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December 2007
DVD REVIEW:
INTERVIEW

By Kam Williams

DVD REVIEW
INTERVIEW


 

Actors: Steve Buscemi, Sienna Miller
Directors: Steve Buscemi
Format: AC-3, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DVD-Video, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
Language: English
Aspect Ratio: 1.78:1
Number of discs: 1
Rating: R
Studio: Sony Pictures
DVD Release Date: December 11, 2007
Run Time: 84 minutes
DVD Extras: Commentary by Steve Buscemi, “Behind-the-Scenes” and another featurette



   
 

American Version of Dutch Director’s Drama Released on DVD

Pierre Peders (Steve Buscemi), a war correspondent for a leading publication called News World, has recently been demoted by his boss for basing some stories on non-existent sources. Katya (Sienna Miller), the much-pursued blonde-of-the-moment, is not only the hottest movie star, but also the constant subject of speculation in the tabloids.

When Pierre is assigned to interview this shallow, self absorbed diva, he feels like he’s hit rock bottom, since he considers the task to be beneath him. So, he doesn’t bother to prepare for the tete-a-tete and even flaunts that fact in the face of the actress.

Insulted, Katya storms out of the restaurant only to have their paths cross again minutes later when the taxi he’s riding in is in an accident right in front of her home. She then takes compassion on the shaken Pierre and invites him up to her loft.
There, the pair share a glass of wine and proceed to engage in a very frank exchange about men and women and relationships. Crossing a line, he asks her what makes a man attractive and whether she’s good at seduction. And she turns the tables on him, inquiring whether he’s gay and if he’s interested in her.

Matters only intensify exponentially from this juncture forward, both emotionally and physically, as the two become hopelessly enmeshed in a dangerous cat-and-mouse game of both their making. They flirt, kiss, role play, smoke, drink, do drugs, agree, deceive, despair, disagree, play truth or dare, and preserve each of their deepest secrets on videotape, all over the course of one unusually intimate evening, given that they were total strangers only hours ago.

This is the compelling trajectory of Interview, a character-driven drama directed by Steve Buscemi. The picture is a remake of a movie by Theo van Gogh, the Dutch director murdered by Muslim extremists in 2004 for having made a documentary depicting the mistreatment of females in the name of Islam.

Oozing an erotic edginess and raw sensuality which is almost palpable, Steve Buscemi and Sienna Miller generate enough chemistry here to keep one transfixed for the duration of this daring mindbender. Who’d ever expect to hear the words “Steve Buscemi” and “raw sensuality” in the same sentence?