I don’t know how he manages to write so much surrounded by seven women chitchatting away!ĪP: What is the biggest difference and challenge in comparison with acting in a film?ĪE: Essentially, the challenge is always the same-it is about taming your fears, giving the best of yourself and doing justice to your part. We are all getting to know each other, and we discuss profound and light things. He takes notes as he listens to us talk among ourselves. ![]() Simon has a unique way of working-he writes when the whole cast is together, in a theatre. At the moment, we are still at the writing stage. The novelty of the experience gives it a certain gracefulness, but also an enormous amount of fear and pressure. ![]() I’m very lucky to be making my theater debut under the direction of Simon Stone, alongside seven groundbreaking actresses-I am the only first-timer of the cast. All by Louis VuittonĪP: You are also to appear in your first theater play-how has the experience been so far?ĪE: Indeed. Before anything, a shoot is a human experience. This is entirely subjective and based on my own work experience, but every person I have worked with has a unique way of directing a team, leading a project, which I really can’t relate back to a nationality or a specific culture. I said to him, “I promise to live up to your expectations,” to honor the person whose role I play, Clara Saint, an incrediby elegant woman, who I was lucky enough to meet in real life.ĪP: Are there notable differences between American, British, and French directors?ĪE: To me, every director is unique. Which in turn made me want to give even more of myself! I remember the day he called me to tell me I had got the part. He is extremely generous to his actors, to the roles, and to the story he wants to tell. ![]() I’ve rarely met someone with such a precise perception. You immediately feel the impact of his experience as an actor-he is involved in every gesture, every gaze, and keeps adding density and complexity to each character throughout the process. On the eve of the release of her new film, Ralph Fiennes’s The White Crow, and as she prepares to make her theater debut, in Paris next year, RAIN stepped behind the scenes to discuss her life as a young mother, her relationship with social media, and her desire to only ever live up to her own standards.Īlice Pfeiffer: Can you tell me about your experience working with Ralph Fiennes?Īdèle Exarchopoulos: I only met Ralph Fiennes once before we skipped straight to the casting stage, where I discovered his uniquely sharp vision. After appearing in Abdellatif Kechiche’s Blue is the Warmest Color, the overnight star was faced with the unforeseen challenge of living up to an already cult status. Hair: Perrine Rougemont at Caren Makeup: Helene Vasnier at Artlist Paris Casting: Ibrahim Tarouhit Fashion assistant: Elisa Schmitt Production: Allan Vetier Production assistant: Justine LabrotĪ Palme d’Or at the 2013 Cannes Film Festival when she was just 19, a scandalous sex scene, a media buzz with little to no precedent nothing about Adéle Exarchopoulos’s rise to fame began as it usually does for aspiring actresses. 4.This interview first appeared in the print edition of RAIN magazine in the fall of 2018. The irony of the film is that while Adèle Exarchopoulos' Adèle blames herself for the breach she ultimately brings about, her straying is a preemptive act of self-defense, a desperate-and terribly sad - attempt at connection when the person who is her whole world has already started to slip away. Director and screenwriter Abdellatif Kechiche developed the premise for Blue Is the Warmest Colour while directing his second feature film, Games of Love and Chance (2003).īeside above, where does Blue is the warmest color take place? The crucial scene in Abdellatif Kechiche's drama “Blue Is the Warmest Color” isn't the one that sparks the movie's romance-the shot, in a street in Lille, in which the teen-age high-school student Adèle (Adèle Exarchopoulos) falls in love with the blue-haired university student Emma (Léa Seydoux) at the moment thatĪlso question is, is Blue is the warmest color sad? NYFF: Abdellatif Kechiche Open To ' Blue Is The Warmest Color' Sequel, Says Director's Cut Will Be 40 Minutes Longer.Īccordingly, is there a second blue is the warmest color?Īdaptation.
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