
Whoever writes People magazine captions deserves a Pulitzer. Solid prose. I spot four hyphenated words and three adverbs (loathsome things in grammar) and somehow I just believe in this sentence entirely. Mostly because I have a sense that the person writing this really believes it too. And that’s what’s getting me out of bed every day—that someone else believes in what they do as much as I do. I have a job, you have a job, we all have a job. Do your job well. That’s why we get out of bed. We gotta pay the bills. If you’re not feeling up to it, my advice: take two Aleve® and keep it moving (in your low-key bomber). Fake it ‘til you make it.
#GetTinaThick2017
GQ: Let’s start with a quote from an old man—albeit a Grand Old Man. Martin Scorsese recently said, “Cinema is gone. The cinema I grew up with and that I’m making, it’s gone. It should matter to your life. Unfortunately, the latest generations don’t know that it mattered so much.” I ask you, as one of the “latest generations”: Is he right?
Edgar Wright: First of all, I want to say, “Marty, I paid $15 to see Silence, sir. I am not part of the problem.”
Cary Fukunaga: I find it reductive to say that cinema is dead. That’s like saying painting is dead. Or theater is dead. But I get the anxiety that the stories that interest me most will be more and more rare as a theatrical experience.
Taylor Sheridan: I think we’re in a renaissance to a certain degree. The types of stories that I respond to and that I try to make—there are people consuming that kind of material. They haven’t evaporated. But where and how they digest that material is changing.
GQ: Okay, so let’s interpret “cinema” that way for a moment. How much does the movie theater—the building itself—still matter?
Ava DuVernay: I think it’s a question of what cinema is for you. I grew up in Compton, and there are no movie theaters in Compton. So I didn’t have access to cinema in the ways that most people think about it.
Bong Joon Ho: Throughout my childhood, Korea was under the military dictatorship. We didn’t have access to even VHS tapes. So I obsessed over what movies were on the TV timetable. Brian DePalma, Sam Peckinpah, John Carpenter: All of these, I watched on TV.
DuVernay: Yes, there’s certainly something about a cinematic experience in a traditional theater, but cinema has also become more about images expressing a certain feeling, mood, place and culture. I’ve had literally extraordinary experiences watching films in all different ways: Watching films on a lawn on a sheet. Watching films in beautiful theaters with pristine sound and picture quality. Watching in bed on my iPad. I’ve had transformative experiences watching a film at 30,000 feet, with the clouds going by and I’m under the blanket with my earphones in. “Cinema” is in the eye of the beholder. And I see it as something that’s morphing and growing and blossoming in different ways, as opposed to something that’s dying.
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1. Infinity Mirrored Room - The Souls of Millions of Light Years Away, 2013
2. Chandelier of Grief, 2016
3. All the Eternal Love I Have for the Pumpkins, 2016
4. Infinity Mirror Room (Phalli’s Field), 1965
5. Aftermath of Obliteration of Eternity, 2009
6. Infinity Mirrored Room - Love Forever, 1996
I don’t need to sell my soul
He’s already in meI wanna be adored