Gå ubegrenset med Magzter GOLD

Gå ubegrenset med Magzter GOLD

Få ubegrenset tilgang til over 9000 magasiner, aviser og premiumhistorier for bare

$149.99
 
$74.99/År

Prøve GULL - Gratis

Steven Soderbergh Used To Make Movies Like This......But Now He Does It Like This

New York magazine

|

February 18, 2019

The director on the high-speed production of High Flying Bird.

- Brian Raftery

Steven Soderbergh Used To Make Movies Like This......But Now He Does It Like This

It was a late-winter afternoon in 2018, and Steven Soderbergh was premiering his newest movie aboard a Manhattan-bound Amtrak train. Earlier that day, in Philadelphia, the director had finished production on the basket ball-business drama High Flying Bird, about a quietly insurrectional sports agent, played by André Holland, who is trying to outmaneuver the NBA during a lockout. Now he and Holland were zipping back to New York, watching portions of a rough version of the movie that Soderbergh had finished editing just hours after filming wrapped. The 56-year-old filmmaker is famously efficient: On his Cinemax series, The Knick—on which he served as director, cinematographer, and editor—he cut footage together while being driven back from the set. But on High Flying Bird, Soderbergh was able to shoot and complete a first edit on an entire 90-minute film in just a few weeks. “We moved fast on The Knick,” says series co-star Holland. “We moved even faster on High Flying Bird. If anything, there was an intensified energy to his approach.”

A year after High Flying Bird’s marathon shoot, Soderbergh—dressed in corduroy pants and a blazer, plus a T-shirt he produced featuring a license-plate number from The French Connection—is in Los Angeles, working in the Hollywood offices of his friend David Fincher, director of Gone Girl. There’s a Fincher-face Pez dispenser sitting nearby and a bar of Fight Club soap. The two have been close since the early 1990s; Fincher even sent Soderbergh a rough cut of Gone Girl, asking for feedback. (“We always show each other stuff,” Soderbergh says.) Over a weekend, Soderbergh edited his own cut of the film and sent it back.

FLERE HISTORIER FRA New York magazine

New York magazine

New York magazine

Lizzo's success once felt radical.Can she capture the Zeitgeist again?

Fish Out of Water

time to read

28 mins

September 8-21, 2025

New York magazine

New York magazine

Shaking Up the Classics

This fall's crop of noodle emporiums, reinvented ristorantes, and perspective-altering vegan bakeries is remixing familiar concepts with new ideas.

time to read

14 mins

September 8-21, 2025

New York magazine

New York magazine

THE RISE OF THE PROFESSIONAL NARCISSIST

DIAGNOSED NARCISSISTS ARE DISCOVERING HOW TO THRIVE-BY DOLING OUT ADVICE TO OTHER NARCISSISTS.

time to read

21 mins

September 8-21, 2025

New York magazine

New York magazine

Neighborhood News: The Student You Are Trying to Call Is Not Available

Scenes from the first day of phoneless school.

time to read

1 mins

September 8-21, 2025

New York magazine

New York magazine

Five Story Lines Dominating the Movies This Fall

Get your tissues.

time to read

3 mins

September 8-21, 2025

New York magazine

New York magazine

254 MINUTES WITH ...Dean Winters

His Allstate commercials pay his mortgage, and playing cops keeps him “from working behind a bar.”

time to read

6 mins

September 8-21, 2025

New York magazine

New York magazine

The City Politic: David Freedlander

The Trump Bump The president has jumped into the mayoral race. But is he helping Cuomo or Mamdani?

time to read

5 mins

September 8-21, 2025

New York magazine

New York magazine

Sabrina Impacciatore Reports for Duty

The White Lotus star got Steve Carell's blessing after joining the Office spinoff about a flailing newspaper.

time to read

7 mins

September 8-21, 2025

New York magazine

New York magazine

Reintroducing Big Thief

Now a trio, the beloved band is putting lingering assumptions about its music and politics to rest.

time to read

8 mins

September 8-21, 2025

New York magazine

New York magazine

Do You Know Where on Roblox Your Children Are?

The world's most beloved video-game app is also a brain-rotting, hypercommercial dystopia.

time to read

23 mins

September 8-21, 2025

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size