Sunday, June 15, 2014

CostaGavras. Transcript. DemocracyNow. 09 Oct 2013.



1.      NermeenShaikh: Today we’re joined by a man described as one of the world’s greatest living politicalfilmmakers, CostaGavras. Born inGreece eightyyearsago in1933, CostaGavras has won twoAcademyAwards for his films, Z and Missing. His other films include StateOfSiege, Amen., MusicBox, TheConfession, HannaK. and Betrayed. For nearlyfivedecades, CostaGavras has tackled some of the key politicalissues of the day. Z was a drama looselybased on the1963assassination of a greek left-wing activist. The opening credits to the film read: "Any resemblance to real events, to persons living or dead, is not accidental. It is DELIBERATE." Missing, his 1982film starring Jack Lemmon and SissySpacek, told the story of american journalist CharlesHorman, who was abducted and killed after GeneralAugustoPinochet came to power inChile in aUSbacked coup.
2.      Goodman: In his film StateOfSiege, CostaGavras looked at the controversial role ofUSAID, theUnitedStatesAgencyForInternationalDevelopment, in Latin America. The film was based on the kidnapping and murder of aUSofficial namedDanMitrione, who taught torture to uruguayan officers. The film was toocontroversial forWashington. A screening at theKennedyCenterForThePerformingArts in1972 was cancelled. Today, at the age of80, CostaGavras is still going strong. His latest film, Capital, tells the story of aCEO of a large bank, who lays off many of the employees and brokers, a corrupt deal with the head of an american hedgefund. This is the film’strailer.
3.      [skip]
4.      Goodman: Capital, the new film by the legendary filmmaker, CostaGavras. He joins us here in our NewYorkstudio. Welcome toDemocracy Now. It’s an honour to have you with us.
5.      Gavras: Thank you.
6.      Goodman: So tell us aboutCapital.
7.      Gavras: Capital is a movie about money, of course, but essentially it’s about humanbeings, and how they’re affected by the money, because I believe, since a couple of decades, evenmore, the money becomes a kind ofReligion in our societies. And we speak, and theEthics getting moreandmoreweaker, and the money is gettingbiggerandbigger. And we have moreandmore poor people and moreandmore rich people, and the middleclass is just shrinking.
8.      NermeenShaikh: Did you decide to make the film after the2008financialcrisis?
9.      Gavras: No, I started before, several years before. During the crisis, we were writing the script, and we decided not to speak about it, except for just oneline, when someone asks, How is the budgetcrisis? And the answer was, is, We didn’t get, we didn’t reach yet the. No, the worst is about to come.
10.   Goodman: In this scene from your film, Capital, the character MarcTourneuil, head of a large french investmentfirm, meets with men from the american hedgefund who want to buy him out.
11.   [skip]
12.   Goodman: And there you have that scene fromCapital. Tell us the storyline, CostaGavras.
13.   Gavras: The storyline, it’s, MarcTourneuil, he’s just an employee in the bank. And they push them up to thehighestpoint, so they put him up there just for a while, and he decides to stay. And he does everything he can to stay up there. That’s generally the story. And he becomes, he’s a good man in the beginning, and little by little he becomes a kind of sympathetic monster.
14.   Goodman: And you base this on a book.
15.   Gavras: It’s based on a book written by someone who was in the bankingsystem, and he ran away, because he was verytired and with disgust, and he did that book. But I had to change a few things, in particular the end, because at the end, the character in the book was punished. And I think this is notveryreal, what’s going on. No banker has been in prison since all the problems we have with them. So I, at the end, he keeps being an important person in the bankingsystem.
16.   NermeenShaikh: And you researched the film over many years.
17.   Gavras: Yes.
18.   NermeenShaikh: So, what are some of the things that you found out about the banking industry and about the finance world, as you did this research?
19.   Gavras: I found out that there is no, they are working, they are legal. Everything they do there is legal. Everybody accepts them. And finally, they do verynegative things for the society most of the time. And you know that inAmerica, when a lot of people lost their houses, because of the way the banks, bankers and the banking system was working.
20.   NermeenShaikh: One of the things that you make a distinction, you make a veryclear distinction in the film between europeanstyleCapitalism and americanCapitalism. Do you think that distinction is as clear now?
21.   Gavras: Yes, it used to be, but it’s less and less, because they don’t accept the regulations. Everybody says we need regulations all over, but there is no regulations in the americansystem. So they say inEurope, We should get rid of our regulations, and they do, because if we keep them, the american bankingsystem so strong, will eat us.
22.   Goodman: In this scene fromCapital, we see the family of character MarcTourneuil confront him while they’re having dinner together.
23.   [skip]
24.   Goodman: TheCEO’sfamily has conscience, CostaGavras.
25.   Gavras: Yes, particularly an uncle, who is probably verylefty, probably a communist, and with different ideals years ago, and everything fell apart. So, his nephew says, We’re doing the good job today, because he believes what he do, he’s convinced that it is a good thing to do.
26.   NermeenShaikh: Well, you explore also in the film various forms of resistance to the, let’s call it the americanisation of frenchCapitalism. How do you see that playing out in the rest ofEurope, in other places, as well?
27.   Gavras: It’s thesame all over. It’s thesame. It’s the really modernisation of that, of the american system. There is no doubt of that.
28.   NermeenShaikh: Because what do you see as some of the effects of that system inEurope?
29.   Gavras: The effects, you can see them in what’s going on inSpain, inGreece, inPortugal. I mean, there was this huge debt, and we have more and more, as I was saying before, moreandmore poor people and moreandmore rich people, and the middleclass is about to disappear.
30.   Goodman: When you made this film, among the places you made it was Miami. That was your firsttime there?
31.   Gavras: Yes, it was. And I was, I was reallysurprised to see how many private boats there are there. The boat we used there, it costs something like 60millionsUSD, and there is tens, hundreds of them.
32.   Goodman: We’re going to break, and when we come back, we’re going to talk about some of your other films and your plans for a new film about Greece, deeplytroubled right now. We’re speaking with the worldrenowned greekfrench filmmaker, CostaGavras. Among his films, Missing, about the coup inChile, which just passed thefortiethanniversary, as well as Z. And we’ll talk about these and more. Stay with us.
33.   Goodman: That music composed by the greek musician MikisTheodorakis. It was the score of CostaGavras’s [1969]movie, Z. In fact, Theodorakis was imprisoned, imprisoned by the greekDictatorship during the time that CostaGavras was making his famed politicalthriller. This is DemocracyNow, democracynow.org, TheWarAndPeaceReport. I’m AmyGoodman, withNermeenShaikh. And our guest for the hour is CostaGavras. Before we talk about-Z and -Missing, StateOfSiege and others of your films, talk about where you were born and why you left Greece, CostaGavras.
34.   Gavras: I was born in the south ofGreece inPeloponnese, but after the german occupation, we came toAthens. All the family came toAthens. And thefirstthing my family would like to do was send me to theUnitedStates, because my mother had a brother here and some uncles inMilwaukee. So I tried to go there, but there was no way to have a visa to come to theUnitedStates, because my father has done the resistance against germans with leftwing people, and it was against the king. So, I.
35.   Goodman: And this was what year?
36.   Gavras: This was in 50, 51, 52. That's right. And then I decided.
37.   Goodman: Resistance against theNazis.
38.   Gavras: Yes.
39.   Goodman: Was going to prevent you from coming into theUnitedStates?
40.   Gavras: In a certain way, yes. Certainly it was of the position of my father, because the family and the kids, those are guys, they could not go to the university inGreece. They have to present a certificate for the good behaviour of their parents or their fathers, so it was impossible to go to university to study. So I had to go toFrance, because inFrance the studies are free. They used to be and still are a lot of help for the students.
41.   NermeenShaikh: So to what extent did your father’spoliticalorientation and his resistance influence the direction that your films took?
42.   Gavras: Probably did, but I don’t want to know about that.
43.   Goodman: So, you really got your training inParis, inFrance.
44.   Gavras: InParis, absolutely.
45.   Goodman: Otherwise, you would have become aHollywoodfilmmaker, if theUS had let you in.
46.   Gavras: Nobody knows who I would be if was coming to theUnitedStates.
47.   Goodman: So talk about your influences inParis, what it meant to come of age with french film.
48.   Gavras: I was veryverylucky to meet people like-SimoneSignoret, -YvesMontand and JorgeSemprún and some other.
49.   Goodman: YvesMontand, the famous actor.
50.   Gavras: Absolutely, famous actor. And his wife was also a famous actress, working here and there. And I went in a group with extraordinary people, and I was verylucky. And I learned a lot about life, aboutPolitics and aboutMovies also.
51.   NermeenShaikh: You’ve alsosaid that films are alwayspolitical, regardless of the director’sintention. Could you explain what you mean by that? In other words, even if the film is notexplicitlyaboutPolitics, it’s stillpolitical?
52.   Gavras: Yes. It’s enough to see why, how the movies are made and what they show. I mean, I used to say that some of the movies, what just are actionmovies, that indirectly, or evendirectly sometimes, they teach young people that violence is necessary in society, or that kind of things. But they don’t often be political. The idea is how, the effect they have on the young people.
53.   Goodman: Let’s talk aboutZ, which had a profound effect on people all over the world. I want to play a clip from the famous openingsequence ofZ. This is the chiefofpolice addressing a meeting ofGovernmentofficials on the dangers of the left.
54.   [skip]
55.   Goodman: From the openingsequence ofCostaGavras’sZ. And at the beginning of that film, you famously play the opening credits, saying, "Any resemblance to real events, to persons living or dead, is not accidental. It is DELIBERATE."
56.   Gavras: Deliberate.
57.   Goodman: Explain what happens in this film.
58.   Gavras: In this film, the royal family and some military decided to eliminate a new politician who was proposing a new way ofPolitics inGreece, because in that period, it was theColdWar, have left, extreme left, the communists, and then the right. And he was proposing a different way, a middle way, with no war, with no military spendings and so forth. And they decided to, to kill him. And they create a small system. They kill him. And then, the story, I mean, the fact will completelydisappear, except we have a good judge, who went through. He was a rightwingjudge, and his father was one of important militarists, and he decided to establishJustice. And he went on and on, and he, that’s the story, about that judge and the way he acted.
59.   NermeenShaikh: Well, let’s turn to part of the trailer forZ. The film was banned inGreece under the military junta that ruled from1967to1974.
60.   [skip]
61.   NermeenShaikh: That was an excerpt from your film, the trailer of your film, Z. So could you explain why is it that the film is in french, you made the decision to make the film in french?
62.   Gavras: Because there was no way to make it in greek, in Greece.
63.   NermeenShaikh: Would that have been your preference?
64.   Gavras: Essentially, yes, because it was a greek story. Then I had to make in french with french actors, who are veryimportant actors who decided to play the movie. And we didn’t have so much money, either. And we were able to make it reallyveryeasily because of the famous actors I have in the movie.
65.   Goodman: LikeYvesMontand.
66.   Gavras: LikeYvesMontand.
67.   Goodman: PlayingGrigorisLambrakis.
68.   Gavras: Absolutely.
69.   Goodman: Explain both Lambrakis.
70.   Gavras: Yes.
71.   Goodman: His significance, and also just the music we were just listening to underlying the film. MikisTheodorakis was in prison during this time.
72.   Gavras: Yes, was in prison. And there was no way to have him make the music, so, but I contact him through a friend, and he said to me, Just take music from all my music. Take the pieces you need. And so I did.
73.   Goodman: Why was he in prison?
74.   Gavras: Because the militaryGovernment didn’t like him, because he was considered like being a lefty.
75.   NermeenShaikh: But you pointed out.
76.   Gavras: Against them.
77.   NermeenShaikh: It was difficult to get financing for this film.
78.   Gavras: Yes, it was verydifficult. We have done the movie without being paid, all of us, and some of them major actors like-YvesMontand and -JeanLouisTrintignant.
79.   NermeenShaikh: And apparently a number of the majorHollywoodstudios said that politicalfilms are always poison at the boxoffice.
80.   Gavras: That’s right, and nobody would like to produce the movie. And finally, we did it. And it was a surprise for all of us, even for us, that it was that kind of huge success all over the world. You know, at the end of the movie, the audiences all over the world, they were applauding. It was really something verynew.
81.   Goodman: And you won theOscar for this for bestforeignfilm.
82.   Gavras: Yes, foreignfilms, and for editing also. We had a lot of, fiveorsixnominations, if I remember.
83.   Goodman: So, the significance of this, although you don’t like to talk about politicalfilmmaking, that a politicalfilm like this, that was banned in your own country, couldn’t be seen at this time, was winning theAcademyAward and being acknowledged in the rest of the world?
84.   Gavras: Yeah, there’s no contradiction. I think people like the movie. The voters for theAcademyAward like the movie, so they voted for it.
85.   NermeenShaikh: Your screenwriter, your coscreenwriter for the film has said that the film has significance far beyond the particular situation that was represented in it. He said, Let’s not try to reassure ourselves. This type of thing doesn’t only happen elsewhere; it happens everywhere. So do you see a certain universal theme inZ?
86.   Gavras: Yes, because, essentially, the militaryGovernment used to control theJustice, control the police and control theArmy. And if in aDemocracy you do that, there is no Democracy anymore. And this happens in a lot of countries around the world, even today, something like fortyyearslater.
87.   Goodman: The, one of the opening scenes, the preparing for the big politicalrally, a hall, says.
88.   Gavras: Right.
89.   Goodman: To the organisers of the, this greek protest, Get out of here. There are peace signs everywhere.
90.   Gavras: Right.
91.   Goodman: I don’t care. I don’t want your money.
92.   Gavras: It was the great period of asking for peace everywhere, because there were military bases all over the world. The russians were preparing a big war with atomicbombs. The americans, they were doing thesamething from their part. And so, the big fear was to have an atomic war, which would be a total catastrophe for theEarth.
93.   Goodman: And so we move forward decades.
94.   Gavras: Right.
95.   Goodman: And you have just finishedCapital, but you’re moving on now to make a film about your own country. I mean, you have lived for decades in France.
96.   Gavras: Yes.
97.   Goodman: But you’re now going to be looking atGreece.
98.   Gavras: I’m trying. I’m trying to find, to write a script to make a movie there, because I am verycurious what’s, what is happening there and to show also how the greek people, the majority of the greek people, suffer with that crisis, yes.
99.   Goodman: Let’s talk about what’s happening there for a minute. The greekGovernment has launched a probe of the neoNazi GoldenDawnparty in the aftermath of the killing of a prominent hiphopmusician. RapperPavlosFyssas was stabbed to death by aGoldenDawnsupporter outside a cafe last month, the murder sparking a new wave of protests againstGoldenDawn, which placed third in lastyear’s greek election. On monday, greek parliamentarians condemned the party. This is CommunistPartylawmaker, LianaKanelli.
100.          The problem is not deciding if they’re a gang or not. I think that everybody has already understood that they are. They are brutal, bestial, like all theNazis, by birth. If you, if you want to be a Nazi, then you can’t be anything else but a beast. The problem is now to convince people that they’ve never been, they are not, and they will never be the solution of any of the popular problems.
101.          Goodman: CostaGavras?
102.          Gavras: This fascist group, who are still in. If you see the movie, still in the, inZ, you can see them. But it’s, at that time, it was a smaller group. And because of the crisis, the group grew up enormously, because they’re promising changes inGreece, to save theGreece from the crisis, which is completelyfake. So, some people are so unhappy, so miserable, so they think they can find solutions by voting these people. But they’re reallyfascist, like theNazis used to be.
103.          NermeenShaikh: Have you spent any time inGreece during the protests, when the protests were occurring?
104.          Gavras: Yes, I were there sometime, yes. I see how the protest was big, and people trying to say you have to stop with them, to stop them. And finally, theGovernment decided to stop them. We’ll see if it will continue, see how far that’s going to go.
105.          Goodman: We got word out that you were going to be the guest on our show for the hour, and people were writing in from all over the world questions. On our Facebookpage, MichaelClark posted this question for you, CostaGavras. He said, “Mr.CostaGavras, what is the solution forGreece to free herself from the banksters, IMF, EU and her corrupt politicians.”
106.          Gavras: You know, a filmmaker doesn’t have solutions. He has questions, and that’s all. I mean, the solutions have to be found from the politicians, from people who we vote for, and also theEuropeanCommunity and others. I don’t have the solution. The problem inGreece is verycomplex, but it’s veryreal for the people.
107.          NermeenShaikh: Do you think now, depending on what shape your film takes now onGreece, your future project, is it easier or harder to get financing for films of this kind?
108.          Gavras: It is harder. It is hard, and it’s a big fight.
109.          NermeenShaikh: Even inEurope?
110.          Gavras: Even inEurope. But in France, we have a system which makes the whole thing much easier.
111.          Goodman: Which is what?
112.          Gavras: Which is we will receive help from, small help from theState. But also theTelevisionchannels, they are obliged to coproduce movies. So they’re coproducing also movies.
113.          Goodman: Ah, that’s fascinating. I wanted to go fromGreece, fromEurope, to latinAmerica, where you have also done a number of verypowerful films. This is the trailer for CostaGavras’s 1982 Oscarwinning film, Missing, which followsEdHorman, the father of U.S. journalist CharlesHorman, as he goes toChile amidst the bloodshed of the coup to join his daughterinlaw, who’s played bySissySpacek, JoyceHorman is the woman, in the search for his son.
114.          [skip]
115.          Goodman: From the trailer, Missing, theOscarwinning film of 1982. We just passed thefortiethanniversary of theUSbacked coup in Chile, another September11, 1973, backed byPresidentNixon, by SecretaryOfStateKissinger, byITT. Who wasCharles Horman, and why did you decide to make this film? You have these great actors, JackLemmon, SissySpacek.
116.          Gavras: I was, Jack Lemmon accepted to make the movie. That was a really big, I was verylucky. The story is of a young, the story ofMissing is a young american who goes toChile in the period ofAllende. And when he gets there, thesameday, Allende has decided to give one liter of milk to every poor child. So, as a youngamerican, veryromantic.
117.          Goodman: So thePresident ofChile is giving milk to every poor child.
118.          Gavras: To every poor child. So, this young, very romantic American says, This is a great system. So he decides to stay. And he stays, and he works, and he’s a little bit a filmmaker, a little bit also journalist. And the day of the coup, he meets American officials and militaries, and he discovers that something wrong is going on, and then, a few days later, disappearscompletely during the coup. And his father goes down there to find him. JackLemmon played the part. And his father, who voted forNixon over that time, and he didn’t like his son. He thought his son was a kind of failure, because he was an artist and that kind of thing. He is furious against him. But little by little, he discovers that his son was a good person, and his country was doing down there something verynegative. That’s the whole story. And as I was saying, I was reallyhappy to haveJackLemmon, who decided to play it, because he was extraordinary, asSissySpacek.
119.          Goodman: I was just withJackLemmon’sson at a fortiethanniversary of the coupevent, who talked about how deeplymeaningful this film was for him. And, I mean, he was really considered a comedic actor. How did you see beyond that, CostaGavras, to say, I wantJackLemmon to playCharlesHorman’sfather?
120.          Gavras: Well, thefirstmeeting we have inUniversal inHollywood, I said that I would likeJackLemmon. Everybody was curious. They say, JackLemmon? Are we doing a comedy? Said, No, he’s a great artist. He played some good movies, like theSaveTheTiger, for example, or ApartmentThe. And he could be, and there was a real fight. And after a while, the producer, EdLewis, said, Okay, let’s take, if he likesJackLemmon, let’s haveJackLemmon. And it was great, because he, apart of the, he won awards in theCannesfestival and in some other festivals, and particularly, he was so good, so real, like an american of, middleclassamerican.
121.          NermeenShaikh: One of your producers has apparentlysaid that it would be impossible to make the film Missing now. Is that right?
122.          Gavras: Yes, it is. Yes.
123.          NermeenShaikh: Why?
124.          Gavras: [inaudible] say that. Because now Hollywood is completelydifferent. What they’re doing now, they’re doing those big, big movies with specialeffects and a lot of action, a lot of killing, and that kind of things. There’s a few good movies they start now, because I believe Hollywood understands that it’s enough with that kind of monsters they’re doing.
125.          Goodman: I want to go back toMissing. When we seeJoyceHorman, the widow ofUSjournalist, CharlesHorman, though she doesn’t know she’s a widow at that time, she is calledBeth and played bySissySpacek. Joyce was verynervous about someone making a film, and she wanted to distance herself, though she recently told me, when she went to Mexico, where you were making the film, she was just astounded by what you were doing and was changing her mind at that time. She and Jack Lemmon, who plays CharlesHorman’sfather Ed, go to theChilestadium where they’re allowed to get on the loudspeaker and ask if he’s there. Thousands of sympathizers of oustedPresident SalvadorAllende were rounded up and taken to the stadium in the days following theSeptember11.1973coup.
126.          Goodman: What a scene, now calledVíctorJaraStadium.
127.          Gavras: Yes.
128.          Goodman: VíctorJara, the great folk singer, who died also at that time right near the stadium. As we wrap up this part of the discussion, we want to talk aboutStateOfSiege after break. You made this inMexico. You couldn’t make this during the coup. And now, the latest news, RayDavis, who was responsible for the death ofCharlesHorman, he may well have died inChile recently. It’s notclear. I sawJoyce just the other night at the premiere of your film, Capital, and she’s saying she needs to be convinced; theUSEmbassy is not even, she feels, coming clean on this, so many decades later.
129.          Gavras: Yes, they tried to have all the evidence about what happened that day toCharles, but the americanGovernment didn’t give to them. So it’s still, the case is still pending, in a certain way.
130.          NermeenShaikh: How was the film received in theUS when it first came out?
131.          Gavras: Verywell. Verywell for some people. Verybadly for some other people.
132.          Goodman: CostaGavras is our guest for the hour, the world-renowned greek-French filmmaker. When we come back, we’re going to look at State of Siege, State of Siege about aUSofficial in latinAmerica involved with torture. He was kidnapped, and he himself was murdered. We’re also going to talk about his film on a past pope. Stay with us.
133.          Goodman: The music again by the greek musician MikisTheodorakis for the score of CostaGavras’s 1972movie StateOfSiege. Theodorakis was free by then. This is DemocracyNow, democracynow.org, TheWarAndPeaceReport. CostaGavras for the hour. I’m AmyGoodman, withNermeenShaikh.
134.          NermeenShaikh: So let’s go to a clip from CostaGavras’s 1972film, StateOfSiege. The film was based on the kidnapping and murder of aUSofficial named DanMitrione, who taught torture to uruguayan officers. Here, the USAID worker, his character in the film is PhilipMichaelSantore, is being interrogated by one of his kidnappers about his work with the country’s repressive police force.
135.          [skip]
136.          NermeenShaikh: That was a clip from CostaGavras’s 1972 film, extremelycontroversial film, StateOfSiege. So, CostaGavras, could you talk about the story behind this film? Who was DanMitrione?
137.          Gavras: DanMitrione was an official working inUruguay, and he was supposed to be there to help theAgriculture and other and universities and so forth. And theTupamaros were a kind of lefty movement, revolutionary movement, but verypeaceful by the time. They kidnapped him, and they, because they have discovered that he was teaching the police how torture and how change the policesystem. And they kidnapped him and asked him to liberate a lot of prisoners. If not, they will kill him. But theGovernment decided not to liberate prisoners, and they had to kill him. That was the first veryvery, an action which was so negative that, little by little, after that, unfortunately, they disappear. So that’s, in general terms, the story.
138.          Goodman: And why did you choose to take on this story?
139.          Gavras: I liked this story because it looks verymuch like a greek story, but it happened in latinAmerica. So I would like to show that this was thesamething, in a certain way. Because most of those advisers at that time, they’re supposed to be verypeaceful, verynice, but most of them, they were doing something negative. Even verynegative.
140.          Goodman: And it was verycontroversial when it came out.
141.          Gavras: Verynegative, verycontroversial everywhere, and particularly theUnitedStates. But the movie was shown here. And it was also coproduced with an american company. And it went around the world.
142.          NermeenShaikh: So I want to ask also veryquickly, before we conclude, about your 2002 film, Amen., which looks at the links between theVatican and NaziGermany. The central character is a NaziSSofficer employed at theHygieneInstitute who learns the process he develops to eradicate typhus is being used for killing jews in exterminationcamps. He attempts to notify the pope but gets little response from theCatholichierarchy.
143.          [skip]
144.          NermeenShaikh: That was an excerpt from your film, Amen. So, could you talk about what you revealed or wanted to reveal in that film, and that pope and the pope we have now?
145.          Gavras: Yeah, the, I mean, the truth is that the pope knew everything about the extermination of the Jews, and for fouryears he didn’t say a word against that. And he was the mostimportantperson in the world at that time, and he didn’t speak about that. Instead, a young priest and a german officer that knew about that, they tried to inform the embassies in all the world, and risking their lives. That’s the whole story. It’s a story about resistance, how people resist in a kind of situation like this one.
146.          Goodman: Something your father did.
147.          Gavras: Yes, yes, and with a lot of risk, as well.
148.          Goodman: And your, the pope today?
149.          Gavras: Oh, I think he’s a good pope. It’s a major change. It’s surprising to listen to him, to read what he says about theChurch and the change it has to do. I think it’s, I think also thefirsttime in theHistory of theChurch, theCatholicChurch, that the pope speaks about money and says money is not so important, humanbeings are important. This is verynew.
150.          Goodman: Which brings us back to your film Capital, and that is airing now all, opening, premiering around theUnitedStates. We thank you so much, CostaGavras, for being our guest for the hour, worldrenowned greekfrench filmmaker. His films include StateOfSiege, Missing, EdenIsWest, theAcademyAwardwinning Z, as well as Missing. His most recent film, now just opening in theUnitedStates, Capital, opens here inNewYork[City] october25th and inLosAngeles and other cities on november1st. That does it for our show. I’ll be atPrincetonUniversity thursday 5PM. Check our website for democracy.org.

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