China Daily

Lost City of Z explores the hunt for a vanished civilizati­on

- By DEBORAH COLE in Berlin Agence France-Presse

British actors Robert Pattinson and Charlie Hunnam star in the true-to-life jungle adventure story The Lost City ofZ about the ill-fated search for a vanished South American civilizati­on.

The movie, given its internatio­nal premiere at the Berlin film festival on Tuesday, was directed by US filmmaker James Gray (The Immigrant) and is based on a best-seller by David Grann, a New Yorker staff writer.

Hunnam, best known from the Sons of Anarchy television series, plays Percy Fawcett, a British mapmaker and explorer who believed there was an advanced society in the Amazon long before the arrival of the Europeans.

Pattinson, the heartthrob from the Twilight franchise, is his aide-de-camp Henry Costin, who joined him on several treacherou­s expedition­s before and after World War I looking for what Fawcett called The Lost City of Z.

Sienna Miller (Foxcatcher) appears as his wife Nina, an independen­t woman with a taste for adventure who longed to accompany Fawcett on his travels but stayed back in England to raise their three children.

The story plays up both the lengthstow­hichFawcet­twould go for recognitio­n in Britain’s rigid class system, as well as his progressiv­e streak, with a desire to disprove Western notions of cultural superiorit­y.

Gray says those ideals appealed to him given the “wave of nationalis­m that’s gripping the world” today.

“The whole world, the human race, has this terrible urge, need, desire, tendency to rank, to put people into categories,” the director tells reporters in Berlin.

“The movie unfortunat­ely is, I think, as relevant as ever because we cannot close the book on what is clearly a — let’s be honest here — white and very racist, colonialis­t view of the world.”

Gray says his team spent weeksworki­ngwithfour­native tribes in the Amazon but he resisted the urge to make an “anthropolo­gical movie” focused on exotic difference­s.

“I was terrified of course of being condescend­ing,” he says. “I think we need to be reminded that we’re all made of the same clay.”

The film features encounters with native peoples during the treks, which were shot in Colombia, set against vivid World War I battlefiel­d scenes from the Belgian trenches.

“I thought it was essential story-wise because it would really give full color to the lie that is the idea of the advanced European civilizati­on,” he says.

Faced with growing scepticism­athomeanda­chroniclac­k of financing, Fawcett, a gifted storytelle­r, managed to capture the imaginatio­n of newspaper editors around the world, sending them breathless dispatches in exchange for cash.

The articles made him a global star in his lifetime, and heightened the tragedy around the mystery of his eventual disappeara­nce in the Amazon in 1925 alongside his son Jack.

Hunnam says the work on set had been hairy at times, with scorpions, snakes and poisonous spiders often coming too close for comfort.

“It was pretty adventurou­s, hesays.“Therewerea­llmanner of things on any given day that thought it might be a nice idea to bite and attempt to kill us.”

Pattinson, who has branched out to more adult fare in recent years, appearing in David Cronenberg’s Maps to the Stars and Cosmopolis, says it was fun getting out of his comfort zone.

“When I first read the script, I loved there being areas of the world that you could still explore and were totally uncontroll­ed,” he says.

He says today’s hyper-connected world “takes away that mystery and kind of majesty of going into the unknown”.

The Berlin film festival runs until Sunday.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Robert Pattinson (from left), Sienna Miller and Charlie Hunnam promote the movie The Lost City of Z at the 67th Berlinale Internatio­nal Film Festival in Berlin on Feb 14.
REUTERS Robert Pattinson (from left), Sienna Miller and Charlie Hunnam promote the movie The Lost City of Z at the 67th Berlinale Internatio­nal Film Festival in Berlin on Feb 14.

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