#paul mescal #his profile - oh my!
#I like how he collects festival merchandise, so he can look back on his fond memories.
#paul mescal
These pictures need to be displayed in an art gallery. 😍
What a man. 😍
#paul mescal
Paul Mescal
I still get chills when I think about the masterpiece that is Gladiator. 💯
Gladiator (2000) + quotes
Paul is so handsome. 🥰
#paul mescal
Paul Mescal | Oscars (2023)
#paul mescal
How Paul Mescal won no awards for Gladiator II is beyond me. He understood the assignment, and he ate, and left no crumbs.
"No, if anything, he's just trying to tear the establishment down, but actually not for kind of political reasons. It's personal reasons. It's the fact that Rome to Lucius represents everything that has taken his wife away from him. It's the the reason that he doesn't feel connected to his mother anymore. So it's an exciting thing to get to excercise that anger against an establishment in film."
"I think he attempted [to separate his personal agenda for the greater good of democracy]. I think he attempted up to the point that there's a certain responsibility thrust into his character's journey. Of course, it depends on the context, but I think where there's conscience, there comes a responsibility, right? I think that's what the film is saying with lucius."
"They're both questions. It's the moment that it stops being about him. He's asking the thousands of people around him a question. He's like, the line is, 'Is this how Rome treats its heroes?', and essentially it's Iike, 'If that's how they're going to treat him, how do you think you're going to be treated just as a simple citizen? This is a celebrated Roman general.'"
"I think he probably flips. He think he acts without constitution for the most part, for the first two acts of the film, I would say, and then when he finds out about his bloodline, he sees the state of Rome and what Fred and Joe's characters have done to Rome, and suddenly he's got the birthright to kind of succeed them, his constitution is somewhat forced upon him, but I don't think it's to fair to say that he takes that in his stride, like the film ends on a question where he's seeking guidance. I would describe him in the latter half of the film as somewhat of a reluctant leader, but does have a constitution. We don't really know how far he gets with it, but I think he probably would make a good leader. "
"He recited the poem in an attempt to subvert the power because Denzel's character at that moment is trying to protect Lucius by saying, 'Oh, he doesn't understand English. He's from the Provinces, etc.' But by Lucius reciting something in English, he's letting the emperors know, 'It's not that I don't understand the question. I'm choosing not to answer it. So, instead, I'm going to recite a poem to you.' But it's a political decision. It's a charged decision. It's an exciting moment for an actor to get to play because anything can happen in a story context from that point."
Paul Mescal on Lucius: IAMMIKEMUSE
#paul mescal
#Paul is the real deal. We knew this from the start.
Paul talks about film stars
For pride month, the fourth LGBTQ film that I watched for the first time is a 2015 film from my country of Australia, called Holding The Man. The film was directed by Neil Armfield and is adapted from Timothy Conigrave's 1995 memoir of the same name.
This is an exceptional and devastating film, with terrific chemistry between Ryan Corr and Craig Stott in the leading roles. In 1976, two students at an all boys Catholic school in Melbourne, Timothy Conigrave (Corr) and John Caleo (Stott) fall in love. This is of course is a problem for the school when this is discovered, and disapproved of by the boys' parents. This was a time when homosexuality was illegal in Australia.
This is also a story about AIDS, and as the story is devastating, you can probably guess where it's heading. Much like All Of Us Strangers, Holding The Man broke me, and I will think about this film for a long time.
Score: ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Andrew Scott & Paul Mescal: *gently, quietly break your heart for an hour and 45 minutes in All Of Us Strangers* Also Andrew Scott & Paul Mescal:
you don’t need perfect conditions to start. you just need to start. five minutes of focus is better than waiting for motivation to come.
#I just watched La chimera for the first time.
#It is a masterpiece of cinema.
#The cinematography is beautiful.
#I must check out more of Alice Rohrwacher's films.
#Josh O'Connor speaks Italian in the film, which made him even more attractive.
La Chimera (2023) dir. Alice Rohrwacher