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  • (grunts)

  • (grunts) (thuds)

  • - They lost their (bleep) the end of the movie, for sure.

  • - I'm so glad, I'm so pleased to hear people responding

  • to the third act of the movie.

  • - That's what I wanted to talk with you about.

  • If I'm the Bond producers I'm watching that

  • third act, I'm going "This (bleep) just topped us."

  • (laughs)

  • Can you talk about, like I felt like I was watching

  • a Star Wars movie, in that, not to impose a Twitter (bleep)

  • in that inner cutting across like three spheres of action

  • the way Star Wars does.

  • And, I was just wondering like how did you lock in on that?

  • Was that from like early concept thing?

  • - Early concept was you had all of these characters

  • and I had to give them all their things to do.

  • So, the entire third act, I knew what Tom was going

  • to be doing.

  • He was going to be flying in this helicopter.

  • But, that his flying in a helicopter didn't mean

  • anything if it didn't have some immediate impact

  • on things that were happening on the ground.

  • And, the whole movie became about how do I engineer

  • a sequence where the team all has things to do

  • and if any one member of that team was removed

  • it all would have gone to seed.

  • And, even then I only had the vaguest sense of it

  • going into that village days before we shot it.

  • - Like, that sequence just in it with the IMAX scope to it

  • like is that, on an Empire podcast you said last year

  • that you showed Tom a picture of something

  • and he said, "I can't wait to fall off that."

  • Was that the helicopter?

  • - That was Pulpit Rock.

  • - [Phil] Oh that (bleep) rock.

  • - We had figured out the helicopter sequence

  • and we knew that it was going to end on a cliff somewhere.

  • But, we couldn't find a cliff like that anywhere

  • in New Zealand.

  • New Zealand everything was sloping downward.

  • And, I kept saying to the location guy, "not something

  • "he can fall down.

  • "It needs to be something he can fall off."

  • And, he brought me that picture and when I brought it

  • to Tom he was like, "That's it."

  • And, the trick became how to create the helicopter

  • sequence so that it would end on that mountain

  • with both of those characters together.

  • And, that really was the big challenge of that sequence.

  • - And, I love that, I mean I think if that sequence

  • has any theme it's like subverting expectation.

  • 'Cause you're sitting there and you're like

  • Ethan's going to get out of the helicopter

  • before it hits him.

  • No it (bleep) isn't.

  • (laughs)

  • I was like he's not going to crash.

  • He's going to crash and the helicopter,

  • like was that something like, 'cause I know these movies

  • they don't exactly stop on dime.

  • So, is that something that you're coming up with

  • like leading up to the shoot?

  • Was that there in the original outline?

  • - It really became, it became the demands of

  • we wanna have this confrontation between

  • these two characters.

  • And, we wanna have this helicopter chase between

  • these two characters.

  • And, Benji when he asked that question saying,

  • "If he's in another helicopter how are you gonna get it?"

  • That was our question.

  • And so, a lot of what you see the team going through,

  • that's why when I introduced the film last night

  • I said, "Watching a Mission Impossible movie,

  • "the experience of watching it is very much like

  • "the experience of making it."

  • A lot of times we put together these sequences

  • not knowing how we're gonna solve these problems.

  • And, it's always just about doing it in a way

  • that just feels real enough 'cause they're so outrageous.

  • - Right, and what I like that question, another question

  • that's asked in the film addition to how the hell

  • are we going to do this?

  • We'll figure it out.

  • Is not a question but I love that Ethan says

  • throughout the movie, "I'm so sorry."

  • Like, six movies in we have not seen him

  • express the emotional toll this has.

  • And, was that a conscious effort from you?

  • - From the very beginning, when Tom asked me to come back

  • to do another one

  • I said, "But a new director has come on for every one,

  • "and that's the precedent."

  • And he said, "Precedents are made to be broken."

  • I said, "All right, well I'll come back but I wanna

  • "maintain that aesthetic.

  • "I want it to feel like a different director.

  • "And, I wanna make a very different movie

  • "from Rogue Nation."

  • Rogue Nation tipped its hat to Ghost Protocol.

  • And, Ghost Protocol wasn't broke and we didn't try

  • to fix it.

  • I said, I don't think we can do that three times in a row.

  • It's gonna become kind of cute.

  • And so, I wanna do something more emotional.

  • And, I never really even allowed inside Ethan's head

  • and I want this movie to do that.

  • So, what do you wanna do?

  • And he said, "Well, I wanna tie up the story with Julia.

  • "Everybody keeps asking me wherever I go

  • "they're asking me what about Julia?"

  • We thought we had tied it up in Ghost Protocol.

  • So, I said, "Okay, we can do that but you gotta do it

  • "in a way that it's not gonna end up on

  • "the cutting room floor.

  • "And, I need to reintroduce that character.

  • "You can't assume that people have seen

  • "every other Mission Impossible."

  • So, I pitched him the opening of the movie which is

  • the opening you saw.

  • And, that was the very first scene we came up with.

  • - The dream sequence?

  • - Yes, and that from that moment on

  • we were in different territory.

  • We were starting an action movie in way

  • action movies don't begin.

  • Not because we were saying, "Oh, let's be different."

  • It was simply well, what would the story require.

  • And, everything that's you're seeing in the movie

  • that feels subversive is just us following the story

  • where the story wanted to go.

  • - As a huge fan of three I love that you guys

  • wrap up Julia.

  • I thought it was such a ballsy move to open with

  • a dream sequence. - Thank you.

  • - Is that, not to be a Mission nerd or anything

  • but is that supposed to be Lake Wanaka where they

  • got married in three?

  • Or, it can be now.

  • - Well, that's just it it's we actually to get

  • to that location took off from Lake Wanaka.

  • - [Phil] Oh nice, awesome.

  • - We were in New Zealand and it all sort of came home.

  • We didn't make any conscious effort to do that

  • but when we found that location, that's a place

  • called Millford Sound, which is actually quite beautiful.

  • We had one hour to shoot that scene.

  • - Holy (bleep) nicely done.

  • - Thank you very much.

  • - In terms of your visual approach, I know you said

  • that was important to you to be distinct

  • and the movie it feels like if Gordon Willis had

  • like a three way with Three Days at the Condor

  • and Michael Mann.

  • I'm watching this movie I'm going, "I think this is

  • "your best directed, - Wow.

  • - "Visually," - Thank you.

  • - And two sequences that really like felt

  • very Paccouli to me was the funeral beat which,

  • I don't know how you guys away with keeping that in there

  • for such a, it's such a small beat in such a big movie

  • you'd think that would be the first thing cut.

  • And, I also love the one=er where Ethan is imagining

  • the first heist with-- - Yes.

  • - Can you think about how you pulled those two scenes off?

  • - Thank you, first of all you're speaking my language

  • when you say Gordon Willis you are talking about

  • the cornerstone of everything I think cinematography is.

  • - I mean, you've got two eyes and a heart so.

  • - But, what I realized about people ask me

  • "Who's your favorite director?"

  • And, I say Gordon Willis.

  • Gordon Willis has such a distinct impact over

  • so many movies with so many different directors

  • from Woody Allen, to Francis Ford Coppola,

  • to Alan Ber-coola.

  • He's a distinctly powerful

  • filmmaker in his own right.

  • And, the sequence you're talking about, that one-er

  • when I was pitching to Tom the breakout

  • the rule of every Mission Impossible is you have to show

  • how something is supposed to happen before

  • you show how it all goes wrong.

  • And he said, when we're describing this sequence

  • I wanna see what they plan to happen.

  • And, I said, I'm gonna take that a step further

  • and I'm not gonna let you know it.

  • And then, I designed as something that was going to be,

  • there was going to MOS.

  • It was gonna be shot without sound.

  • I knew from the very beginning it was going to have music.

  • I never considered for a moment using that particular

  • cue which is the same music playing over the wedding

  • at the beginning of the movie.

  • - [Phil] Oh, nice I didn't catch that.

  • - And, that piece was written by Loren Blafe

  • before we ever started shooting the film.

  • And as I started, and I don't cut with temp music.

  • I edit the entire movie together before I ever put music in.

  • And, as a result you had the freedom to drop

  • this piece of music throughout the movie

  • and it worked in scene after scene after scene.

  • And, it became sort of a theme for Ethan's regret,

  • all of his emotional baggage that he's carrying with him.

  • And, that became more or less the theme of the film.

  • - That's awesome, and can you talk about

  • the little funeral beat, how you guys came up with that?

  • - The Saint Paul's? - Yeah.

  • - Yes, well it was originally going to be a wedding.

  • And, we had talked about a wedding

  • and talked about a funeral.

  • Somebody said the funeral was going to be too heavy,

  • it was going to be a little bit depressing.

  • And, I said, "Great, then it's going to be more

  • "inappropriate and that'll be funnier."

  • But, the shot that reveals the coffin, where Ethan's

  • walking through, it's all done in a one-er.

  • That was just coverage.

  • We didn't think that that's how the shot

  • was going to pay.

  • And, it wasn't until I saw it on the monitor

  • and realized, this is actually funny all by itself.

  • And, I changed the entire way we shot the scene.

  • The real impetus of all of that

  • was we started on the roof where Ethan runs along and jumps

  • from one building to another, where he ultimately

  • broke his foot.

  • And, we were there and we saw Black Friar's Bridge.

  • We saw the Tate Modern, we could see Saint Paul's

  • and it became very clear to us that all of these pieces

  • within this geography were great for

  • the set piece itself.

  • So, we didn't even think of Saint Paul's until

  • after we picked the roof.

  • And then, it became the question of how do I

  • get him onto the roof of Saint Paul's.

  • And originally, we had a meeting that was gonna happen

  • up inside, it was way too complicated.

  • And, the simplest solution became I'm gonna force him

  • up those stairs.

  • And, how do I funnel Ethan into that place?

  • And, all of the choreography, everything you're seeing

  • is just what forces Ethan to have to go where we

  • want him to go for the sequence.

  • And then, the funeral is this beautiful discovery.

  • - That's a great little beat.

  • - Thank you, I'm so glad you picked those two moments.

  • - Oh well thank you, yeah me and the Fandango guy

  • were nerding out about those scenes so I had to

  • talk about it.

  • Also, Simon said that the movie

  • when he first got the story for the movie

  • it was 30 pages of dialog and an outline.

  • And, I know you said you didn't want to start

  • without a complete script.

  • I just like, what's harder to do that while you're

  • trying to chase a bullet with another bullet while

  • riding a horse while making this movie?

  • (laughs)

  • Or writing like the full script?

  • - Probably, in retrospect writing the full script.

  • Because, what happens is when you write the script

  • you then tend to go out looking for places that match

  • what you imagined.

  • And, what I did going into this one based on what

  • I learned from Rogue Nation is I told the studio,

  • "I'm not going to start writing the screenplay

  • "until I know where I'm going to shoot it."

  • I encountered situations like that on Rogue Nation

  • which were really frustrating to the crew.

  • So, they said, "We don't know what to look for

  • "if we don't know what's happening there."

  • And, I said, "Well, I don't know what to shoot,

  • "I don't know what story to tell if I don't know

  • "where it's happening.

  • I can invent action all day long but then

  • we're gonna kill ourselves finding a place to shoot it.

  • So, just find something that looks cool and I'll

  • tell you what's going to happen.

  • And, I drove my crew crazy.

  • And, nothing that you saw in this movie existed

  • before we knew where it was going to be shot.

  • Except for the opening scene.

  • - Okay, like the callbacks to one in this movie

  • as a huge fan of that one like were those intentional?

  • - You say callbacks plural?

  • - I thought there were a few in terms of having

  • the reference to Max and now we have her daughter,

  • the helicopter ski, Baldwin getting stabbed with the knife

  • at the fence kind of felt like a callback to one, too.

  • - Oh, that's interesting.

  • - That wasn't intentional?

  • - No, the one intentional callback you nailed the one

  • intentional callback. - Which was?

  • - The Max, yeah.

  • - Okay, were there other callbacks.

  • There's definitely a nod to the TV series when

  • he opens the book we used the reel to reel tape recorder.

  • But, it's interesting, for the most part so many people

  • were looking at all of the Easter Eggs I'd laid out

  • in Rogue Nation and I was determined to, that was the

  • first thing I let go of so that it would not feel so much.

  • That was one of the-- - It's so distracting.

  • - Distinctly, the Chris McQuarrie that directed

  • that movie I said let's do something completely different.

  • And, I'm always amused when people see things that

  • they think are like, if you have a pigeon anywhere

  • in your movie they think you're referencing John Woo.

  • (laughs)

  • And, I was like, "No actually, there's just a lot

  • "of pigeons in Paris and they just happened

  • "to be going through."

  • But, that's interestingly the--

  • - I'm surprised that wasn't intentional 'cause

  • it felt direct.

  • - No, it's the way the scene came together.

  • Everything that happens to Alec in this movie

  • was Alec's suggestion.

  • - Really? - Yeah.

  • - I'm kind of bummed he died.

  • - Well, here's the great thing about movies

  • there's a two year gap between five and six

  • so seven can start two years earlier.

  • - [Phil] That's true.

  • - He's not going anywhere.

  • - I like how unlike the other missions,

  • like every character in this has their little

  • hero moment, especially Luther.

  • And, was that something that you and Ving

  • came up with together or was that just,

  • "Look, this is what we're gonna do for Luther?"

  • - It was funny.

  • I said, "Look, it's Luther's turn.

  • "The guy has been in a van for five movies

  • "and this is really the one where I want him

  • "to carry the emotional weight of the movie."

  • He's known Ethan longer than any of these characters

  • and he's the one, if anybody is going to tell the audience

  • what's going on in Ethan's mind it's gotta be Luther.

  • And, if anyone has a history with these characters

  • it's gotta be Luther.

  • And, I think what was really surprising was watching

  • Ving over the course of the movie, who I think

  • is accustomed to being the guy in the van.

  • Ving will come to set and go, "Just give me the line

  • "I'll give it to you five times."

  • 'Cause he knows, you're just gonna cut to me

  • for this line.

  • And he really, he would come to set everyday

  • and say, "I really like where this is going.

  • "I see what you're doing here."

  • And, he really rose to the occasion.

  • That scene that he has with Ilsa

  • just absolutely, it's all of his really emotional

  • moments in the movie you feel a sense that

  • he grounds the movie in such a way and brings

  • such an emotional depth to it.

  • And, the first time he said to Ilsa when we were shooting

  • the scene where he said, "We're in this mess because

  • "Ethan wouldn't let me die."

  • The way he said it I remember being so profoundly,

  • you're making a movie you're not--

  • - It's a gut punch.

  • - Oh yeah, yeah and I knew, "Oh, this is gonna work.

  • "This is gonna be great."

  • (air rushes)

(grunts)

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獨家採訪:《不可能的任務--輻射》導演克里斯托弗-麥奎利(SPOILERS)。不可能的任務--輻射》導演克里斯托弗-麥奎利(SPOILERS)。 (EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW: 'Mission: Impossible - Fallout' Director Christoper McQuarrie (SPOILERS))

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    Elizabeth Gao 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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