Far from Men: Q&A with actor Viggo Mortensen

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  • Опубликовано: 27 апр 2016
  • 00:14 Introduction by Shanny Peer
    02:20 Introduction by Viggo Mortensen
    05:20 Q&A with Viggo Mortensen and Madeleine Dobie
    March 28, 2016 a Q&A with lead actor Viggo Mortensen, in conversation with Madeleine Dobie after the screening of Far from Men directed by David Oelhoffen.
    Featuring a career-best performance from the multi-talented Viggo Mortensen and a superb original soundtrack by Nick Cave and Warren Ellis, Far from Men is a gripping tale of morality and friendship set during the Algerian War, against an imposing mountainous landscape.
    The year is 1954, the war is beginning and village schoolteacher Daru (Mortensen), an ex-French Army soldier, is caught in the crossfire. Born in Algeria but Spanish by lineage, he’s a man out of time and place, perceived as alien by both locals and colonisers alike. So when he reluctantly agrees to escort a dissident (rising star Reda Kateb, of A Prophet & Zero Dark Thirty) to a regional police station to face trial for murder, a series of incidents and revelations force the question of where Daru’s loyalties truly lie.
    Based on a story by Albert Camus, writer/director David Oelhoffen’s masterful, breathtakingly-shot drama bears all the hallmarks of a classic frontier drama, yet carries strong contemporary resonances. It was widely acclaimed at the Venice Film Festival where it premiered in Official Competition.
    Viggo Mortensen has consistently earned acclaim for his work in a wide range of films. Some of these include Jauja, Loin des hommes, The Two Faces of January, A Dangerous Method, The Road, Eastern Promises, Appaloosa, A History of Violence, and The Lord of the Rings trilogy.
    An event presented by Columbia Maison Française and The Albert Camus Estate as a part of Camus: A Stranger in the City
    If you want to see Viggo Mortensen reading Albert Camus's "The Human Crisis" a video is available here: • Albert Camus's “The Hu...
    Columbia Maison Française website: maisonfrancaise.org/
    Follow us on FB: / columbia.maisonfrancaise
    Twitter and Instagram: Columbia_MF

Комментарии • 17

  • @escapetheratracenow9883
    @escapetheratracenow9883 2 года назад +11

    What an inspirational man Viggo is. Not afraid to speak his mind, highly intelligent, thoughtful and compassionate.

    • @mathonamoore123
      @mathonamoore123 2 года назад +1

      Yes and as a bonus, he's incredibly good looking and tall. While looks aren't everything, they don't go against you.

    • @escapetheratracenow9883
      @escapetheratracenow9883 2 года назад

      @@mathonamoore123 my better half would agree you there🤔

  • @fashionpony9626
    @fashionpony9626 8 лет назад +26

    one of my absolute favourite actors of all time...amazing man

  • @gloriamitchell3518
    @gloriamitchell3518 2 года назад +4

    An amazing human and artist.

  • @carlsogari3249
    @carlsogari3249 4 года назад +3

    fav actor and person in the film area for me. Multilingual, argentine speaker, well red, and even an oscar winner. But his best movies are experimental like "Jauja".watch it on youtube

    • @mathonamoore123
      @mathonamoore123 2 года назад

      Read * 📕and 'Oscar' 🏆 has a capital 'O'. God bless from Ireland 🇮🇪❤️ this Easter Monday 18th of April 2022 🐰🐣💐🌹🥚🌻

  • @TommyChardonneret
    @TommyChardonneret 8 лет назад +2

    In light of the stunning scholarship and thoughtfulness of both the accomplished artist in many media, as well as an impressive polyglot, Viggo Mortensen, and the justifiably esteemed Columbia University professor of francophone/postcolonial literatures and cinemas, Madeleine Dobie, all I might add to the discussion is that another Columbia University affiliated Dobie, the character in the 1959 to 1963 American TV sitcom "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis" often pondered deep thoughts at the foot of Columbia's famous Rodin sculpture "The Thinker" (bien sûr, "Le Penseur" en francais). That's all I have to add, sadly enough.

  • @Sheercashmere
    @Sheercashmere 3 года назад +1

    He will always be Aragon to me

  • @carlsogari3249
    @carlsogari3249 4 года назад

    ...and always changing hair colour, genius

  • @Blickafram
    @Blickafram 2 года назад

    How can we Do?

  • @kuarzorossopatriciatorrest271
    @kuarzorossopatriciatorrest271 6 лет назад +2

    Don't you take your hat of when inside of a building? and more over when you attended a interesting show as a signal of respect for the people that is working... Just a though. Not hating.

    • @apexxxx10
      @apexxxx10 5 лет назад +2

      Kuarzorosso Patricia Torres Torres *Les Américains, It’s their UNIFORM: the BASEBALL CAP and SNEAKERS (TRAINERS). How to spot an American especially outside USA look at his HEAD and FEET. Who are you? I’am Bangkok-Johnnie CarSanook Editor, living in THAILAND. My Algerian connexion. 1968 In my late teens I hitch-hiked with a large Swedish flag on back-pack from Scandinavia, Stockholm, Sweden all the way the North Africa, Algeria. Ferry across from Marseille to Skikda-Oran-Oudja-Marrakech. And back to Sweden through Spain, France, Germany and Denmark. Now, the tragic, bloody, long Algerian independence war. I had no idea. But they still spoke French. Later I did learn French. Today I am a Francophile and Francophone. TV5 tous les matins, absolument! BTW I am also a filmmaker or RUclipsr. Here is my latest contribution a test drive of a MG3 ex British, now Chinese assembled in Thailand.

    • @johan4461
      @johan4461 5 лет назад +1

      Who cares. Let the man wear his hat.

    • @mathonamoore123
      @mathonamoore123 2 года назад

      Yes, just bad manners!

  • @mikealwhailchzm6842
    @mikealwhailchzm6842 2 года назад

    Rick smells