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IMDbPro

Interview

  • 2007
  • R
  • 1h 24m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
14K
YOUR RATING
Interview (2007)
Theatrical Trailer from Sony Pictures Classics
Play trailer1:48
1 Video
47 Photos
Drama

After falling out with his editor, a fading political journalist is forced to interview America's most popular soap actress.After falling out with his editor, a fading political journalist is forced to interview America's most popular soap actress.After falling out with his editor, a fading political journalist is forced to interview America's most popular soap actress.

  • Director
    • Steve Buscemi
  • Writers
    • David Schechter
    • Theo van Gogh
    • Theodor Holman
  • Stars
    • Sienna Miller
    • Steve Buscemi
    • Michael Buscemi
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    14K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Steve Buscemi
    • Writers
      • David Schechter
      • Theo van Gogh
      • Theodor Holman
    • Stars
      • Sienna Miller
      • Steve Buscemi
      • Michael Buscemi
    • 63User reviews
    • 120Critic reviews
    • 64Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 3 nominations total

    Videos1

    Interview
    Trailer 1:48
    Interview

    Photos47

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    + 41
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    Top cast22

    Edit
    Sienna Miller
    Sienna Miller
    • Katya
    Steve Buscemi
    Steve Buscemi
    • Pierre Peders
    Michael Buscemi
    Michael Buscemi
    • Robert Peders
    Tara Elders
    Tara Elders
    • Maggie
    David Schechter
    • Maitre'd
    Molly Griffith
    Molly Griffith
    • Waitress
    Elizabeth Bracco
    Elizabeth Bracco
    • Woman at Restaurant
    James Villemaire
    James Villemaire
    • Man at Restaurant
    Jackson Loo
    • Fan at Restaurant
    Craig muMs Grant
    Craig muMs Grant
    • Cab Driver
    • (as muMs)
    Doc Dougherty
    Doc Dougherty
    • Truck Driver
    Donna Hanover
    Donna Hanover
    • Commentator
    Wayne Wilcox
    Wayne Wilcox
    • Hunky Actor
    Danny Schechter
    • Political Pundit
    Philippe Vonlanthen
    Philippe Vonlanthen
    • Autograph Seeker #1
    Yan Xi
    Yan Xi
    • Autograph Seeker #2
    Steve Sands
    • Paparazzi
    Craig Grant
    • Paparazzi
    • Director
      • Steve Buscemi
    • Writers
      • David Schechter
      • Theo van Gogh
      • Theodor Holman
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews63

    6.814.1K
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    Featured reviews

    7dbborroughs

    good sparring between two good actors

    Remake of Theo Van Gogh's film of the same name. This is the story of a self important reporter forced to do a celebrity interview with an actress "best known for who she sleeps with".

    Good but far from deep-despite what the film thinks-sparring between characters is an amusing if at sometimes uncomfortable 85 minutes. The joy here is watching the actors do what the do best. The real joy here is watching Sienna Miller who proves she really can act. After a few borderline roles and a cringe inducing performance (at least in the trailer) in Stardust she proves that she is oh so much better than we are giving her credit for (clearly she really isn't just an actress best known for insulting cities and whom she sleeps with).

    If there is any flaws its a couple of odd twists that seem to occur just to have something dramatic happen and to prove what bad people the characters are. Its a minor flaw.

    Is it worth seeing? Yes. But I don't know if it really needs to be seen on the big screen
    Tony43

    My evening with a celebrity

    "Interview" is something of an old fashioned two character drama updated to cover questions about just how much of the information we get in today's media saturated world can be trusted.

    The plot is simple. News magazine writer Pierre, who in his salad days was a top political reporter, has fallen from grace and is now lucky to pick up celebrity profile interviews. One night in New York he is assigned to interview a beautiful actress known for B movie horror films and highly sexed cable TV fare of the "Sex in the City" variety. Her only real claim to fame seems to be that she underwent a breast reduction operation, getting her implants removed.

    Through a fluke what starts off as an interview so disastrous that both want to immediately end it, turns into an all night affair when he bumps his head in a fender bender accident outside the restaurant where they meet. Rather than going their separate ways, they wind up going to her spacious loft where they spend the next few hours bobbing and weaving around each other like a pair of good middle weight boxers. And over the course of the evening, we learn quite a bit about both of them, or so we think.

    Steve Buscemi, who also directed, gets good marks for his acting, but even better for his work helming this story. He keeps it moving along with such energy and such conviction that one hardly notices that this is a two character set piece probably better suited to the theater and a small theater at that.

    The real revelation for me, though, was Sienna Miller, who I had never seen before and know virtually nothing about. She sparkles as the under appreciated sex symbol who goes along with that game because it has made her rich and famous. But there would appear to be a lot more to her than meets the eye, and luckily for us, she is not played as the clichéd dumb blonde with a heart of gold Hollywood usually trucks out in this kind of story. Miller's character is smart, at times highly manipulative, and more than able to handle herself in a verbal street fight.

    Whether in real life any actress, much less any journalist, would reveal their deepest secrets to a total stranger is highly questionable. But then part of the plothere is that we never quite know how much of what they say is the truth, and how much is manufactured. This is very much a story about how the media and celebrities use each other to attain their own ends.

    So what we come out with in the end is people who are smarter than they seem, but maybe a little less ethical than we would like them to be. And first and foremost in that category is the journalist, who we come to realize is not only capable of stretching the truth when it suits his needs, but also of betraying confidences if that will further his career.

    Miller's character is less easily defined, though, and some of that may be the script's fault, or some of that may be by design. There is a spot near the end of the film in which Miller's character clearly puts the mask back on. She re-establishes the wall between movie star and the member of the press who is there to interview her, nothing more.

    What that says is that most of, maybe all of, what happened on this unusual night was an illusion. Was it just the under appreciated actress proving she was much better at her craft than people thought? Was it a girl pigeon holed as a bimbo proving she was just as smart as the condescending intellectual reluctantly interviewing her? We never quite know in the end and that may be "interview's" one failure, because in the end, we really want to like the actress. We're just not sure if we do.
    8ferguson-6

    Stuck with Fluff

    Greetings again from the darkness. The film is based on the original screenplay by Theodor Holman and a 1993 version directed by Vincent Van Gogh distant relative Theo Van Gogh, who was shot and killed in Amsterdam. Theo Van Gogh, a renowned journalist, once said "I prefer covering the war between a woman and a man." With this remake, director and actor Steve Buscemi does a wonderful job of doing just that.

    The set-up is simple enough. Buscemi plays a political journalist whose editor believes has lost his edge and is now assigning him fluff pieces. Enter the fluff piece ... a beautiful actress who is known more for her off screen "romances" than on screen talent. Sienna Miller plays the actress Katya and delivers an outstanding performance; by far, the best of her career. She is all over the place with the role, but stays focused on the internal torment and remarkable people smarts that Buscemi's Pierre is lacking.

    Along the lines of "My Dinner with Andre" and "Before Sunset", there is an enormous amount of dialogue and interaction between the two leads, who are on screen 95% of the time. Quite a statement in human nature's preponderance to pre-judge others, this is like peeling back the layers of an onion as each character uncovers a bit more about the other over alcohol, screaming and tender moments. Of course, the whole time the viewer is skeptical about which stories are real and which are fabricated or embellished for the purpose of the moment.

    Really an interesting film and directed with a nice touch by Buscemi, who is also at his usual high level of acting. Don't miss the quick glimpse of the real life Dutch star Katja Schuurman, who was in the Van Gogh version of the film. She is the lady who steps from the limo and greets Buscemi's character. A must see for those who love the structure of scenes with dialogue rather than special effects. And remember, there is always a winner and a loser.
    8buzzbruin

    A good job by Buscemi

    This is a solid effort by Steve Buscemi and his co-star Sienna Miller. It would do well as a 2 character play on the 99 equity circuit. Buscemi lays good ground work in developing his character early, while Miller shows her stuff gradually. I found them both believable and not typical Hollywood movies fakes. The things that happened to them seemed real, and the writing was solid. I was impressed by Millers effort, she showed the person and the emotion behind her character. Buscemi took the time to let the audience gradually learn the people behind the show-biz mask. I cared about both people which is my fundamental requirement for any art form. I get pleasure from real professionals doing a god workmanlike job. Kudos to both!!
    7rajdoctor

    Interview

    This movie was originally made in Netherlands (2002) by a Dutch Director Theo Van Gogh. As I am staying in Amsterdam, that know-how interested me and on top of that I have a liking for Steve Buscemi (obviously after seeing Fargo).

    This is a story of a political journalist Pierre Peters (Steve) who is given a job to interview a B-grade movie celebrity Katya (Sienna Millers). They meet each other at a restaurant, dislike each other instantly, part their ways and immediately bump into each other again to land up in Katya's spacious flat. The remaining story unfolds with each of them trying to outsmart the other by being witty. There is a final twist in the movie that makes the viewers satisfy.

    Both the characters are complex, especially of Katya – and I should say that even though Sienna Millers has tried her best and acted well too, still her character remains un-defined and shallow. This is the major slack in the scripting. Steve is wonderful and decent in this role. This is a special kind of cinema – mostly experimental – where the camera revolves around two characters in a room. But obviously Steve would have found the original movie so inspirational that he took the challenge to Amercianise it – with him on the driving seat as Director and Lead Actor.

    Good movie, especially if you are of a kind you are a risk-taking movie goer, and open to different kind and genre of cinema.

    (Stars: 6.5 out of 10)

    Best Emmys Moments

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The woman who steps out of the limo at the end, almost walking into the distracted Pierre, is played by Katja Schuurman. She played Katya in the original 2003 Dutch version of the movie by Theo van Gogh.
    • Goofs
      Katya's wireless microphone rig is clearly visible as a rectangular bulge just below the small of her back in several scenes soon after they go to her apartment.
    • Quotes

      Katya: Do you like fishnet stockings, Pierre? Wait. Let me rephrase. Why do you think it is that men like fishnet stockings so much?

      Pierre Peders: They look good on women.

      Katya: Fishnet stockings are a net, and the woman is imprisoned in this net like a fish. Do you get it?

      Pierre Peders: Yeah, and what about high heels?

      Katya: Well, high heels make walking very, very difficult. So you see, nothing would be more attractive to a man than a woman wearing fishnet stockings and high heels because she has trouble walking and she's imprisoned within this net and therefore he thinks she's easy prey. I know everything.

    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert: I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry/Goya's Ghosts/Interview/No Reservations/Sunshine (2007)
    • Soundtracks
      Pancakes
      Written and Performed by Marvin Pontiac

      Courtesy of Strange & Beautiful Music

      Published by Lagarto Productions, Inc. ASCAP

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 10, 2007 (Netherlands)
    • Countries of origin
      • United States
      • Canada
      • Netherlands
    • Official site
      • Sony Pictures Classics (United States)
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Untitled Steve Buscemi Project
    • Filming locations
      • Amsterdam, Noord-Holland, Netherlands
    • Production companies
      • Cinemavault
      • Column Productions
      • Ironworks Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $416,951
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $41,016
      • Jul 15, 2007
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,469,644
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 24m(84 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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