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#Guy Ritchie Was Constantly Rewriting The Gentlemen -BB

Guy Ritchie’s slick and hilarious new film, The Gentlemen, was constantly undergoing rewrites on set, much to the chagrin of star Matthew McConaughey. Every writer and director tends to have their own unique style, and Guy Ritchie is certainly no exception. The mind behind the new crime caper blockbuster The Gentlemen is well-known for his rapid-fire dialogue and hilariously vicious insults, a trademark which dates back to his first ever feature, Lock, Stock, and Two Smoking Barrels. That tone and flare, it seems, isn’t something Ritchie expects to nail right out of the gate.

The Gentlemen is exceptionally star-studded, even for a Guy Ritchie film, featuring an ensemble that includes McConaughey, Charlie Hunnam, Michelle Dockery, Jeremy Strong, Colin Farrell, Henry Golding, Hugh Grant, and many more. Most of that cast, impressive as it is, has never received the full Guy Ritchie experience, especially not one unhampered by the mandates of a pre-existing IP like Sherlock Holmes or Aladdin, and it seems Ritchie’s penchant for last-minute revisions caught many of them by surprise.

Speaking with CinemaBlend, McConaughey revealed how these rewrites were initially challenging for him as an actor. His usual preparations were thrown out the window with Ritchie’s constant revisions that required him to learn what he described as „an agility“ to the set every day in order to adapt to this new flow. It sounds like this was not an easy transition, but McConoughey reveals he came around once he realized the on-the-fly changes Ritchie was coming up with were better than what he had prepared, and they helped contribute to the style and „musicality“ of the film that many find so captivating.

Guy Ritchie has one of the most recognizable styles of any writer/director out there, one that puts so much emphasis on street-wise and motormouthed dialogue and iconic quotes unlike everything else most actors get to work with. Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels and Snatch defined that style but it’s evident in everything he does, with the director even going so far as to rebrand King Arthur as a cocky street urchin in King Arthur: Legend of the Sword. His style has continued to evolve into The Gentlemen, which is Ritchie’s most complex feature yet.

McConaughey has personified many different eccentric personalities in his long career, perhaps most notably with his mastery of Nic Pizzolatto’s pseudo-philosophical dialogue on True Detective which sparked the renaissance of his career, so it’s interesting to see him adapting to such a new style. His smarmy charm is a perfect fit for Guy Ritchie’s signature mayhem, so it’s exciting to see the two of them so on the same page of The Gentlemen after a less-than-ideal beginning of their partnership.

Source: CinemaBlend

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