6 directors on 'wasting' (and saving) money, the future of movie theaters and more

Rian Johnson (“Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery”) and Benny Safdie (“The Smashing Machine”) join Chu (“Wicked: For Good”), DaCosta (“Hedda”), Del Toro (“Frankenstein”), and Fastvold (“The Testament of Ann Lee”) on this year’s Envelope Directors Roundtable.This is read by an automated voice.

Please report any issues or inconsistencies here.It is often said that film directors are siloed off from one another, that they don’t get to watch how others work.

So when you put a group of them together, as with the six participants in The Envelope’s 2025 Oscar Directors Roundtable, they are quick to share all sorts of ideas.Like where they prefer to sit in a movie theater — centered in a row or on an aisle? How far back is the best for sound, or so the screen runs up to the edges of your peripheral vision? Should you even take the worst seats in the house, since somebody will eventually be asked to pay money to sit there?Guillermo del Toro, there with his adaptation of Mary Shelley’s classic novel “Frankenstein,” likes the top of the first quarter of the theater.

Rian Johnson, who finds new twists for Benoit Blanc in his third “Knives Out” detective story, “Wake Up Dead Man,” says, “I look for wherever Guillermo’s sitting.” Nia DaCosta, who made the bold, adventurous Ibsen adaptation “Hedda,” likes the top of the first third.Mona Fastvold, who explores the life of the founder of the religious movement known as the Shakers in “The Testament of Ann Lee,” likes the center a little farther back.

Jon M.Chu, who made the second part of a musical adaptation with “Wicked: For Good,” sits dead center — and has been known to talk to the theater manager if the sound isn’t loud enough.

And Benny Safdie, who explores the rise and fall of mixed martial arts fighter Mark Kerr in “The Smashing Machine,” tries to find a spot where he can fidget in his seat and not bother anyone.Read on for more excerpts of thei...

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Publisher: Los Angeles Times

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