AI-generated interview qa format analysis of the interview
Explore the art of filmmaking with insights from a seasoned actor on the magic of Paul Thomas Anderson, unforgettable roles, and the enduring power of cinema.
Published September 25, 2025
Upload your interview recording and get the same detailed AI analysis.
Upload Your InterviewThis interview qa format was automatically generated by AI from the interview transcription. The analysis provides structured insights and key information extracted from the conversation.
Leonardo DiCaprio
Complete analysis processed by AI from the interview transcription
SPEAKER_06: Yeah. SPEAKER_06: I think it's got to be.
SPEAKER_09: Uh, you know, I don't remember that part. SPEAKER_09: Let's just not nitpick over the password stuff. SPEAKER_09: Look, this is Bob Ferguson, all right? SPEAKER_09: You just called my house. SPEAKER_09: Let's cut the... SPEAKER_09: I need the rendezvous point.
SPEAKER_07: You know, he's got an incredible detector of BS, as they say. SPEAKER_07: And I think everyone, there's just an ecosystem on set where everyone's at the top of their game. SPEAKER_07: So you don't move on unless he feels that you nailed it. SPEAKER_07: You know, otherwise, you'll reshoot it. SPEAKER_07: You know, he'll reshoot those sequences. SPEAKER_07: And oftentimes, you know, he did. SPEAKER_07: We did some reshoots in this movie. SPEAKER_07: If he doesn't feel like it fits into the context of the storyline and he didn't accomplish what he wanted to, you go back.
SPEAKER_07: Hmm. SPEAKER_06: Depends. SPEAKER_07: Sometimes very quickly and sometimes a multitude of takes. SPEAKER_07: But more so than the takes, I just love how flexible he is to new ideas. SPEAKER_07: And a lot of the actors came on board with a lot of ideas. SPEAKER_07: But you'll say that one, that one singular idea that can take you on a completely different road trip.
SPEAKER_07: Yeah, and that came from the workshops that we did with Chase Infinity, the young actress who stars in the film. SPEAKER_07: There's a generational gap between us. SPEAKER_07: I'm living off the grid. SPEAKER_07: I'm disconnected from anything. SPEAKER_07: I don't even think Bob has Wi-Fi. SPEAKER_07: He's watching VHS tapes of, you know, revolutionary films from the past. SPEAKER_07: And, of course, his daughter's got a secret phone and she betrays him. SPEAKER_07: And that became a great little, you know, side road that the film went on. SPEAKER_07: And especially when Benicio came in, too. SPEAKER_07: Courage. SPEAKER_07: Courage. SPEAKER_07: Yeah. SPEAKER_07: We took a whole side trip and Paul's very flexible. SPEAKER_07: Once he hears a good idea, he's willing to change the entire narrative structure.
SPEAKER_06: Jeffrey Lebowski. SPEAKER_04: I am not Mr. Lebowski. SPEAKER_04: You're Mr. Lebowski. SPEAKER_04: I'm the dude. SPEAKER_06: There's some dude here. SPEAKER_06: There's some dude in there, for sure. SPEAKER_04: That or his dudeness or a duder or, you know, El Duderino, if you're not into the whole brevity thing.
SPEAKER_07: The dude, to me, is one of the most iconic performances. SPEAKER_07: I would never try to duplicate that. SPEAKER_07: But there's definitely an element of the dude in this character. SPEAKER_07: I mean, that's my father's favorite character, I think, in cinema history. SPEAKER_07: It's almost a folk hero element to him. SPEAKER_07: A late 60s, a keep on trucking sort of element to that. SPEAKER_07: And Paul set up a character similar to the dude in the sense that, does he make all the right decisions? SPEAKER_07: No. SPEAKER_07: But the dude abides. SPEAKER_07: And in this character, Bob, you know, he makes all the wrong decisions. SPEAKER_07: He can't even remember the password to get his daughter back. SPEAKER_07: And you think you're going to have this sort of traditional espionage thriller of a father utilizing his skills from the past to save the day, but he can't get over the first hurdle. SPEAKER_07: And, you know, his heroism is just moving forward.
SPEAKER_06: Yeah, well, like, that's just your opinion, man. SPEAKER_06: Just tumbles out of me.
SPEAKER_07: I was actually thinking about, uh, movies that I watched for this performance. SPEAKER_07: And another one was, uh, Dog Day Afternoon, uh, Al Pacino. SPEAKER_07: The fact that, you know, this guy's, uh, relentless in his pursuit to save the one that he loves, but he doesn't have all the right answers either. SPEAKER_07: The first one that comes to mind when I was young was East of Eden, James Dean. SPEAKER_07: That performance really moved me. SPEAKER_07: I think I watched that when I was 14, 15 years old.
SPEAKER_06: What about talking to people like Al Pacino? SPEAKER_06: We've discussed previously, you may not remember, whilst on the set of Hollywood, you're sitting across from him on a table, you know, in the heart of Hollywood.
SPEAKER_07: I've gotten to meet a lot of incredible people in this industry. SPEAKER_07: And, you know, I think it's less of picking their brain and just watching what they do, how they approach their work, learning by example when you get to work with them. SPEAKER_07: But off camera, it's just their choices that they've made, their specificity and their courage and going for the unexpected that I've learned the most from. SPEAKER_07: There's never been anyone that's ever sat me down and said, this is how you approach a character, this is exactly what you do. SPEAKER_07: You get to work with people of that caliber and you just, you just learn from their process of how they approach characters.
SPEAKER_07: It's very difficult to make good movies. SPEAKER_07: Go in there with the best intentions. SPEAKER_07: You head your bet. SPEAKER_07: And in this case, I'm very lucky and fortunate to have been able to work with great directors. SPEAKER_07: And then there's those one moments where you have a singular idea that sort of shapes the narrative of the entire structure of the movie. SPEAKER_07: And we had a couple on this movie. SPEAKER_07: And once upon a time in Hollywood, that moment of him not remembering his lines was another one that came from discussions and workshopping with Quentin.
SPEAKER_07: And then he got to do a little Western within a Western. SPEAKER_07: He does remember his lines. SPEAKER_07: He beats himself up like in that trailer moment, which was a lot that was improvised. SPEAKER_07: And then he comes back like a cowboy ready for the shootout. SPEAKER_07: And that's the beauty of being able to collaborate with directors that are open to new ideas like that.
SPEAKER_07: I think that the directors have to create that ecosystem for you. SPEAKER_07: They give you the setup for those characters, and they allow you to sort of fly. SPEAKER_07: And Paul is like that, too. SPEAKER_07: Quentin was like that, too. SPEAKER_07: They're kind of off-camera watching you, waiting for those surprise moments. SPEAKER_07: But it's in the characters that they write. SPEAKER_07: It's in the circumstances that they give you as an actor to allow those moments. SPEAKER_07: And Paul loved to laugh. SPEAKER_07: Quentin loved to laugh. SPEAKER_07: But, yeah, there were a few moments, certainly when you're talking about Once Upon a Time, that I remember them being off-camera snickering.
SPEAKER_07: That sequence, funnily enough, I thought was going to be very short. SPEAKER_07: And when I did it with Marty, he had 50 shots set up. SPEAKER_07: And I said, we're working on this for two days of me crawling from the telephone booth to the car. SPEAKER_07: And he was like, yeah, I'm going to do an overhead shot, side shot. SPEAKER_07: I'm going to make the stairs bigger. SPEAKER_07: You know, I want this to be like a dream sequence where you can't get to the car. SPEAKER_07: And it went on and on and on. SPEAKER_07: And if anything, it was just the sheer exhaustion of doing that for hours and hours on end.
SPEAKER_06: This is a tough question, but bear with me. SPEAKER_06: Are there any films in your back catalog that you might view as hidden gems, movies that you are personally really proud of that you'd love more people to see? SPEAKER_06: Are there any that spring to mind?
SPEAKER_07: I have a film that, you know, you think about films that you've worked on and you, SPEAKER_07: it's hard to have a detachment from the filmmaking process. SPEAKER_07: So for me, that one would be The Aviator, I suppose. SPEAKER_07: Oh, she was fine. SPEAKER_07: It was just so much thought put into that character. SPEAKER_07: I got to be a producer for the first time. SPEAKER_07: I brought it to Scorsese. SPEAKER_07: We went and recreated the Spruce Goose and the Man Chinese in Canada. SPEAKER_07: And we, you know, brought the 1920s, 30s, and 40s to life. SPEAKER_07: I was obsessed with Howard Hughes and that character. SPEAKER_07: Howard. SPEAKER_07: Bring her home. SPEAKER_07: So that one for me is, will always have a special place in my heart.
SPEAKER_07: I always try to take a specific prop home that relates to my character. SPEAKER_07: And my mom's a bit of a collector, so she likes to hold on to these things. SPEAKER_07: So I have no idea where all this stuff is, but she's got it locked up somewhere.
SPEAKER_06: Yes.
SPEAKER_07: I've given this answer before, so I hope it's not boring. SPEAKER_07: Hit me. SPEAKER_07: But my first film that I did called This Boy's Life, my first starring role, was opposite De Niro. SPEAKER_07: I was on set, you know, being immersed in that environment for the first time, watching De Niro work. SPEAKER_07: And, you know, I didn't quite have my footing in the world of cinema yet. SPEAKER_07: And Michael Caden-Jones, the director, to me, in a very tough scene, said to me, pain is temporary, film is forever. SPEAKER_07: And I said, okay, got it. SPEAKER_07: And that has resonated with me the most, I think. SPEAKER_07: That's a seminal age, too, you know? SPEAKER_07: It's a very important time when you're first starting out. SPEAKER_07: So that was the first solid piece of advice.
SPEAKER_07: In cinema history? SPEAKER_07: Ooh, God, what have I watched over and over again? SPEAKER_07: Not necessarily my favorite films. SPEAKER_07: I've watched Bicycle Thieves over and over again. SPEAKER_07: 2001, Space Odyssey, over and over again. SPEAKER_07: Tokyo Story Vertigo. SPEAKER_07: I've watched The Big Lebowski over and over again. SPEAKER_07: Goodfellas about a thousand times. SPEAKER_07: Taxi Driver hundreds of times.
SPEAKER_07: It's the communal act of being with other people in the theater as well. SPEAKER_07: Like I said, it's very hard to make a good movie. SPEAKER_07: But it's very hard to connect an audience and put them in a set of circumstances where they have empathy for a character or they're on that journey. SPEAKER_07: And the communal experience of going to see a movie with other people allows you to laugh at certain areas that may seem uncomfortable. SPEAKER_07: Other people may see the comedy in that. SPEAKER_07: They may be, you know, connected to the characters in a way that you didn't see the first time around or didn't experience in that moment. SPEAKER_07: And it's one of the most immersive art forms there is. SPEAKER_07: I, I, uh, like I said, I got to do my first movie and I sat home and went to theaters and watched movies for a year straight. SPEAKER_07: And there ain't no better art form out there. SPEAKER_07: And I, and I hope, uh, I hope it stays alive.
SPEAKER_06: Thank you. SPEAKER_06: It'll live forever. SPEAKER_06: I've decided. SPEAKER_06: I think. SPEAKER_06: Just don't worry about it. SPEAKER_06: It's fine. SPEAKER_06: But honestly, they call it the empathy machine and it feels right. SPEAKER_06: I like being made uncomfortable. SPEAKER_06: I want to be challenged. SPEAKER_06: I think cinema does it better than anything else. SPEAKER_06: I agree with you. SPEAKER_06: Um, so here's to that. SPEAKER_06: And here's to you, sir. SPEAKER_06: It's an honor and a privilege. SPEAKER_06: Thank you. SPEAKER_07: Thank you, my friend. SPEAKER_06: Thank you. SPEAKER_06: Truly. SPEAKER_06: Great interview. SPEAKER_06: Thank you. SPEAKER_06: Oh, so kind. SPEAKER_06: Great questions.
Upload your interview recording and get the same detailed AI analysis.
Upload Your Interview