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Robert
Altman -
Interview
Robert
Altman is a man of strong opinions and two phobias: George W. Bush
and shopping. In Deauville to present his latest film, Dr. T
and the Women, he certainly knew how to give voice to one of
them. In fact, he would have been happy to talk of nothing but the
state of American politics… Until Wilma Radar steered him back to
more cinematographic concerns.
Wilma Radar: Do you think hat this year’s presidential election
has moved beyond satire?
Robert Altman: I think we’ve moved well beyond satire. We’re on
a very dangerous precipice; if George Bush gets elected president,
it’s going to have a terrible effect. This George Bush character
is a joke.
W.R: Let’s evoke the ending of your film for a moment, without
revealing too much of it. The ending is visually very lifty. Is
that a camera move?
R.A: Women have never what the ending evokes from that angle. And
yet everyone came into this planet through the same door . The film
doesn’t exist without that; it would seem misogynistic.
W.R:
You’ve introduced many of your films in a festival form, rather
than putting them straight out on the market. Could you tell us
a little bit on how it’s helped your career?
R.A.: I think without the Cannes film festivals and MASH I might
be doing sitcom television right now. I don’t think it makes a difference
to my career. But I think it’s important for me to support film
festivals, because it’s the only place that new filmmakers, new
films, new ideas can be seen, and can be brought into a situation
where they can survive.
I don’t care how small or how big a festival is: it’s important.
Wilma Radar
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