National Post

AN UNSTOPPABL­E DUO

STONE AND LANTHIMOS SEEMINGLY CAN’T GO WRONG MAKING FILMS TOGETHER

- Jake Coyle in Cannes, France

Before a journalist has even lobbed a question, Emma Stone and Yorgos Lanthimos spit out a string of overlappin­g answers.

“We have a great relationsh­ip,” begins Lanthimos.

“We just love working together,” adds Stone.

“It was cool to do a modern-day piece.” “Going back to some of the early stuff,” says Lanthimos. “A throwback,” says Stone. “Our relationsh­ip has evolved over time,” Lanthimos adds. “Totally,” says Stone. Stone and Lanthimos have by now honed their patter. They’re just barely removed from the Oscar campaign for Poor Things, which culminated in four Academy Awards, including best actress for Stone. Just two months later, they’re back together at the Cannes Film Festival with Kinds of Kindness, their third feature together and fourth film, counting the 2022 short Bleat.

Their collaborat­ion has by now become so regular, and the talking points so scripted, that it would be easy to take it for granted. Minutes before they sat down for an interview in Cannes, a press release went out with the news that Lanthimos and Stone will soon begin shooting another movie together, titled Bugonia.

Opposite as they may seem — one a 35-year-old star from Arizona, the other a 50-year-old art house filmmaker from Athens — they’ve formed one of the movies’ strongest director-actor partnershi­ps, a collaborat­ion based on a shared sense of absurdity and a willingnes­s to go, full-tilt, to some very strange places.

For Stone, the connection she feels with Lanthimos isn’t so different than the one she does with Nathan Fielder, the darkly deadpan comedian of The Curse.

“I don’t say this lightly even though I know it’s easy to use this word flippantly: They’re both geniuses,” says Stone. “They are. I think it’s just an innate thing. It can’t really be taught or described. It’s just a way of seeing society and people. You’re actually both drawn to themes of: Why is this social structure like this? Why do we have these rules? How are we supposed to function within them?”

You can grasp a similar attitude in Lanthimos and Stone’s opening volley of answers to unasked questions, disarming the regular rhythms of an interview. Or in how Stone, every bit the movie star, constantly undercuts herself with self-deprecatin­g sarcasm.

But you can most see it in their movies together. The aggressive period farce of The Favourite. Bella Baxter’s childlike experience of social mores in Poor Things. In Kinds of Kindness, a triptych of extreme tales of controllin­g relationsh­ips, Lanthimos, working again with screenwrit­er Efthimis Filippou, continues his idiosyncra­tic examinatio­ns of social conformity.

“I got inspired by reading Caligula by Camus,” Lanthimos says. “I just started thinking about one man’s control over other people’s lives. Then I thought it would be interestin­g to explore on a more personal level how that would feel, having someone be in total control over your life, even in the most minute detail.”

Kinds of Kindness, which Searchligh­t Pictures will release June 21 in theatres, was an opportunit­y for Stone (aside from Bleat) to work with Lanthimos in the style of his earlier films (The Lobster, The Killing of a Sacred Deer) with Filippou.

“It was the chance to finally be in that version of Yorgos’s mind,” Stone says. “Before I met him, obviously, those were the only ones I had seen.”

The two had discussed making Kinds of Kindness before Poor Things, but shot it in the aftermath of their Oscar-winner during its lengthy post-production process due to the film’s large amount of special effects.

Alternativ­ely, Kinds of Kindness, Stone says “was free and happy and everyone’s going to love this.”

That might be surprising for anyone’s who’s seen the three-hour Kinds of Kindness, which uses largely the same company of actors across all three stories. (Among them: Jesse Plemons, Willem Dafoe and Margaret Qualley.) The three parts take stories of work-life balance, spousal suspicion and sexual abuse to severe, surreal lengths.

“The common denominato­r of the things I’ve been a part of are that they’re things I want to watch,” Stone says. “That’s the only gauge that I have. If it’s not something that I would be like, ‘I gotta go see this the day it comes out,’ then it’s probably not a good fit for me.”

 ?? LOIC VENANCE / AFP/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Filmmaker Yorgos Lanthimos, left, and actress Emma Stone, will next partner for Kinds of Kindness,
their third feature together and fourth film, counting the 2022 short film Bleat.
LOIC VENANCE / AFP/ GETTY IMAGES Filmmaker Yorgos Lanthimos, left, and actress Emma Stone, will next partner for Kinds of Kindness, their third feature together and fourth film, counting the 2022 short film Bleat.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada