LOS ANGELES: Leonardo DiCaprio calls his new film “Don’t see” gifts.
Not because he had to work with the cast who included Jennifer Lawrence, Cate Blanchett, Meryl Streep, Timothee Chalamet and Jonah Hill, to mention only a few, but because the film captured the dangers of climate change, while also making people laugh.
“I think we all see this as a very unique gift,” said DiCaprio, one of the most vocal campaigns in the neighborhood.
“We’ve wanted to get a message out there about the climate crisis, and Adam (McKay) really put the code by creating this narrative,” he said.
Released in theaters on Friday and at Netflix on December 24, “Don’t look up now” Take a satirical look on how the media and politicians treat climate problems.
The plot saw two low astronomers (played by DiCaprio and Lawrence) who tried to warn the world that did not seem to care about a big comet on the track to destroy the earth within six months.
DiCaprio said he would look for a film about the climate crisis for a while but found the right approach had proven difficult, until now.
“You do some existential trips through a person’s lifetime, or you make a disaster film where New York froze,” said DiCaprio.
Streep plays an US selfish president, with Hill as a son and his disgusting advisor’s head.
Blanchett and Tyler Perry Play Breezy TV News Anchors, Chalamet is a teen drop-out and Mark Rylance plays a strange billionaire with his own agenda.
Adam McKay’s director said that while people can see films as taking a political attitude “The big trick is that we want you to laugh.” “Basically, it is comedy,” he said.
DiCaprio said he was interested in the film because he wanted to support scientists.
“I want to tip to people who devote their lives to this problem, who knows what they are talking about, and tries to give them a little voice,” he said.
The Oscar winner’s actor calls itself “Debbie Downer” about the progress of efforts to overcome the climate crisis, but he added: “Hopefully these films like this begun to create different conversations, and more people who talk about it will encourage the private sector and strength that will make changes Massive.
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