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The ‘Memoria’ Trailer Takes You On A ‘Bewildering’ Sensory Experience With Tilda Swinton

Tilda Swinton’s career is fascinating. I would argue that no one has seamlessly transitioned between indies and blockbusters better than her. I mean, look at Swinton’s 2019: she appeared in the second highest-grossing movie ever, a Jim Jarmusch zombie comedy, Armando Iannucci’s re-telling of a Charles Dickens novel, Joanna Hogg’s BAFTA-nominated The Souvenir, and you can hear her voice in Uncut Gems. This year, she’ll play the Fairy with Turquoise Hair in Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio movie for Netflix and she’s the lead role in Memoria, the latest mind-bending film from director Apichatpong Weerasethakul (Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives).

“We will see her walking a lot, like a ghost,” Weerasethakul said about working with Swinton. “I wrote this movie with her in mind knowing that she is an actress who needs no explanation. In fact, it was she who showed me this character. The experience was very significant and I really appreciate that.” You can watch the Memoria trailer above.

Here’s the official plot synopsis:

From the extraordinary mind of Palme D’or winning director Apichatpong Weerasethakul, and starring Academy Award winner Tilda Swinton, comes a bewildering drama about a Scottish woman, who, after hearing a loud “bang” at daybreak, begins experiencing a mysterious sensory syndrome while traversing the jungles of Colombia.

Memoria, which also stars Jeanne Balibar, Daniel Giménez Cacho, Juan Pablo Urrego, and Elkin Diaz, debuts at the Cannes Film Festival on July 15, followed by a theatrical release later this year.

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John Oliver Obsessed Over Octopuses Again, And Don’t You Dare Call Them ‘Octopi’

Last Week Tonight is on hiatus, but that doesn’t mean John Oliver has to stop obsessing over octopuses, which is exactly what he did in a new web exclusive video uploaded to the show’s YouTube account on Sunday night. In the 10-minute segment, Oliver goes hard on his love of the tentacled sea creature, and he even dropped a grammar lesson on why the proper plural form is “octopuses” not “octopi.”

During the lengthy love letter to octopuses, Oliver also called out Craig Foster, the subject of the Netflix documentary My Octopus Teacher. Considering there were countless jokes about how that guy was basically in love with an octopus, you’d just assume Foster is the ultimate octopus fan. Nope. Oliver trashed him for not being into octopuses enough. That’s how hard the Last Week Tonight host goes for his tentacle friends. Via The Wrap:

“Look, look, America — and to some extent, the world. All I’ve been trying to say with this piece — and in a way, my entire life — is that octopuses are cool,” Oliver wound down his 10-minute tribute. “Cats have dominated the internet for far too long and it is past time that octopuses get their turn. That’s it. That’s my whole argument here: Octopuses are great. I don’t have some big call to action, I’m not going to bring out a giant octopus mascot –although, f— that is a good idea, I should get on that.

Of course, this isn’t the first time Oliver has randomly displayed his octopus fever. Following the 2020 presidential election, Oliver celebrated Trump losing by showing people dancing in the streets while he rattled off random, and surprisingly true octopus facts like, “if octopuses take ecstasy, they’ll hang out and party with other octopuses.”

(Via Last Week Tonight)

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Black Keys’ Dan Auerbach Is Directing A Documentary About The One-Of-A-Kind Legend Dr. John

Dr. John — a unique, multi-genre music legend beloved in New Orleans and beyond — passed away around this time in 2019, at 77 years old. Now that Dr. John’s (whose real name is Malcolm John Rebennack) life story is complete, Black Keys’ Dan Auerbach is stepping up to tell it in a new documentary, which will be his directorial debut.

Press materials note the film, which does not currently have a confirmed title, “is about a man and his home: how a city raises him, shapes him and how a city’s trajectory changed his life and how his life shapes the city right back. This is the story of the intricate life and prolific musical and cultural impact of Mac Rebennack, best known as Dr. John, the Nite Tripper.”

Auerbach says of the project:

“I’m thrilled to be partnering with RadicalMedia and Impact Artist Productions to try my hand at directing a documentary feature for the first time and I’m honored to have the subject be my friend Dr John. He was such a unique individual and a shining example of the great melting pot of American music. From his mysterious voodoo stage persona Dr John, to his real, humble self Mac Rebannack — the street poet, the family man, the junkie, the Grammy award winner and all that’s in between, this documentary will introduce the world to him in a way they haven’t seen him before. I’m still learning bits about him that I never knew, and I hope the movie provides a lens into the story of the life of Dr John.”

Auerbach got to know Dr. John when they worked on Dr. John’s 2012 album Locked Down together; Auerbach produced the album and performed on it. The album was Dr. John’s final studio album of original material — Dr. John’s final record overall was his 2014 Louis Armstrong tribute album, Ske-Dat-De-Dat: The Spirit Of Satch. Locked Down was a successful farewell project, as it earned Dr. John his sixth and final Grammy win, for Best Blues Album at the 55th Annual Grammy Awards in 2012.

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A Snoop Dogg Lookalike Has Captured People’s Hearts After Posing With A Fan’s Oblivious Mom

A fan’s photo of his mom posing with a Snoop Dogg lookalike has gone viral on Twitter as users crack wise about the man’s resemblance to the rapper and the mom’s apparent obliviousness. @matchu_chutrain posted the photo with a caption that read, “I’ve been in LA for a year and haven’t seen a single celebrity. My mom comes for a weekend and meets Snoop Dogg.” Unfortunately, it appears he’s neglected to let her know that the person she thinks is Snoop is actually not the rapper — but he looks close enough to prompt a double-take. To be fair, Snoop is a mom-approved favorite.

As fans shared the photo (currently upwards of 215,000 likes and only 500 retweets away from 10,000), the reactions built on each other as people found parallels between the Snoop lookalike situation and the plot of Marvel’s Disney Plus series Loki, joking that the man in the photo must be a “variant” or alternate version of the rapper. The original poster joked that he wanted everyone to stop pointing out that it wasn’t the rapper because “My mom’s gonna be heartbroken the next time she logs onto Twitter.” One person even posted the lookalike posing with Snoop, offering up a photo that might make your eyes cross.

Check out more responses below. Meanwhile, you can catch the real Snoop Dogg — and maybe the imposter too? — at his Once Upon A Time In LA Festival this autumn.

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BIA’s Claims On Nicki Minaj’s Livestream Prompt Burna Boy To Issue A Correction

Burna Boy is calling “cap” on BIA’s claims from her recent appearance on Nicki Minaj’s live stream to debut the “Whole Lotta Money” remix. During the live stream, Nicki asked BIA about Nigerian hitmakers Burna Boy, Davido, and Wizkid, only for BIA to admit that she doesn’t know what any of them look like. Over the weekend, Burna addressed the comment, tweeting that BIA must have been exaggerating because she’s been in his DMs since 2018.

“That babe wey nor know our face don dey my dms since 2018,” he wrote. However, BIA later responded to a fan’s tweet about the comments that she does know what Wizkid looks like, noting that she doesn’t need to know what any of the three Nigerian stars look like to know and appreciate their music.

Then, when the conversation was picked up by Instagram gossip pages, BIA was sure to reply to at least one, explaining that the “DM” Burna referred to was her tagging his song. “Burna, love your music,” she wrote. “Don’t be hurt I said Ion know what U look like. Your girl is beautiful anyway you shouldn’t care. Now, don’t make it seem like I slid on U in 2018 bc I tagged your song.”

She signed off by once again plugging her Nicki Minaj collaboration: “Now back to what’s important. Stream #WholeLottaMoneyRemix.”

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Tomi Lahren’s History Of Anti-Trans Comments Resurfaced After She Defended Caitlyn Jenner From ‘Despicable’ Conservative ‘Attacks’

Caitlyn Jenner spoke at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in Dallas, Texas, over the weekend as part of her campaign to replace Gavin Newsom as the governor of California. The reality show star was greeted with transphobic abuse, including “heckling and deadnaming outside the conference, while anti-trans skits and denouncement of gay people went on inside,” according to LGBTQ Nation. Conservative sh*tposter Tomi Lahren, last heard from referring to flight attendants as “Nazis of the air” for enforcing mask mandates, came to Jenner’s defense on Twitter.

“Hearing how some ‘conservatives’ treated @Caitlyn_Jenner at CPAC makes my blood boil. There’s no room for your hate in the America First movement. We believe in freedom and we believe in limited government. The way she chooses to live her personal life harms you in no way!” she tweeted on Sunday night, adding, “The attacks on @Caitlyn_Jenner are despicable. I’ll go to bat for her every single time and if you want to take my ‘conservative’ card for it, take it and shove it.”

“Your mob is no better than the Left’s and in fact, it’s uglier.”

It’s good that Lahren called out the sickening transphobia that Jenner faced at CPAC. Less good is Lahren’s own history of anti-trans remarks. Back in 2017, GLAAD even put together a list of some of her most hateful comments (there’s been more since).

-Supported President Trump’s ban on transgender Americans serving openly in the U.S. Military: “The military is not a social experiment. Finally a POTUS who understands the concept. Political correctness=intellectual dishonesty!”

-Claimed liberals don’t have an actual argument to support transgender service members; adds that people only support it because it “feels right.”

-Said Trump’s repeal of Obama transgender guidance did nothing more than “return America’s taxpayer funded bathrooms and locker rooms to normal.”

-Went after and deadnamed Chelsea Manning by saying, “trans traitor Chelsea Bradley Manning,” and “him, well, I guess her now.”

Others called out the hypocrisy of Lahren, a frequent Fox News guest who has compared the Black Lives Matter movement to “the new KKK” and falsely described Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-MN) as being “tolerant of Sharia Law,” claiming that conservatives don’t “do” hate. The proud anti-vaxxer tweeting about how someone chooses to live their “personal life” being their choice and their choice only also did not go unnoticed.

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Justin Bieber Performed A Whopping Three Concerts In Just 24 Hours

Justin Bieber unveiled his rescheduled Justice tour dates a couple months ago, and they kick off in February 2022 and run through to June. Before that gets going, though, he got good practice by squeezing a bunch of performances into a short window. Specifically, he played three concerts in just 24 hours.

As Billboard notes, Bieber was on hand at the opening weekend of Delilah at Wynn Las Vegas, a new location of the West Hollywood supper club by The h.wood Group. On Friday night, he played an hour-plus, 18-song set at the 1,500-capacity Encore Theater, during which he was joined by The Kid Laroi to perform their collaboration “Stay.”

Later in the evening, Bieber found his way to XS Nightclub and performed five songs in the 5,000-person-capacity venue: “Where Are You Now,” “Cold Water,” “Peaches,” “Sorry,” and “What Do You Mean.”

Then, on Saturday night, he found himself back at Wynn to walk the red carpet at the Delilah grand opening. After midnight, he performed a brief invite-only set for 500 guests, during which he was again joined by The Kid Laroi for “Stay.”

Bieber shared a photo of the festivities and noted simply, “Last night was crazy!!”

Check out some clips from Bieber’s performances below.

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All The Best New Music From This Week That You Need To Hear

Keeping up with the best new music can be exhausting, even impossible. From the weekly album releases to standalone singles dropping on a daily basis, the amount of music is so vast it’s easy for something to slip through the cracks. Even following along with the Uproxx recommendations on a daily basis can be a lot to ask, so every Monday we’re offering up this rundown of the best new music this week.

This week saw a strong new Vince Staples album and a certain pop star collaborator of his dropping a track of her own. Yeah, it was a great week for the best new music. Check out the highlights below.

For more music recommendations, check out our Listen To This section, as well as our Indie Mixtape and Pop Life newsletters.

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Billie Eilish — “NDA”

Gearing up for her new album Happier Than Ever has been an emotionally trying process, but Billie Eilish presses on. Her latest promotional effort was last week’s video for “NDA,” the making of which left Eilish’s mom a bit shook. As for the track, it continues Eilish’s trend of subdued and dark alternative pop that has made her a household name.

Vince Staples — “Are You With That?”

One of Eilish’s early collaborators, Vince Staples, had a busy week as well. He dropped his new self-titled album, and it features a bit of a pivot in the more melodic single “Are You With That?.” He explained of the track, “I was just having a lot of conversations with a lot of people around me… and people always say, ‘Oh, you used to always say these stories and this and that, and I don’t notice much about these specific things. Why don’t you put it into the music?’ And it’ll be stuff that has been in songs for years. And then I realized the backdrop wasn’t right for certain things I was saying or vice versa.”

Post Malone — “Motley Crew”

Post Malone has remained consistently active, but as for songs where he’s the primary artist, there hasn’t been one of those in a couple years. He returned last week, though, with “Motley Crew,” which arrived alongside a NASCAR-themed, Lyrical Lemonade-directed video that features appearances from folks like Big Sean, Ty Dolla Sign, French Montana, and Tyga.

Bas — “The Jackie” Feat. J. Cole and Lil Tjay

Since wrapping up his stint as a pro basketball player in Africa, J. Cole has kept busy. Besides sharpening his on-court skills with a Los Angeles Laker, he’s dedicated time to music, including his first featured appearance since 2019. He and Lil Tjay both joined Bas on “The Jackie,” a confident and melodic new single.

BIA and Nicki Minaj — “Whole Lotta Money”

Boston rapper BIA is on her way up thanks to the single “Whole Lotta Money,” and now her profile has been raised even further thanks to a new remix featuring Nicki Minaj. Making good on Minaj’s teased “very very very important” announcement, the track keeps things instrumentally identical but now with the added bonus of Minaj trading verses with BIA.

The Kid Laroi and Justin Bieber — “Stay”

The young folks have been taking over music in a big way over the past couple years, and a big part of that is The Kid Laroi. Last week, the 17-year-old teamed up with somebody who knows a thing or two about being a child phenom: Justin Bieber. The pair linked up on “Stay,” a yearning single on which the pair beg their lovers not to go.

IDK, MF DOOM, Westside Gunn, and Jay Electronica — “Red”

After establishing himself as a rising star with his 2019 debut album, IDK has returned with his anticipated sophomore effort, USee4Yourself. The album sees IDK getting co-signs from some established names, like Young Thug, Offset, T-Pain, Rico Nasty, and Swae Lee. On just “Red,” he secured features from Westside Gunn, Jay Electronica, and the late, great MF DOOM.

BTS — “Permission To Dance”

In 2019, Ed Sheeran gave the BTS boys a hand with their Map Of The Soul: 7 song “Made It Right,” co-writing the song with the group. Now they’ve gotten back together on “Permission To Dance,” with Sheeran again receiving a co-writing credit on the jaunty new tune.

Omar Apollo — “Go Away”

Genre-defier Omar Apollo has dropped a new project once a year since 2018, most recently his 2020 album Apolonio. Now he’s back with some new music, a slice of nighttime pop called “Go Away” on which he bids farewell to a loved one.

Courtney Barnett — “Rae Street”

Courtney Barnett dropped Tell Me How You Really Feel in 2018, and now she’s back with her first new music since then. The song is “Rae Street,” a fan-pleasing tune that heralds a new album, Things Take Time, Take Time. If you like what you hear, the good news is that Barnett may be performing the song in a city near you early next year.

Some artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

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‘Black Widow’ Scored A Pandemic Box Office Record, And Disney+ Revealed Sizable Premier Access Numbers, Too

Despite a strong showing by F9, which previously held the pandemic box office record for close to a week, Black Widow came swooping in and knocked Vin Diesel and his crew out of the top as the Scarlett Johansson and Florence Pugh spy-venture dominated ticket sales. Black Widow brought in an $80 million domestic haul, besting Dom and the gang by a good $10 million. To put the affects of the pandemic in perspective, America hasn’t had a box office haul this big since Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker in December 2019.

While Black Widow‘s success shows that audience are ready to return the theaters, Disney pulled a surprising move while announcing Black Widow‘s box office, which could have massive implications going forward. For the first time, the House of Mouse has shared its internal numbers for Disney+ with Premier Access purchases, and according to Disney, Black Widow racked up $60 million through Premier Access.

That’s a game-changing number, and Disney is notably spiking the ball on the hybrid release strategy. Via Deadline:

“Once again, Marvel has delivered an exceptional film to the delight of fans worldwide with Black Widow achieving numerous milestones in the current marketplace,” said Kareem Daniel, Chairman, Disney Media and Entertainment Distribution, in a statement. “Black Widow’s strong performance this weekend affirms our flexible distribution strategy of making franchise films available in theaters for a true cinematic experience and, as COVID concerns continue globally, providing choice to consumers who prefer to watch at home on Disney+.”

It’s interesting to note that F9 is a purely theatrical release, which means if you wanted to see it, your only option is the theater. And, yet, it was still bested at the box office by Black Widow even with a sizable amount of its audience choosing to stay home. Could this development mean Disney will pull the trigger on giving Shang-Chi and other Marvel titles a Premier Access release? We’ll have to wait and see how that plays out.

However, as Deadline notes, Black Widow had a massive Friday to Saturday drop in box office: 41% to be exact, which is the largest dip for any Marvel movie. Did Premier Access eat into those numbers, or are we still seeing the effects of the pandemic on ticket sales? It’ll be interesting to see how the situation shakes out as the industry closely watches how Disney reacts.

(Via Deadline, CNBC)

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‘Roadrunner’ Director Morgan Neville On The Complicated Life And Death Of Anthony Bourdain

He loved food, Orwell, jiu-jitsu, and punk rock — I have this feeling Anthony Bourdain was a lot like me, only famous. It’s a feeling, deep down and undeniable, that I don’t express out loud very often because I know how insanely corny it sounds. A lot of people probably feel that way about Anthony Bourdain. In fact, fomenting this very kind of thought might’ve been the secret to Bourdain’s success — his ability to live the life you wish you had, if you had the means and the fortitude.

That everyone seems to feel a personal connection to him, combined with the fact that he spent at least a third of his life writing and producing memoirs and travelogues and hanging out with prominent people, makes the project of a definitive documentary a daunting prospect. Which parts of the literal thousands of hours of footage do you use? Who do you interview about him when virtually every food person in the country can share an opinion or a personal anecdote?

With Morgan Neville’s portrait of Bourdain, Roadrunner hitting theaters on July 16th, I asked Neville, the Oscar-winning director of 20 Feet From Stardom and Won’t You Be My Neighbor, what made him think he was up to the challenge.

“Part of it is I’ve been making documentaries for almost 30 years, and I’ve made films about how culture connects us,” Neville told me. “I felt like Tony was like a fellow traveler. He was kind of a documentary filmmaker himself. I felt like I was starting at a place where I had some baseline understanding of the type of guy he was.”

In other words, Bourdain made Neville feel the way he makes so many of us feel: like “a fellow traveler.” Roadrunner is part Bourdain greatest hits record, reminding why many of us liked this guy in the first place, part enlightening portrait of an addict who tried to cure himself by, successfully until it wasn’t, transposing his drug addiction onto to his various obsessions — cooking, traveling, new relationships, jiu-jitsu (which Bourdain took up at the age of 58), the #MeToo movement.

As daunting a project Roadrunner may have been by volume, it was also thorny by content. Not only was Anthony Bourdain an addict, but he also killed himself. It’s virtually impossible to talk about someone who has committed suicide without naturally wondering why, a question we can’t help asking even when we know that there can never be a satisfying answer. The truth is it frequently happens on a whim. On top of the manner of death, there was Bourdain’s amour fou with Asia Argento in his final months, the cycle of blame afterward, and seemingly endless scandals and counter-scandals.

Is it even possible to discuss the end of Anthony Bourdain’s life honestly without contributing to the anti-Argento backlash? Not to mention the potential legal consequences. In the end, Roadrunner has discussions of Argento, but no interviews with her — a decision that feels odd, even if the alternatives carried risks of their own.

“That part of the story is like narrative quicksand,” Neville told me. “Whenever there was more of it, it just brought up ten more questions, and it gets really complicated. I felt like if I’d interviewed her, it would just end up in this kind of, she said-they said, litigating everybody’s behavior, and it wasn’t making me feel like I understood Tony any better.”

Again, that’s sort of the trouble with Anthony Bourdain as a subject: no matter what you say about him, there will be millions of people itching to play Monday morning quarterback. Roadrunner is a touching look at Bourdain’s life that in many ways gets to the root of what made him so appealing. One thing it isn’t is the end of the conversation. I spoke to Neville about the challenge recently.

So when did you first become aware of Anthony Bourdain?

Kitchen Confidential, I think it was, and maybe even before — there was a chapter of Kitchen Confidential that came out before the book in the New Yorker that caused a stir. I think I read that article, it was like something like, “Think Twice Before You Order This.” (Ed. note: that aforementioned article was actually titled “Don’t Eat Before Reading This.”) Then the book I remember, all my friends read it, it was like “the book to read that year in 2000.” I kind of missed Cook’s Tour, his first show, because I wasn’t watching the Food Network a whole lot, and it was kind of an obscure show. But at some point in No Reservations, I started to watch it, and then later Parts Unknown, and the show also got better and better. I mean, people think that Tony had a TV show for 18 years, but he had a bunch of different shows. You go back and look at those early shows and they are rough. They’re made for no money, and they’re kind of cheesy. And then if you look up by the end, they’re like beautiful movies he’s shooting.

Do you think that a host would be allowed to evolve like that, if this were to happen now?

God, I don’t know. I mean, because Tony is such a one-off culturally, and you can see right now if you look around television, people are trying to come up with the new Anthony Bourdain. There is going to be no new Anthony Bourdain. There could be other people doing interesting things, but he was such a unique character. He had the credibility of having been a chef and the storytelling ability of a writer because that’s really how he thought of himself, as a writer first and foremost. But he was also this complicated, flawed character who wore his scars on the outside and was very open about his own insecurities and constantly learning on camera. That’s something that you just don’t see that often. He says in the film that he loved to go to a place and be totally wrong about it. He went out of his way to go to places that he just didn’t understand. Like in the wake of the 2016 election, the first episode he did was West Virginia. He’s like, “I want to go and sit down with these people.” And it’s one of my favorite episodes he ever did, because it’s just him being open-minded. So often when I see television, I just feel like everybody’s minds are made up before anything is shot. You don’t actually see people experiencing things on camera.

Did you approach this project differently than you did with, say, a subject like Mister Rogers?

I mean, yes and no. I’d say my general approach with anything is just to try and get the subject’s energy as tactile as possible. In this case, I went through every time he ever mentioned a song — he had done podcasts, and he had made some playlists, and he had mentioned songs and books, and I put together a playlist that’s 18-and-a-half hours long. Everybody who worked on the film had the playlist and we’d listen to it. Then I went back and re-read Graham Greene and George Orwell Down and Out in Paris and London, all these books that were very influential to him, and watched the movies and the Wong Kar-Wais and the Antonioni‘s and all the films that he was influenced by. He was such a culture vulture that I was just trying to feel like, oh, I’m kind of in his head space.

The other part is the footage, of which there was an insane amount. The other part on top of that is the interviews. For me, the more I have no agenda going into a film, the better it will be, I’m just there to learn and then reflect back what I learned. In the beginning, I really wanted to make a film that I felt like Tony would respect, but also in spending so much time with the people in his life and having these really tough interviews, I realized the film also had to speak to something that Tony himself probably would have been very uncomfortable about. For somebody who is so good at wearing their flaws on their sleeve, he still had some major blind spots about himself.

Asia Argento is this background presence throughout the movie. I mean, obviously, I have to ask, did you try to interview her? Were you trying to get her to participate?

I didn’t. I didn’t want any more of that story in here, just because, and we talked a lot about it, that part of the story is like narrative quicksand. Whenever there was more of it, it just brought up ten more questions, and it gets really complicated. I felt like if I’d interviewed her, it would just end up in this kind of she said-they said, litigating everybody’s behavior. And it wasn’t making me feel like I understood Tony any better. And so, I just made the decision to concentrate on what was Tony thinking at every beat. I feel like Tony made all those decisions, he made the decision to date her, and he made the decision to kill himself. Tony’s the one who’s responsible for everything, I want to be very clear about that. But yeah, I’m totally good with the decision I made there, because I feel like I really worked to balance it right.

There’s been sort of a backlash against her already. Is it sort of like, damned if you do, damned if you don’t kind of thing, just bringing up that story?

Sure. But I mean, there’s no way not to bring it up. She is part of Tony’s story, so you have to bring it up. But if you get into the weeds on it, again… it becomes a film about his last relationship and not a film about the life of this guy. I knew that certain people are going to think, you should have more of this or less of this, or you should have talked to her, not talked to her. Like I said, I’m 100% certain for myself that I made the right decision. So people can like it or not like it, that’s up to them, but I feel good about it.

On that note, there’s probably no shortage of people willing to talk to you about Anthony Bourdain. How did you decide which ones had valuable insights to share about him?

Part of it is, I’m not a big fan of interviewing a hundred people for a 100-minute documentary or whatever, because I feel…

I mean, you already have 1,000 hours of footage.

Yeah, and I actually interviewed at least a dozen more people that aren’t in the film, not because they weren’t great, but I kind of made this decision that I wanted everybody in the film to actually be a character. Everybody in the film, you know exactly who they are, you know how they connect to Tony, when they met Tony. So when somebody comes back, you’re not saying, “Who was that talking head?” Literally, nobody talks in the film until they’ve been introduced in this story with Tony. And that meant that we can only introduce so many people. Again, we shot probably 34 interviews, and I think we used 18 or 19.

To me, they’re just a cross-section of the people who knew Tony really well and who had different experiences as a friend, as another chef, as a coworker, as a wife. It was just different types of voices that could speak to different parts of his life. I always say that making a film is not writing a book, that it’s so reductive, you’re just trying to get the essence of all these ideas, because there’s just no way to unpack them in all the detail. That’s what books are for.

There are a couple of scenes where it looks like he’s at some sort of a 12-step meeting. And then he also drank a lot in his shows, and all my friends in recovery, basically, they say that you can’t do that. Did that come up at all? What was his relationship to actual recovery programs?

He had no relationship, really, with recovery programs. I think it was part of that episode where he went to a working-class Massachusetts town and sat in on a recovery program, because there was so much opioid addiction in this town, and he talked about himself. He was always willing to talk about himself, about his drug days, to anybody. It was a way of disarming people and getting them to open up about themselves. If you look at the raw footage of a lot of episodes, he’d be like, “Yeah, I first went to Baltimore. I couldn’t score heroin there.” Just very open about those things.

But as David Choe says in the film, I don’t know anybody who got off of heroin without going into recovery and Tony didn’t. He absolutely replaced one addiction with another. He had this real sense of responsibility. So he kept putting himself in positions where he had a lot of responsibility. The rigor of a kitchen was something that kept him on the straight and narrow. But did he ever deal with all the issues that may have been addiction? No. Literally the last eight weeks of his life, I think he started therapy. I think he was realizing that he needed help, but it was too little, too late. The therapy scene we have in there was, they’d done an episode in Buenos Aires, which I guess has the highest per capita use of psychoanalysis in the world. So he’s like, “I’ll do a therapy session for the camera.” They ended up filming for an hour and a half, and they use bits of it in the show. Again, Tony would do it because he knew that stuff wouldn’t be in the show. In the same way that if he sat down with somebody who did shoot a meal, he would instantly talk about himself as a way to get people to open up, and then they would never use him talking about himself.

So I would of ask this of anybody making a documentary, sort of as a general question, but: why are you the guy to tell this story?

I mean, it’s always presumptuous to say you’re the guy, but … I think there were a couple of things that made me feel like I could do it. Part of it is I’ve been making documentaries for almost 30 years, and I’ve made films about culture, about how culture connects us, how we have more in common than not, and how culture, which can be food, art, music, as a way of understanding people and the others and humanizing them in a way.

I felt like Tony was like a fellow traveler with me. I felt like we were fighting the same fights, and he was doing it in his own way. And he was kind of a documentary filmmaker too. I so liked that about him. And also, I got his taste. I’d made a film about Iggy Pop. I made a film about Keith Richards. I made a film about Orson Welles. I made a film about Johnny Cash. These were Tony’s heroes. I know exactly the type of taste he had in movies and music and books, because a lot of that’s my taste. Not that taste equals understanding, but at least I felt like I was starting at a place where I had some baseline understanding of the type of guy he was. And then once you have all that, then you really go deep into the psychological stuff and try and figure out what it is that made him tick. The reality of it is somebody like Keith Richards or Iggy Pop, who he adored and in some ways kind of emulated, they’re very Zen characters. They really don’t care what people think. I think it’s part of why they’ve survived is they’re so willing to just float on top and really nothing gets to them. The thing is, Tony wanted to be that, but he always cared. He always cared so much. He was never going to be the guy that didn’t care about everything.

‘Roadrunner’ opens in theaters on Friday, July 16th and will eventually air on CNN and stream via HBO Max. Vince Mancini is on Twitter. You can access his archive of reviews here.