Video: ‘The Devil All the Time’ | Anatomy of a Scene – The New York Times

NARRATOR: Hi, Im Antonio Campos, and Im the director of The Devil All the Time. So were about 2/3 of the way into the movie, were entering the third act. And Arvin has been spying on this preacher and has figured out that he did something to his stepsister. And so he is coming to get revenge. And one of the things I wanted to convey in this scene is that Arvin isnt a killer. He comes in with the intent of killing him, and in the moment when hes going to shoot, he gets nervous and he sits down, and hes got to muster up the courage to go through with the act. Hes a violent kid, but hes not a killer yet. And so what I wanted to do is I wanted to try and give you two perspectives in this scene, one from the perspective of Teagardin talking to this young man thats come in. You got time for a sinner? Who wants to confess, get something off his chest, and the other, in close up on Arvins face, where we are with Arvin, where were with him, were seeing that hes nervous, and that hes a little anxious. Ive done lustful acts. So we get this angle here, this close-up angle, and thats where were in it with him, and we get to see into his eyes. And then theres the frontal angle, and the frontal, were withholding his eyes. Were seeing it the way that Teagardin sees him. The other thing there is this little technical thing is Teagardin has seen Arvin in church with his grandmother and with his stepsister, but with his hat on, and the angle that hes looking at him, he cant quite identify him. So thats the other reason why this wardrobe was really important for the scene. This is, by far, my favorite scene in the whole movie. And I was so excited for these two characters to come together. And for this force of good and this force of evil to finally meet. And its the beginning of what becomes Arvin coming up against a lot of different evil forces in the story. Its a very long scene, so we really wanted you to feel every single beat. And so this scene took about I think we edited this scene on and off for about nine months. One day I got this girl in my truck and I drove her out to the sticks, and I had my way with her. [SIGHS] She put up a fight? No. And it was really about trying to capture every single detail that these two great actors gave us. I really think that Tom Holland is the greatest actor of his generation. And I think hes so natural, and he conveys such a wonderful humanity, but still manages to capture this kind of danger. And that Rob Pattinson is this kind of mad genius, and you dont know what hes going to give you on the day. And so I had this wonderful footage to work with. And it was really about trying to nail every little micro expression, every gesture. And by doing that, we create this kind of we start building up the tension to the point where then Arvin stands up and, with standing up, he reveals his eyes and reveals his identity to Teagardin. Ive been watching your every move for the last couple weeks. You cant get enough of that Reaster girl, can you? Is that how you did my Lenora, too? And this kind of face off, here, was really this is where it kind of, like, really finely tuned the editing to make sure that every little gesture, once the gun revealed itself, is dangerous for Teagardin. Dont do anything youll regret, son. Why dont you put the gun down, and we can talk all about it? So we really wanted to highlight each beat, and feel every time that Tom gets worked up and Teagardin gets scared. In the sound design, here, you really hear the rattle of the gun. It was just like this this Reaster girl. You get the shake of Arvins hand through the sound of the gun rattling, which is one of these things that we didnt plan on, but when we got into the mix, you really kind of you realize you needed a sound to convey that sort of nervousness, to heighten the nervousness. soul too? Look, I I didnt have nothing to do with that. And then you get this sort of, like, this anger building up. So now Arvin, who came into the scene so, so nervous to go through with the act, is now getting angrier and angrier and angrier. And hes building up the courage to either shoot or not shoot. We dont know yet. We dont know if hes going to change his mind, if Teagardins going to manage to talk his way out of it. I aint going to take the blame for no bastard child. It would ruin me, man. My wife is the editor, Sophia Subercaseaux. She and I always loved every one of Robs deliveries here. She was delusional. Shes crazy. Thats it. Or she was just lonely.

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Video: 'The Devil All the Time' | Anatomy of a Scene - The New York Times

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