Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • Hi, I'm Jonathan Levine.

  • I'm the director ofLong Shot.'”

  • Are you O.K.?”

  • Yeah, I'm O.K. Are you O.K.?”

  • In this scene, we find Fred Flarsky,

  • played by Seth Rogen, and Charlotte Field,

  • the Secretary of State, played by Charlize Theron.”

  • Oh, we could have just died.”

  • They are in an underground bomb shelter

  • because they have been on the road.

  • Fred is Charlotte's speechwriter,

  • and they have been writing her big campaign speech.

  • She's going to announce her presidential run.

  • And in doing so, they found themselves

  • in the middle of a firefight in another country,

  • and they had to kind of take shelter.”

  • “I just have so many regrets, just so many terrible things.

  • When I was 12, I peed on a dog to impress an older kid.

  • The dog didn't like it.”

  • And with this scene, what we wanted to accomplish

  • is we wanted

  • there you see another bomb has hit

  • and what we wanted to accomplish

  • was we really wanted to show this

  • is where their relationship goes from them just

  • being friends and sort of connecting

  • over intellectual things and humor

  • into a more romantic mode.

  • And we really wanted to show how tension

  • can precipitate that.”

  • Four seconds in.”

  • “(WHISPERING) I, 2, 3, 4.”

  • You don't have to count while you're doing this.”

  • It helps me.

  • 1, 2, 3, 4.”

  • Of course, this is a comedy first and foremost.

  • But it is also we were attempting

  • to be as romantic as we possibly could,

  • and we really wanted to exist tonally

  • in this area between sort of absurdity and naturalism.

  • So you know you'll see that we're

  • taking a lot of the situations they're in

  • and we're depicting them very, in a very serious grounded

  • way whether that be with the cinematography

  • or the production design.

  • And the actors also are finding a very

  • naturalistic way to play the scene.

  • And what's so great about Seth is

  • you know he can be absurd and naturalistic

  • at the same time.

  • He is always acting like a real person,

  • but he's acting like a person who

  • has some very big reactions to things.

  • But you always believe in it.

  • I think that's why he's so funny.

  • And Charlize, of course, is incredibly believable.

  • And she's probably found herself

  • in situations like this in many dramatic movies.

  • But when we juxtapose her with Seth's energy,

  • and we kind of try to find, you know, places for jokes,

  • we really just find that that's the best

  • place for this movie to live.

  • And that's how we can be funny and romantic and feel real.

  • What I love about this moment is that in this moment

  • they are not the secretary of state and a speechwriter.

  • They're just kind of a guy and a girl.”

  • “I feel like maybe you want me to kiss you right now.

  • But I don't want to make the same stupid mistake

  • I made 25 years ago.”

  • It wouldn't be a stupid mistake.”

  • Wait.

  • Really?”

  • And that, to me, is something that I found very exciting — “

  • We secured a location.”

  • “ — in approaching a romantic comedy is just conveying

  • those moments.

  • And when you have two great performers like this,

  • they make you look good.”

Hi, I'm Jonathan Levine.

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it