Benedict Cumberbatch is yet to master the banjo


London, Sep 14 (IANS): English star Benedict Cumberbatch has jokingly said that he still needs to master the banjo after playing the musical instrument in his film 'The Power of the Dog'.

Cumberbatch said: "I've yet to master the banjo. If you put an instrument that takes years to practice in someone's hands who's had one year, or a few months in my case, there is nothing like pulling you out of an authentic experience, committing to something you believe is immersive and going, 'Oh this is such a fake moment.' It's really painful."

He plays a masculine character who torments his brother George's played by Jesse Plemons family while repressing his inner feelings and sees Burbank as a tragic figure, reports femalefirst.co.uk.

Cumberbatch tolher work but it is doubtful if she, as a woman, would be allowed to do so.

"Every day I dream that there will be a call and we can go back," she said.

Leading up to the takeover of Kabul by the Taliban, Karimi was busy trying to plan for a national film festival and attempting to open more movie theaters in the country.

Two of her young employees from Afghan Film were killed in a car explosion.

She recalled: "I was searching for their (bodies) all night and the next day. That was the moment I had really lost hope."

On August 15 after the Taliban entered the city, Karimi said she headed to the airport with her family and two assistants from Afghan film and by August 17, they were on a Turkish flight to Ukraine.

"It was like a film," she said of the experience trying to get onto an airplane, likening the experience of the Korean film 'Train to Busan'.

"It was like zombies are coming to attack you and you are running."

Karimi plans to turn her experience fleeing Afghanistan into a feature titled 'Flight from Kabul', hoping to finish a first draft of the screenplay later this month, and is soon set to teach at Italy's National Film School in Rome.

Karimi sees filmmaking as a change agent, noting that the Afghan government did not do enough to support the arts, reports hollywoodreporter.com.

"One of the biggest mistakes this past 20 years of the government of Afghanistan is that they didn't support art and culture and cinema. They didn't even build one cinema in Afghanistan,a said the filmmaker, noting that there were no film funds or attempts to build out infrastructure for productions.

"If we had real cinema, if we had real production, if the private sector and government-supported filmmakers to make a film industry, then we wouldn't be in this situation right now," she said.

Asked what her advice would be for young Afghan filmmakers, she said: "Do not let Afghan cinema die. Even if you are in exile.

"I just ask all filmmakers around the world, please don't be silent about the situation in Afghanistan and don't be silent about the cinema of Afghanistan."

 

  

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