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Esce in sala il 27 novembre Frozen 2 - Il Segreto di Arendelle e Sonia Serafini ha intervistato i registi del film, Jennifer Lee e Chris Buck, e il produttore, Peter Del Vecho.
Trascrizione
00:00Can I say that you are the man and the woman of the records, so which one was the best one, your favorite to beat?
00:10Oh, the record? Oh, beating records.
00:14Oscar was a first for Disney Animation, not including Walt, if I'm not mistaken.
00:20I think for us to bring that back to the crew, they work tirelessly on these films
00:27and they give their heart and soul into it, and I think the pride we felt to bring that home.
00:33They were all together in the studio cheering, and I remember that very well.
00:39That was a very emotional moment.
00:41It was, and we sit here or we stand up at those places if we're lucky enough to get an award, and it really is.
00:48We represent so many artists, hundreds of artists, that put so much work into it,
00:53and we're humbled by that because they really, it's their work up on the screen that everyone is applauding.
01:01The Frozen Saga is full of beautiful messages behind, family, friendship, love, and also the environment.
01:11What do you think, how much do we leave movies like Frozen with these beautiful messages inside,
01:19especially for the new generation?
01:24I think we always try to inspire and provoke conversation, and I think audiences want complex stories,
01:33and really, our story really evolved from our character's journey.
01:37It sort of evolved naturally, but I think that complexity is what attracts you to the movie.
01:43The emotions that you go through make you feel like you've seen a really giant movie.
01:49You almost forget you're watching a movie because it becomes real and believable.
01:53You say in London that you did research in beautiful places.
01:58Yes.
01:59So, how did you decide to put everything in the movie?
02:03Well, we traveled along with our production designer and had a story to Norway and Finland.
02:09And we traveled in the fall, and since the movie was starting to look like it was going to deal with maturity and growing up and change,
02:19the fall represented to us the change of seasons and the maturing of the season.
02:24But we also went to Iceland, and its stark contrast to Norway made us realize we had two different characters.
02:33And it felt very much at home in Norway and Finland in the fairytale setting.
02:38But Elsa, against the power of nature, felt almost very at home in the mythic landscape of Iceland.
02:46So we realized we had two stories running in parallel along the way.
02:51What do you think is the power of Frozen? Why people have so much this saga?
02:59We've been asking that question ourselves.
03:02I mean, I think there's many sort of elements. I mean, I think that the characters are relatable, they're flawed, they're aspirational.
03:12I think there's the family aspect, you know, such a strong family bond, not only just between Anna and Elsa, but all five of them.
03:21I think there's that.
03:23Yeah, I think for me watching, I've been watching the film now, finished, versus working on it.
03:29And I find that Anna and Elsa show me new things each time, and there's something about the two of them.
03:35I'm still trying to understand. I just know that they make me feel a lot, they make me feel like things are possible.
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