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E. Nina Rothe

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In-depth interviews and casual chats with the personalities and influencers of today, yesterday and tomorrow.

Jason Momoa and Suki Waterhouse in 'The Bad Batch'

Jason Momoa and Suki Waterhouse in 'The Bad Batch'

A Practical Dreamer: Talking with Ana Lily Amirpour about ‘The Bad Batch’ in Venice

E. Nina Rothe February 26, 2018

When the line-up for the 73rd Venice International Film Festival was announced, in late July, there was one film that immediately jumped off the page at me, and I knew coming into this edition of the oldest film festival in the world, I just had to watch it. I craved to watch it, in fact, as one craves a good meal or the perfect glass of wine. 

In fact, “craving to watch it” is the perfect way to describe the desire that accompanies a film like The Bad Batch, which according to producer Eddy Moretti, was initially pitched by its filmmaker as “a cannibal falls in love with his next meal.” 

And right I was to be ravenous about watching Ana Lily Amirpour’s follow up to her modern cult classic (yes, it’s already a classic, in case you were wondering) A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night. Watching The Bad Batch turned out to be so spectacular for me, so infinitely ahead of the majority of filmmakers’ visions and critics’ perception that I wouldn’t be surprised if everyone else was still unraveling their brains, as I am two days later, to fully comprehend it. I won’t use broad statements like Amirpour is a genius, because for such a young and talented filmmaker where would she go from there if I did — but she comes awfully close. 

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In Interviews, Celebrity Tags Suki Waterhouse, Jason Momoa, Ana Lily Amirpour, The Bad Batch, Giovanni Ribisi, Jim Carrey, The Dream, The Hermit, Keanu Reeves, Venice International Film Festival, La Biennale di Venezia, Venezia, Eddy Moretti, A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night, cannibal love story, Bruce Lee, Mohammad Ali, sex, Twitter, Megan Ellison, Danny Gabai, Vice, Annapurna, cinema, Pope Francis
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PHOTO COURTESY OF THE VENICE FILM FESTIVAL/ASAC

PHOTO COURTESY OF THE VENICE FILM FESTIVAL/ASAC

‘Jim & Andy: The Great Beyond’ in Venice: Will the real Jim Carrey please stand up

E. Nina Rothe February 7, 2018

On a recent sunny afternoon in Venice, I sat in the company of Jim Carrey in a corner of a shaded garden and found before me a human being who is both wise and charming, as well as a handsome fifty-something man who captured my imagination and filled my thoughts for days thereafter. Part spiritual guru, part Saint Francis — yes, there was a bee buzzing around him the entire time, the animal clearly enamored with his scent and the actor unaffected by the imminent danger — Carrey appeared like the romantic hero with a sense of humor I had come across so many years ago. In ‘Once Bitten’ what is probably one of his first and most forgettable films, when I was in my teens and he, well, super young too.

But a few days after our tranquil interview, when we talked to Carrey about his latest project ‘Jim & Andy: The Great Beyond’, a Vice production premiering at the Venice Film Festival, the actor pulled a red carpet prank at NY Fashion Week and all was hilariously-Jim-Carrey-right-with-the-world once more. I imagined Carrey giggling to himself after our talk, thinking “I got that journalist, I really got her good, now she thinks I’m a smooth, great looking mystic and will write the most beautiful piece about me.” 

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In Celebrity, Festivals, Interviews, Movies Tags Jim Carrey, Chris Smith, Jim & Andy: The Great Beyond, Venice Film Festival, Venice, Vice, NY Fashion Week, Andy Kaufman, Man on the Moon, Milos Forman, Spike Jonze, Tony Clifton, REM, The Mask, Dumb and Dumber, Liar Liar, Ace Ventura, Ana Lily Amirpour, The Bad Batch, The Hermit, Netflix
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