What face convinced you it could carry a drowning nation. what trembling gave you your lead.
There was a very long casting process involved also in finding the right constellation within the group of friends, but once I came across Amaryllis, I knew I had Laura.
Denmark has been your constant costar. taverns, classrooms, rising seas. do you still call it home, or only a backdrop.
I live in Denmark together with my family. It continues to be one of my sources of inspiration – past and present. Perhaps because I know my country well enough now for it to reward me with the kind of detail that brings my writing to life.
Your work dissects human closeness until only bone remains. did television give you sharper tools for the cutting.
There’s pros and cons to everything. There is more time but there are also a lot of characters.
The Oscar sits behind you. did the applause change your appetite or only sharpen your hunger.
I always wanted to reach a large audience, and I love to see my work travel. I think art has an innate ability to reach out and communicate across borders that moves me.
And when this flood is done, will you stay in television’s labyrinth or return to cinema’s single beam of light.
I am filmmaker and I continue to be a filmmaker, but I also enjoy writing, making tv series and theatre plays. It all comes down to the story and the project.
Vinterberg’s answers flow like the tide that haunts his series measured, deliberate, each pulling something buried to the surface. there is no ego in his voice, only a quiet curiosity about why humans cling to one another when the world begins to shift. families like ours is not a warning; it’s a reflection. he asks what happens when luck runs out, yet what he really shows us is what remains: love, loyalty, and the thin, stubborn thread of hope.
before we part, i ask the question that has nothing to do with cinema. New Zealand have you been? he shakes his head, smiles. not yet.
we would love to host you.
— Roger Wyllie, View Mag
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