This is by far one of the best interviews I've seen with Harrison Ford. He was comfortable with you, and his guard was down. He wasn't being praised and admired, or obligatorily doing some big press junket. I could tell he really enjoyed the informal, relaxed setting. It almost hurt me to see such a humble man, who has a passion for story telling via the medium of acting, have to battle with exalting fans, celebrity and the chaos of stardom. People erroneously believe "fame" is great, and for narcissists I'm sure it is. The modern press doesn't help with that... encouraging people to buy everything Star's have to be like them. However, for Mr. Ford, fame is a necessary evil... the price to be paid... to keep getting new opportunities for work. I liked his analysis of "customers" vs. "fans." In reality, that's exactly how the movie-making industry should be viewed. They simply churn out a commodity - a movie - that's purchased and watched. It's just sadly ironic to see how Harrison Ford's own authenticity and humility in acknowledging that simple fact... is also the very character trait that works against him. Unlike James Bond or any other hero of the big screen, Harrison Ford's characters aren't ever some robust, infallible human... just as he doesn't narcissistically view himself as some big, infallible superstar. When Indiana Jones or Han Solo got knocked down... it hurt! His characters will fight, but they'll also run away! His characters freely show their fears and weaknesses as much as they show their strengths and courage. Harrison Ford's characters are authentic, because he's gives them their authenticity... their humanity. Harrison Ford puts something of himself into all of his characters with a wit and vulnerability few other actors could or would do. Tom Cruise, as Indiana Jones, would not be afraid of snakes. He'd simply zap and vaporize a King Cobra with some sort of "Scientology hates fear and weakness" mojo that's already within his, personal beliefs. Harrison Ford's characters are much more likable... more relatable... and more admired as a result of what he puts into them. It's because he's so authentic that his character's become so real... and fans love, idolize and exalt those characters (therefore him), as a result. People truly love the characters he creates. This minimizes the chances of his viewers ever becoming simple "customers".
+lovelush2u I love the way he usually plays a really nice guy who's in love with his wife and everything, but shit happens and people are after him and he has to punch a lot of guys in the face... :) But seriously, he's great in anything. I've watched almost all of his movies. Hanover street is a favourite. He also made a great performance in Crossing over, among others. He's funny too, god damn...
Nice essay, lol. First of all, the so-called humanity that he brings to characters he plays is written in the scripts (such as being afraid of snakes as Indiana Jones). Secondly, he has stated in a number of interviews that his first reaction upon being offered a new role is "show me the money" (ie: how much are you willing to pay me to be in your movie?). He's a regular guy, and I agree that he comes across as a nice guy IRL. He can also be funny as hell in interviews when he wants to be. But just because you're a fan of his acting career is no reason to portray him as some kind of "Ghandi of the acting world". He's simply a human. Here's a story about Harrison that might give you some perspective on his humanity: He had an affair with Carrie Fisher when she was 19 and he was 33. He was married at the time. Carrie stated in an interview that she was smitten with him, but he couldn't have cared less. He was just looking for someone to have sex with while they were filming the movie (A New Hope). He ended the affair the moment filming ended, and to this day refuses to speak about it. I say this not to paint him as some kind of cheating cad, but rather to point out that he is certainly as flawed as any other human. Enjoy his movies? Fine... but he doesn't deserve to be idolized (and probably doesn't want to be).
This is probably the most intimate Ford interviews I've ever seen. No lights or makeup. Straight human to human. You get to see something that people don't see unless they know him. Fantastic.
This is literally his best interview out of all I’ve watched. He doesn’t seem annoyed, it’s not staged like a late night show, it’s just him talking and he seems chill. Doesn’t seem grumpy
these are the best interview's for me, refreshing to hear a famous person being interviewed without an audience clapping in the background. Famous people are just ordinary people - it's about time we (in general) stopped idolizing them
tom gregory exactly. The kiss-ass idolatry culture is a fucking cancer... What I love about this dude - No Bullshit about him. Truth in his work. Doesn't let A-list fame get into his head. He knows when to be content. And when to take. Wisdom in spades.
I’ve grown out of fanboying over people because I know they don’t give a shut about me, they’re just humans like me and because I’d hate having huge fanboys cry over me. I’d sure like to have fans of my work though
God, how I would LOVE to have a sit-down with Harrison Ford. No interviews, no discussions about Hollywood or his career, or putting him on the spot about anything like that. Just simply to hang with him, smoke a joint (which he does, BTW), and simply CHILL with him, and treat him like an ordinary human being.
I'm sorry about the sound on this; I miscalculated--it was noisy out there, he has a low voice, and he was too far away from the flipcam mic. I'm trying to get better at this. I am a print reporter who likes to shoot these informal videos. I am taking recommendations on a (small) new camera with portable sync sound?
Yes sound could have been better but wow, what a great interview! He was very relaxed and hearing him talk humbly about his love of the acting craft is very refreshing. I enjoyed his description of the fans vs the customers. I really hope we keep seeing more of him in movies.
+Anne Thompson I can fix the sound if you like, it'll take me a minute to do. Huge Harrison Ford fan, Spielberg, Lucas, and Ford are the reason I got into film. Raiders is one of my first memories.
Anne Thompson i really like your informal interviews. I just subbed making me you 7k sube you were @6,999 but i noticed you havent made anything in a couple years hope your ok.
The best interviewer in the business. Not so much interviews as great, personal conversations that seem as far removed from the 'canned' press circuit crap we get everywhere else.
if the world was comprised of more people that shared the same views regarding fame and celebrity status as this man, it would be such a more relaxed and welcoming society to live in.
Anne, hands down, this is the best interview Ford has given anyone. How did you get him to do the interview? The question is he really an artist or a businessman? He sees "fans" as "customers", so he sees himself as a product. One lucky sob.
The look on Harrison's face when she tells him she spent $19 on the ticket is my face whenever I see someone spend a lot of money on something when they could of gotten it somewhere else for less.
i worked at a movie theater as a teen in the late 80s. i believe it was five bucks a ticket. it is crazy that to bring a family to the movies one might have to spend over a hundred dollars now
I love this interview, and I was trying to figure out why I did beyond the obvious. You don't interrupt the interviewee, never! I get so angry when interviewers do that! Great job.
Really cool interview! It almost felt like I was sitting across from Mr. Ford while he was talking so candidly! Really unique interview, that felt relaxed, and cozy!
Not for his father, though. So ford's son probably never said that. The guy loves his work, which is acting and storytelling. Doesn't really care about fame - not out of humbleness but just the side effects of fame - and pretty much wants to keep it to a non-fanatical exchange: he gives a show, people enjoy it and pay for it. The interviewer didnt get this at all and kept showing how great of a fan of Ford she is. That's just a pity.
Mark Hamill once talked about this with his son who would always get “it must be so cool to have Luke Skywalker as a dad” from his friends. His son would respond with “Luke Skywalker doesn’t yell at you to do your homework.”
I totally agree with him about seeing a film in a dark cinema with strangers and a big sound system, it makes the experience special. I can't remember the last time I went to a cinema, sad indeed
Thanks for posting this interview. Really fascinating to see, mostly because it's an intelligent conversation with great questions and real engagement on both sides.
I just happened to come across your interview on my RUclips feed. You gave a wonderful interview, where he was comfortable and being himself. It being in a relaxed locale, and not with an audience and all that stuff he is not comfortable with. It would be awesome for you to do a follow-up with him.
This is one of the most intelligent, intuitive, honestly inquisitive, and all around gifted interviewers I've seen, making this one of this one of the best Ford interviews out there. I remember liking one Ford did with Sydney Pollack (standing in for Charlie Rose, I think?), but a lot of interviews are full of generic or fluff questions, and even ones that are purportedly about the man's career like Inside The Actor's Studio have too much ass-kissing and too little discussion on craft and collaboration (though I realize those are edited down from several hours). Anyway, well done!
i concur on what he says at 1.35min; had a really cool experience in Niamey's theater, we went to see The Lion King, that was in open sky, and next to us was the actual zoo & its smells... Talking about immersion hahaha. What was nice also, was that some folk would entertain with troubadour-like activities before the movie started.
I’m with Harrison, I miss the dark theatre and the sound system all that jazz. Unfortunately we also have mobile phones. People use them and don’t turn them off and I’m not paying anymore to watch someones glaring screen anymore.
Smart Man. I don't think he ever believes his own press (or any press probably). He seems to play, "The Game', just well enough to progress, but it doesn't look like he enjoys that sort of thing. Perhaps one of very few true ,"Adults" , on earth, in my humble view. Great video.
I am taken aback by this interview. Most of the time, he is playing to a crowd and tiptoeing around the questions and often very uncomfortable with being present. In this interview, he is presenting a true mastery about acting and the process.
Audio quality is not good enough. I recommend, as a fan, to use an external recorder. Even an ipod or iphone with iTalk will do. Hell, that's what I'm using for my reality show.
I enjoyed this interview and his natural mannerisms BUT, the audio left a lot to be desired. Further down you apologized but I did want to make my point. Also, I don't know if I idolize him but I definitely respect and admire his handsome looks. I had the good fortune of starring in one of his greatest hits, THE FUGITIVE as an extra. I learned a lot about acting since I also loved recording family videos. So along with him, we will both always be seen in this movie. My descendents will see me for how I looked, if only for a brief moment.
+Ben Katzazz That is very exalted company, thank you, and for standing up to me over on the Tom Hardy thread. I do know I need to improve. Old habits die hard.
Maybe I just took what he said, in a wrong way. He was kind enough, to sign for fans, at the latest star wars premiere, so that must say something! Sorry if my comments upset anyone, and I stand corrected.
@9:36 what the HELL has she been smoking asking him about WHEN he WAS a Leading man and making TOP-TOP DOLLAR? He has consistently been one of the biggest BOX-OFFICE draws and highest paid people in Hollywood for almost FIFTY DAMNED YEARS! His movies have made over SIX-BILLION DOLLARS!
"The days when you were getting paid top, top dollar..." Harrison Ford walked away with $25 million for Force Awakens in 2015. He's doing just fine in the money department, lady.
To many stupid questions. Why Expendables 2? Because he is an actor and is getting paid to do a job. Most people go to work because they want to make money. Apparently, actors are supposed to have some higher ambitions. Why do actors make childish superhero movies? Because they're being paid millions of dollars to do it.
This is a man who still just wants to work, for the work. He does not want the bullshit surrounding that work. He could have retired 500,000 times over from just S.W. or I.J. and never been seen again. Only a trusted interviewer with a phone and no camera crew or producers could ever have captured it.
The part where you ask Harrison about originality in scripts, it almost looked like he wanted to be a naysayer on originality, whether it was because of the financial risk or possibly that original work gets overlooked too often when it is made.
this poor man, this interviewer seems so tedious. However one of the more insightful interviews available with this very talented actor because she does let him talk
He DOESN’T like being famous.... he blatantly says he wishes he could exchange goods with a customer and go about his way.... he’s never liked being famous.
I meant I didn't like his use of the word customers, I think it's a damn insult. As I said great actor, indeed brilliant, but after 37 years of being a fan of his, it time to move on.
moviefan85 I am very sorry for what I said, when my nephew and niece saw him, he was the only one of the main stars, who was happy to sign for them! I admit I am wrong.
he does not like the word fan- seems better in some way to say customers as is that not what they are too. fan means fanatic and that must make him uncomfortable
Harrison seems much more comfortable in this casual setting with a cup of coffee then in any other interviews I have scene with him.
100%
This is by far one of the best interviews I've seen with Harrison Ford. He was comfortable with you, and his guard was down. He wasn't being praised and admired, or obligatorily doing some big press junket. I could tell he really enjoyed the informal, relaxed setting.
It almost hurt me to see such a humble man, who has a passion for story telling via the medium of acting, have to battle with exalting fans, celebrity and the chaos of stardom. People erroneously believe "fame" is great, and for narcissists I'm sure it is. The modern press doesn't help with that... encouraging people to buy everything Star's have to be like them.
However, for Mr. Ford, fame is a necessary evil... the price to be paid... to keep getting new opportunities for work.
I liked his analysis of "customers" vs. "fans." In reality, that's exactly how the movie-making industry should be viewed. They simply churn out a commodity - a movie - that's purchased and watched. It's just sadly ironic to see how Harrison Ford's own authenticity and humility in acknowledging that simple fact... is also the very character trait that works against him.
Unlike James Bond or any other hero of the big screen, Harrison Ford's characters aren't ever some robust, infallible human... just as he doesn't narcissistically view himself as some big, infallible superstar.
When Indiana Jones or Han Solo got knocked down... it hurt! His characters will fight, but they'll also run away! His characters freely show their fears and weaknesses as much as they show their strengths and courage. Harrison Ford's characters are authentic, because he's gives them their authenticity... their humanity.
Harrison Ford puts something of himself into all of his characters with a wit and vulnerability few other actors could or would do. Tom Cruise, as Indiana Jones, would not be afraid of snakes. He'd simply zap and vaporize a King Cobra with some sort of "Scientology hates fear and weakness" mojo that's already within his, personal beliefs. Harrison Ford's characters are much more likable... more relatable... and more admired as a result of what he puts into them.
It's because he's so authentic that his character's become so real... and fans love, idolize and exalt those characters (therefore him), as a result. People truly love the characters he creates. This minimizes the chances of his viewers ever becoming simple "customers".
Well said.
+lovelush2u I love the way he usually plays a really nice guy who's in love with his wife and everything, but shit happens and people are after him and he has to punch a lot of guys in the face... :) But seriously, he's great in anything. I've watched almost all of his movies. Hanover street is a favourite. He also made a great performance in Crossing over, among others. He's funny too, god damn...
Nice essay, lol. First of all, the so-called humanity that he brings to characters he plays is written in the scripts (such as being afraid of snakes as Indiana Jones). Secondly, he has stated in a number of interviews that his first reaction upon being offered a new role is "show me the money" (ie: how much are you willing to pay me to be in your movie?). He's a regular guy, and I agree that he comes across as a nice guy IRL. He can also be funny as hell in interviews when he wants to be. But just because you're a fan of his acting career is no reason to portray him as some kind of "Ghandi of the acting world". He's simply a human.
Here's a story about Harrison that might give you some perspective on his humanity: He had an affair with Carrie Fisher when she was 19 and he was 33. He was married at the time. Carrie stated in an interview that she was smitten with him, but he couldn't have cared less. He was just looking for someone to have sex with while they were filming the movie (A New Hope). He ended the affair the moment filming ended, and to this day refuses to speak about it. I say this not to paint him as some kind of cheating cad, but rather to point out that he is certainly as flawed as any other human. Enjoy his movies? Fine... but he doesn't deserve to be idolized (and probably doesn't want to be).
Great analysis!
@@Graxster From another angle you said the same thing. He is relatable.
This is probably the most intimate Ford interviews I've ever seen. No lights or makeup. Straight human to human. You get to see something that people don't see unless they know him. Fantastic.
This is literally his best interview out of all I’ve watched. He doesn’t seem annoyed, it’s not staged like a late night show, it’s just him talking and he seems chill. Doesn’t seem grumpy
these are the best interview's for me, refreshing to hear a famous person being interviewed without an audience clapping in the background. Famous people are just ordinary people - it's about time we (in general) stopped idolizing them
+tom gregory Humans are serial idolizers. We like to enjoy myths for vicarious reasons that are usually facile and inflated.
Great observation
tom gregory exactly. The kiss-ass idolatry culture is a fucking cancer... What I love about this dude - No Bullshit about him. Truth in his work. Doesn't let A-list fame get into his head. He knows when to be content. And when to take. Wisdom in spades.
I’ve grown out of fanboying over people because I know they don’t give a shut about me, they’re just humans like me and because I’d hate having huge fanboys cry over me. I’d sure like to have fans of my work though
The serial idolising is infuriating, drives me up the wall
Best Harrison Ford interview I've ever seen..usually he doesn't want to be there or seems to be purposely boring and uncomfortable. Excellent job.
Fantastic interview. Why hasn't the academy awarded this man an Oscar? His commitment to his craft is undeniable.
God, how I would LOVE to have a sit-down with Harrison Ford. No interviews, no discussions about Hollywood or his career, or putting him on the spot about anything like that. Just simply to hang with him, smoke a joint (which he does, BTW), and simply CHILL with him, and treat him like an ordinary human being.
Thanks for recommending this, RUclips.
Wow - an actual conversation. What a pleasant man.
I'm sorry about the sound on this; I miscalculated--it was noisy out there, he has a low voice, and he was too far away from the flipcam mic. I'm trying to get better at this. I am a print reporter who likes to shoot these informal videos. I am taking recommendations on a (small) new camera with portable sync sound?
Yes sound could have been better but wow, what a great interview! He was very relaxed and hearing him talk humbly about his love of the acting craft is very refreshing. I enjoyed his description of the fans vs the customers. I really hope we keep seeing more of him in movies.
The informal format worked really well with Ford.
+Anne Thompson I can fix the sound if you like, it'll take me a minute to do. Huge Harrison Ford fan, Spielberg, Lucas, and Ford are the reason I got into film. Raiders is one of my first memories.
What's your budget for a camera and mic. You need a wireless lav mic more than a camera.
Anne Thompson i really like your informal interviews. I just subbed making me you 7k sube you were @6,999 but i noticed you havent made anything in a couple years hope your ok.
What a fantastic interview with Harrison. You have such a gentle and smooth way in how you asked him all your questions. Congrats.
The best interviewer in the business. Not so much interviews as great, personal conversations that seem as far removed from the 'canned' press circuit crap we get everywhere else.
I really liked this interview, the best I have seen. I could listen to him all day. Thanks for asking him decent questions.
if the world was comprised of more people that shared the same views regarding fame and celebrity status as this man, it would be such a more relaxed and welcoming society to live in.
Best interview ever. Unique. Every other interview of Harrisons sounds identical script about the bell hop except this one!
Probably the best interview I've seen with Harrison Ford.
Ok thanks, looks extremely Relaxed here nice to see,no rubbing the seet. Just well rested. Hero.
The BEST interview with him. Well done. X
Anne, hands down, this is the best interview Ford has given anyone. How did you get him to do the interview? The question is he really an artist or a businessman? He sees "fans" as "customers", so he sees himself as a product. One lucky sob.
Such a great relaxed interview.
The look on Harrison's face when she tells him she spent $19 on the ticket is my face whenever I see someone spend a lot of money on something when they could of gotten it somewhere else for less.
i worked at a movie theater as a teen in the late 80s. i believe it was five bucks a ticket. it is crazy that to bring a family to the movies one might have to spend over a hundred dollars now
Best interview I've seen! More of an informative conversation, really. Thank you!
I love this interview, and I was trying to figure out why I did beyond the obvious. You don't interrupt the interviewee, never! I get so angry when interviewers do that! Great job.
The best Harrison Ford interview I have ever seen. Good work. Thank you.
Thanks for doing this stuff, you get all the great interviews.
What a great interview, Harrison is really good at being interviewed, he seems like a great guy.!
Really cool interview! It almost felt like I was sitting across from Mr. Ford while he was talking so candidly! Really unique interview, that felt relaxed, and cozy!
Imagine being able to say 'My dad is Han Solo'? What a thrill it must be for his son!
Not for his father, though. So ford's son probably never said that. The guy loves his work, which is acting and storytelling. Doesn't really care about fame - not out of humbleness but just the side effects of fame - and pretty much wants to keep it to a non-fanatical exchange: he gives a show, people enjoy it and pay for it. The interviewer didnt get this at all and kept showing how great of a fan of Ford she is. That's just a pity.
Mark Hamill once talked about this with his son who would always get “it must be so cool to have Luke Skywalker as a dad” from his friends. His son would respond with “Luke Skywalker doesn’t yell at you to do your homework.”
It was the Four Seasons in LA.
I totally agree with him about seeing a film in a dark cinema with strangers and a big sound system, it makes the experience special. I can't remember the last time I went to a cinema, sad indeed
Thanks for posting this interview. Really fascinating to see, mostly because it's an intelligent conversation with great questions and real engagement on both sides.
I just happened to come across your interview on my RUclips feed. You gave a wonderful interview, where he was comfortable and being himself. It being in a relaxed locale, and not with an audience and all that stuff he is not comfortable with. It would be awesome for you to do a follow-up with him.
Might be a good idea to have a microphone for the interviewee in the future...
This is one of the most intelligent, intuitive, honestly inquisitive, and all around gifted interviewers I've seen, making this one of this one of the best Ford interviews out there. I remember liking one Ford did with Sydney Pollack (standing in for Charlie Rose, I think?), but a lot of interviews are full of generic or fluff questions, and even ones that are purportedly about the man's career like Inside The Actor's Studio have too much ass-kissing and too little discussion on craft and collaboration (though I realize those are edited down from several hours). Anyway, well done!
Nice reflection on H being a normal guy answering a few questions .
i concur on what he says at 1.35min; had a really cool experience in Niamey's theater, we went to see The Lion King, that was in open sky, and next to us was the actual zoo & its smells... Talking about immersion hahaha. What was nice also, was that some folk would entertain with troubadour-like activities before the movie started.
Harrison просто лучший,самый,самый чудесный человек,мужчина.
Само очарование,люблю❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
How come you got to go to his house an interview him?! That's amazing!
I tend to watch movies at home because I have a good sound system and the audio is well balanced, unlike most theaters I've been in.
Happy birthday harrison from italian boy live in rome
How did you get Harrison talking so much? Amazingly candid, open and in depth interview.
I grew up watching Harrison since the 80’a but Jesus Christ the earring!!
Follow up interview needed. :) Loved this one! And please lemme know cause I'll be your sound guy
Harrison Ford has the patience of a Saint....
I’m with Harrison, I miss the dark theatre and the sound system all that jazz. Unfortunately we also have mobile phones. People use them and don’t turn them off and I’m not paying anymore to watch someones glaring screen anymore.
This is a really interesting, newer interview with Ford, with his take on "fandom", comicon and as he puts it, a "clear exchange".
Idk why but Harisson Ford interviews give me that ASMR experience.
A great actor!
Harrison sounds so silent that even turning subtitles on this video doesn't help, it can't pic up his words :D
Smart Man. I don't think he ever believes his own press (or any press probably). He seems to play, "The Game', just well enough to progress, but it doesn't look like he enjoys that sort of thing. Perhaps one of very few true ,"Adults" , on earth, in my humble view. Great video.
1:06 This hits differently in the middle of the pandemic.
Great Interview. Harrison is famously defensive but she has him on the ropes from the get go
How were you able to get a one on one sit down with THE Harrison Ford???!!!
I asked him. Can we sit down and talk
Adi Adrian How did you get the opportunity to be alone with him and talk?
wow what a great interview
I am taken aback by this interview. Most of the time, he is playing to a crowd and tiptoeing around the questions and often very uncomfortable with being present. In this interview, he is presenting a true mastery about acting and the process.
He seems like such a gentleman and scholar. Not what I would call the most fluent conversationalist though.
Audio quality is not good enough. I recommend, as a fan, to use an external recorder. Even an ipod or iphone with iTalk will do. Hell, that's what I'm using for my reality show.
He seems to be underestimating his box office importance back in the day or he’s just being modest
Love you Indiana
I enjoyed this interview and his natural mannerisms BUT, the audio left a lot to be desired. Further down you apologized but I did want to make my point. Also, I don't know if I idolize him but I definitely respect and admire his handsome looks. I had the good fortune of starring in one of his greatest hits, THE FUGITIVE as an extra. I learned a lot about acting since I also loved recording family videos. So along with him, we will both always be seen in this movie. My descendents will see me for how I looked, if only for a brief moment.
Before the crash at the time of the opening of '42.'
+Ben Katzazz That is very exalted company, thank you, and for standing up to me over on the Tom Hardy thread. I do know I need to improve. Old habits die hard.
he likes neil young- now i love harrison even more :)
Where was this filmed? I mean did you just bump into Harrison Ford on the street?
Looks like his house.
He reminds me of my dad
I’m only 20 and Neil Young’s basically all I listen to lmao
Maybe I just took what he said, in a wrong way. He was kind enough, to sign for fans, at the latest star wars premiere, so that must say something! Sorry if my comments upset anyone, and I stand corrected.
@9:36 what the HELL has she been smoking asking him about WHEN he WAS a Leading man and making TOP-TOP DOLLAR? He has consistently been one of the biggest BOX-OFFICE draws and highest paid people in Hollywood for almost FIFTY DAMNED YEARS! His movies have made over SIX-BILLION DOLLARS!
This woman also did my one of my favorite Mel Gibson interviews ever. Search for Karlovy Vary Cafe Mel Gibson. Similar intimate style. She's great!
Great actor, nice person.
"The days when you were getting paid top, top dollar..." Harrison Ford walked away with $25 million for Force Awakens in 2015. He's doing just fine in the money department, lady.
He's got a soft delivery. Why did you have the volume so low?
Nice interview!
Person with the most franchises, maybe Stallone?
I've never seen a NON-Italian/Greek/Spanish person speak with their hands as much as Ford.
He's half Jewish I think. It's a thing with us as well lol
ender's game was a good movie, tbh he's the only great thing about it lol
Just wish you had a microphone on him, because we can hardly hear him and when volume is turned up we are deafened by yourself. : (
How did this interview even happen?
I think camera would've been better off to the side instead of right in his face.
Great interview. Too bad there was so much ambient noise.
Tripod and mic other than that great interview!
To many stupid questions. Why Expendables 2? Because he is an actor and is getting paid to do a job. Most people go to work because they want to make money. Apparently, actors are supposed to have some higher ambitions.
Why do actors make childish superhero movies? Because they're being paid millions of dollars to do it.
I always go to the cinema 🎥..... have to watch dvds during Plandemic
❤
This is a man who still just wants to work, for the work. He does not want the bullshit surrounding that work. He could have retired 500,000 times over from just S.W. or I.J. and never been seen again. Only a trusted interviewer with a phone and no camera crew or producers could ever have captured it.
The part where you ask Harrison about originality in scripts, it almost looked like he wanted to be a naysayer on originality, whether it was because of the financial risk or possibly that original work gets overlooked too often when it is made.
She said Expendables 2..... It's Expendables 3.
Besides of not that good sound and not using a tripod for the camera/phone. Cool Interview.
8.48k subscribers and no microphone and no stabilization
5 days in Expendables 2, how much paid??
Good interview, but you're in dire need of a tripod and a proper mic setup. Too much shakiness and low audio level on the interviewee.
HEY !
I like Neil Young !
this poor man, this interviewer seems so tedious. However one of the more insightful interviews available with this very talented actor because she does let him talk
He DOESN’T like being famous.... he blatantly says he wishes he could exchange goods with a customer and go about his way.... he’s never liked being famous.
Buona giornata oggi fortuna
I meant I didn't like his use of the word customers, I think it's a damn insult. As I said great actor, indeed brilliant, but after 37 years of being a fan of his, it time to move on.
Move on by yourself, Dale.
moviefan85 I am very sorry for what I said, when my nephew and niece saw him, he was the only one of the main stars, who was happy to sign for them! I admit I am wrong.
he does not like the word fan- seems better in some way to say customers as is that not what they are too. fan means fanatic and that must make him uncomfortable
Damn he doesn’t give very many interviews so maybe give him a mic when he talks.
Wow, did you just catch him at breakfast?😮
disappointing that the interviewer is wearing a mic and the interviewee isn't and therefore can barely be heard. a weird (and regrettable) decision.
What date was this taken? Was before the crash doesn't have the new scar on his head.
Richard Buxton yeah he’s like 20 here probably so it is probably in a few years
Hollywood we don’t give a damn about. Interview him as a pilot. We care about the man not (acting)
OMG some other RUclipsr did a redub of Harrison watching mandalorian and it made him look like he had alzheimers
Oh thank God it wasn't true