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Interview
Directed by
Steve Buscemi
2007
84m
R
Drama
6.8
58%
55%
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After falling out with his editor, a fading political journalist is forced to interview America's most popular soap actress.
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+4 more
Cast of Interview
Sienna Miller
Katya
Steve Buscemi
Pierre Peders
James Franco
Boyfriend on Phone (voice)
Michael Buscemi
Robert Peders
Tara Elders
Maggie
Molly Griffith
Waitress
Yan Xi
Autograph Seeker #2
Katja Schuurman
Lady in the Limo
David Schecter
Maitre'd
Elizabeth Bracco
Woman in Restaurant
James Villemaire
Man in Restaurant
Craig muMs Grant
Cab Driver
Doc Dougherty
Truck Driver
Donna Hanover
Commentator
Wayne Wilcox
Hunky Actor
Jackson Loo
Fan at Restaurant
Danny Schechter
Political Pundit
Philippe Vonlanthen
Autograph Seeker #1
JoJo Whilden
Paparazzi
Chris T. Margaritis
Door Man (uncredited)
Interview Reviews
Orlando Sentinel
Roger Moore
A mixed bag of realism and arch, dramatic exaggeration.
Rolling Stone
Peter Travers
Stick with it for Miller's gutsy tour de force and the kick of watching Buscemi, as actor and filmmaker, turn an experiment into a mesmerizing battle of wills.
Detroit Free Press
Terry Lawson
Interview feels more like a lab experiment/tribute than a committed, personal drama, leaving us with the sense that Buscemi wanted to feel more connected to this material than he actually did.
Detroit News
Tom Long
This movie keeps falling out of rhythm just when it should be picking up pace. It's a fitful piece of wrong beginnings and false ends.
Seattle Times
Moira MacDonald
Interview slyly keeps you watching, wondering who will emerge from this long night's journey.
Houston Chronicle
Bruce Westbrook
I'll just say that Buscemi, who also directed and co-wrote, knows a lot about making movies but little about journalism.
Philadelphia Inquirer
Carrie Rickey
An eminently watchable contest between two actors at the top of their games.
ReelViews
James Berardinelli
Interview has its moments but they can't prevent it from feeling a little long winded and unsatisfying. The premise makes it sound more interesting than the in-theater experience delivers.
Austin Chronicle
Josh Rosenblatt
Emotional honesty in the service of nonsense is still nonsense, no matter how many scabs it manages to pick at.
Washington Post
Desson Thomson
Buscemi's film conveys the spirit of its source material but doesn't make a satisfying transmogrification out of its homage.
Boston Globe
Ty Burr
Ultimately, pointless. One comes away from Interview exhausted.
New York Magazine/Vulture
David Edelstein
I've sat through so many claustrophobic examples of the genre I forgot how exhilarating, how pure a great one could be. Interview is a great one -- electric as theater and cinema.
Chicago Tribune
Michael Phillips
The results may not seem to be taking place on planet Earth among verifiable humans, but, taken in the spirit of gladiatorial battle, the film is often fascinating.
New York Press
Eric Kohn
There's no doubting that the two actors, whose exchanges carry the script to its deceitful ending, generate spectacular chemistry.
San Francisco Chronicle
Mick LaSalle
Despite the fact that both protagonists are equally appalling, the screenplay seems to have a soft spot for the woman. However, this doesn't take away from the fun of watching the two characters tear each other to pieces.
Chicago Sun-Times
Roger Ebert
Kind of fascinating, especially in the ways that Buscemi and Miller make their performances into commentaries on the types of characters they play. When actors are really turned loose to play actors, they can achieve merciless accuracy.
Ebert & Roeper
Richard Roeper
A bitter, darkly funny little slice of arsenic, with some of the most stinging dialogue since Closer.
Chicago Reader
Jonathan Rosenbaum
Despite a few interesting twists and ambiguities, the main revelation -- that the reporter is an insufferable snob -- doesn't seem worth the 84 minutes devoted to spelling it out.
Observer
Andrew Sarris
Mr. Buscemi and Ms. Miller prove that they are fully up to the task of carrying a whole movie on their shoulders without any help from the other characters.
AV Club
Nathan Rabin
Interview is mannered, implausible, and stagy, but queasily compelling all the same.
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