Alex Garland reveals how Civil War is partly autobiographical

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Q with Tom Power

Q with Tom Power

2 ай бұрын

Alex Garland’s latest film Civil War is unsettling even in its premise - maybe because of how real it feels. Set in a dystopian future America, the film follows a team of journalists who travel across the country during a rapidly escalating Second American Civil War. Alex sits down with Tom Power in studio for a conversation about what inspired the film, his feelings on journalism and media, and why Civil War is not just a warning about conflict, but the loss of a collective truth.
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Пікірлер: 218
@area51pictures
@area51pictures 2 ай бұрын
FINALLY. A real interview with Alex Garland. Tom Power, you are the man.
@K.C-2049
@K.C-2049 2 ай бұрын
my mom loves him lol she had a lot to say about his interview with Denis Villeneuve even though she's never seen any of his films 🤣
@brentulstad3275
@brentulstad3275 2 ай бұрын
Also checkout The Big Picture podcast, interview with Sean Fennessey. Incredibly personal & in depth conversation around Civil War and related issues.
@smoothbrain4384
@smoothbrain4384 2 ай бұрын
What an absolute pleasure, the best Alex Garland interview I've seen. The film was incredibly powerful. Like all of his work it makes an unforgettable impression and just sticks with you.
@K.C-2049
@K.C-2049 2 ай бұрын
I've seen quite a few interviews with Alex Garland and while he's always incredibly interesting to listen to I don't think I've ever seen him look so comfy. well done!
@That80sAstronaut
@That80sAstronaut 2 ай бұрын
Brilliant interview. Alex Garland is absolutely right about journalism. I'm glad he made this movie.
@andreafeliciangeli3785
@andreafeliciangeli3785 2 ай бұрын
The desensitization depicted, the scenarios are so well depicted they all stall rent free in the back of my mind…believe me this movie will remain as a CLASSIC✨
@JohnMinehan-lx9ts
@JohnMinehan-lx9ts Ай бұрын
Kristin Dunst did a great job underplaying PTSD.
@Lagrangeify
@Lagrangeify 2 ай бұрын
What I like about Tom ( besides the terrific questions) is that he always looks totally engaged. I tend to find Alex Garland seems initially quite poker faced in interviews but then he always turns out to be effusive and generous. This was a good match.
@aarondavis156
@aarondavis156 2 ай бұрын
I love that it wasn’t explicitly stated it made it such a better film. Such a complex, brilliant film.
@aservantinbabylon
@aservantinbabylon 20 күн бұрын
Just watched last night. Still ruminating on it. Very impacting.
@antonio_ferme
@antonio_ferme 2 ай бұрын
Brilliant interview. Alex Garland is one of the most visionary directors of all-time - and it’s solidified by the fact that he would never agree with that. Thanks for sharing!
@Tea-rettes
@Tea-rettes 2 ай бұрын
One thing to mention about a lot of the animosity toward legacy media these days is that much of it is well founded. Garland talks a lot about the very valid position of journalists as those who speak truth to power. But the distrust and hostility toward the news today is because they simply aren't doing that. Instead, they trade flattery of politicians and business leaders for access. They get bigger business if they actively support those with money and power. In America in particular, legacy media are private businesses run by wealthy moguls for whom profit is more important than content. As such, the public is presented not with an informative view of the world, but a false image tainted by so-called "journalists" uncritically parroting the talking points of the very people they should be holding accountable.
@adambazso9207
@adambazso9207 2 ай бұрын
Ok, but that was the case almost always, with very few exceptions. Media was always a propaganda-tool of the wealthy and of the suppressors, who wanted to form public opinion. With the endless campaign against whistleblowers like Edward Snowden or Julian Assange, who is actively tortured and killed by the in-justice system, and how almost none of the so-called media-platforms are informing us about it, shows, that they are part of the problem and they always were, besides of very few brave, real journalists. They were always a rarity and always hunted and despised. Hated by their own fellow "colleagues" and by the powerful. Nothing has changed. (The only change is maybe that almost nobody buys newspapers anymore, because of the internet and online media, but I honestly can't feel any sympathy towards them. They dug their own graves and fully deserve their fate. Of course now they are even more power-conform and defensive regarding the status quo, because their complete lack of criticism and independent thinking is the only guarantee for their funding. A vicious circle.)
@InlandDiscoEmpire
@InlandDiscoEmpire 2 ай бұрын
@@adambazso9207 No it's not a few exceptions if you've been paying attention. You clearly haven't.
@iplaydodgeball
@iplaydodgeball Ай бұрын
The hostility is because people who want to degrade trust in media are also twisting truth into becoming "bias" as a way to deny that truth power.. and that how the media is sometimes biased doesnt help. it's the exact opposite of what youre saying. You didn't understand what he was saying at all and you are exactly the type he's talking about. You're being manipulated. Its the type of person who claims that the stuff trump does is media bias even though a lot of it just comes out of his mouth himself in plain English or there's literal incontrovertible evidence for it or both. That's the exact 'Watergate scenario" that he is talking about.
@Tea-rettes
@Tea-rettes Ай бұрын
@@iplaydodgeball I don't think we're on entirely different grounds here. I completely agree that there are many bad actors who exploit distrust of media to discredit real journalism, but there is a reason that sort of manipulation works so well. The media landscape of today simply isn't what it was 30 years ago, especially since Reagan repealed the Fairness Doctrine, opening the floodgate for news to simply lie to their audience without consequence. Are there still quality journalists able to offer valid and fair critique of politicians? Absolutely. But you will not find them on CNN, MSNBC, or Fox News. They can't be heard over the cacophony of voices telling you the status quo is great, anyone promising change is a radical, and your neighbors are to blame for all your problems. Moreover, we must do away with this delusion that neutrality equals objectivity. It doesn't. The truth is biased, whether we like it or not. Humans are biased, whether we like it or not. Objectivity means fessing up to both of those things, telling the truth regardless of who it agitates, and doing your best to acknowledge and compensate for your biases in the process.
@wychwoodmusic
@wychwoodmusic 28 күн бұрын
Damn, well-said.
@PeterZeeke
@PeterZeeke 2 ай бұрын
Damn this interview was awesome
@angelleigh9468
@angelleigh9468 2 ай бұрын
I deeply appreciated that there was no clear definition to why California and Texas were allies. also, war crimes that were enacted by rogue, individuals and groups, that US Americans associate with other countries. There was a point where I was so emotionally moved that I leaned forward and hugged the empty seat in front of me while the scene played out. I watched this film with my Air Force veteran gen-z son and I found a conversation spectacular. I can’t wait to buy it on Prime.
@janari64
@janari64 Ай бұрын
The scene with the mass grave was not placed in the context of individual crimes, but of the planned elimination of others.
@mikesoylu
@mikesoylu 2 ай бұрын
Best interview so far
@ElCid_1099
@ElCid_1099 2 ай бұрын
Great Interview. Best interview with Alex Garland I have seen. His comments on polarization (and the extremists responsible) at the end of the interview put into words exactly how I have been feeling recently.
@sultankuan2349
@sultankuan2349 2 ай бұрын
I really love watching Alex Garland interview. So smart and interesting dude. Well spoken, calm and very talented filmmaker
@EditorJord
@EditorJord 2 ай бұрын
Best interview I've listened to about the film. I really need to dig into Garland's filmography. I was very moved by Civil War.
@atreidesN
@atreidesN 2 ай бұрын
Ex Machina is excellent if you’ve not seen it yet.
@tzz89
@tzz89 2 ай бұрын
@@atreidesN I second Ex-Machina. Brilliant film - it shines even more than this one, IMO.
@EditorJord
@EditorJord 2 ай бұрын
@@atreidesNFor sure, Ex Machina is the next film I'm gonna watch
@IJohnSmith
@IJohnSmith 2 ай бұрын
Devs is my favorite of his, check it out
@Dinalafont
@Dinalafont 2 күн бұрын
Excellent interview. Greetings from Argentina. Unfortunately we are living a nightmare here. Excelente entrevista. Saludos desde Argentina. Lamentablemente acá estamos viviendo una pesadilla.
@mtb5778
@mtb5778 18 күн бұрын
great interview. Alex is relaxed. sharing much more than I have ever seen. also the lack of adverts every 5 minutes helped my viewing. thanks.
@nevengrujic6518
@nevengrujic6518 2 ай бұрын
Terrific movie. I felt there were many parallels to Apocalypse Now throughout the movie but everything was done in it's own unique way told through its own scope on a different topic.
@Dridgeism
@Dridgeism 2 ай бұрын
Yeah definitely in between another Heart of Darkness-like and a bit of Dante's inferno...but fortunately not too explicitly derivative.
@nevengrujic6518
@nevengrujic6518 2 ай бұрын
@@Dridgeism I haven't been lucky enough to read either yet but of course I know apocalypse now was based off of hearts of darkness. What similarities did you see between Dante's Inferno and Civil War?
@deangulberry1876
@deangulberry1876 2 ай бұрын
Loved Civil War. Saw it yesterday on imax. Will be seeing it again today. The trailer was right: this movie was made for imax. The sound in this movie was really intense.
@dhammaboy1203
@dhammaboy1203 2 ай бұрын
I definitely got those vibes too!
@paulruddock8885
@paulruddock8885 2 ай бұрын
Excellent interview! Thanks to both!
@emilymitchell6823
@emilymitchell6823 Ай бұрын
Tom's openness and how comfortable he seems to make his guests feel are all on display in full force, here. We literally get brand new insights into Garland because of it and it is so worthwhile and edifying to get his perspective
@user-ve1lz9dm6j
@user-ve1lz9dm6j 2 ай бұрын
Fascinating interview, thank you so much!!
@thomasscottwilliams6672
@thomasscottwilliams6672 2 ай бұрын
I am so grateful for cinema that recognises that the audience is intelligent enough to understand and extrapolate or query the whys and not have everything spelt out. Oppenheimer was an incredible piece of cinema that had an implicit understanding that the audience would understand or investigate to extrapolate for themselves.
@marinebymistake
@marinebymistake Ай бұрын
understand and investigate what exactly? There's nothing to investigate in Oppenheimer lol
@notonate69
@notonate69 Ай бұрын
Thank you for this incredible interview!
@BIGSchuZ
@BIGSchuZ 2 ай бұрын
This was a fantastic interview! You're a great host
@branchestarot
@branchestarot 2 ай бұрын
Thank you for this! Just met Alex Georges from A24 who worked on this film. Incredible.
@EmyRulz300
@EmyRulz300 2 ай бұрын
incredible interview and insights, thank you!
@arelis9383
@arelis9383 Ай бұрын
This was so good. I was in search of a deeper conversation surrounding the film’s themes and this was exactly what I was looking for.
@jamesdorkings3853
@jamesdorkings3853 2 ай бұрын
Incredible interview 👏🏻
@Lucilup
@Lucilup Ай бұрын
Best interview and I love how they open up in the process. The best reflections .
@madeleinelaidlaw9568
@madeleinelaidlaw9568 Ай бұрын
Such a good interview!
@Veronica-oc9yt
@Veronica-oc9yt 2 ай бұрын
Thank you for this interview, what a fascinating person
@americanpancakelive
@americanpancakelive 2 ай бұрын
Fantastic interview.
@domeneccdi420
@domeneccdi420 Ай бұрын
Gotta admit that Civil War might match the bar set with Ex Machina. Awesome film. Quite an original way to address a subject like that one. Props to Alex Garland and his team. Peace from Spain🌿
@CaptainPopcorn
@CaptainPopcorn 2 ай бұрын
Excellent job.
@darthgzuz
@darthgzuz Ай бұрын
brilliant talk ... thanks Tom for bringing out real Alex to us ... thanks for this amazing interview
@paellaking9007
@paellaking9007 2 ай бұрын
Garland is a fiercely intelligent introspective individual, & it both gladdens me & saddens me many still quite don't get or understand his projects or his works.
@hazardousjazzgasm129
@hazardousjazzgasm129 13 күн бұрын
a lot of people seemingly beg for movies that don't spoonfeed them everything and treats them like an adult, but then complain that a movie "lacks substance or a message" when they finally get what they asked for
@Rocco_Co
@Rocco_Co 2 ай бұрын
Garland is right that you really don't want to be associated with the extremes of either party and really the idea that politics is two-party is dumb. You don't want to be agreeing with AOC often, like you don't want to be agreeing with Alex Jones or Nick Fuentes often.
@toxiccylon
@toxiccylon 2 ай бұрын
yes always appreciated
@Warnerchild
@Warnerchild 2 ай бұрын
i've only seen a few interviews by tom but every one i see is ace - he matches the guests energy so well like a sparring partner and is always on his toes ready to follow any switch ups or something that can be explored and seeing what path the guest is up for exploring - must be a student of psychology
@BryanKerr1
@BryanKerr1 Ай бұрын
I watched all the interviews about this film, this was the best by a mile.
@DANJONPEARCE
@DANJONPEARCE 2 ай бұрын
great interview and love the Fleet Foxes t shirt
@o0pinkdino0o
@o0pinkdino0o 23 күн бұрын
He is a savant and needs to make all of the movies.
@AP-hb2qw
@AP-hb2qw 2 ай бұрын
Q is the most underrated talk show
@roymc1866
@roymc1866 2 ай бұрын
Not sure i believe Alex's statement @15:15 about the purpose of the Western Forces. To me, the beauty of this film being released in our current historical moment, is that having a scenario where Texas and California are allies instantly breaks-down whatever partisan lens the viewer is bringing into the theater. That only works, precisely because it seems so implausible, from our current polarization. And by breaking the viewer out of that partisan dynamic, you enable them to see the ensuing violence for the tragedy & horror that it truly is. I thought that it was a genius choice, and as a result this film is able reach so many more people than if Alex had portrayed a more 'plausible' political scenario. I find it hard to believe this effect is not completely intentional, from the get-go.
@mhawang8204
@mhawang8204 2 ай бұрын
From what I see in the discourse about this film, a lot of viewers checked out mentally when they see that TA and CA joined forces and dismissed the film as nonsense, so his implicit message about a "litmus test" for partisanship is pretty valid.
@roymc1866
@roymc1866 2 ай бұрын
@@mhawang8204 i have seen that attitude from folks as well... about the film's trailer. Havent seen anyone say that who has actually viewed the film. Which is a shame, because its precisely those people who need this message most.
@jay1jayf
@jay1jayf Ай бұрын
@@roymc1866 cringe
@elfari100
@elfari100 2 ай бұрын
Thanks so much for making this film. As I watched I was reminded of the stories my godfather, who was a correspondent during the Vietnam War, told me. It was spot on and believable.
@shitpostheavy
@shitpostheavy Ай бұрын
Great job Tom
@jonathanlopez2697
@jonathanlopez2697 24 күн бұрын
Fantastic interview. Alex Garland spoke exactly like what id invision the director of civil war would to be like. His views and vision of the movie resonates with me and i too am deeply concerned with this current climate.
@TeleuteDPu
@TeleuteDPu 2 ай бұрын
Outstanding interview & listen; well done!
@jollypioneer
@jollypioneer Ай бұрын
I am very interested in the film but I think we are a very long way from civil war in the UK. In the US, much much closer...
@oaktowndaddyg
@oaktowndaddyg 2 ай бұрын
I grew up in the late fifties and sixties and served as a medical corpsman in Vietnam. And things were much worse back then. There was an undeclared civil war over the actual war when I came back to the world after my tour of duty. But I think there will be a civil war in America. But I do think we are marching toward a Third World War given events in Ukraine or Gaza or this saber rattling in the South China Sea over Taiwan rather than a civil war in America.
@GonzaloCruz-bn3dg
@GonzaloCruz-bn3dg 2 ай бұрын
As Peruvian, I agree 100% with Garland. Most of my friends are more worried and aware about US politics than our national politics (that is useless with most aspects of our life).
@evertonvale3773
@evertonvale3773 2 ай бұрын
Amazing!!! And think the actor Wagner Moura fantastic. Congratulations.
@mattgilbert7347
@mattgilbert7347 2 ай бұрын
How are people misreading this film? It's almost as the film itself provides an answer to this question.
@michaelfowler3187
@michaelfowler3187 Ай бұрын
I didn't come away from this film with the same satisfaction as other garland films, but I have to remind myself I felt pretty confused after most of them- thrilled and intoxicated with the visual (and audial) and emotional journey of his films.. but this one left me puzzled and contemplating, still impressed but in a less clear way. I don't think I could bring myself to see the film a second time- but I hope some healthy dissent comes from it.
@MrMisuma
@MrMisuma 2 ай бұрын
I just came home from the movie theater and I loved the movie. I get that a movie especially like this, needs to be loud, but man, I should’ve brought some ear plugs 😵‍💫
@f.n.246
@f.n.246 2 ай бұрын
Perfect.
@thomasscottwilliams6672
@thomasscottwilliams6672 2 ай бұрын
This was an incredible movie, it brought to the foreground the recognition that the media really does not portray the reality of war to the extent that the general public are almost anaesthetised to the barbarism that is going on on in the world today. We are constantly fed ambient noise of war but nothing of the horrors.
@M.H.I.A.F.T.
@M.H.I.A.F.T. 2 ай бұрын
Surprised to hear Alex actually laugh a bit. I thought he didn't have a humorous bone in his body.
@MrHowsabouthathen
@MrHowsabouthathen Ай бұрын
I loved the film, absolutely loved it.
@JohnMinehan-lx9ts
@JohnMinehan-lx9ts Ай бұрын
It seems like Michael Herr's Dispatches and Loyd's My War Gone by, I Miss It So influenced this . . . .
@CharlesFitzgerald-pm5uk
@CharlesFitzgerald-pm5uk 14 күн бұрын
The Beach is a great book
@nbt3663
@nbt3663 Ай бұрын
It was a very fast and very realistic movie.
@j03T3XAz
@j03T3XAz Ай бұрын
You either die an amateur correspondent, or live long enough to see yourself become Timcast.
@mtb5778
@mtb5778 18 күн бұрын
10m30s - love it - am I being coherent? I get that feeling and say am I making any sense?
@chaosmusician
@chaosmusician 2 ай бұрын
A solid film of consequence is hard to find...like cheap popcorn these inflationary spring days🎉
@marcosvelasquez461
@marcosvelasquez461 Ай бұрын
If God were to bless America, you will see a lot of consequences.
@JohnMinehan-lx9ts
@JohnMinehan-lx9ts Ай бұрын
It seems like Garland had a detailed backstory in mind and got advice from military analysts, but I'm not certain about this . . . .
@JohnMinehan-lx9ts
@JohnMinehan-lx9ts Ай бұрын
My thought was more that both TX and CA have military formations that went with the States against the Feds and the decision is utilitarian rather than idealistic . . . . (settle this with the Feds then deal with the other state).
@Lucilup
@Lucilup Ай бұрын
Min 31:42
@BabyOatmeal
@BabyOatmeal 2 ай бұрын
This movie is what happens when truth and trust disappear. At that point you better be on the correct side in the right place at the right time. We take truth and trust for granted, like it's steady as oxygen or gravity. But look what happen in only the past 5 years.
@rathowreck
@rathowreck 2 ай бұрын
32:30
@Rocco_Co
@Rocco_Co 2 ай бұрын
Pissing off the extremes means you are probably doing something right. The answer is moderation in everything. Garland seems to understand that even though he mentions he is left leaning.
@alexbade
@alexbade 2 ай бұрын
i absolutely love this : the world is absolutely and deranged going fascist - far right and people being like : oh, honestly i am a centrist ... i find that slightly chilling
@brennanlundgren
@brennanlundgren Ай бұрын
This guy wrote enslaved odyssey to the west best game ever
@wychwoodmusic
@wychwoodmusic 28 күн бұрын
Damn, I love so many points from this interview and film. But I think what Garland also misses is that centrist capitalist democracy has also led us to the brink of ecological collapse, mass extinction, and omnicide. The political centre seems to be leading us to mass death just as surely - if more slowly - than fascism and communism did. What the extremists he detests get right is a sense that something is deeply wrong and needs to deeply change. A reformist or progressive path has failed to address any of the cascading crises we're currently facing. Real reform of a system-saving variety like the New Deal seems completely blocked and unrealistic in the 21st century. *Polarization isn't just a bad idea mean people thought up and put into practice, it's a response to the material crises and conflicts ripping our economic and physical world apart.* Every conflict and crisis is an opportunity for destruction, but also for a break-through and sea-change. There are good reasons to be profoundly afraid, but also wildly hopeful. Anyways, as long as we can all agree fighting fascism should be our first and unifying political goal, we might just be alright. (On that count, three cheers for Garland and this film!)
@AntonChigurh989
@AntonChigurh989 Ай бұрын
It's a really good film, is it imperfect, yes, no film is perfect
@AP-hb2qw
@AP-hb2qw 2 ай бұрын
Why are his glasses on his head the entire time?
@thedude4594
@thedude4594 2 ай бұрын
You’ll understand soon youngling
@thomasalexanian927
@thomasalexanian927 Ай бұрын
What terrifies me the most about Civil War is that given how America is now, it should have already happened in real life.
@aservantinbabylon
@aservantinbabylon 20 күн бұрын
It's coming. Perhaps by the end of this year.
@thomasalexanian927
@thomasalexanian927 20 күн бұрын
@@aservantinbabylon I'm calling it: The East vs The West
@aservantinbabylon
@aservantinbabylon 20 күн бұрын
@@thomasalexanian927 Nah, not in the least. Places like TN have much more in common with states like Montana and Idaho than they do with the eastern seaboard metropolises. It will be very much like the movie......a huge fracturing with many factions going at each other....at least in the beginning until alliances are made.
@nomoresunforever3695
@nomoresunforever3695 2 ай бұрын
I'm confused. The movie did not make me appreciate journalism at all. It made me see the journalists as the prime example of what is wrong with humans that will lead to civil war. These war photographers have to shut off their empathy for non journalists, laughing and being aroused by the rush of the action after having watched random people die, while still being able to see the humanity of other journalists after these die later in the movie. It made me feel like that is exactly the psychological process that leads to civil war. We have well-meaning motivations that make us become just as blind to the humanity of "the other side".
@Mumra2K
@Mumra2K 2 ай бұрын
Quintessentially, unapologetically British. ❤
@earnthis1
@earnthis1 2 ай бұрын
"Division" is a problem??? Um so we should all just politely agree? lol This is a pretty milk toast take from Garland. I wish he would make some stronger statements, and less bland platitudes. His points don't land when he's wishy washy.
@sean748
@sean748 26 күн бұрын
milk toast 😂
@alexbade
@alexbade 2 ай бұрын
the ending is so cynical regarding the world of mass-media and journalism ...
@captcomps
@captcomps Ай бұрын
To not be fascist is a low bar for any ideology. It's ironic that this is a key reason for why we end up with fascism. Because if we don't strive for anything better our red line will always be nearer to what we oppose than what we dream of.
@patozols7747
@patozols7747 2 ай бұрын
Garland supremacy.
@ggalan212
@ggalan212 2 ай бұрын
theres 666 likes
@GK-wx6xo
@GK-wx6xo Ай бұрын
Love AG but his views on the media and western governments seems a bit naieve
@earnthis1
@earnthis1 2 ай бұрын
Trying to remove bias, is both impossible, but also leaves you in a bland, fence sitting, middle ground. Not a rational centrist position. So, basically, nonsense.
@USALibertarian
@USALibertarian 2 ай бұрын
"Who is undermining trust in journalism?" That's easy: Journalists.
@anarchisttutor7423
@anarchisttutor7423 2 ай бұрын
Regarding national divorce, it's not only necessary, it's successfully been done before elsewhere.
@Paintballandthings
@Paintballandthings 2 ай бұрын
It's not necessary. We're more alike than we are different.
@earnthis1
@earnthis1 2 ай бұрын
How is this movie more intelligent than like The Purge series? I hope it is, but if it's wishy washy, platitudes and "both sides" nonsense, it will be LESS effective than the Purge series.
@sethflix
@sethflix Ай бұрын
I LOVE this! God is now clearly working through filmmakers in order to keep things as He wishes. America is not meant to be a fascist state. We were established with a shared recognition that no matter what we may call "God" be it Allah, God, the Universe or whatever, we are all his equally beloved children during the era of enlightenment! But oh how we have fallen from that enlightenment into a place of becoming a godless and nihilistic society whose "god" has become money and most people are unconsciously being enslaved by their own egos by way of advertising in America and elsewhere world-wide. This godless, fear-based, fascist threat is spreading all the time slowly too like a frog slowly being boiled alive in a pot of hat started with it being cold water on the stove. God is love. Love is in direct opposition to fear. Love is the answer. Alex Garland knows this and that's why he did not take a side on the left or the right, but instead stood up for a peaceful world and brotherly love amongst all humankind. I believe we would all do well to listen to what Alex Garland and other wise centrists who support brotherly love and unity amongst all humankind, just as I do as well. Stop caring about what the extremists on the left and the right have to say and Come Together as one human family through brotherly love. I'm just starting out on my film making career. Yet listening to this interview I can sense a kinship with Alex Garland. Alex Garland clearly listens to his conscience over all the propaganda being fed to us all in the world and I salute him for this! I sincerely pray that God will use me as His instrument to help make this world a better place through the films and TV series He inspires me to write and direct, just like our Heavenly Father so clearly has done and continues to do for our beloved brother, Alex Garland. May God bless Alex indeed and keep him putting such amazing and much needed films into the world. Amen.
@newhorizons-novoshorizonte3102
@newhorizons-novoshorizonte3102 5 күн бұрын
The movie is great and horrible at the same time. But Garland totally misuse the term fascism.
@NotLazySelectivelyMotivated
@NotLazySelectivelyMotivated 2 ай бұрын
He’s just capitalizing on Americas political angst. No matter how he dresses it up that’s all he’s doing.
@BryanKirch
@BryanKirch Ай бұрын
All you need to know is the filmmaker thinks Texas and California are United
@micahtewersofficial
@micahtewersofficial 2 ай бұрын
this movie was somehow less powerful than Disney's Captain America.
@happycamper6298
@happycamper6298 2 ай бұрын
No. Not really. But have fun rousing the shallow and incurious rabble.
@ubiktd4064
@ubiktd4064 2 ай бұрын
Basically a 2 hour advert for the Military Industrial Complex .
@redMrCrayon
@redMrCrayon 2 ай бұрын
Whoosh
@pinecone9045
@pinecone9045 2 ай бұрын
What superficial drivel.
@M.H.I.A.F.T.
@M.H.I.A.F.T. 2 ай бұрын
Because?
@pinecone9045
@pinecone9045 2 ай бұрын
@@M.H.I.A.F.T. His talking points are propaganda zero depth.
@M.H.I.A.F.T.
@M.H.I.A.F.T. 2 ай бұрын
@@pinecone9045 Can you give me some examples of why?
@pinecone9045
@pinecone9045 2 ай бұрын
@@M.H.I.A.F.T. His use of the term fascism is that of a proper 12 year old.
@M.H.I.A.F.T.
@M.H.I.A.F.T. 2 ай бұрын
@@pinecone9045 What's your definition of it?
@InlandDiscoEmpire
@InlandDiscoEmpire 2 ай бұрын
Alan, Texas is voting is Trump. Cry more lol. And keep freaking out about a "fascist president" lol.
@M.H.I.A.F.T.
@M.H.I.A.F.T. 2 ай бұрын
Trump said he'd be a dictator on day one. He stirs up political violence. He incited an insurrection because he's a sore loser. He said he would encourage Putin to attach other countries. Take your head out of the sand.
@Asillyhobo
@Asillyhobo 2 ай бұрын
This is gonna be a very unpopular opinion/hot take, but there's nothing groundbreaking about remaking/plagiarizing Apocalypse Now, and Heart of Darkness, to make Civil War. I saw the film, and it's beat for beat the same, with a number of changes, the biggest one is reducing any backstory of any of the characters, and reducing any and all context for how we as the audience arrive to the CW already in progress. AG's interviews ring hollow compared to Coppola's masterpiece, the making of masterpiece, and subsequent interviews about the experience of the Vietnam war, American and Franco Colonialism/Imperialism, and the immorality of war. By giving minimal to no context to what led to the war in CW, and therefore what anyone's motives are, AG just plays it safe with the politics of a potential CW, and his own politics or lack thereof. EDIT: • Following President Nick Offerman's speech, both films open on our main characters in a hotel room, emotionally vacant but disturbed. Willard drunkenly suffering PTSD in Saigon, Lee in NYC editing while in the distance explosions breakout in the night sky • Lee, Joel, and Sammy discuss a harrowing suicide trip to DC. This parallels Willard's briefing, mission, and receival of the Kurtz dossier • Willard's mission is assassinating a rogue decorated Green Beret Colonel in enemy occupied Cambodia; Lee and Joel's mission is a character assassination of the President of the United States. Rather than physically kill the President, their mission is publicly kill his character for his role in the ongoing CW, his policies, and the atrocities he and his administration have committed • Sammy is meant to be Chief, the older wiser sailor who captained/piloted the PBR. Joel and Lee can both interchangeably be Willard. There's no Lance, although Lee's fame as a photojournalist could substitute for Lance's fame as a surfer. Joel later substitutes for Chef, the PBR crewman, following Sammy's death, just as Chef became distraught after Chief's death, and upon learning Willard's true mission, once Chef has to pilot the PBR. • The Ford truck is the river patrol boat (PBR) • After they meet Jessie, and welcome her aboard their journey, she's our analogue for Clean, the youngest member of both crews. • The American country roads and interstate are the Nung River • Both films have scenes where their vessels come upon a precarious stop for fuel. The PBR stops for fuel, and Willard negotiates with the Playboy Bunny manager for the crew to sleep with them. Lee and the gang negotiates with the country folk militiamen for fuel in exchange for Canadian currency. • Both crews are horrified by the hanging bodies/corpses in the area. In AN, this is closer to when the crew reach Kurtz's compound, as part of the setting. In CW, it's at the gas station. • The crews continue their journey. The stop by the crashed helicopter, and how "you don't see that everyday" is not unlike the AN crew coming across the tail of a downed B52 • The raid and aftermath between the Western Front sided Militiamen plays out kinda like one of the sniper battles in Full Metal Jacket, but mostly like Kilgore's cavalry beach raid once the militiamen storm the building, and execute the surrendered loyalist force. • Both crews continue their journey, the refugee camp at the stadium is our stand in for Kilgore's campfire, but especially their journey into town with the rooftop snipers plays off the campfire peace, and the peace the PBR crew find with the French colonists who refuse to give up their land to the Vietnamese. The townsfolk refuse to engage with war. • As the crews continue their journey until they come upon a raucous environment. For the PBR crew, it's the Do Lung Bridge, with all the music and explosions. For the journalists, it's the Christmas display that turns out to be a sniper battle. The sniper who's calm, collected, and demands silence, is our analogue for Roach, the grenadier who kills the lone Vietnamese terrorizing the Americans at the Do Lung Bridge outpost. • Both Joel and Captain Willard ask their respective soldier, who it is they're fighting. Both soldiers scoff at our protagonists, for asking such a dumb question, before elaborating. AN says it's a lone Vietnamese soldier. CW says whoever is shooting at them. AN Willard asks who's in charge, CW Joel asks along the lines, whose side are you on; both "snipers" retort that they either know or elaborate about being on the side shooting back at whoever is shooting them in the first place • Both "snipers" make their kill successfully after getting the silence they demand • Both crews try to unwind on their vessels to unsuccessful ends. On the PBR, they drop LSD, smoke, and light a smoke grenade. On the truck, they exchange passengers while driving side by side with the Hong Kong journalists • Both crews come under attack. The PBR by the Montagnards, the journalists by the militiamen who stop Jessie and one of the Hong Kong journalists. • The Jesse Plemons scene plays out not unlike the scene in AN where they stop another riverboat and murder the crew, including an innocent woman. Jesse Plemons is making a mass grave, and subsequently murders the Hong Kong journalists. The PBR killed the woman just hiding her puppy and livestock. • Sammy rescues the journalists, Chief pilots the PBR and orders an attack on the Montagnards. Both are hit by stray gunfire/arrows • Chef loses it after Chief dies, and upon learning about the real mission into Cambodia. Jessie doesn't physically die like Clean does, but emotionally she's not as naive or inexperienced as when she started the journey. • Both crews reach their final destination, DC and Cambodia. If the building raid didn't have the energy of Kilgore's beach raid, the whole helicopter sequence in DC did. • Both crews reach their respective antagonist compound, Kurtz's compound and the White House. Both crews reach their antagonist, Kurtz and President Nick Offerman. Kurtz is murdered not unlike the water buffalo ritual. The President's character is murdered by his final quote/plea to Joel. You could argue that Joel's weapon, his pen, recorder, or keyboard are mightier or as mighty as the swords of the Western Front forces. Willard's is the machete.
@KenTWOu
@KenTWOu 2 ай бұрын
Watching Apocalypse Now you might get an impression that that war was cool. watching Civil War you won't get the war is cool feeling.
@Wingman_
@Wingman_ 2 ай бұрын
Making an anti-war movie = plagiarizing Apocalypse Now is a wildly bad take
@stephenericwalsh
@stephenericwalsh 2 ай бұрын
I love Apocalypse Now and I enjoyed this. Didn't bother me in the slightest.
@nekromatica
@nekromatica 2 ай бұрын
Did you watch the same movie? Cause I didn't get a whole lot of apocalypse now out of civil war
@Asillyhobo
@Asillyhobo 2 ай бұрын
@@stephenericwalsh I enjoyed both, but CW strikes me as emotionally hollow in comparison, and the marketing interviews make the hollowness worse, because there's way more emotional and intelligent discourse in the interviews rather than what was depicted on screen for CW.
@seandilallo8718
@seandilallo8718 2 ай бұрын
Alex Garland, based on this interview, is obviously a naive fool.
@M.H.I.A.F.T.
@M.H.I.A.F.T. 2 ай бұрын
Because?
@seandilallo8718
@seandilallo8718 2 ай бұрын
@@M.H.I.A.F.T. People hate modern journalists because they are corrupt sycophants controlled by political factions, spending most of their time trying to censor or imprison their political rivals. Fascism isn't just a slur; it has a meaning. A fascist president would imply the concentration of political and military power in Washington, meaning an expansion, politicization and weaponization of the FBI rather its disbanding. Modern Texans and Californians would eagerly slaughter each other over their differences and then be ruled by a dictator, rather than work together under any circumstances. The current population of America, including the hyper-polarized traditional American nation and the enormous mishmash of paper citizen foreigners from all four corners of the Earth, has nothing in common binding it together. Economically, culturally, demographically, militarily and politically America is in terminal decline vis-a-vis the rest of the world. That kind of a country will inevitably fragment or become an autocracy.
@pm.meowth4850
@pm.meowth4850 2 ай бұрын
@@M.H.I.A.F.T.he is british, he doesnt know anything about america
@tortuga3tortuga
@tortuga3tortuga 2 ай бұрын
Civil War - Horrible movie I was fooled by the title. I will never see a movie again without reviewing. Waste of time and money. I don't even want to hear ever again about this man.
@M.H.I.A.F.T.
@M.H.I.A.F.T. 2 ай бұрын
Sounds like you got triggered! What did the film do to hurt your poor little feelings so much?
@InlandDiscoEmpire
@InlandDiscoEmpire 2 ай бұрын
And yes the great Jan 6ht lol. The ONE day people stood around and were GUIDED THROUGH a building by security lol. Meanwhile 4 straight months of riots over a guy overdosing on fentanyl lol.
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