00:00This is a festival for a genre, a cinema, the noir genre, and I was wondering, Stanley Kubrick in his career touched a lot of different genres, and there was one of them as a spectator that he preferred, his favorite?
00:22One of his favorite films. I can tell you that he really liked Edgar Wright's Heimat, which was a 10-hour film of the history of a particular village, and I know that he watched that twice, back-to-backs, and he was a huge Igmar Bergman fan, and he also loved Carlos Saura and Fellini, of course, and he was a film fan, so he watched a lot of films.
00:52He's Stanley Kubrick, the master of cinema and art, but for you, he's your father, so how did you split these different kind of characters, your memories as an adult and your memory as someone who is the heir of a piece of history or art?
01:11Well, I think that his attention to his films and attention to his family was equal, I think. Family was very important to him, which is why he wanted to work from home, and he set up his life so that he could be with his wife and his children and his cats and his dogs and work on his movies.
01:34So he was a complete person.
01:38Yeah, and he was, you said he was a film fan, and he left a lot of projects and made a lot of movies that he could do, but he did. So there is today a director who can do some of his projects. Yes.
02:00Well, I think there's talk of HBO doing a long-running TV series, maybe of Napoleon, and we'll see where that goes. But it's well known that Steven Spielberg already took up the mantle and did AI, which he did very well, and so we were very thrilled that he did that.
02:21But there are a lot of directors out there who are incredibly talented with vision who are influenced by him, I think, and encouraged by the fact that he, that Stanley broke all the rules, and that he did it his way. So I think that gives other directors freedom to do it their way.
02:39Okay, thank you very much.
02:41Thank you very much.
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