‘De Palma’ Trailer: The Influential ‘Scarface’ Director Recounts His Career In A New Doc

DirectorBrian De Palmais one of the most influential and iconic directors that cinema has ever seen. His body of work includes films such asScarface, Carrie, Blow Out, The Untouchables, Casualties of War, Mission: Impossible, Snake Eyes, The Black Dahlia, Carlito’s Wayand most recently,Passion. Now the filmmaker himself dives into his impressive ouvre in a documentary simply titledDe Palma.

DirectorsNoah Baumbach(Frances Ha) andJake Paltrow(Young Ones) sat down with Brian De Palma to conduct about 30 hours of interviews, featuring the filmmaker recounting unheard stories from his time behind the camera, working in the Hollywood system and paying tribute to Alfred Hitchcock with his own work. Watch theDe Palmatrailer below to see just how amazing this documentary is going to be for cinephiles.

De Palma

Here’s theDePalmatrailer straight from A24:

The film looks simple in its execution, letting De Palma and clips from his movies speak for themselves. This is one of those times where some of the pull quotes actually have me even more interested in seeing the movie, specifically Jason Bailey’s comment about the movie being full of “wonderful, no-fucks-left-to-give stories.”

De Palma already screened at the Venice Film Festival, and it got plenty of praise in the reviews that followed. While there’s not really anything innovative in the filmmaking department, it’s the focus on De Palma, in his own words, that seems to make the movie so damn fascinating.

The Film Stagementions some of the tales included:

WhileThe Hollywood Reportercommends the director’s candid discussion:

De Palma is candid about his failures, honest about his disappointments, and doesn’t bother with false modesty where his great pictures are concerned. Speaking of the various remakes and subsequent adaptations ofCarrie, the film that put him on the commercial map, he chuckles over the amusement of watching other people make mistakes that he avoided.

This is the kind of documentary I wish that we could get with every filmmaker. It feels like one of thoseInterviewsbooks brought to life, but with a lot more content and intimate storytelling involved. Here’s hoping more footage that didn’t make it into the film ends up included on a home video release at some point.

De Palmahits limited theaters onJune 10.