Shadowing-Übung: Portraying Marie Colvin in A Private War | Rosamund Pike on Acting - Englisch Sprechen Lernen mit YouTube

C1
I actually sought out the role of Marie Colvin in A Private War.
⏸ Pausiert
158 Sätze
Wenn Sätze zu kurz oder zu lang sind, klicke auf Edit, um sie anzupassen.
1
I actually sought out the role of Marie Colvin in A Private War.
2
I heard that they were making a film about Marie.
3
I read a Vanity Fair article that was written about her
4
maybe a year and a half after her tragic death in Syria.
5
And the article just struck me with the kind of commitment of this woman,
6
the contradictions of her, the passion with which she pursued her career,
7
the single-mindedness but also this person who was so effervescently
8
optimistic I suppose despite all the trauma that she witnessed
9
and I just thought this is an extraordinary person and
10
if the right filmmaker comes on to direct the film then it could be an extraordinary film
11
and when I heard
12
that Matthew Heinemann whose background is in documentary was going to
13
be the filmmaker I just really really wanted to be involved
14
because I thought he's going going to have an unflinching eye on this woman
15
and we're going to get all of her
16
and there's going to be a truth to the war zone depictions
17
which you know really matters it can't be a hollywoodisation
18
when you're dealing with subject matter like this um
19
so i tried to meet him and i
20
and it took me about a year to actually um to actually meet him face to face
21
but luckily he was working on the script for that long
22
so the delay didn't matter we really hit it off it was a kind of meeting of minds
23
and a sort of search for the same truth
24
and he was probably being persuaded and people were probably trying to persuade him to cast someone else but we
25
just sort of knew we had the same vision in mind
26
and that sort of trust that we established on that day
27
or an instinct for the trust that we could have just carried us through the movie.
28
Marie's great ally towards the end of her life was her
29
photographer Paul Connery had a reputation for ditching photographers who she became impatient with
30
and Paul Conroy was one of the few who kind of stayed the course.
31
And you know I think that was largely
32
because they shared this fantastic sense of humour
33
and they both like to kind of go against the grain and not follow the pack.
34
And Jamie Dornan plays Paul in our film and the interesting thing is
35
when I came on board the film we didn't actually have life rights to anybody apart from Marie herself.
36
So other characters' names were changed.
37
And then as people got to know Matthew Heinemann and me and we gained people's trust,
38
more and more people said,
39
okay, I think it would be great if you used my name.
40
So that was true of Sean Ryan,
41
the editor of the Sunday Times, and of Paul Conroy.
42
And Paul Conroy came on board, actually, as an advisor.
43
And he came out to visit us during our first week of filming in Jordan,
44
and then he never left.
45
I think he found a kind of,
46
like another family, really, in the tribe that we become
47
when we're making a film
48
and I think it had a sort of strange relationship to
49
the to the band of journalists on the road following conflict
50
and I think there was something in the experience of making a film
51
that he recognized and felt very comfortable with
52
so we benefited from his stories his experiences you know
53
when we were depicting a scene he was actually there
54
so the level of accuracy
55
that he could help us achieve was astonishing I think Matthew Heinemann and my greatest fear when embarking on this project was,
56
you know, would we be able to get as close to something that felt truthful as we wanted to?
57
You know, when we were depicting conflict zones, could they feel real?
58
Could the experience that the audience was going to get come anywhere close to the experience
59
that Marie had when she was in these places?
60
And I think the fact that Matt has,
61
you know, shot documentaries up to this point,
62
you know, he's been the cameraman,
63
he's taken his own sound,
64
he's embedded with people very much in the way
65
that Marie did to get to the truth of the stories
66
that he's telling and he followed a kind of similar instinct with our film.
67
So we filmed all the war zones in Jordan
68
but he interviewed everybody who was going to make up the background of our film.
69
So basically whatever conflict zone we're covering,
70
we went, Jordan stood in for Libya,
71
Iraq, Afghanistan, Sri Lanka and Syria
72
and Matt found refugees from all those countries currently living in Jordan
73
and they became the fabric of our of the war zones as we showed them in the movie
74
so when I'm interviewing people or coming across people
75
or interacting with anyone who's been you know the victim of an IED explosion
76
or you know people who are crowding around a mass gravesite
77
that Marie had an instinct about and she She hired a digger to dig up the earth.
78
And they did find bodies.
79
The people crowded around the graves.
80
We were in a clinic in the besieged city of Homs.
81
Everybody was someone who had had a very similar experience,
82
if not the very experience that we were describing.
83
So there was a level of reality that I just didn't believe could be achieved really.
84
And it became the kind of touchstone of our film.
85
It's what gives it its truth.
86
It's what gives it its fierceness.
87
It's what gives it its power.
88
Because again and again, you're diving into an experience through these people that doesn't just feel real.
89
It is real.
90
So, for instance, there are two women at one point tell me the stories of losing their husbands
91
and one tells me the story of losing her child.
92
And I'd never heard it until the minute it's told to me on film,
93
and that's the moment that's in the movie.
94
And it's harrowing, and it's harrowing for the audience,
95
it was harrowing for me.
96
and I think comes very close to the kind of in-depth connection-driven reporting that Marie was famous for.
97
I mean, I think I'm still very affected by Marie.
98
I think she's in me somewhere.
99
I think my eyes have been opened to the world as she saw it.
100
You know, you inhabit someone.
101
Your job as an actor is to trick your brain into believing you are the person.
102
And if you trick your brain well enough,
103
your body starts to respond as if you are that person.
104
So situations that are not dangerous because you're an actor
105
and it's a movie are read by your body as dangerous and your heart will race,
106
you'll sweat, you'll have a physiological reaction that's not of your making.
107
you know, and that those experiences in the body never leave you, I think.
108
I mean, there is so much pressure in playing a real person,
109
especially someone who was as fiercely loved and missed as Marie.
110
I mean, Marie's friends are devoted.
111
Her family, you know, it's a painful recent loss for them.
112
Her family are fighting at the moment.
113
They're bringing a court case against the Syrian regime for Marie's murder.
114
They really believe and have a body of evidence to support the fact that she was targeted by the Assad regime
115
when she went into Homs.
116
I mean, it was an enormous pressure because in this instance,
117
and I don't think it's the same with every real person you play,
118
sometimes I think you can have a legitimate choice as an actor to get a feeling of the person across
119
or tell the truth of their story but not,
120
you know, embody them fully.
121
But in this,
122
I had a documentary maker as my director who is used solely to trading in the truth in real people,
123
in observing real people.
124
And secondly, I found Marie such an intoxicating woman when I listened to her,
125
watched her, that I just thought I want to put that on screen.
126
I want to be as close as I possibly can to her.
127
I want to be her.
128
I want to apologise for not being her,
129
you know, with a documentary maker as my director.
130
So I just tried to do everything I could to kind of eradicate all trace of my own instincts and behaviours.
131
And once I decided to do that,
132
I then realised what a momentous task it was,
133
to change your voice, change your posture,
134
change the way you walk,
135
change the little tells, the little insecurities that you default to in an uncomfortable situation,
136
learn to smoke.
137
And that's just the external,
138
there's a whole world of internal stuff too, of course.
139
One of my heroes I ended up playing right after I played Murray Colvin,
140
and that was Murray Curie.
141
So I had this very extraordinary year where two very important Marie's came into my hands at the same time.
142
And that was, you know,
143
they definitely influenced one another in my mind,
144
I think, because I was sort of thinking about them both in tandem sometimes.
145
And Marie Curie was just an astonishing person.
146
Again, someone who lived courageously.
147
I mean, Marie Curie probably,
148
I would say, lived pretty fearlessly.
149
Mary Colvin, I don't think was fearless.
150
You know, that's often the cliche about the war correspondent,
151
is that they're fearless.
152
I think she was not fearless at all.
153
I think she had tremendous fear,
154
but the need to tell the story was so urgent that she went past her fear.
155
Apart from that, there's no one currently calling me,
156
no. But give me a year.
157
Hearing stillker
158
낫 page

App herunterladen

KI-Bewertung für jeden gesprochenen Satz

TRENDING

Beliebt

Kontext & Hintergrund

In dem Video spricht Rosamund Pike über ihre Erfahrungen beim Schauspielern der Journalistin Marie Colvin im Film "A Private War". Sie beschreibt, wie sie auf die Rolle aufmerksam wurde und welche Faszination sie für die Persönlichkeit der Colvin empfand. Marie Colvin war bekannt für ihren unerschütterlichen Einsatz in Kriegsgebieten und die Kontraste zwischen ihrer optimistischen Natur und den traumatischen Erlebnissen, die sie während ihrer Berichterstattung machte. Pike betont die Bedeutung der Authentizität bei der Darstellung der Kriegsrealität und die Zusammenarbeit mit dem Dokumentarfilmer Matthew Heinemann, der einen ehrlichen Blick auf Colvins Leben werfen wollte. Ihre Leidenschaft und ihr Engagement für die Rolle sind inspirierend und zeigen, wie Kreativität und Wahrheit im Geschichtenerzählen miteinander verbunden sind.

Top 5 Phrasen für die tägliche Kommunikation

  • „Ich wollte wirklich an diesem Projekt teilnehmen.“ – Diese Phrase zeigt Entschlossenheit und Engagement.
  • „Wir hatten die gleiche Vision im Kopf.“ – Ein guter Ausdruck, um gemeinsame Ziele und Ideen zu beschreiben.
  • „Ich fand eine Art von Familie.“ – Diese Formulierung beschreibt enge Beziehungen innerhalb eines Teams oder einer Gruppe.
  • „Das ist eine außergewöhnliche Person.“ – Nutzen Sie dies, um Bewunderung für andere auszudrücken.
  • „Es war ein Treffen von Gedanken.“ – Dies verdeutlicht einen bedeutungsvollen Austausch von Ideen und Perspektiven.

Schritt-für-Schritt Shadowing-Anleitung

Um Ihre Englisch sprechen üben Fähigkeiten mit diesem Video durch shadow speak zu verbessern, folgen Sie diesen Schritten:

  1. Video ansehen: Schauen Sie sich das Video einmal vollständig an, ohne mitzuarbeiten, um den allgemeinen Kontext zu verstehen.
  2. Wahl des Abschnitts: Wählen Sie einen kurzen Abschnitt des Videos (ca. 30 Sekunden), in dem Rosamund Pike über ihre Erfahrungen spricht.
  3. Erstmaliges Hören: Hören Sie sich den ausgewählten Abschnitt mehrmals an und achten Sie auf die Betonung und Intonation.
  4. Mitsprechen: Spielen Sie den Abschnitt erneut ab und sprechen Sie gleichzeitig mit. Versuchen Sie, den Rhythmus und die Aussprache nachzuahmen, um Ihre Englische Aussprache verbessern zu können.
  5. Wiederholung: Wiederholen Sie diesen Vorgang mehrmals, bis Sie sich sicher fühlen. Konzentrieren Sie sich dabei darauf, nicht nur die Worte nachzusprechen, sondern auch den emotionalen Ausdruck zu erfassen.

Durch diese Methode des Englisch Shadowing können Sie nicht nur Ihre Sprach- und Ausdrucksfähigkeiten verbessern, sondern auch ein besseres Verständnis für die Nuancen der englischen Sprache entwickeln.

Was ist die Shadowing-Technik?

Shadowing ist eine wissenschaftlich fundierte Sprachlerntechnik, die ursprünglich für die professionelle Dolmetscherausbildung entwickelt und durch den Polyglotten Dr. Alexander Arguelles populär gemacht wurde. Die Methode ist einfach aber wirkungsvoll: Du hörst englisches Audio von Muttersprachlern und wiederholst es sofort laut — wie ein Schatten, der dem Sprecher mit nur 1–2 Sekunden Verzögerung folgt. Anders als passives Hören oder Grammatikübungen zwingt Shadowing dein Gehirn und deine Mundmuskulatur, gleichzeitig echte Sprachmuster zu verarbeiten und zu reproduzieren. Studien zeigen, dass es Aussprachegenauigkeit, Intonation, Rhythmus, verbundene Sprache, Hörverständnis und Sprechflüssigkeit signifikant verbessert — was es zu einer der effektivsten Methoden für die IELTS Speaking-Vorbereitung und reale englische Kommunikation macht.

Kauf uns einen Kaffee