炎夏之夜

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主演:提莫西·查拉梅,麦卡·梦露,托马斯·简,威廉·菲克纳,玛雅·米切尔,艾莫里·科恩,亚历克斯·罗伊,杰克·凯西,凯萨琳·戴尔,丽贝卡·库恩,小托马斯·布莱克

类型:电影地区:美国语言:英语年份:2017

 量子

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 非凡

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 剧照

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 长篇影评

 1 ) 不明白为什么会质疑甜茶演技

本冲着甜茶看的,开篇的带入感很强,吸引了注意。片头,甜茶是个带叛逆的怂宅男,虽然平时看起来沉默寡言,守本分,但却敢于冒险加入贩毒。这也是影片的最大漏洞,到底是什么造成了这个"乖"孩子从怂包变成了为贩毒不惜一切的青年?只是青春期躁动吗,不可能。导演并没有给出答案。对于甜茶感情戏我觉得甜茶拿捏得很好,那应该是丹尼尔的first love吧,他贩毒,疯狂,但在爱情面前,他原本的怂,呆萌,宅男天性难以掩藏,所以他在性感尤物面前并不能展现霸道总裁的一面,也正是这一点"纯"打动了女主,以至于后来女主知道他贩毒反应如此强烈。 看了这么多甜茶的电影,我认为除了颜一直在线外,演技也是恨棒的。他对每个角色的诠释几乎都是恰到好处,不是演什么都一样,而是演什么像什么,可能cmbyn 太经典,所以观众无法脱离它们的比较吧。

 2 ) 笔记•关键词

倒时序

旁白

风暴天气云图蒙太奇

90年代美国小镇图鉴

航拍 表现人力的渺小 人的无助

两次问茶名字 表现丹尼尔对自我一无所知 茫然青春期 ——可以安排弱鸡的丹尼尔哭一次。开篇的静坐有为赋新词强说愁之嫌。

摩天轮的霓虹或是自我麻痹下放光放大的瞳孔

空虚生产俗欲来补缺

暴富 豪车 美女 毒品犯罪表现空虚的欲望——为什么缺少了性

试图卖可卡因却遭遇算计 补充说明丹尼尔的迷失 且不自知

爱情是附属而家庭血缘却是内在不被割断纽带 但强拧这纽带让人异化 而爱情却在这个意义上拯救人——导演试图证明

暴富时的拍立得感胶片幻灯片 加快节奏 满足观众

试图表现唯美的恋爱关系——车后座视角拍男女主

和隐匿在镜头背后的性爱黄色麦草和红色的车灯

似乎展示了这些感情的忠坚

那不过都是夜里的幻觉 是隐瞒真相以偷取的短暂欢愉

就像酒吧的霓虹 若有若无的诱惑你

是嘉年华的摩天轮 关上了灯 什么都化为无有

大麻赚来的钱亏给可卡因 豪车也被撞的粉碎

秋风起时 仲夏一梦醒来

这是一则现代灰姑娘的故事

种种表象褪去 露出永恒的现实 逼人去面对 不容躲避

人怎么认知自己以及处理生活根基(家庭 家园 生命)的动摇

拿出重建的决心是不是唯一途径

或许还有离开

离开虽简单 却要用把包袱埋进心底的代价换得

面对所有的无所适从 搁置 且不再有答案

 3 ) (转载)90后导演关于处女座Hot summer nights的一篇采访

采访详细的介绍的导演的创作背景,选角,制作经费等,希望对大家关于电影有更深入的了解。

An Afternoon with Filmmaker Elijah Bynum: The Prodigy Behind Hot SummerNights

The first-time writer and director discusses his confident coming-of-age drama

Film festivals are an unpredictable slog. With so many screenings offered at any given hour, the margin for disappointment is fairly wide, which explains why critics traditionally leave each yearloving two or three films tops.But then there are the films that legitimately shock you to your core, the ones that come out of left field, delivering a forceful hook to the head that’s tantalizing and exciting all at once. Those are the ones that make the trip worth it.

Hot Summer Nights is one such film. Elijah Bynum’s directorial debut, which premieredat this past Spring’s South by Southwest Film Festival, is a staggering accomplishment, especially since the young screenwriter and filmmaker had zero experience in either field prior to making the film.It’s a simmering anti-coming-of-age drama that moves with the muscular confidence of an early Paul Thomas Anderson production, and kind of looks like one, too.

Set in Cape Cod, Massachusetts during the Summer of 1991, the filmfollows a seemingly quiet and timid teenager named Daniel (Timothée Chalamet), who’s sent upstate for the season by his mother in what he even admits is a total cliché. After finding some work at a beat-up gas station, he soon befriends his co-worker, a small town hunk named Hunter Strawberry (Alex Roe), who gets him involved in some shady sidejobs that involve copious amounts of drugs.

Daniel and Hunter don’t roll around, toss out dollar bills, and tear through merchandise — they chase their summer dreams as any one of us would at the time. Hunter has a summer fling with the daughter (Maia Mitchell) of a slick-back cop (Thomas Jane), while Daniel finds first-time love with Cape Cod’s dream girl McKayla (Maika Monroe). Everything’s dandy until it’s not and that’s what makes Hot Summer Nights such a stirring and vivid presentation. The stakes are real.

Without sounding too hyperbolic, Bynum’s work on Hot Summer Nights is absolutelyprodigious. Given the scope, the style, and the weight of this film — not to mention, its two-hour runtime — it’s unreal that he was able to pull it off given his empty resume. Again, these are the type of stories you want at a film festival, which is whyConsequence of Soundreached out and spoke to both Bynum and producer Ryan Friedkin shortly after its worldwide premiere.

Why 1991? Did you experience Hurricane Bob yourself? Was it something that drew you to that?

Elijah Bynum: I personally didn’t experience it. I was only four years old, but I grew up in Massachusetts, so I had heard of it. You know, people who were a little older than me had talked about it cause it’s the biggest hurricane in New England history. We don’t typically get hurricanes that far up the coast, so there’s definitely some legends surrounding that. When I was writing, I had always wanted to set it in the past for a number of reasons thematically. Just through the research, I found that hurricane in 1991 and there haven’t been too many films based in that specific time period, so it felt like a very special time and that’s why we went with it.

It’s kind of a weird time period, though. It’s not the ’80s, but it’s not the 90’s, either. Time is kind of figuring itself out.

Bynum:Well that’s what we ran into a little bit in not just wardrobe but music, too. It’s in this kind of weird dead zone, where it’s not the ’80s music – like Bruce Springsteen and Rick Springfield – but it’s also not like Nirvana. So, there was a lot of discussion, and we ended up just trying to pick music that felt right emotionally for the character. And again, the whole movie was less about being grounded in reality and more about what it feels like to be a teenager who’s just running around and going off instinct. So, we chose music that felt like it was based off instinct.

What was the impetus behindsome of these songs? Were they what you were listening to whilewriting?

Bynum:Yeah, some of it was from when I was writing. Alot of it we just played on set. For instance, there is a Jonathan Richman song in the middle of the movie that we had no intention of using until we got in the edit room and we were just trying different stuff out in the edit room and it just worked and we ran with it.

How did you get the budget to pull off something like this?

Bynum:Well, it was a long journey, until I met Imperative Entertainment, and then it happened very quickly. I had written the script in 2012 — I had never written anything with an intention of directing — and I wanted to tell a cool story that I had kind of witnessed in college. Then it made the Black List, which was great, and it went away. We put it on the shelf, moved on, and then I met with Imperative Entertainment and those guys over there were just as supportive as you could possibly want producers to be. I met with them in the Fall, and by the Spring we were pre-production, which is just a dream come true.

It’s a new company and you never feel that they’re just churning out products. It’s not like, “Alright, we have to make this movie, turn it out, make a profit, now let’s make the next movie.” There’s a lot of care and passion that goes into it. So, they have a filmmakers mentality versus a businessman mentality. They’re definitely businessmen at the end of the day, but it comes from a creative place first. Not only are they creative and supportive financially, but creatively and emotionally. It always felt like we were on the same team, we were never at odds. It wasn’t like “what’s best for the bottom line” or “what’s gonna sell the most tickets,” it was always what’s gonna make the best movie. That goes a long way and hopefully it shows up on screen.

How did Peter Farrelly get involved?

Ryan Friedkin:So, Bradley Thomas, who’s one of the partners at Imperative, he produced all the Farrelly brother movies – Dumb and Dumber, There’s Something about Mary – and when Elijahcame and met with them, I think Bradley, he knew he’d never directed a film before, hadn’t been on a set before.

Not even shorts or anything like that?

Bynum:No short or commercial or music video. So again, they put so much faith in me and trust.

That’s quite prodigious.

Ryan Friedkin: Obviously, if he hadn’t written it, no one in their right mind would have let him direct it. But I’m a firm believer in writer-directors. It makes life so much more easier. A director always likes a script. But I also think getting first drafts in from a writer-director is such a higher level than someone who just churns it out over a few weeks. Their whole life is in the movie, their whole career is at stake, and so in every waking moment, he was thinking about this movie. So back to Peter, Bradley sort of had the idea to have Peter take him under his wing a little bit and just do a little work on the script and give him some notes and guide him in the discussion in the beginning. And Peter is one of the great guys of the world. He’s an amazing, supportive guy.

Once it was on the Black List, did you have a feeling the gears were going to start moving?

Bynum: No. The production companies around town, they all liked the script, but nobody wanted to touch it cause it’s a tough movie. You can’t make it for like $100,000 dollars. It demanded a pretty big budget, but it also has enough elements in it that aren’t very commercial. With a teenage cast, a dark ending, it’s a period piece, and kind of a drama and a lot of things that scared people away who responded to the script very highly. Luckily, we found someone who was like, “Fuck it, let’s give it a shot and I’m really glad they did.”

Okay, sogoing into this, you haven’t done shorts, you haven’t done any films …was it all just in your head?

Bynum: For a while, I tried to get the movie made with another director, and we sat down with a few really talented, mostly music video directors, who were looking for a first feature. And they’d come in and they’d meet and I realized that they probably didn’t appreciate this, but I was telling them how I envisioned it. And the more I talked about that, the more I felt like I have this movie more or less in my head and I know how I would shoot these scenes and how the camera should move or if I were to direct it this is what I would do… Saying that enough times sort of gave me the confidence where I felt like maybe, just maybe, given the right chance, I could take a crack at it. So, yes, it was in my head, and then I storyboarded it, and shot list it, planned it out, and tried to execute it as closely as possible.

Did you talk to any other filmmakers to kind of get some tips?

Bynum: Yeah, I have a really great film buddy named Justin Lerner who eats, breathes, and sleeps cinema. He was an integral part in this. His best advice was, “Don’t make a movie this big your first go around,” and I understand why. At first, I didn’t want to hear it, but when we were on set and there were just so many moving parts and the clock is always creeping up on you, I understood why he was like, “You might want to bite off something a little more manageable,” but he’s been great and very supportive. He came into the editing room and gave great notes.

The framing device for this film is wonderful, coming from the point of view of a random character. You don’t know this person, he’s always off screen, and that makes the film’s narrative more like an urban legend. You know, like something passed down through oral tradition, which is so relatable. You mentioned this was a story from college. How much did you have to embellish?

Bynum:It was mostly just the seed. It wasn’t a story I heard, it was kind of a story I witnessed: the entire rise and fall of a friendship.

Was it in Cape Cod?

Bynum: It was at Amherst, so it was a different part of the state. All the Cape Cod stuff is completely fictional, but Daniel and Hunter, and the drug dealing narrative, were based off two kids in college. All the rest was stuff we came up with afterwards, but it was all framedaround this very interesting, kind of romantically tragic rise and fall of a drug empire and a friendship that rose very quickly and fell very quickly. Ittook place in real life for over a year, but we condensed it down into three months.

I don’t know. There’s just something about being a teenager; your hormones are rushing around. Everything is much more intense than it actually is: the cool kids are way cooler than they actually are, the girls are hotter than they really are, everything is just so intense and embellished that it felt appropriate.

The cross-generational narrative is key, too. You have the younger kids talking about the teenagers, the teenagers commenting on the adults, and the adults looking back on it all. It actually reminded me of the way Stephen King frames some of his novels, specifically‘Salem’s Lot. But that could have been because of the New England setting. [Laughs.]

Bynum: Well, Stand by Mewas a huge influence, and Stephen King is one of the greatest writers in the last 50 years. I think there’s a way he taps into things that are very visceral and emotional and also just very American. I think the story, in a way, is this bygone American era that adds the nostalgia without it feeling pastiche necessarily.

There’s nobody walking around saying,“Hey, did you hear this Nirvana band coming out in a month?”

Bynum: Yeah, we were very careful to avoid that, but we also wanted to bring you into the world, which is why you do see stuff likeTerminator 2 and Street Fighter.

Yeah, but you created the world around those references. One of the biggest pitfalls of the many more modern period pieces is that they all too often lean on pop culture to sell the setting. But that’s not the case with Hot Summer Nights, and mostly because it’s supported by so many short stories woven into the main narrative, which is what really reminded me of King.

Bynum: It makes things feel bigger. Even if you meet Ricky Orwell and his gum for 20 seconds, it makes the world feel lived-in, which was important for us.

I’ve read in past interviews with you that there’s a note in your office that reads, “Don’t be boring.” Now, that could work for or against a screenwriter, mostly because there might always be an impetus to keep adding and thinking of more things. When it came to building this world, how hard was it to paint the story without too many layers or too broad of strokes?

Bynum: Well, there had to be some level of self-discipline in the writing process and then in the edit room. Because, like the Ricky Orwell tangents, I love doing that kind of stuff and I would have gone on forever doing more and more of it. Eventually, people are like, “Okay get to the story,” so there’s a good amount that was in the writing room floor and then the editing room floor because you have to hone in. But that’s always fun, telling the little side character stories.

It also adds another point of view tothe characters. You see that they’re larger than life to some people, but probably not to themselves. For instance, Maika Monroe’s McKayla likely doesn’t see herself as the talk of the town.

Bynum: I think the last thing Hunter Strawberry would want to hear is that people idolize him, and I think that’s what makes it special. The reason that the child narrator works is because you’re at that point in your life where these characters do feel larger than life. And the interesting thing is that from an older perspective, like a 40-year-old audience member watching this, everyone knew a Hunter Strawberry and a McKayla Strawberry. For the most part, you know what life looks like for themwhen they’re not young and the coolest kid in town anymore.

There’s something very tragic about that, and I think Hunter and McKayla are very self aware of the archetypes that they are and to this society — the box they’ve been put in. It’s like, “I’m the cool bad boy that none of your parents want you hanging out with, and I’ll probably end up never make it out of this town.” Again, for a 13-year-old, that’s the coolest guy ever, but for the 40-year-old looking back, it’s a tragedy, and that’s what we wanted to tap into…

You really do capture that evolution, though, from wide-eyed kids to cynical teenagers to wizened adults. Then again, it helps having someone like Thomas Jane around to do the heavy lifting. It goes without saying that we’re huge, huge fans of his work over here. It’s still a goddamn crime he missed the opportunity to be inThe Walking Dead.

Friedkin: And Mad Men.

Bynum: They wanted him on Mad Men?

Friedkin: Yeah, for Don Draper. His agent called and said, “Thomas Jane doesn’t do TV.”

He was pretty phenomenal in Hung.

Bynum: I’ll do TV if I get to have a big dick.

[Laughs.] Doyou feel that traditional oral storiesare still athing today?

Bynum: I think it’s dying out a little bit. I think people were allowed to be much more mysterious back in the day, you know?

Friedkin:I think now all these kids’ heroes are like the Kardashians or whoever they see onInstagram. Whereas back in the day, even when we were growing up, there were still those kids — it was just before Twitter and Instagram.

Bynum:Yeah, like you were saying, the Kardashians are on Snapchat, and it almost feels like in a weird, fucked up way like, “Oh, I’m friends with Kylie, let’s see what she’s wearing today.” Whereas, not even one generation ago, the stories you heard were about the kid the next town over who drove the Mustang and was dating the cheerleader. I think there’s something a little more special about that because it’s one step removed. And yeah, I think it’s dying out, which is again why I wanted to set the movie in the past because it was like the last tip of a time period where those kinds of stories still existed.

What some people tend to forget is how everyone is traditionally nostalgic for something 20years prior, and what was interesting about the ’80s is how a lot of the early ’60s aesthetics were huge. Naturally, that bled into the ’90s, though it didn’t take long for the nostalgia to shiftinto the ’70s. Your film seeminglycaptures this weird phenomenon.

Bynum: Well, the vibe — like when Hunter and Amy first meet at the diner and the Shangri-Las are playing — is total ’50s. The girl sitting there at the roller rink…

Friedkin:And also in that scene, it has that small town vibe where one girl says she’s a whore and one girl says she’s so pretty.

Bynum:The gossip. Eating French fries and drinking a Coke on a Saturday night. Shameless nostalgia.

Did you grow up in a small town.?

Bynum: Small-ish, pretty small.

Did that help in figuringthings out?

Bynum: Oh yeah, a lot of the stories were pulled from things I had heard. And then there were always the older kids that you would hear about. Like I heard he did this, I heard he did that, so yeah that was definitely from stuff I grew up with.

Did you hang out with any older kids growing up?

Bynum: I don’t know, I wanted to. You could like see them show up and everyone would move to the side.

Are you at all nervous people might not relate to this?

Bynum: Yeah, we talked about it a lot in the writers’ room like, “Who is the audience for this? Are the millennials gonna respond to this?” We were always more interested in the people who were teenagers in 1991 — so those in their 30s or 40s now — and I hope they respond to it because the movie slows down and gets into some heavier stuff.

But really, we wanted to make it for anyone because I think there’s something universal about being young, whether or not you grew up in a time where you had a pay phone or you grew up in a time where you used Twitter. There’s still something universal about being young — the cool older kids, the hot older girls that you’re scared to talk to — and I don’t think that will ever go away.

No, it’sjust between the lines now. The way we search through Facebook profiles, which are all self-curated portraits of people that might not actually be that at all.

Bynum: “Oh, you’re not really what your Instagram says you are!” It’s a different variation of “I heard Hunter do this, I heard Hunter do that,” and it’s not really as true as people say it is.

Despite the story being set in New England, the film was shot in Atlanta, which has become the Mecca of filmmaking these days. How difficult was it to create those signature Northern settings in the South?

Bynum: Well, one of our producers, Dan Friedkin,happens to know how to fly a helicopter and many other things. So, all that aerial footage, that’s from Cape Cod. He went up there and shot that, and it looks incredible, and I think it really saved our ass a lot. Not only to make the movie feel bigger, but to drop you into this sun-bleached world.

Friedkin: We shot on the beach, too. So, when they’re in the crab shack, when Hunter is of doing the false interrogation, that was on Tybee Island, a three-hour drive from Atlanta on the coast. So, that kind of passed for it. But the rest of it…

Bynum: That’s why a lot of stuff is shot really tight. If they see the fried chicken place over there, it’s gonna give us away.

Setting up the scene for 1991 must have also been difficult. There aren’t too many vintage arcades around.

Bynum: We looked for like a month and a half to find that.

Friedkin: Which is crazy because they’re starting to come back again.

Bynum:But the ones that are coming back have brand new games and the games look like they were built in 2010. So, to find an arcade that has old games from the late ’80s and early ’90s was very difficult.

Did you have to build it?

Bynum: No, we just found some arcade in rural Georgia somewhere. It was very cool, we lucked out with that one.

What was the most challengingpart for you as a first-time director?

Bynum: I think just realizing how quickly the 12-hour shooting day goes by. It goes by very quickly. We did a really good job of planning this thing — we planned it within an inch of its life — but it doesn’t matter how well you planned. The day starts and your phone starts ringing or people start coming up to you and saying things like, “So, this thing we talked about is not gonna happen anymore, we got to do an audible.”

You can’t go and throw a fit or start feeling bad for yourself, which, admittedly, the first week of production I was doing. I was just ranting and raving all the time about how everything is going wrong. But that’s part of making a movie. You could probably have a hundred million dollar budget and you’re still going to run into roadblocks. That was the biggest challenge: learning to adapt on the fly and finding things that other people would consider setbacks and recognizing them as opportunities.

Winging it, basically.

Bynum: Winging it or either being like, “Its not going to be this, but what if it’s that.” The most exciting part is when you’re on Plan B or Plan C and it’s better than Plan A ever was. It wouldn’t have happened if something didn’t go wrong, and that was the really exciting part. Also just being able to trust your actors, because good actors are really smart and have really smart ideas. And sometimes you can just go to them and be like, “This isn’t working. What do you think?” And just trusting what they have to say and letting them do their thing allows good things come out of it.

How long was the casting process for this? Did you kinda have a sense of maybe who you were going after?

Bynum: Ryan wanted Timothée [Chalamet] from the beginning. He was like, “Timothy is Daniel,” and I was like, “That’s great.” So, Timothy had that role basically from day one, but unfortunately, we tortured him a little bit and stretched out [the casting process] for four months, but he was always it.

Friedkin: We knew him mostly from Homeland, and then Interstellar came out right as we were starting to cast.

Bynum: It’s hard because the role on the page seems obvious, but his trajectory from awkward goofy boy to drug runner is a pretty big arc to try and do believably. And he did a great job with that. With Maika [Monroe], we had all seen It Follows, it came out when we were casting, and we were like, “That’s it.”

Friedkin: Hunter was the hardest.

Bynum:Hunter was the hardest because it could have gone so terribly.

Friedkin:[Alex Roe]hadn’t really been in anything — his two films were sort of in post — and we saw him and obviously he looks good enough to be Hunter, but he had a great tape and when he showed up on set his acting abilities were even higher than that.

Bynum:Everyone was blown away.

Friedkin: I remember a moment. The first time he shot was on the beach, and the second was a crab shack, and Elijah and I looked at each other and were like, “Okay, we’re okay.”

That’s a great feeling.

Friedkin: Do you want to tell him about Dex?

Bynum:Well, I had seen Emory [Cohen] first in A Place Beyond the Pines and I was like, “Who is this guy? He’s a genius. If I ever get to make a movie, I want Emory Cohen to be in it.” Somehow, he got the script and responded to Dex’s role, which was interesting — because I had always imagined Dex as someone older, someone in their 50s — but Ryan was like, “How about Emory for Dex?” And god, I’m glad we went with it because he was so much fun to work with, and in post, we were like, “Should we do a re-shoot and write a new scene for him?” He was that good.

Friedkin:I think he makes the character a little less of a cliché because to have the 30-year-old or whatever he is be the villain in the film is risky.

He does feel like an equal to Alex Roe’s Hunter.

Bynum: It’s like what Hunter could have been, and that’s what Hunter sees in him at the end I think, and Hunter is like, “I don’t want it, if this is what I’m going to become, I don’t want to be it.” So, I thought that was very interesting, and it wasn’t something in the script that was intended. It just came out of the casting, and now it works.

Friedkin: Emory showed up in Atlanta for the casting and we were talking about the role and he was like, “I’m gonna do this John Malkovich thing,” and we were like, “Uh…,” but then the camera started rolling and it was amazing.

It’s such a fine line because he could have easily become one of those smarmy villains…

Bynum:Or the mustached twirling villain. And I think he walked the line, but never quite crossed it. I think all the characters did really. Because the intention was to write these characters that felt familiar, the character was supposed to be aware of who they were. So, it’s a tricky tone to balance. Even someone like who Maia Mitchell wasplaying. Her role was very small, but when she’s on camera, she’s interesting to watch and adds something there that, again, could have been a very forgettable character.

There are so many characters to follow and love.

Friedkin: That’s one of my favorite things about the script. Often times, my favorite character in everything he writes is this guy who has one scene. The cousin who runs for the door, this guy is amazing. Ricky Orwell! I mean, there are no boring characters which I think really makes the whole film go up. Going back to Thomas Jane, Boogie Nights is one of our favorites and his character isn’t in a handful of scenes, but we talk about his character all the time.

Supporting charactersreally do make a movie. It’swhyfolks like Rob Lowe can secretly steal moments in broad comedieslike Wayne’s World or Tommy’s Boy. Boogie Nights is a perfect example, though, and certainly something that came to mind while watching Hot Summer Nights. What other works would you say you cut your teeth with?

Bynum:Martin Scorsese is a big one. You can feel the influence of that in there. Paul Thomas Anderson is another one, the Coenbrothers, David Fincher. And then, lately, I’ve been a big fan of Harmony Corinne. I think what Nicholas Winding Refn is doing right now is interesting. We’re both big Lars Von Trier fans, too. He’s the man.

Yeah, his movies are always a joy to see when you’re under the influence.

Bynum:He’s fearless, people who just go for it. It doesn’t always work, but when it does, it’s magical, you know? Paolo Sorentino is making really interesting stuff, too. And then all the classic guys that influenced everyone, from Kurasowa to Orson Wells, of course, and Stanley Kubrick. The legends.

Now that you’ve finished this film, what’s next?

Bynum: There’s one I’m writing right now that I’m almost done with that hopefully I get to make next. Ryan has read an early draft. We’re doing a quick rewrite on it.

Friedkin:We’re very excited about it.

Do you have an idea of what kind of films you want to make?

Bynum:Well, those guys we just talked about …. what they do is make movies that have a very unique vision and point of view and I think they’re going to last the test of time. They’re special and they’re unique in a way, and I’d love to be able to make movies like that — that people react to in a very specific way.

Well, that’s the best you can do.

Bynum: Yeah, I’m going to keep going until they tell me I can’t anymore.

Would you want to even shake up genres?

Bynum:A good story is a good story. So, whatever genre it’s in.

Friedkin:Well, I think that’s probably the best line to go on.

 4 ) 《炎夏之夜》有哪些让你印象深刻的片段

73:21-77:34


场景1 Hunter and his girlfriend's father 简称 H 和 F

H: This is very romantic, but what the fuck are we doing here?

F: You know, you remind me of...There was a boy a few years back.

H: Klye Tate, right? Yeah, I know all of the stories. I look like someone who wants to spend the next 20 years rotting away up in Walpole? I'm not gonna go out like that. Not like that.

F: You ever thought about just giving it up?

H: Yeah, sure. And do...do what? Go to college. Get a job, maybe. I don't think that meatloaf dinners and a white picket fence are in the cards for me.

F: Well, how do you imagine this is gonna end?

H: Look, if you were gonna get me, you would got me already.


场景2 Daniel and Mckayla 简称 D 和 M

M: When I was a little kid, I used to catch them in those glass jars. It always reminds me of how planes looked when they're way up in the sky.

D: Why'd you stop?

M: Kept dying. Got depressing.

D: I think you should start collecting the fireflies again.

M: You can't hold on to everything.

D: I think some things you can.

M: Then I hope you're good at being hurt.


场景1

H: All right. So what? So last time I checked, it wasn't illegal for your old man to be a fucking fuck-up.

F: It's a little hard to tell now, but half a lifetime ago, your dad was the coolest thing in 100 miles. Yeah, kind of guy who could break a girl's heart just walking into a room. Jimmy Srawberry. Yeah. See. We was thick as thives, me and him. We...uh...got into some trouble. They were good times. You know part of me likes to believe that it was him who saved me that he knew who he was, that he knew where his life was headed, and he didn't want that life for me. The choices that we make ain't always about us.


场景2

D: I've never really said this before...But I think I might...

M: Whatever it is that you want to say... Wait. And if you still wanna tell me when summer's over. Tell me then.

(bgm: I still love you. Just like you did before. But before you smile. Darling. I don't wanna cry. I don't wanna cry. No more. No...)

 5 ) 好经典的电影!

我感觉甜茶这部电影拍的特别好看,我觉得这拍出了背后犯罪家庭居然也可以有这么幸福的生活,不过终究有一句话说的没有错,因为即使你是一个坏人,你的幸福生活中有一天会到头的,而且这一天会很快来的时候特别残酷,会一下子摧毁掉你所有的生活,确实这句话说的很有道理,我觉得这部电影拍的特别好看!

 6 ) 中二少年贩毒玩脱,连累他人自毁青春。

不知道是导演还是剧本的缘故,片子看着有点一头雾水。但是在在下这位极不专业人士的眼中,摄影挺棒的,有点意思。灯光,色调,配乐也不错,就连标题的色调都很吸引人。然而居然被这旋风蒸汽波迪斯科粉色少女迷情的标题和宣传片给骗了,电影完全不是预告片的样子啊,是该说预告片失败呢,还是导演没搞清楚自己想传达什么呢?感觉到非常想往独立电影的方向偏,表面的味儿够了。

什么鬼啊,刚开始看,同学问我,这是恐怖片吗?我凭借预告片的理解,跟她解释说,我觉得这不是恐怖片,是青春片。看到开头觉得,嗯好像还蛮有意思,感觉很喜剧。看到中间,越来越不知道这人在干嘛了。这就是一部中二sb少年贩毒片啊,我的甜茶哦。

说说槽点!那个旁白男孩子搞得人一头雾水,一直到最后才知道是个小邻居,然而口气宛如当事人,当然这是导演的个人爱好,每个人都有自己的风格,我选择接受忽略好了。然而甜茶为什么突然去卖叶子,我们就理解为中二少年夏天无聊。卖了叶子有了上线还不够,还想作死发展别的上线,有脑子卖叶子没脑子想到自己做这些事的后果?卖完了不要紧,你说人生好巧不巧,丹尼尔小老弟的小老哥跟那位酷似傻脸妹的条子女儿正爱的你侬我侬呢,洗手的心思都有了,被人家爹拉出去谈谈话,开始反思自己,兄妹的间隙眼看就要化解了,哥哥却替中二病死在枪口下。我的天呐!wtf啊!什么鬼啊!还有那位意识流警察啊,讲的话都是什么鬼啊!还有,danny开头跟妈妈去看爹的墓了,然后呢?这个情节真的非常有用吗!关键是你妈呢?看到最后我都郁闷,小老弟,你妈哪去了?就从头出现了之后,就不见了?人呢?这都是导演的锅啊!小老弟你到底为啥一开心就去贩毒了?就是突然入伙,都不带被怀疑的。还有男二也是,这个暴脾气,男二就一副暴脾气在撑着了,其他的性格之类的没看出来一点儿啊。暴风来了,很霸道总裁的坐在雨里打电话。还有晚上为什么遇见了哭泣的女主啊?女主嘤嘤嘤的是咋了啊?偶真滴好鱼闷啊!导演大哥如果我感觉没错,你应该是想讲个故事,可是这故事在前面儿眼看要出来了,活生生给憋回去了。讲故事应当是讲通顺吧,在下浅薄,也就这么点理解。

看完是真的,脑子乱七八糟。只能说开头是个恐怖片的基调,然后又觉得是个青春喜剧片,实在没想到最后变成中二少年无脑坑队友悲伤10000+的贩毒片。导演是在讲自己身边的故事吗?那这个故事可真的,既没拍出里面的有趣,也没拍出人之间的因果,也没塑造好这几个干巴巴的角色。

我觉得这个角色不适合甜茶。甜茶的这片子里的演技跟cmbyn里的水平是差不多的,时间上确实也没隔多久。开头是一个呆呆的男孩子,但是怎么突然就咸鱼翻身变成贩毒大佬了?甚至看着看着让我怀疑这位年轻小茶茶的演戏套路是不是稳定在这个风格了,就像小雀斑那经典的演戏方式,我有点难过,不希望甜茶成为一个长得好看但角色单一的演员。还有他怎么总是演小渣男,怎么现在一看到他那撩妹满分的技能,就能猜到下面坑人的甜茶了。算了,无论是lady bird还是cmbyn,同情一下女方的同时,我也还是想吃他嘴里那块糖。

他在片子里是在演丹尼尔吗?刚开始是,后面就是在演自己了,丝毫没有角色的感觉了,或者说这个角色实在搞得人一头雾水。很期待下面的beautiful boy,不想对甜茶失望,永远喜欢甜茶!

 短评

American Graffiti wanna-be, 连 i don’t wanna cry 都出来了~ 剪辑和摄影挺好看的。

6分钟前
  • 老海拉鲁人
  • 还行

大型MTV现场合集,甜茶是个傻逼!

9分钟前
  • 西决
  • 还行

当甜茶被拍成了甜酒……

14分钟前
  • 啊么吸溜
  • 还行

【SxSW】美其名曰是给Call Me By Your Name热身。其实是直男共同贩毒上妞儿的故事,却莫名其妙觉得有《我自己的爱达荷》之感。除了略长,其他真还是有种At-risk青年成长史诗的感觉。

15分钟前
  • 考拉先生
  • 推荐

晚霞余光、终结者2,那年夏天的聒噪迷乱、性感浪漫全有了。这是导演的处女作,拍得很有风格,90s金曲配乐和一些意象镜头用得不错。

17分钟前
  • 科林
  • 推荐

添麦菲是这个时代影坛的瑰宝。

20分钟前
  • SingLesinger
  • 推荐

海岸、粉色夕阳、大红色跑车、冰苏打、大麻、酒精、对金钱和爱情的躁动的心,是为Hot Summer;潜伏在那股躁动之下的则是冒险、家庭的悲哀往事、情人与兄弟间的欺瞒,是为Night。快速剪辑、几乎没有歇过的美版劲歌金曲又似乎让影片在一溜烟的时间里过去了,好像飓风之后所有的东西都烟消云散一般。

23分钟前
  • 笑脸怪
  • 还行

为了甜茶 还是来看了。// 夏天就该配甜茶!

28分钟前
  • 帅的让人生气
  • 还行

谁不想往他嘴里递东西吃

32分钟前
  • 罌至
  • 推荐

那个年纪的少年无非迷人或乏味,而Timmy自然是迷人的了,断送的才有理由去挂念。但影片里的夏天燥热令人厌倦

34分钟前
  • SundanceKid🌈
  • 还行

新片没有最烂只有更烂(所以我为什么要看?!)甜茶比CMBYN时期颜更正笑更甜,然而这剧本我实在是无fuck说。简介赫然写着“导演原创剧本上过好莱坞剧本黑名单”

39分钟前
  • 倒带
  • 很差

在烟花盛开的霓虹下接吻,在警报闪烁的酒吧里豪饮,在无人经过的街道上起舞,在一成不变的汽车影院看着施瓦辛格一枪崩掉敌人的脑袋。嗑嗨了的夏天燥热难耐,迷醉了的黑夜烟雾缭绕。你说那些“快乐”比樱桃冰沙还畅销,可在风暴肆虐的夜晚,一切都分崩离析了。

40分钟前
  • 康报虹
  • 还行

甜茶是甜的,故事是乏的。

42分钟前
  • 阿五
  • 较差

所谓影像灾难,就是连甜茶都能被整得气质全无吧。

44分钟前
  • 徐若风
  • 较差

90s music so nostalgic. But other than that, nothing much new-too predictable without enough closure.

45分钟前
  • Lerota
  • 还行

#C- 纵使剧情像一坨明晃晃的屎,对夏日电影就是没有抵抗力惹,尤其还有90s音乐的大混剪。Timothée和Roe真的莫名般配,如果双男主为爱鼓掌的话,令人潮红

47分钟前
  • 波吃曼
  • 还行

@IFFBoston 前面看得好开心,Timothee总是一副抽大麻抽嗨了的样子。快到结尾突然就沉重了起来,炎夏夜晚狂风暴雨,有种film noir的感觉。

52分钟前
  • muahaha
  • 推荐

同样是夏日的故事,比起CMBYN清新的蓝色调,本片是热烈的红色调。怎么会有比甜茶这样如此适合夏天的人呢?不管是情窦初开的意大利少年,还是冲动贩毒嗨得不行的美国小子,他都能分毫不差的完美呈现。天赋和灵气,再配上他的眼光和努力,未来的好莱坞影坛和奖项会是他的游乐场。

55分钟前
  • SupernovaR
  • 力荐

抿一口甜茶 我茶真的太适合夏天了吧 谁不想往他嘴里递东西吃。。。甜茶,奶,给你了。。。

58分钟前
  • ShAne
  • 力荐

甜茶是和夏天最般配的男孩儿!

1小时前
  • 书生武将
  • 推荐