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Thursday, September 19, 2019
Interview with 20 Minute at the Deauville Film Festival for 'Seberg'
Google translated.
She is amazing Kristen Stewart in Benedict's Seberg Andrews, presented in Deauville this Friday. The film goes back to the FBI's persecution of actress Jean Seberg (1938-1979) because of her commitment to the Black Panther movement in the late 1960s.
"Jean Seberg was an actress who lived her roles thoroughly and I'm made on the same mold," says the actress at 20 minutes. She has seen the films of the star of 'A bout de souffle' by Jean-Luc Godard before playing it. "She is first luminous and then we see her gradually deteriorate as and filmography and suffering that destroyed it. What interested me also in the project is that she does not win against the system." Kristen Stewart is gorgeous and intense, like looking straight at you to answer your questions.
The benefits of social media
"She would probably have been so mistreated if she had been a man," says the actress. The US government wanted to shoot it down because it defended ideas that it considered dangerous. Kristen Stewart shows how the young woman gradually sinks into depression. "Today, Jean Seberg could defend herself more easily through social media because it would have direct access to information and a great facility to respond." For Kristen Stewart, social media can help lonely people. "They give you the opportunity not to be alone in your corner and find people who look like you when you feel isolated."
A movie festival
At 29, Kristen Stewart takes her job very seriously, even more than when she played in the Twilight Saga. "When you're a kid, you go for it without thinking, it's only gradually that you understand the implication that this job requires when you want to practice it in a credible way."
On October 30, we'll see Kristen Stewart in Elizabeth Banks' Charlie's Angels. In the meantime, she is preparing to receive the Deauville Talent Award for her career. "Receiving a prize makes me look more towards the future than in the past," she says. "I see it as a big party where we celebrate cinema with friends." French director Olivier Assayas, who directed her in Sils Maria and Personal Shopper, is one of those who waited for her firmly in Deauville.
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