Colin Farrell is nauseated by his new film
Colin Farrell is reteaming with his The Lobster director Yorgos Lanthimos for The Killing of a Sacred Dear. Filming has just ended on the movie and we probably should not expect it for at least another year. It has this cryptic logline:
A teenager's attempts to bring a brilliant surgeon into his dysfunctional family takes an unexpected turn.
Farrell is the surgeon, Nicole Kidman plays his wife, Alicia Silverstone is the teenager’s mother.
Farrell recently gave an interview to Business Insider, ostensibly to promote this week's Fantastic Beasts, in which he told us exactly how he felt after reading the script for The Killing of a Sacred Deer:
I’ll wait to see what the film is, but it’s set in a contemporary world, in America, there are hospitals and diners, parks, things that we will recognize and experienced ourselves but yet there’s this similar kind of uneasiness through all the interactions and all the things that take place. It was unnerving reading the script. I kind of felt nauseous after reading it.”
Knowing and loving Lanthimos’ warped sense of the world that he showed not only in The Lobster but also in his first international hit Dogtooth (2009), we are very intrigued. Specially after reading more of what Farrell said:
I can say it’s — ugh, God — it’s eerier than The Lobster. It felt pretty bleak to me. I mean, when I read the script it was extraordinary and to work with Yorgos again was amazing…There are so many interpretations that this film could be approached from. But Yorgos is so specifically minded, he’s so clinical in his direction of the film. He’s really a master I feel, I really do.