation, filmmaker Eduardo Williams discusses "The Human Surge 3," the would-be sequel to his 2016 work. This time, he shot it with 360-degree cameras, making for a singular cinematic experience.
He describes the interplay between script and improvisation that forms the backbone of his process, as well as the inherently political nature of cinema and the significant influence of video games on his work. Reflecting on online interactions and the potential of virtual reality in filmmaking, Williams offers deeper insights into his intense and distinctive approach to "The Human Surge 3".
Williams contrasts the grandiosity and strangeness of the title with the film's quotidian depiction of everyday life, emphasizing the looming presence of the apocalypse while spurning any obvious dramatic climax. This double perspective frustrates and subverts expectations and explodes the minutiae of the human condition into an elaborate spectrum of everyday situations.
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Season 1 • 13 | 12 | 2023
From Script to Soul: Katie Folger's Cinematic and Comedic Evolution
Austin actress and writer Katie Folger shines in the ensemble cast of Family Portrait, a unique film about a Texas family's struggle to get a group photo.
The production took an unconventional approach, reflected in both the casting and the visual language of the film. With room to experiment, Katie valued the immersive, "dream-like" shooting experience over traditional rehearsals and a strict script.
In addition to her film work, Katie wrote "Getting in Bed with the Pizza Man", a one-woman show exploring self-discovery and empowerment. Addressing sensitive topics such as sex from the perspective of growing up in a conservative family as an actress and comedian, she describes the experience of baring her soul to an audience as a form of spiritual alchemy. Active in Austin's artistic community, she is concerned about the evolving artistic landscape and strives to preserve the city's distinctive identity.
Subscribe to Locarno Meets for lively conversations about art, culture life and everything in between with the likes of Lambert Wilson, Ken Loach, Harmony Korine, Marianne Slot, Luc Jacquet, Zar Amir Ebrahimi, and more.
Subscribe on Spotify:
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Season 1 • 28 | 11 | 2023
Open Doors: Gloria Carrión and Nadean Rawlins on Cinematic Liberation
Join us for an exploration of resilience, creativity and the transformative power of cinema in the lives of our inspiring guests: director Gloria Carrión and producer Nadean Rawlins, both participants in the 2023 Open Doors Hub program focused on Latin America and the Caribbean.
Gloria shared her journey from the 2018 civil uprising in Nicaragua to the creation of Leaves of K., a film born out of oppression and forced migration. Faced with government restrictions, she found refuge in Toronto and, in a way, in Open Doors, which enabled her to develop "Pantasma", a poignant coming-of-age story that challenges notions of the enemy through animation and unique media.
Nadean, is in Locarno as the producer of "Raised by Goats" by Gibrey Allen, a film set in pre-independence Jamaica, exploring independence as individuals and as a country. She reflects on the transformative experience at Open Doors, the challenges of film funding in Jamaica and her commitment to making a difference.
Subscribe to Locarno Meets for lively conversations about art, culture life and everything in between with the likes of Lambert Wilson, Ken Loach, Harmony Korine, Marianne Slot, Luc Jacquet, Zar Amir Ebrahimi, and more.
Subscribe on Spotify:
https://open.spotify.com/show/55tbpML40KtHJJQUrmXosq?si=QhYzMW6pR0-uX_r0qWXQMQ
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https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/locarno-meets/id1705681701
Season 1 • 08 | 11 | 2023
Capturing Time and Emotion: Lucy Kerr on "Family Portrait"
Delve into the world of Lucy Kerr, an American filmmaker and artist based in New York, who was named one of the '25 New Faces of Independent Film' by Filmmaker Magazine in 2022! Her debut feature, "Family Portrait", which premiered at the 76th Locarno Film Festival, is set during the early days of the Covid-19 pandemic and offers a compelling exploration of family bonds and the enigmatic nature of time and space. Inspired by her own family experiences, the film transcends traditional storytelling, gradually transforming a seemingly ordinary family photo session into a ritual of transition.
"Family Portrait" has earned Kerr recognition, including the feature film grant from the Austin Film Society, the AirFrance Prize from FIDLab, and the New Horizons Award from US in Progress.
Subscribe to Locarno Meets for lively conversations about art, culture life and everything in between with the likes of Lambert Wilson, Ken Loach, Harmony Korine, Marianne Slot, Luc Jacquet, Zar Amir Ebrahimi, and more.
Subscribe on Spotify:
https://open.spotify.com/show/55tbpML40KtHJJQUrmXosq?si=QhYzMW6pR0-uX_r0qWXQMQ
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Season 1 • 08 | 11 | 2023
Pietro Scalia: Anecdotes of an Oscar-Winning Editor
Oliver Stone, Ridley Scott, Michael Bay, Gus Van Sant... these are just some of the iconic filmmakers who have called on award-winning editor Pietro Scalia to help them realise their visions. With a career spanning over 30 years, 2 Oscars and many more awards, Scalia has helped shape some of the most iconic films in Hollywood history, "Gladiator", "Black Hawk Down" and "JFK" to name but a few.
In August, he received the Vision Award Ticinomoda in Locarno and sat down with our host Alexander Miller to share fascinating anecdotes, such as the first time he met Gus Van Sant or sitting in the editing room with Ridley Scott and Steven Spielberg... the life of a Hollywood editor!
Subscribe to Locarno Meets for lively conversations about art, culture life and everything in between with the likes of Lambert Wilson, Ken Loach, Harmony Korine, Marianne Slot, Luc Jacquet, Zar Amir Ebrahimi, and more.
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https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/locarno-meets/id1705681701
Season 1 • 08 | 11 | 2023
Luc Jacquet: Climate Activism, Antarctica and the Poetry of Film
Luc Jacquet is an award-winning director and screenwriter with a passion for our planet and, in particular, Antarctica. This summer he was in Locarno to receive the Locarno Kids Award la Mobiliare, a recognition of the creative minds that are helping to shape the future of today's and tomorrow's younger generations.
Jacquet's work attempts to strike a balance between celebrating the beauty and poetry of nature as it is, and raising much-needed awareness of the dangers of climate change. While questioning the effectiveness of political films and the role of activists, he offers a refreshing perspective: finding an artistic response through the emotional connections that humans have with nature.
With his latest film, "Antarctica Calling", presented at the 76th edition of the Locarno Film Festival, Luc Jacquet invites the audience on a journey to feel the emotions of nature, from the majestic beauty of Antarctica to the vulnerability of its inhabitants.
Subscribe to Locarno Meets for lively conversations about art, culture life and everything in between with the likes of Lambert Wilson, Ken Loach, Harmony Korine, Marianne Slot, Luc Jacquet, Zar Amir Ebrahimi, and more.
Subscribe on Spotify:
https://open.spotify.com/show/55tbpML40KtHJJQUrmXosq?si=ebe5131caae74a1c
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https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/locarno-meets/id1705681701
Season 1 • 04 | 10 | 2023
Radu Jude Knows He’s Divisive, But He Loves It
Radu Jude is a Romanian filmmaker who isn't to everyone's taste. His last film was called "Bad Luck Banging or Loony Porn", a provocative satire that won the Golden Bear at the Berlinale in 2021 and pushed him into the center of global cinema. It also annoyed a lot of his countrymen who frankly found it crass. Jude's new film is a near three hour experience called "Do Not Expect Too Much From the End of the World," a triptych of differing styles that leaps, without warning, into a montage documentary before finally settling into the most remarkable single take scene of the year. Jude knows his work is divisive. But let's face it, he loves that.
Subscribe to Locarno Meets for lively conversations about art, culture life and everything in between with the likes of Lambert Wilson, Ken Loach, Harmony Korine, Marianne Slot, Luc Jacquet, Zar Amir Ebrahimi, and more.
Season 1 • 12 | 09 | 2023
Marianne Slot: Lars von Trier's Producer on Defending Artistic Freedom
Imagine this: you’re in your 20s, you’ve never worked in or studied film when suddenly you find yourself producing an indisputably brilliant generational movie. Marianne Slot has now worked as Lars von Trier’s production partner since the 1990s. Over the decades her production company, Slot Machine, has been a cathedral for independent cinema. If producers were gatekeepers, Slot is the person you want holding the keys.
As a producer for renowned filmmakers such as Lars von Trier, Lucrecia Martel, and Lisandro Alonso, we asked Marianne Slot about the importance of the creative bond between the director and producer, defending artistic freedom, tough times for independent cinema, and ask her: what does a film producer actually do?
Subscribe to Locarno Meets for lively conversations about art, culture life and everything in between with the likes of Lambert Wilson, Ken Loach, Harmony Korine, Marianne Slot, Luc Jacquet, Zar Amir Ebrahimi, and more.
Subscribe on Spotify:
https://open.spotify.com/show/55tbpML40KtHJJQUrmXosq?si=QhYzMW6pR0-uX_r0qWXQMQ
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https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/locarno-meets/id1705681701
Season 1 • 05 | 09 | 2023
Lambert Wilson: "Being Inside One Life Wasn't Enough"
Tractors, madness, creative freedom and the heavy burden of judging art. We sit down with the prolific French actor Lambert Wilson, who is also the President of the Jury for the Locarno Film Festival, to talk about his new film, why he sees acting as a tool to extend life and ask that one crucial question: above all, is it great cinema?
Subscribe to Locarno Meets for lively conversations about art, culture life and everything in between with the likes of Lambert Wilson, Ken Loach, Harmony Korine, Marianne Slot, Luc Jacquet, Zar Amir Ebrahimi, and more.
Subscribe on Spotify:
https://open.spotify.com/show/55tbpML40KtHJJQUrmXosq?si=QhYzMW6pR0-uX_r0qWXQMQ
Subscribe on Apple Podcasts:
https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/locarno-meets/id1705681701