National Post

Besson took more than a decade to realize futuristic French fantasy

French auteur worked from the inside out

- Bob Thompson

LOS ANGELES • French filmmaker Luc Besson usually gets things done quickly. But it took him more than a decade of care and attention to realize his cinematic dream called Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets.

The movie is based on the French comic books Valerian and Laureline by writer Pierre Christin and artist Jean- Claude Mézières. The series enthralled Besson as a child growing up in Paris. As a 58- year- old, he’s finally promoting the English language version of the sci- fi fantasy.

The Besson movie features Dane DeHaan as Valerian and Cara Delevingne who plays Laureline. Costarring are Clive Owen, Ethan Hawke, Herbie Hancock, Rutger Hauer, Kris Wu and singer Rihanna, who stands out as a shape- shifting entertaine­r.

They are a squabbling but in- love couple who are also space detectives assigned to uncover a lethal menace at the gigantic space station named City of a Thousand Planets. If they don’t find the device, it might destroy the city and maybe the universe. The problem is some of the city’s inhabitant­s — made up of separate spheres f or humanoids, r obots, methane aliens and marine extraterre­strials — aren’t in the mood to co-operate with the investigat­ors.

Certainly, Besson flirted with the fantasy genre in 1997 when he released The Fifth Element to modest success. His latest effort is much more expansive and expensive. The eye- popping designs and the state of the art special effects are the real stars of the production, although the director admits during a Beverly Hills Hotel interview that the casting of Valerian and Laureline were key. “It’s almost a $ 200- million film and you know it’s going to be tough,” says Besson, who acknowledg­es the he has to compete with the trendsetti­ng superhero movies. “So I start 10 years ago and I start very slowly.”

He hired 10 designers and then had them prepare separate space visions without really knowing what the goal was. “Weird” was the operative word, says Besson. “I received more than 6,000 drawings to start my puzzle and then I could think about my two (lead) actors.”

DeHaan was the Green Goblin in 2014’s The Amazing Spider- Man 2 and Delevingne portrayed the evil Enchantres­s in last year’s Suicide Squad, but they had more to offer than previous experience in a special effects movie. “I know the comics since I’m 10 years old, so I really know Valerian and Laureline very well, so it was more for me like I had a picture of who I want, and then I check who can fit,” Besson says. “When I ( met with) them the first time, the first hour of conversati­on, I knew i t was them.”

The director wanted “the salt and the sugar in the same story” and that’s what he received from his headliners. Still, he had to do the onscreen chemistry test. “So I have to wait a month to finally get them together and honestly, i t takes 10 seconds,” Besson says. “After 10 seconds you can tell. I was so happy. I tried not to show it too much at the time, but I was so thrilled because I was sure about the couple.”

Casting the very busy Rihanna as the exotic dancer was more of a leap of faith. Says the director: “I didn’t even know if it was realistic or not, but it was just my dream, and you never know until you ask.”

Indeed, women make up a strong component of the film, as they usually do in Besson’s movies. “I think it’s normal,” Besson says. “I pay the exact same attention, believe me, to the female part as I do to the male part ... maybe I was raised a certain way that I was lucky enough to see that they’re both very strong.”

 ?? FAYESVISIO­N / WENN. COM ?? From left, director Luc Besson and co-stars Cara Delevingne and Dane DeHaan appear at the world premiere of Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets last Monday in Los Angeles.
FAYESVISIO­N / WENN. COM From left, director Luc Besson and co-stars Cara Delevingne and Dane DeHaan appear at the world premiere of Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets last Monday in Los Angeles.

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