Stream Close Up

Brian Laffan

Bringing you conversations with filmmakers, actors, and artists, the storytellers behind the stories. We cover the worlds of film, TV and music. Watching some great films as we dig into our coverage of the 36th Annual Stockholm International Film Festival. "That's a good question." Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  1. Mads Mengel - The Guest - KVIFF 60

    -4 h

    Mads Mengel - The Guest - KVIFF 60

    In this episode, Brian speaks with Danish filmmaker Mads Mengel about his feature debut The Guest, a tightly controlled family drama built around a deceptively simple event, a naming ceremony for a young couple’s new son. What begins as a celebration soon becomes something much more fragile when Carl’s estranged mother arrives unexpectedly, forcing the family to confront old pain, broken trust and the possibility of reconciliation. Mads traces the long road to the film, from his childhood discovery that movies were something people actually made, through years of rejection before entering the Danish Film School. He reflects on the privilege of working in a country with strong public support for film, and how his own experience of becoming a father shaped the final version of the story. The conversation also digs into the film’s remarkable cast. Mads talks about writing the role of Carl with Simon Bennebjerg in mind, discovering Josephine Park through his television work, and building a sibling dynamic that feels lived in rather than explained. He also discusses the importance of collaboration, improvisation and trusting actors to bring small details into the film, including one of the episode’s best anecdotes involving a dog that became part of the character’s emotional life. At the center of the discussion is the film’s refusal to make things simple. Mads describes wanting the story to exist in “one big pile of grey,” where no character is reduced to a villain or victim. The result is a drama about family, mental illness, generational trauma and the uneasy question of when love becomes responsibility, and when responsibility becomes too much to carry. “It has to have all of it, and then none of it. It has to be one big pile of grey.” - Mads Mengel Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    54 min
  2. Work, Life, War Balance - Roman Liubyi - Time Machine Maidan

    -6 j

    Work, Life, War Balance - Roman Liubyi - Time Machine Maidan

    In this episode of Stream Close Up, Brian speaks with Ukrainian filmmaker Roman Liubyi about his latest film, Time Machine Maidan. Roman is part of the filmmaking collective Babylon’13, which came together during the first days of the Maidan Revolution in 2013. What began as an urgent effort to film, subtitle, and share short videos from inside the protest movement has grown into a larger cinematic archive of modern Ukrainian history. Time Machine Maidan draws on that archive in a strikingly original way. The film imagines a young soldier from today’s battlefield traveling back ten years to the beginning of the Revolution of Dignity. Using archival footage, voiceover, and experimental visual transitions, Roman and his collaborators turn documentary material into something closer to a time travel story, a memory piece, and a work of political cinema all at once. The conversation explores how the film was shaped by the tenth anniversary of Maidan, the desire to create something Roman could one day show his daughter, and the challenge of making a film about history while that history is still violently unfolding. Roman discusses the role of Babylon’13, the artistic tension behind the film’s structure, the use of new visual technology on decade-old footage, and why he sees Maidan and the current war as part of the same struggle. They also talk about the personal side of revolution: love stories born during moments of upheaval, the strange sense of community that existed on Maidan, and the responsibility Ukrainian filmmakers feel as they continue to create while living through war. A powerful conversation about memory, resistance, collective authorship, and the role cinema can play when the present is still fighting with the past. Trailer: Time Machine Maidan Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    35 min

À propos

Bringing you conversations with filmmakers, actors, and artists, the storytellers behind the stories. We cover the worlds of film, TV and music. Watching some great films as we dig into our coverage of the 36th Annual Stockholm International Film Festival. "That's a good question." Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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