'Another Round' Director Thomas Vinterberg Has "Hope and Curiosity" for the Leonardo DiCaprio-Led Remake
It’s the fate of nearly every successful foreign-language film — to be remade in English by Hollywood. But the turnaround came remarkably fast for Another Round, the stellar comedy-drama from director Thomas Vinterberg that walked away with the Best International Film Oscar on Sunday night. And less than 24 hours later, Hollywood struck with the news that a remake was in the works with Leonardo DiCaprio potentially taking the role played by Mads Mikkelsen. Naturally, the internet didn’t respond well. But Vinterberg is holding out a little more hope for the Another Round remake than the rest of us.
In an interview with IndieWire, Vinterberg said that he is “full of hope and curiosity” about the upcoming Another Round remake from DiCaprio’s Appian Way, citing previous English-language adaptations of his own works for the stage:
Vinterberg’s 1998 film The Celebration has been adapted into a stage play in multiple languages, while an English version of his 2012 drama The Hunt, also starring Mikkelsen, opened at London’s Almeida Theatre in 2019. But it’s hard to imagine Another Round without its very specific portrayal of Danish drinking culture, and without Mikkelsen’s tidal wave of a performance in the lead role as a washed-up teacher who finds a new lease on life through a doomed drinking experiment. But Vinterberg dismissed the likelihood that Mikkelsen would want to reprise the role in a remake, despite the Danish actor fairly big profile in the States for his roles in Hannibal, Star Wars, and more. Vinterberg said:
While Vinterberg enjoys “the fact that there are more and more readers of subtitles in the United States,” he told IndieWire that “it’s still very limited. I don’t think this is only about trying to make this understandable to people who can’t read subtitles. I see this as an artistic project where someone is using the text as a starting point and developing it into something else. It’s a different culture; it’s not only a different language.”
Source: Read Full Article