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Minute With: Robert Redford on magical childhood stories
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[August 10, 2016]
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) -
Hollywood veteran Robert Redford returns to his
childhood love of fantasy stories in "Pete's Dragon," a
new Disney film about an orphaned boy living in a forest
and his friendship with one such creature.
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The fantasy adventure is a remake of the 1977 movie of the
same name and this time movie features a realistic green-furred
computer-generated creation of the dragon named Elliot.
Redford, 79, known for films such as "Butch Cassidy and the
Sundance Kid" and "Out of Africa", plays Meacham, the father of
forest ranger Grace (Bryce Dallas Howard) and the only one other
than Pete (Oakes Fegley) to encounter the dragon.
Q: You're seen as this champion of independent cinema, so what
was it that made you decide to go into this?
A: This was about a chance to return to my own childhood
experience and remember times when I was a kid ... I loved
stories that had magic in them. Then you grow out of that as you
get older and you miss it. So this was a chance to play a role
in a film that allowed me to step back into that time.
Q: How did you imagine the dragon? Did anyone give you any cues?
A: No, you really had to imagine the dragon because all you got
when you were working was a pole with a tennis ball at the end
and that was the dragon ... You had to imagine what the dragon
would look like because it hadn't been developed yet.
Q: What do you think this film says about the environment?
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A: If we keep cutting down trees, if we keep cutting things away and
taking things away, pretty soon there will be nothing left to take
away. There will be no planet ... I think the film illustrates the
value of something like a forest, the storytelling values something
like an animal in the forest that no one believes exists. I think
those are very important things in this day and age because we
become pretty cynical.
Q: So how much would you say you live the life of someone who keeps
their eyes open?
A: My eyes are always open. I'm always looking at what's beyond or
behind what I'm looking at and also I love using my imagination. I
exercise that because that's what storytelling is about. I love
storytelling because I think we're bred on storytelling.
(Reporting by Rollo Ross; Editing by Marie-Louise Gumuchian and
Jeffrey Benkoe)
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