
George Miller Gives Update on Three Thousand Years of Longing & Fury Road Sequel
During an interview with Deadline, Oscar-winning filmmaker George Miller revealed that his upcoming feature Three Thousand Years of Longing will begin production in March 2021 in Australia, with Golden Globe winner Idris Elba (Luther) and Oscar winner Tilda Swinton (Michael Clayton) attached to star. Very little is known about the film, with Miller saying he feels like itâs a âjinkâ to âtalk about these films before theyâre actually completed,â but he did share that the project is the âanti-Mad Max.â
RELATED: Furiosa Star Anya Taylor-Joy Praises Charlize Theronâs Performance
âI see the title of this film as a riddle, and itâs more or less at heart a two-hander, even though itâs way more complex than that,â said Miller. âTilda and Idris are the two characters at the center of this thing. I canât even decide what genre it is, to be honest. And thatâs a good thing. I like to think in these days that to have a chance of people taking notice of what youâre doing, without being overly flamboyant, your film needs to be uniquely familiar. Thatâs the term I use. The audience is looking for that, something that seems fresh and atypical. In this case, every time I think, oh itâs this kind of film, I say yes but also itâs that kind of film. I would hope that translates into people feeling that what weâre trying to do is interesting.â
âOne thing I can tell you; itâs not [another Fury Road]. Itâs a movie that is very strongly visual, but itâs almost the opposite of Fury Road. Itâs almost all interior and thereâs a lot of conversation in it. There are action scenes, but they are by the by and I guess you could say itâs the anti-Mad Max.â
Speaking of Mad Max, Miller shared that heâs ânot done with the Mad Max storyâ and that there is âanother Mad Max coming down the pikeâ revealing that they are in preparation on the next project even as Three Thousand Years of Longing enters pre-production.
âItâs an interesting question, the idea of multi-tasking. I discuss this with other filmmakers and I think what happens to me is that when youâre working on one thing, and you get so distracted and focused on that one thing, itâs like a creative holiday to focus on the other one for a bit. It helps you achieve that objectivity, to look at the thing afresh each time and say, I thought I was doing this, but it doesnât seem to be the case now.â
RELATED: Taylor-Joy, Hemsworth & Abdul-Mateen II to Lead Furiosa Prequel!
Miller also gave his opinion on the debate about whether superhero films âqualify as cinema,â saying that to him, âitâs all cinema.â
âI watch all of them. To be honest, in terms of this debate, cinema is cinema and itâs a very broad church. The test, ultimately, is what it means to the audience. Thereâs a great quote I saw that applies to all we do. It was from the Swahili storytellers. Each time they finished a story they would say, âThe story has been told. If it was bad, it was my fault because I am the storyteller. And if it was good, it belongs to everybody,’â Miller said.
âItâs a mistake and a kind of hubris if a film does well at the box office to dismiss it as clever marketing or something else. Thereâs more happening there, and itâs our obligation as storytellers to really try and understand it. To me, itâs all cinema. I donât think you can ghettoize it and say, oh this is cinema or that is cinema. It applies to all the arts, to literature, the performing arts, painting and music, in all its form. Itâs such a broad spectrum, a wide range and to say that anyone is more significant or more important than the other, is missing the point. Itâs one big mosaic and each bit of work fits into it,â he added.
(Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images)







































