Under the Skin came out 9 years after Birth, so he definitely has no problem taking his time. He's in pre production on a film now, so supposing it comes out 2 years from now he'll continue the 9 year streak, but hopefully that average can be brought down cause Glazer probably has a lot to offer that we're not even aware of.
I’m a horror fan; I’ve seen nearly every horror film worth seeing and many more besides. And the scene where Johannsen’s character dispassionately ignores the baby crying alone on the beach in the middle of the night was the most horrifying thing I’ve seen in decades. Few directors would have the balls to put that in their final cut.
I don't know what you mean by that was ballsy, with the baby scene. I agree, however, that it was a fantastic example of pure apathy. If you'd like to see another good baby scene, try the movie Demon Seed, a scifi-horror amalgam. I think he Exorcist was fairly ballsy for it's time, as far as shocking goes.
You're right about 'ballsy'. Directors would worry about people questioning 'the mistreatment' of the child. I'm sure the kid was well loved and cared for, and is one of THE moments in the film.
Still remember the collective gasp in the theater when that first human gets...compacted. Film ain't dead. Lost count of the times I've returned to this interview. A master, discoursing unpretentiously about his craft.
I live in Glasgow. When I started watching the film I was immediately struck by how REAL the city looked. Listening to this interview, I can say the director achieved exactly was he was aiming for. Fascinating film overall.
This film really hit me. I return to it again and again. It is frightening, it is fascinating, and there are many moments that leave you with this sinking feeling in your stomach.
This movie was so incredibly refreshing, I don't remember being blown away by anything on film in the last couple of years. Yes, the pacing didn't seem quite right near the ending of the film. Yes, the narrative felt disjoined at times, in my case I did miss the purpose of some scenes, and was lost at times (in retrospect the story was completely coherent, and constructed wonderfully). Regardless, the film captured me, both from a visual standpoint, as well as intellectually. It kept me asking, reiterating what I had seen for days after watching it. Judging from this interview, Glazer is a director who does not set out to tell a story in an appealing, likeable sort of way. He actually thinks about what it is that a film must do conceptually, how to get the viewer to watch humanity from the films perspective, rather then their own. To me, that is the sign of a master at work. I am more than excited to see what Glazer comes up with next.
Just a tiny bit late to add into this conversation(!) But if you haven't yet watched Annihilation by Alex Garland, I would really recommend it! Not quite as subtle as Under the Skin, but it's a great film nevertheless that creates a similarly uneasy feeling
"Under the Skin" is a remarkable film. Jonathan Glazer's interview is a rare glimpse into the mind of a director as he struggles to realize his vision. His sensibility is dead on and his observations on collaboration reveal secrets of the craft. You will learn more about film making here than in freshman year at film school. My favorite part was when he said he didn't want to see anything alien in the film. To suggest is to create. To describe is to destroy. Film making is all about sensibility.
Watched it this evening and I'm still reeling from the impact. It's rare to experience this awesome feeling from a movie. I'd be interested in reading the book now.
This film really creep-ed me out. It also reminded me of Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey and The Shining, mostly due to the music but also because of the style of cinematography. It was as disturbing as it was visually stunning. The message of the film is something I believe we lack more and more as a species as time goes on and is a bit refreshing. Not entirely original however at the same time it is unique.
This film is in my humble opinion one of the best films of the past twenty years. It's a work of true brillance and Scarlett Johansson's cental performance is otherworldly and simply chilling.
Words you want to quote: That curve is the right angle. So astonishing to learn that a film which owns a large part of its fame to the music in it, in a first draft, was conceived to go a long time without any music at all. Levi, of course, in their first scoring for film (now with more great scores, though very recognisable in style) came out as a heaven sent.
Glazer is one of the best directors we have, despite having a low output. I love what he says about how he wanted this film to keep moving without giving the viewer time to ponder or react to things happening on screen. That's a very rare thing in film now, where directors don't baby their audience. The vast majority of directors want to spoon feed every little thought into our minds as if we were stupid, where Glazer prefers to let the viewer do all the mental legwork.
What a fascinating monologue on the process of putting together a great film. It's nice to hear Glazer mention Kubrick when speaking about sound design.
This is a film for film fans.Then general public isn't sharp enough to appreciate the artistry.It wasn't very entertaining to me at times but I recognize this is the work of a true Artist
Such a thought provoking and completely absorbing film. And I’m sure a film student at any top film school could learn more about the thought process behind amazing filmmaking in this mere 22 minute breakdown by Glazer than they could in a half a dozen film classes combined.
I can see how Jonathan Glazer made the film on the fly with a loose structure and left himself open during the process. I don’t think a film like this could have been made if everything was cast in stone from the get go. Fortunately, Glazer’s instincts paid off and he created a brilliant film. It certainly wasn't what I expected, which was icing on the cake.
Under The Skin is one of the first films I've deeply enjoyed in years. This interview complements the film so well as a brief manual on how to make a film that is pared down to its best bits.
Just saw this movie, and what a masterpiece of film in almost every aspect: story, characters, effects, composition, cinematography, music, pacing, and the overall feel. It's hard to believe that this barely made an impact in the industry considering the scope of the project. This film addresses a different kind of horror, not a jump-scare horror, but an accumulative slow build horror that makes it feel real. The film having some heavy subject matter, but it is an excellent movie.
The unsettling Beach family notwithstanding- the film is great and clever looking through an Alien changing in another world. Bravo Mr Glazer and all. It will take me a while before I view it again however...
This is a great interview. It seems like Jonathan Glazer is a big picture thinker and an external processor. This is refreshing to see that. I am the same way. As an artist and animator I am finding it tricky to nail down what Im trying to portray when I approach a project. This interview is helpful in seeing how someone with a similar way of thinking goes about that process.
I only watched the film last night on streaming (1/5/19) and am absolutely blown away. I've bought the score on iTunes, I'm probably gonna buy the Blu-Ray. I've ordered the book at the library. I'm fascinated by this story and its implications and no doubt endless interpretations. But my one - literal one - criticism of the film was its pacing, so it's very interesting to hear Glazer speak about "make the point and move on". I was never bored, I must say, and it's also refreshing to hear he always intended to visit the Black Space thrice, because I did catch myself thinking "I hope this film isn't just her luring men there over and over", and it's not. The first is establishing what she's doing. The second is seeing it from the victim's perspective and what the process is. The third is the refusal. Unlike 2001, which I continued to think about while watching the film, the pacing of Under the Skin didn't do the film or this viewer any favours. In 2001, the pacing allows you to absorb everything and digest; Kubrick made sure you and the film were on the same page, whereas, as much as it hurts me to say, the pacing in UTS felt luxuriant. There were many shots I felt, as a filmmaker, could have been trimmed. Does this stop me loving this movie? Fuck no. It's definitely in my top 10 movies of all time, if not top five. I'm moved, touched, affected and bowled over by this masterpiece, and my differing perspective of pacing to Glazer's is an important part of the discussion we have with the filmmakers through their films. A film isn't a statement, it's an icebreaker for a conversation that lasts a lifetime.
glazer's process is so meticulous and this made under the skin the brilliant masterpiece of mind-warping narrative and both seductive and disturbing imagery that it is
I think 'Under the Skin' and 'Only Lovers Left Alive' are probably the two best films of this past year. Thankfully there are still artists left alive in this medium of excessive explosions, buddy comedies and dance offs.
This film and Ex Machina are just brilliant examples of what British cinema can achieve with the correct backing! I'm bored of 'Paddington'-esque Britain and loved how artistic and experimental these films are. Please give us more!
The way seemingly every guy snuck or outright turned to check out Johansson was frightening in the way a dreamer's subconscious would turn on the characters in Inception was frightening. The fact that these were real people acting naturally made it doubly so. They were these blank stares too, which made them look menacing. The actual encounters she had, that I remember, were nicer, which made it even scarier, because you saw the mask politeness puts on sexual desire. Everyone characterizes sexual desire as hot and passionate, but in reality it's initially cold and calculating. Not many movies reveal as much as this one.
As a Woman in the world, YES, it is very much predator and prey-feeling, sometimes, not romantic at all, in reality - one to one. Your comment makes me Think. 👍
I can't speak for all women, but for me, you're always on some level of alert for these glances and approaches from men, wherever you are. It's called hypervigilance, and we're doing it constantly. It's second nature because, unfortunately, it has to be.
Brilliantly done! This movie stuck with me long after seeing it. The strange mood and feelings it gives off is sign of an excellent flick....and movies like that are hard to come by now-a-days. It opens up creativity.....I cannot praise it enough.
A rare example or art horror film (well not particularly comes under horror genre). This film's not a typical alien-human movie we've all seen in nonsensical action flicks. A film depicts what real beauty really means (not some skinny show but rather the inner beauty)
The one thing I noticed in the movie is that the clear distinction between paid actors and people unaware they are being filmed, and then realizing the very moment they started acting because they were disclosed they were being filmed, signed a form, paid and then started acting in the next scene, like that first guy walking in the liquid. It's the same feeling when there's very realistic CGI human, like in star wars, but at the same time you can still tell it's not a real human. Regardless how good the actor and the director is, you can never get a real life like feel unless you film people with hidden cameras, why is that, I don't know but it's fascinating.
I thought this was a fantastic film. It is very unusual that a sci-fi/horror film will draw me into the cinema but the trailer for this was too powerful to ignore and I was not disappointed. Brilliant use of subtlety that films of this genre seem to so rarely possess.
I like the film. I like your comment. I like your screen name. I like your avatar. Not much point to my comment, but it seemed like too many things I liked not to comment. :)
I ended up here after watching this movie to find out what I had watched as the reviews were so polarised. I can't say I liked the movie much but I have to give the director the nod for having the balls to stick to his vision.
This film falls in the same category as tarkovky's stalker. Almost everything is humanly and takes place in earth but at the very same time everything looks alien. Such a hard thing to achieve.
Same here. And nobody understands me at that point. Some friends say hey you are depressed, check a terapist)) My brothers and sisters in law said something like "you have too much time in your hands")) Generally we share our tastes in music &films, but this shit ir really to cool for school. I feel much better now having read the comments and of course knowing Glazer's perspective &ideas coming directly from him. Cheers.
The music really draws you in. I found the selection of this composer very impressive and interesting for the movie. It is the thing that really makes the movie. Spooky thing of it is the concept could be real considering we have reptoids posing as humans deceiving the real human for capture and food. I also think the interview of this man, Jonathan Glazer, is interesting to watch. Even though he is grabbing at words and concepts. His hair is amazing and good-looking face.
Under The Skin has a cult movie qualities. Watched it in Electric Cinema Nottinghill on leather sofas and didn't want it to end. magnificent, this is a very serious film, although it frightened me for days but the fear was more like fearing the unknown and as the shock wore off, other emotions kick in. it truly pictures how we can be seen by another creature and how what they do or have can seem to us. it was like a reality show, every moment was unexpected and hard to guess like wondering in a new place where everything is unfamiliar but love to explore it (even if its urban scotland:-). and I think the floating men in the "black unknown "are used for making outer human coat for the bikers!
Movies exist not only for the individual, but because the contemporary mind is capable of forming structure between inconsistencies, even when visual elements are greatly set in stone. The director even said that he wrote it to the specifics of the book before he delineated and followed emotion. One comment on this upload said watch the movie before you read. That makes sense to do for people who have not read the book, because it would give them an understanding of their personal canvas for this story.
Under the Skin is a surreal dream. A film made with £8m/$13m. Made on a shoestring. It's not about the budget, it's about the creativity. What a movie.
Poor guy, his brilliant mind is so bursting with creativity that he can barely get a sentence out before he's on to the next thought, or next 2 thoughts, as they begin to pile up on each other. He spoke a lot of the construction of the film, which makes sense as the director, but I was surprised he didn't speak about any kind of interpretation. As a formerly young and beautiful woman who experienced men reacting to me like they did to Scarlett in the film, to me this showed really well how men can become like sexual sociopaths in the presence of someone to whom they are intensely attracted. They don't care even if she barely speaks, acted strange, where she's from or want to know anything about her. Just that she's pretty and there might be a potential for a very superficial physical encounter. They're willing to go off with someone they don't know, get in a sketchy van and go to some dark place, put themselves in danger, just for that fix. It's literally a skin deep interest. There were kind men in the movie, or even some of the men who ended up being skeevy behaved kindly, until sexual desire took over and they became animalistic. So during the assault scene, the reveal of something sinister under the skin felt like a revenge movie, like an alternative consequence of only relating to someone base don their outer appearance. It also sort of showed how humans can be as predators with animals, like showing no empathy or concern for a suffering child, the way a human would go and get their meat and not worry about the animal's abandoned babies or their pain, just because they think they need to eat them. It wasn't about aliens but about men and women, and how inhuman people can become when they are disconnected form their souls, emotions and a loving desire rather than an unloving one.
He says that he wanted to film "nobody" for the authenticity of the film, but it was almost a stellar choice to have filmed Scarlett Johansson, because it's a far cry from her usual roles.. her barely acting wherein many other films she's acted as a character with immense dynamicism on terms of reactions to situations, emotional turmoil, so forth-the gap of separation between actress and role is obvious, and the unobtrusively barren scope of acting is huge. Seeing the face of a person you know who smiles, cries, becomes angered, experiences the human existence as we do-shift to a total apathetic entity observing mundanity without any internal stimuli is scary, to me. The lack of stir of the human spirit made the film tense, especially filming in the real world. Good show, Jonathan Glazer. Please make more films.
just seen this film....now...as a huge film fan im gonna be totally honest here ok... this film was without a doubt the most disturbing film ive ever seen.... I thought the film itself was excellent but it was stuck in my head for ages after.... one of the most realistic alien movies ive seen....ive never seen anything like it...scarlett Johansson is brilliant in it...even though she doesn't talk for most of the film....the harvest scenes were really fucked up...was filmed amazingly...made me feel really unesasy but u know the film is doing a good job if it has you that way..so I loved this film and will definatly watch it again at some stage.
Just finished the book. It was very good. Having said that, this is one of the rare cases where the film version is far superior. They take very different approaches, but what the film does, for me, far surpasses what the book achieved.
Just saw it tonight in Notting Hill. I liked quite a lot of it, thought it was really good up to about 80 minutes when suddenly I felt like it wasn't moving forward quick enough, too many repeats of events. Also, the final reveal was perhaps a bit too on the nose. The rest of the movie is so abstract, it was weird to go slightly Hollywood and have it right there.
DSDuddles well they wanted to show how not only was her attempt to assimilate into human life a failure, but how much she fell in love with and how beautiful she thought her human skin was, and how sad she was to have to remove it. She had rejected her old life, was now fully rejected from the possibility of playing human, and she knew death was awaiting her. Not that she expected to be set on fire. But since my first glimpses of this film, it has terrified me, haunted me, and yet pulled me towards it at the same time. I've never been so repelled and drawn in at the same time by a film, that I can remember.
She shouldn’t have died at the end in my humble opinion. She was learning empathy and compassion. When she dies immediately after learning she doesn’t live long enough to live from the stance of empathy and compassion. The movie remains one of my favorites nonetheless. Jonathan...if you took out three hours to spend with me I would share something that could possibly change your life forever and you would make a part Il of Skin Deep. I make this promise to you. Perhaps not a part two. Perhaps you will start doing documentaries. Take out time to think about what I’m trying to express without saying it directly. Your movie is so close to the...
She died in the book also when her identify is close to being revealed. And she was ready for that eventuality. She just hit a button and blew up the car.
@@2002MX5 I would have written it differently because that kind was f ending negates the idea of a person accepting what they’ve done and carrying on to be a better person or being. I do appreciate the film and the book irrespective of the ending of either.
I watched this in the middle of the night, kept dozing off, still don’t really know what the heck was going on, just remember how creepy she was. Going to have to watch it again.
I watched this movie today at the end of January 2022 for a second time. I had forgotten a lot of it. The alien's observational behavior and lack of empathy made me think of how the ruling power now seems to be looking at the world's population during this so-called "health crisis." In the film you see how the alien looks at the ordinary people in the city and this made me think about how maybe the elite look at us ordinary people nowadays. Without empathy and as makeable meat bags, as cattle, which only cost money. A very derogatory view of fellow human beings. With an almost equal degree of absence of empathy, the entire ideology of eugenics has continued to exist. People who openly say without hesitation that the world's population should be drastically reduced and that this can now be done with the help of the so-called "vaccines" [ the ingredients of which were immediately declared secret ]. A relatively small proportion of these people belong to the oligarchy, who must be so extremely inhumane as to get their plans realized on a global scale. They have turned the financial system into an immensely large casino and it has gotten completely out of hand. In order to be able to protect themselves in particular, they have to work in an almost alien way. And they are in a hurry [ which leads to more and more mistakes ]. That's why this film gave me an extra dimension of dehumanity if you look at it during this financial crisis, in which dehumanization plays a very big role in every conceivable area. All the plans of the current elite must be carried out at all costs, otherwise they themselves are the bobbin. And I say: They will be the losers, because they have overlooked the elementary characteristics of man and the insane power that lies within it. Plus the fact that you can never use the entire planet as a big test station, despite all the technology. Now we can already see that things are going wrong on more and more fronts. So watching this marvelous film during the current crisis makes it even weirder.
Saw this movie couple of times, loved it, can't praise the cast enough, it's as perfect as you can get, casting Ms Scarlett Johansson to play alien (technically she plays alien automaton) is like casting actual alien to play alien, cuz... She looks like a fucking alien. It's brilliant.
Man when they show the dudes under the black goopy goop and the one dude gets edified by the alien thing those images burn into your mind and they know it haha. I like when film reads to you- nothing needs to be said it all speaks in your head.
Just curious, any spoilers in this interview? I haven't seen it yet, but I'm dying to. I want to watch this but don't want to get spoiled. Thank you in advance.
YES! definitely ~ though nothing can really spoil it... I would definitely recommend seeing the film first before you do anything else and reading Michel Faber's book afterwards... saving reviews and podcasts for later. I'm reading all the rest of Faber's books and stories now ~ and will watch Glazers films again. Absolutely brilliant. Can't get enough :)
Under the Skin will eventually be viewed as one of the greatest films of the century. Glazer's description of his process as the director tells you why. I think any memorable work of art moves to a point of simplicity, as he states, but fuck...what it takes to get there.
Just seen this movie and really liked it, makes me want to read the book now. After thinking about the movie for a bit I don't think there is any deep meaning behind it. I took it as a story of a alien killing people for some unknown reason. The alien shows no emotion through most of the film. I don't think this is because she is cold or evil. I don't think she has any concept of what emotions are. That isn't to say she doesn't feel. She is clearly afraid, surprised, and happy at times but at the times it isn't a act to trap a guy the emotion seems new to her. We are left with thinking this is her first time as a human. Towards the end the alien shows compassion by letting one of her victims go. We aren't told why she does this but I think she saw something of herself in the guy. Also the people that stopped to help her was weighing on her mind. And the last bit was the baby. She ignored the crying baby but we see her thinking back on him or connecting the crying baby in the car with the one she left on the beach. I don't think she understood that babies were taken care of by parents until she seen the baby in the car. All this moved her to release the guy and give up on her task of killing guys. The rest of the movie is just her life on the run that ends badly but maybe not tragically. She looks down as the face of the women she "killed" and at that moment I'm thinking about the guys she killed and how afraid they were. I'm not sure if I'm suppose to feel sorry for her but I do in a way. At this point she is no longer a threat and just a scared creature trying to survive. Also her alien form was beautiful. Anyway the music, the hard to understand accents, and acting made this a joy to watch.
I liked this a lot actually,but needs some more explaining about some things. She works for a "master" to deliver him/her people to consume. Is the master in liquid form or..?
peterraes I don't think the liquid is a monster but an abstract idea of what the guys are going through. However, you could be right but I don't think it matters to the movie. If it is a monster how does that change the movie? If she is a vampire how does that change the movie? If she is doing this because she is some kind of alien scientist how does it change anything? In the end I don't think the why she is doing this or for who is important. What is important is she had a change of heart. And the things that happen to her because of that change is important. Back to the black tar. Another reason I don't believe it is alive or in command is that she released one of guys. The tar didn't let him go, she did. Whatever it is it doesn't seem to be in command.
Dear Jonathan Glazer...please make another film, it's unfair just having three wonderful films and a few ads from such a great mind.
You do realize he made a popular music video as well?
Yes.
+Marlene Melissa Davila Vega Virtual Insanity still remains as one of the best MV ever
He is working on a film now about Auschwitz
Under the Skin came out 9 years after Birth, so he definitely has no problem taking his time. He's in pre production on a film now, so supposing it comes out 2 years from now he'll continue the 9 year streak, but hopefully that average can be brought down cause Glazer probably has a lot to offer that we're not even aware of.
I’m a horror fan; I’ve seen nearly every horror film worth seeing and many more besides. And the scene where Johannsen’s character dispassionately ignores the baby crying alone on the beach in the middle of the night was the most horrifying thing I’ve seen in decades.
Few directors would have the balls to put that in their final cut.
I don't know what you mean by that was ballsy, with the baby scene. I agree, however, that it was a fantastic example of pure apathy. If you'd like to see another good baby scene, try the movie Demon Seed, a scifi-horror amalgam. I think he Exorcist was fairly ballsy for it's time, as far as shocking goes.
You're right about 'ballsy'. Directors would worry about people questioning 'the mistreatment' of the child. I'm sure the kid was well loved and cared for, and is one of THE moments in the film.
That and the baby in the VVitch.
Oh and the baby in The Road
@@davetinoco Exactly!
Still remember the collective gasp in the theater when that first human gets...compacted. Film ain't dead.
Lost count of the times I've returned to this interview. A master, discoursing unpretentiously about his craft.
I live in Glasgow. When I started watching the film I was immediately struck by how REAL the city looked. Listening to this interview, I can say the director achieved exactly was he was aiming for. Fascinating film overall.
This guy is absolutely off his rocker, mad. I wish we had more madmen like this in film.
Dear Jonathan Glazer, please make more movies.
Sincerely, humanity.
This film really hit me. I return to it again and again. It is frightening, it is fascinating, and there are many moments that leave you with this sinking feeling in your stomach.
This movie was so incredibly refreshing, I don't remember being blown away by anything on film in the last couple of years. Yes, the pacing didn't seem quite right near the ending of the film. Yes, the narrative felt disjoined at times, in my case I did miss the purpose of some scenes, and was lost at times (in retrospect the story was completely coherent, and constructed wonderfully). Regardless, the film captured me, both from a visual standpoint, as well as intellectually. It kept me asking, reiterating what I had seen for days after watching it. Judging from this interview, Glazer is a director who does not set out to tell a story in an appealing, likeable sort of way. He actually thinks about what it is that a film must do conceptually, how to get the viewer to watch humanity from the films perspective, rather then their own. To me, that is the sign of a master at work. I am more than excited to see what Glazer comes up with next.
I agree, the ending was disappointing. I felt there was no closure.
@@davetinoco i absoletly loved the ending. Closure wouldnt fit the rest of this movie
@@HerEvilTwin I agree
agreed, but the pacing and even editing empasized greatly on the strange/alieness
Total genius, the whole team. I can't remember the last time a film caused such an effect in my brain.
Just a tiny bit late to add into this conversation(!) But if you haven't yet watched Annihilation by Alex Garland, I would really recommend it! Not quite as subtle as Under the Skin, but it's a great film nevertheless that creates a similarly uneasy feeling
I fucking loved this movie. PUT ME IN A TRANCE. Powerful film making!
It's not the movie it's the drugs.
"Under the Skin" is a remarkable film. Jonathan Glazer's interview is a rare glimpse into the mind of a director as he struggles to realize his vision. His sensibility is dead on and his observations on collaboration reveal secrets of the craft. You will learn more about film making here than in freshman year at film school. My favorite part was when he said he didn't want to see anything alien in the film. To suggest is to create. To describe is to destroy. Film making is all about sensibility.
You just destroyed it
@@HerEvilTwin underrated reply lol
Watched it this evening and I'm still reeling from the impact. It's rare to experience this awesome feeling from a movie. I'd be interested in reading the book now.
Watching paint dry is more entertaining and deep than the horse manure that this movie is
@@jinkazama9015 what's the point of being rude? Just don't like the film, and move on
@@jinkazama9015 - It's ok, not everyone's smart enough to get a brilliant film like this.
This film really creep-ed me out. It also reminded me of Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey and The Shining, mostly due to the music but also because of the style of cinematography. It was as disturbing as it was visually stunning. The message of the film is something I believe we lack more and more as a species as time goes on and is a bit refreshing. Not entirely original however at the same time it is unique.
This film is in my humble opinion one of the best films of the past twenty years. It's a work of true brillance and Scarlett Johansson's cental performance is otherworldly and simply chilling.
Words you want to quote: That curve is the right angle.
So astonishing to learn that a film which owns a large part of its fame to the music in it, in a first draft, was conceived to go a long time without any music at all. Levi, of course, in their first scoring for film (now with more great scores, though very recognisable in style) came out as a heaven sent.
Glazer is one of the best directors we have, despite having a low output. I love what he says about how he wanted this film to keep moving without giving the viewer time to ponder or react to things happening on screen. That's a very rare thing in film now, where directors don't baby their audience. The vast majority of directors want to spoon feed every little thought into our minds as if we were stupid, where Glazer prefers to let the viewer do all the mental legwork.
What a fascinating monologue on the process of putting together a great film. It's nice to hear Glazer mention Kubrick when speaking about sound design.
I couldn't stop thinking of her for days. The being beneath
This is a film for film fans.Then general public isn't sharp enough to appreciate the artistry.It wasn't very entertaining to me at times but I recognize this is the work of a true Artist
This guy is really articulate and thoughtful.
Such a thought provoking and completely absorbing film. And I’m sure a film student at any top film school could learn more about the thought process behind amazing filmmaking in this mere 22 minute breakdown by Glazer than they could in a half a dozen film classes combined.
I can see how Jonathan Glazer made the film on the fly with a loose structure and left himself open during the process. I don’t think a film like this could have been made if everything was cast in stone from the get go. Fortunately, Glazer’s instincts paid off and he created a brilliant film. It certainly wasn't what I expected, which was icing on the cake.
He only made three movies?! I just watched all three of them AND I WANT MORE!!! MORE MOVIES BY Jonathan Glazer!!!
Well you're in luck!
Under The Skin is one of the first films I've deeply enjoyed in years. This interview complements the film so well as a brief manual on how to make a film that is pared down to its best bits.
It's a privilege to hear an artistic genius discussing the creative process behind a work. Kudos.
I loved the movie and this interview made me appreciate it a 100 times more!
Just saw this movie, and what a masterpiece of film in almost every aspect: story, characters, effects, composition, cinematography, music, pacing, and the overall feel. It's hard to believe that this barely made an impact in the industry considering the scope of the project. This film addresses a different kind of horror, not a jump-scare horror, but an accumulative slow build horror that makes it feel real. The film having some heavy subject matter, but it is an excellent movie.
The unsettling Beach family notwithstanding- the film is great and clever looking through an Alien changing in another world. Bravo Mr Glazer and all. It will take me a while before I view it again however...
He’s a visionary and one of the best directors working today
This really is a special, special film...bound to be talked about for decades to come for its intensity, horror and absurdity
PLEASE make another movie, Jonathan. Don't stop.
This is a great interview. It seems like Jonathan Glazer is a big picture thinker and an external processor. This is refreshing to see that. I am the same way. As an artist and animator I am finding it tricky to nail down what Im trying to portray when I approach a project. This interview is helpful in seeing how someone with a similar way of thinking goes about that process.
I only watched the film last night on streaming (1/5/19) and am absolutely blown away. I've bought the score on iTunes, I'm probably gonna buy the Blu-Ray. I've ordered the book at the library. I'm fascinated by this story and its implications and no doubt endless interpretations.
But my one - literal one - criticism of the film was its pacing, so it's very interesting to hear Glazer speak about "make the point and move on". I was never bored, I must say, and it's also refreshing to hear he always intended to visit the Black Space thrice, because I did catch myself thinking "I hope this film isn't just her luring men there over and over", and it's not. The first is establishing what she's doing. The second is seeing it from the victim's perspective and what the process is. The third is the refusal.
Unlike 2001, which I continued to think about while watching the film, the pacing of Under the Skin didn't do the film or this viewer any favours. In 2001, the pacing allows you to absorb everything and digest; Kubrick made sure you and the film were on the same page, whereas, as much as it hurts me to say, the pacing in UTS felt luxuriant. There were many shots I felt, as a filmmaker, could have been trimmed.
Does this stop me loving this movie? Fuck no. It's definitely in my top 10 movies of all time, if not top five. I'm moved, touched, affected and bowled over by this masterpiece, and my differing perspective of pacing to Glazer's is an important part of the discussion we have with the filmmakers through their films. A film isn't a statement, it's an icebreaker for a conversation that lasts a lifetime.
I loved this movie, I watched 2x's in a row to get ALL the little nuances. Excellent work.
Me too!
glazer's process is so meticulous and this made under the skin the brilliant masterpiece of mind-warping narrative and both seductive and disturbing imagery that it is
understated work that reminded me of both Tarkovskii and Kubrick. but mostly jonathan glazer and johannsen. the backyard scene in Solaris.
I think 'Under the Skin' and 'Only Lovers Left Alive' are probably the two best films of this past year. Thankfully there are still artists left alive in this medium of excessive explosions, buddy comedies and dance offs.
This film and Ex Machina are just brilliant examples of what British cinema can achieve with the correct backing! I'm bored of 'Paddington'-esque Britain and loved how artistic and experimental these films are. Please give us more!
The way seemingly every guy snuck or outright turned to check out Johansson was frightening in the way a dreamer's subconscious would turn on the characters in Inception was frightening.
The fact that these were real people acting naturally made it doubly so.
They were these blank stares too, which made them look menacing.
The actual encounters she had, that I remember, were nicer, which made it even scarier, because you saw the mask politeness puts on sexual desire.
Everyone characterizes sexual desire as hot and passionate, but in reality it's initially cold and calculating.
Not many movies reveal as much as this one.
As a Woman in the world, YES, it is very much predator and prey-feeling, sometimes, not romantic at all, in reality - one to one.
Your comment makes me Think. 👍
I can't speak for all women, but for me, you're always on some level of alert for these glances and approaches from men, wherever you are. It's called hypervigilance, and we're doing it constantly. It's second nature because, unfortunately, it has to be.
This guy has an amazing balance of intelligence and creativity
Brilliantly done! This movie stuck with me long after seeing it. The strange mood and feelings it gives off is sign of an excellent flick....and movies like that are hard to come by now-a-days. It opens up creativity.....I cannot praise it enough.
A rare example or art horror film (well not particularly comes under horror genre).
This film's not a typical alien-human movie we've all seen in nonsensical action flicks.
A film depicts what real beauty really means (not some skinny show but rather the inner beauty)
The one thing I noticed in the movie is that the clear distinction between paid actors and people unaware they are being filmed, and then realizing the very moment they started acting because they were disclosed they were being filmed, signed a form, paid and then started acting in the next scene, like that first guy walking in the liquid.
It's the same feeling when there's very realistic CGI human, like in star wars, but at the same time you can still tell it's not a real human.
Regardless how good the actor and the director is, you can never get a real life like feel unless you film people with hidden cameras, why is that, I don't know but it's fascinating.
I thought this was a fantastic film. It is very unusual that a sci-fi/horror film will draw me into the cinema but the trailer for this was too powerful to ignore and I was not disappointed. Brilliant use of subtlety that films of this genre seem to so rarely possess.
I certainly found it pretty horrific in parts!
Cool, thanks for straightening that out
+Blacklava The trailer is superb - almost as good as the film itself.
It is absolutely horror. Cosmic horror. Body horror.
I like the film. I like your comment. I like your screen name. I like your avatar. Not much point to my comment, but it seemed like too many things I liked not to comment. :)
One of the best films I've ever seen. I love it so
I ended up here after watching this movie to find out what I had watched as the reviews were so polarised. I can't say I liked the movie much but I have to give the director the nod for having the balls to stick to his vision.
Masterpiece. Truly. It'll put you in a trance. The soundtrack is one of the absolute best you'll hear in a film.
For me the film and the book were very different but both totally fabulous, loved them both.
One of my very favorite movies. Brilliant!
This is simply a Masterpiece
This film falls in the same category as tarkovky's stalker. Almost everything is humanly and takes place in earth but at the very same time everything looks alien. Such a hard thing to achieve.
I was like 21 when this came out and I had to sleep with the hall light on for the night haha. Such a CREEPY weird movie. LOVE it.
Simply Complex film… and Director … love it
This movie got under my skin.
Same here. And nobody understands me at that point. Some friends say hey you are depressed, check a terapist)) My brothers and sisters in law said something like "you have too much time in your hands")) Generally we share our tastes in music &films, but this shit ir really to cool for school. I feel much better now having read the comments and of course knowing Glazer's perspective &ideas coming directly from him. Cheers.
The music really draws you in. I found the selection of this composer very impressive and interesting for the movie. It is the thing that really makes the movie.
Spooky thing of it is the concept could be real considering we have reptoids posing as humans deceiving the real human for capture and food. I also think the interview of this man, Jonathan Glazer, is interesting to watch. Even though he is grabbing at words and concepts. His hair is amazing and good-looking face.
This is very different from the book, after reading it I was amazed at the amount of work that must have gone into this adaption.
Fantastic movie and amazing soundtrack
Under The Skin has a cult movie qualities. Watched it in Electric Cinema Nottinghill on leather sofas and didn't want it to end.
magnificent, this is a very serious film, although it frightened me for days but the fear was more like fearing the unknown and as the shock wore off, other emotions kick in. it truly pictures how we can be seen by another creature and how what they do or have can seem to us.
it was like a reality show, every moment was unexpected and hard to guess like wondering in a new place where everything is unfamiliar but love to explore it (even if its urban scotland:-).
and I think the floating men in the "black unknown "are used for making outer human coat for the bikers!
It's the most Kubrickian dream-logic/nightmarish films conceived this century. Astonishing!
Kubrickesque
this guy really knows what he is doing.
I put this in the genre I call quiet films. No over drama or stupid music or unnecessary scenes to keep your attention. Just a film. Very good film
one of my fave movies ever, like kubrick made alien
Best sci-fi horror movie since Alien.
then think about what actually was the horror..the alien being or our world.
Movies exist not only for the individual, but because the contemporary mind is capable of forming structure between inconsistencies, even when visual elements are greatly set in stone. The director even said that he wrote it to the specifics of the book before he delineated and followed emotion. One comment on this upload said watch the movie before you read. That makes sense to do for people who have not read the book, because it would give them an understanding of their personal canvas for this story.
Amazing film...Makes me wish a was a Film maker. Congrats to you Jonathan Glazer.
Under the Skin is a surreal dream. A film made with £8m/$13m. Made on a shoestring. It's not about the budget, it's about the creativity. What a movie.
One of the Great British films - up there with Lawrence of Arabia, The Third Man, Brief Encounter, Trainspotting, etc.
Great insight here!
Poor guy, his brilliant mind is so bursting with creativity that he can barely get a sentence out before he's on to the next thought, or next 2 thoughts, as they begin to pile up on each other. He spoke a lot of the construction of the film, which makes sense as the director, but I was surprised he didn't speak about any kind of interpretation.
As a formerly young and beautiful woman who experienced men reacting to me like they did to Scarlett in the film, to me this showed really well how men can become like sexual sociopaths in the presence of someone to whom they are intensely attracted. They don't care even if she barely speaks, acted strange, where she's from or want to know anything about her. Just that she's pretty and there might be a potential for a very superficial physical encounter. They're willing to go off with someone they don't know, get in a sketchy van and go to some dark place, put themselves in danger, just for that fix. It's literally a skin deep interest. There were kind men in the movie, or even some of the men who ended up being skeevy behaved kindly, until sexual desire took over and they became animalistic. So during the assault scene, the reveal of something sinister under the skin felt like a revenge movie, like an alternative consequence of only relating to someone base don their outer appearance.
It also sort of showed how humans can be as predators with animals, like showing no empathy or concern for a suffering child, the way a human would go and get their meat and not worry about the animal's abandoned babies or their pain, just because they think they need to eat them. It wasn't about aliens but about men and women, and how inhuman people can become when they are disconnected form their souls, emotions and a loving desire rather than an unloving one.
Rambling man.
Wonderful movie.
Jonathan said that he started with the idea that aliens exist. To start from there, is brave, in my opinion.
he's like a mad genius
He says that he wanted to film "nobody" for the authenticity of the film, but it was almost a stellar choice to have filmed Scarlett Johansson, because it's a far cry from her usual roles.. her barely acting wherein many other films she's acted as a character with immense dynamicism on terms of reactions to situations, emotional turmoil, so forth-the gap of separation between actress and role is obvious, and the unobtrusively barren scope of acting is huge. Seeing the face of a person you know who smiles, cries, becomes angered, experiences the human existence as we do-shift to a total apathetic entity observing mundanity without any internal stimuli is scary, to me. The lack of stir of the human spirit made the film tense, especially filming in the real world. Good show, Jonathan Glazer. Please make more films.
Film of the year...easily.
You liked!? Dude i was totally blown away..
Groove Q You're talking to yourself again
I like me! :-)
If you want your movies explained to you then you're not very bright.
Of the century
A Masterpiece!!!
just seen this film....now...as a huge film fan im gonna be totally honest here ok...
this film was without a doubt the most disturbing film ive ever seen....
I thought the film itself was excellent but it was stuck in my head for ages after....
one of the most realistic alien movies ive seen....ive never seen anything like it...scarlett Johansson is brilliant in it...even though she doesn't talk for most of the film....the harvest scenes were really fucked up...was filmed amazingly...made me feel really unesasy but u know the film is doing a good job if it has you that way..so I loved this film and will definatly watch it again at some stage.
"The fucking aliens are coming" love it
And he accomplished all that he set out
genius film :) I hope more of this kind of movies will be made...
I love his mind and his voice
Just finished the book. It was very good. Having said that, this is one of the rare cases where the film version is far superior. They take very different approaches, but what the film does, for me, far surpasses what the book achieved.
Just saw it tonight in Notting Hill. I liked quite a lot of it, thought it was really good up to about 80 minutes when suddenly I felt like it wasn't moving forward quick enough, too many repeats of events. Also, the final reveal was perhaps a bit too on the nose. The rest of the movie is so abstract, it was weird to go slightly Hollywood and have it right there.
DSDuddles well they wanted to show how not only was her attempt to assimilate into human life a failure, but how much she fell in love with and how beautiful she thought her human skin was, and how sad she was to have to remove it. She had rejected her old life, was now fully rejected from the possibility of playing human, and she knew death was awaiting her. Not that she expected to be set on fire. But since my first glimpses of this film, it has terrified me, haunted me, and yet pulled me towards it at the same time. I've never been so repelled and drawn in at the same time by a film, that I can remember.
2001 vibes....love it
This man is a genius.
Jonathan is like a shaman in filmmaking realm
She shouldn’t have died at the end in my humble opinion. She was learning empathy and compassion. When she dies immediately after learning she doesn’t live long enough to live from the stance of empathy and compassion. The movie remains one of my favorites nonetheless. Jonathan...if you took out three hours to spend with me I would share something that could possibly change your life forever and you would make a part Il of Skin Deep. I make this promise to you. Perhaps not a part two. Perhaps you will start doing documentaries. Take out time to think about what I’m trying to express without saying it directly. Your movie is so close to the...
She died in the book also when her identify is close to being revealed. And she was ready for that eventuality. She just hit a button and blew up the car.
@@2002MX5 I would have written it differently because that kind was f ending negates the idea of a person accepting what they’ve done and carrying on to be a better person or being. I do appreciate the film and the book irrespective of the ending of either.
I watched this in the middle of the night, kept dozing off, still don’t really know what the heck was going on, just remember how creepy she was. Going to have to watch it again.
I watched this movie today at the end of January 2022 for a second time. I had forgotten a lot of it.
The alien's observational behavior and lack of empathy made me think of how the ruling power now seems to be looking at the world's population during this so-called "health crisis."
In the film you see how the alien looks at the ordinary people in the city and this made me think about how maybe the elite look at us ordinary people nowadays. Without empathy and as makeable meat bags, as cattle, which only cost money.
A very derogatory view of fellow human beings.
With an almost equal degree of absence of empathy, the entire ideology of eugenics has continued to exist. People who openly say without hesitation that the world's population should be drastically reduced and that this can now be done with the help of the so-called "vaccines" [ the ingredients of which were immediately declared secret ].
A relatively small proportion of these people belong to the oligarchy, who must be so extremely inhumane as to get their plans realized on a global scale.
They have turned the financial system into an immensely large casino and it has gotten completely out of hand. In order to be able to protect themselves in particular, they have to work in an almost alien way. And they are in a hurry [ which leads to more and more mistakes ].
That's why this film gave me an extra dimension of dehumanity if you look at it during this financial crisis, in which dehumanization plays a very big role in every conceivable area.
All the plans of the current elite must be carried out at all costs, otherwise they themselves are the bobbin.
And I say: They will be the losers, because they have overlooked the elementary characteristics of man and the insane power that lies within it. Plus the fact that you can never use the entire planet as a big test station, despite all the technology. Now we can already see that things are going wrong on more and more fronts.
So watching this marvelous film during the current crisis makes it even weirder.
Saw this movie couple of times, loved it, can't praise the cast enough, it's as perfect as you can get, casting Ms Scarlett Johansson to play alien (technically she plays alien automaton) is like casting actual alien to play alien, cuz... She looks like a fucking alien. It's brilliant.
Best film of the XXIst century!
Man when they show the dudes under the black goopy goop and the one dude gets edified by the alien thing those images burn into your mind and they know it haha. I like when film reads to you- nothing needs to be said it all speaks in your head.
Just curious, any spoilers in this interview? I haven't seen it yet, but I'm dying to. I want to watch this but don't want to get spoiled. Thank you in advance.
YES! definitely ~ though nothing can really spoil it... I would definitely recommend seeing the film first before you do anything else and reading Michel Faber's book afterwards... saving reviews and podcasts for later. I'm reading all the rest of Faber's books and stories now ~ and will watch Glazers films again. Absolutely brilliant. Can't get enough :)
Pete Dako Thank you so much!
Amazing film.
This and Ex Machina, two amazing films that would be hard to get made today.
Jonathan glazer is an underrated filmmaker. For me,he is on same level of NOLAN,DENIS VILLNEUVE. JONATHAN GLAZER IS A GOAT🐐🐐🐐
Me after 3 pints of lager and a spoonful of LSD:
Under the Skin will eventually be viewed as one of the greatest films of the century. Glazer's description of his process as the director tells you why. I think any memorable work of art moves to a point of simplicity, as he states, but fuck...what it takes to get there.
i wish this was two hours long
Just seen this movie and really liked it, makes me want to read the book now. After thinking about the movie for a bit I don't think there is any deep meaning behind it. I took it as a story of a alien killing people for some unknown reason.
The alien shows no emotion through most of the film. I don't think this is because she is cold or evil. I don't think she has any concept of what emotions are. That isn't to say she doesn't feel. She is clearly afraid, surprised, and happy at times but at the times it isn't a act to trap a guy the emotion seems new to her. We are left with thinking this is her first time as a human.
Towards the end the alien shows compassion by letting one of her victims go. We aren't told why she does this but I think she saw something of herself in the guy. Also the people that stopped to help her was weighing on her mind. And the last bit was the baby. She ignored the crying baby but we see her thinking back on him or connecting the crying baby in the car with the one she left on the beach. I don't think she understood that babies were taken care of by parents until she seen the baby in the car. All this moved her to release the guy and give up on her task of killing guys.
The rest of the movie is just her life on the run that ends badly but maybe not tragically. She looks down as the face of the women she "killed" and at that moment I'm thinking about the guys she killed and how afraid they were. I'm not sure if I'm suppose to feel sorry for her but I do in a way. At this point she is no longer a threat and just a scared creature trying to survive. Also her alien form was beautiful.
Anyway the music, the hard to understand accents, and acting made this a joy to watch.
I liked this a lot actually,but needs some more explaining about some things.
She works for a "master" to deliver him/her people to consume.
Is the master in liquid form or..?
peterraes
I don't think the liquid is a monster but an abstract idea of what the guys are going through. However, you could be right but I don't think it matters to the movie. If it is a monster how does that change the movie? If she is a vampire how does that change the movie? If she is doing this because she is some kind of alien scientist how does it change anything?
In the end I don't think the why she is doing this or for who is important. What is important is she had a change of heart. And the things that happen to her because of that change is important.
Back to the black tar. Another reason I don't believe it is alive or in command is that she released one of guys. The tar didn't let him go, she did. Whatever it is it doesn't seem to be in command.
masterpiece....