Mexico City - Arab Today
Hollywood director Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu said that he's ready to "hibernate like a bear" after back-to-back work on two Oscar-nominated films, including "The Revenant."
The harrowing survival thriller starring Leonardo DiCaprio as a 19th-century fur trapper tops this year's Oscars nominations list with 12 nods, including for best picture, actor and director.
Gonzalez Inarritu also helmed last year's big Oscars winner "Birdman," which earned four golden statuettes, including for best picture and director.
The director compared the back-to-back movie directing to "running two marathons".
"The only challenge that I am facing is resting for six months. I want to crawl into a cave to hibernate like a bear," Gonzalez Inarritu told reporters at a press conference in Mexico City late Tuesday, where he is promoting his latest film.
"I cannot imagine that I will be making another movie anytime soon," he said.
The director told reporters that he began scouting out locations for "The Revenant" five years ago, but could not start filming straight away because of DiCaprio's busy schedule, which at the time included playing the lead in Martin Scorsese's 2013 "The Wolf of Wall Street."
"I'm not very good at resting but I seriously propose investigating how that can be done for a long time," the 52 year-old director joked.
"The Revenant," filmed in remote locations in Canada and Argentine Patagonia, tells the story of a fur trapper named Hugh Glass bent on survival and revenge in the remote US frontier of the 1820s.
- 'Authenticity,''perfection' -
"Much has been talked about with this film of the extreme conditions that we worked in," said DiCaprio, who was also at the event.
In "The Revenant" DiCaprio was forced to film naked in the snow, climb snow-covered mountains in sub-freezing temperatures wearing thick furs, spend hours lying still in the cold, and swim in frozen rivers. He also ate a piece of real bison liver.
The dapper movie star with youthful looks said he appreciated the "authenticity and perfection" of Gonzalez Inarritu's work.
"I'd absolutely work with Alejandro again," the 41 year-old DiCaprio said. "I'd love to work with him again."
The director heaped praise on his star's work.
"The Revenant" required "sacrifices and risks of historic proportions," Inarritu said, but "none of this would have been what it became" without DiCaprio's stellar performance, Inarritu said.
DiCaprio is up for taking home his first Academy Award, after several nominations, in the best actor category.
Should the Mexican director win an Oscar in the February 28 ceremony he would be joining just two other directors -- Joseph Mankiewicz and John Ford -- who won the award for two consecutive years.
Source: AFP