No One Will Save You Interview: Director Brian Duffield

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  • čas přidán 4. 06. 2024
  • In Brian Duffield's latest film, the sci-fi thriller No One Will Save You, a young woman named Brynn Adams (Kaitlyn Dever) lives a solidary existence, shunned by her community, until one day her quiet life is upended by the arrival of extra-terrestrials. And by the looks of things, they do not come in peace. In a surprising decision - one Duffield hopes will not dominate conversations around the film - the story is told entirely without dialogue, letting everything but the words convey the horror of Brynn's situation.
    In this one-on-one interview with Steve Weintraub ahead of Collider's No One Will Save You screening and Q&A, Duffield talks about how he came to the "organic" choice to make his sci-fi thriller without dialogue, relying instead on the power of Dever's performance as Brynn, and carefully crafted aliens to tell the story. They also talk about how he landed on the catchy, '50s-esque title, and the importance of a good editor in helping a story come together.
    #NoOneWillSaveYou #BrianDuffield #KaitlynDever
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Komentáře • 13

  • @TheJosue_Gonzalez
    @TheJosue_Gonzalez Před 8 měsíci +3

    I loved it. The no dialogue part didn’t even hit me till the end. Such a great movie

  • @michaelsnydermusic
    @michaelsnydermusic Před 8 měsíci +2

    This was a surprise for me. The first invasion scene was so exciting. And the complexity and open endedness of the ending was a brave move. The deeper you look the more you’ll appreciate it. Blue pill or Red Pill anyone?

  • @White_devil1980
    @White_devil1980 Před 8 měsíci +3

    I kinda found it a bit strange that the main character was not speaking or any of the other characters, but throughout the story it explained what happened to the main character and why people don’t like her. But it all worked out with the ET intervention

  • @iaskelad
    @iaskelad Před 4 měsíci

    Actually The No dialogue thing it serves the plot to me and helped with the immersion aspect

  • @pedrouribe6033
    @pedrouribe6033 Před 8 měsíci

    I didn’t realize that there was no dialogue until I was watching review after I saw the movie lol

  • @mungojerry
    @mungojerry Před 7 měsíci

    Congrats. Great movie. Love homage to Spielberg’s UFO’s lights.

  • @fineapplepic
    @fineapplepic Před 4 měsíci

    Hi, Can anyone say who many pages was the script, no dailog , have penned one similiar to No One will save you, but its different content, srory pages im getting is 26 pages

  • @thierryardillerVFX
    @thierryardillerVFX Před 8 měsíci +9

    Maybe it's a common théory on the story, i don't know, but it's mine.
    spoiling below.
    -
    -
    -
    -
    The heroine couldn't bear to have killed her best friend. She goes crazy and locks herself in her mind (her house).
    The doctors (aliens) try to get her out of it with electroshocks (the paralyzing beams), the circles multiply in the region (the mark of the electroshocks dots) .
    During the first shock, his mind (the light bulbs) flickers.
    The aliens take strangest symétrical positions that look like rorschach spots showed to her.
    The drugs are perceived as viruses (the parasites) that she spit out.
    At the end, the assembly of doctors at her bedside (the aliens in the ship) understand that she is now a prisoner in her happy world from which she will never escape.
    What do you think, Mr. Duffield ?

    • @PouyaNejati132
      @PouyaNejati132 Před 7 měsíci +2

      this is SO SOLID when you take the psychological perspective. Damn.

    • @juancristoforo
      @juancristoforo Před 4 měsíci +1

      I swear to you, I have been searching in forums, reddits, tiktok, etc for this opinion. I came to the conclusion that I was the only one that saw immediately that this is a in the lines of Shutter Island-ghostland disassociation from reality because of trauma Story. At least I agree that this is either in her head or an alternate reality in her mind while she escaped the hospital. But definitely the parasite may as well be the medication to treat her. Anyway, happy to have found this opinion.

  • @gtmafiaa
    @gtmafiaa Před 8 měsíci

    I'm sorry i find this movie stupid and completely bs starting with the mc a 23-25 year old woman unarmed in the middle of no where besting world invading,galaxy crossing gray aliens by share luck, home alone tactics and by stumbling into things really? this movie is an insult to my intelligence and assumes all its views are stupid is the only way to explain this writing.

    • @PouyaNejati132
      @PouyaNejati132 Před 7 měsíci +2

      funny thing she kills 3 intelligent beings exactly the way she kills her best friend, unintentionally and randomly x))

    • @ThatKid22101
      @ThatKid22101 Před 7 měsíci

      It shows the instinct to survive and ability to improvise without any real weaponry.
      It doesn't matter if the aliens are telepathic or advanced, her ability to improvise for the sake of her survival is always going to put her in the lead, she's able to reject the parasites visions due to this, seeing her friend alive is unbelievable to her, she killed her friend and realizes it's fake, she accepts reality which allows her to remove the parasite, not a lot of people on earth would be willing to accept reality.
      The aliens free her imo because they see that despite what she did to her friend she desires to keep living, for her living in a reality where her friend is still alive and older cheapens her experience because she feels like she doesn't deserve it, her friend is dead, she killed her and she has had to live for years with the shame and guilt and she accepts that, she tries to move on unlike the rest of the town which is why the aliens chose to let her go, so she can finally move on and live whatever life she thinks is best for her.
      It's analogous to psycho therapy in a way, the therapist can recommend all sorts of practices to help a patient with guilt, grief and shame but sometimes the guilt and shame to the patient truly seems justified so the answer is in the middle, to accept the guilt and shame but to move on enough that it's not a burden.