
Pedro Pascal or Chris Evans: who has most value on 'the stock market of men'?
That's how she found herself as a professional matchmaker.
What may have begun as a purely transactional gig, a way for her to keep making her art in an expensive city, taught her more about people's wants and needs and the true contents of their hearts than she could have ever imagined.
"I always wanted to write something about it because there seemed to be a story in it that is massive and very epic in proportion," Song said. "It affects every human being on Earth."
And while waiting for her breakout film Past Lives to debut, she did.
That film is Materialists, a modern-day love story starring Dakota Johnson, Pedro Pascal and Chris Evans that's now showing in cinemas.
Johnson is the matchmaker presented with two different types of men for herself: one a poor struggling actor and ex-boyfriend; the other a wealthy "unicorn". The internet has already drawn battle lines.
25 HOTTEST POPCORN MOVIES THIS WINTER
Past Lives, Song's stunning debut, explored not only love and longing but the very idea that our romantic choices, right or wrong, bring lifelong consequences. Compared to that soulful film, Materialists might look suspiciously like it could be glossy, superficial and ... OK, loads of fun! But perhaps a bit more Bridget Jones than Celine Song.
That doesn't mean the experience rings hollow. Just as Past Lives wasn't really about a love triangle, Materialists is about something more than the question of which guy is the "correct" choice.
It's a smart rom-com that tries to be honest about life and still leave us smiling.
Song and Johnson spoke recently about the film, falling in love and the modern marketplace of dating. Remarks have been edited for clarity and brevity.
Question: How did you find each other?
SONG: We met up thinking that we were just going to get to know each other and be friends and I walked away from that conversation - this is just from my perspective - but I think I was still sitting there when I texted my producers and the studio being like, "I think I've found my Lucy." That's how casting works for me, it's always about falling in love. It's very connected to what we talk about in the film. Like, there's no mathematical anything. It just the feeling that you get talking to someone and you're like, oh I just know.
JOHNSON: I knew you had this movie that you were about to start making. I was basically told it was too late. I was like, but I really want to meet her because she's so smart, and I've seen interviews and obviously had seen Past Lives. I wanted to talk and get to know her as an artist and a person and so I went into this being like there's no chance that I'll be in this movie, but maybe she'll make another one. We just had such a good time talking, I didn't even know that I was someone she was thinking about. A few weeks later we spoke. It was very romantic.
Q: Where do we meet Lucy in life?
JOHNSON: She's sort of at the top of her game in her work and is very disconnected from her heart and focused on being a perfectionist and getting people to get married. On the surface, you see her as a very transactional person and not really invested in people's souls, but she actually is and really does want the best for them. She's also on her own journey of trying to figure out what it is she wants for herself in this life, and, essentially, do you fight for the thing that you think you want, or do you fight for that thing that you know you need? Is that right, Celine?
SONG: That's so good.
Q: What are you trying to say through the two men in her life?
SONG: It was never going to be a conversation about which flavor of a person. It's actually so much more about this marketplace of dating that all of us live in if you're single, and also the marketplace that Dakota's character is navigating. She knows the math better than anyone else in the film. She's an excellent matchmaker. Pedro plays somebody who is probably, in straight dating, someone of the highest possible value. Chris' character, in the spectrum in the marketplace of values of dating, is someone who is of the lowest value possible. I find them to be such adorable characters, very worthy of an adoration. Lucy knows exactly where they fall in the stock market of men. It's actually about the way that the math around that is going to blow up.
HAVE YOU SEEN THESE YET?
JOHNSON: Celine speaks so eloquently about the marketplace of dating and I glitch at those words because I'm like, you can't explain love that way. But that's actually how people are. Marriage used to be a business deal. It was like, my father wants your cows and my mother needs your wheat and whatever. It was a trade-off. But now there's all these books about how we expect our partner to fulfill every single aspect of our needs. And the world being dominated by social media, people don't meet in real life anymore. They don't behave normally in public. People are in a very strange place in evolution, and I think the difference between these two characters and these two men, sure they are different ends of the spectrum in terms of like technical value, materialistic value. But also each of them have the opposite in terms of psycho-spiritual value and emotional value and what they can offer the other person in terms of soul evolution and growth. Perhaps because she works in this world of trying to understand people and what they want, she's forced to go more inward and really interrogate herself and say, what do I really want and what is actually important in this life? Is it how much money I have or is it how truly loved I am?
SONG: To me, it's about this contradiction, right? It's this thing of how we talk about what we want in our partner, when we're asked to use language to describe it, and how we literally, spiritually fall in love. The gap between those two things is terrifyingly big. To me, that's where the mystery of the film is.
AP/AAP
Before Celine Song was an Oscar-nominated filmmaker, she was a playwright in New York who needed day jobs to pay rent.
That's how she found herself as a professional matchmaker.
What may have begun as a purely transactional gig, a way for her to keep making her art in an expensive city, taught her more about people's wants and needs and the true contents of their hearts than she could have ever imagined.
"I always wanted to write something about it because there seemed to be a story in it that is massive and very epic in proportion," Song said. "It affects every human being on Earth."
And while waiting for her breakout film Past Lives to debut, she did.
That film is Materialists, a modern-day love story starring Dakota Johnson, Pedro Pascal and Chris Evans that's now showing in cinemas.
Johnson is the matchmaker presented with two different types of men for herself: one a poor struggling actor and ex-boyfriend; the other a wealthy "unicorn". The internet has already drawn battle lines.
25 HOTTEST POPCORN MOVIES THIS WINTER
Past Lives, Song's stunning debut, explored not only love and longing but the very idea that our romantic choices, right or wrong, bring lifelong consequences. Compared to that soulful film, Materialists might look suspiciously like it could be glossy, superficial and ... OK, loads of fun! But perhaps a bit more Bridget Jones than Celine Song.
That doesn't mean the experience rings hollow. Just as Past Lives wasn't really about a love triangle, Materialists is about something more than the question of which guy is the "correct" choice.
It's a smart rom-com that tries to be honest about life and still leave us smiling.
Song and Johnson spoke recently about the film, falling in love and the modern marketplace of dating. Remarks have been edited for clarity and brevity.
Question: How did you find each other?
SONG: We met up thinking that we were just going to get to know each other and be friends and I walked away from that conversation - this is just from my perspective - but I think I was still sitting there when I texted my producers and the studio being like, "I think I've found my Lucy." That's how casting works for me, it's always about falling in love. It's very connected to what we talk about in the film. Like, there's no mathematical anything. It just the feeling that you get talking to someone and you're like, oh I just know.
JOHNSON: I knew you had this movie that you were about to start making. I was basically told it was too late. I was like, but I really want to meet her because she's so smart, and I've seen interviews and obviously had seen Past Lives. I wanted to talk and get to know her as an artist and a person and so I went into this being like there's no chance that I'll be in this movie, but maybe she'll make another one. We just had such a good time talking, I didn't even know that I was someone she was thinking about. A few weeks later we spoke. It was very romantic.
Q: Where do we meet Lucy in life?
JOHNSON: She's sort of at the top of her game in her work and is very disconnected from her heart and focused on being a perfectionist and getting people to get married. On the surface, you see her as a very transactional person and not really invested in people's souls, but she actually is and really does want the best for them. She's also on her own journey of trying to figure out what it is she wants for herself in this life, and, essentially, do you fight for the thing that you think you want, or do you fight for that thing that you know you need? Is that right, Celine?
SONG: That's so good.
Q: What are you trying to say through the two men in her life?
SONG: It was never going to be a conversation about which flavor of a person. It's actually so much more about this marketplace of dating that all of us live in if you're single, and also the marketplace that Dakota's character is navigating. She knows the math better than anyone else in the film. She's an excellent matchmaker. Pedro plays somebody who is probably, in straight dating, someone of the highest possible value. Chris' character, in the spectrum in the marketplace of values of dating, is someone who is of the lowest value possible. I find them to be such adorable characters, very worthy of an adoration. Lucy knows exactly where they fall in the stock market of men. It's actually about the way that the math around that is going to blow up.
HAVE YOU SEEN THESE YET?
JOHNSON: Celine speaks so eloquently about the marketplace of dating and I glitch at those words because I'm like, you can't explain love that way. But that's actually how people are. Marriage used to be a business deal. It was like, my father wants your cows and my mother needs your wheat and whatever. It was a trade-off. But now there's all these books about how we expect our partner to fulfill every single aspect of our needs. And the world being dominated by social media, people don't meet in real life anymore. They don't behave normally in public. People are in a very strange place in evolution, and I think the difference between these two characters and these two men, sure they are different ends of the spectrum in terms of like technical value, materialistic value. But also each of them have the opposite in terms of psycho-spiritual value and emotional value and what they can offer the other person in terms of soul evolution and growth. Perhaps because she works in this world of trying to understand people and what they want, she's forced to go more inward and really interrogate herself and say, what do I really want and what is actually important in this life? Is it how much money I have or is it how truly loved I am?
SONG: To me, it's about this contradiction, right? It's this thing of how we talk about what we want in our partner, when we're asked to use language to describe it, and how we literally, spiritually fall in love. The gap between those two things is terrifyingly big. To me, that's where the mystery of the film is.
AP/AAP
Before Celine Song was an Oscar-nominated filmmaker, she was a playwright in New York who needed day jobs to pay rent.
That's how she found herself as a professional matchmaker.
What may have begun as a purely transactional gig, a way for her to keep making her art in an expensive city, taught her more about people's wants and needs and the true contents of their hearts than she could have ever imagined.
"I always wanted to write something about it because there seemed to be a story in it that is massive and very epic in proportion," Song said. "It affects every human being on Earth."
And while waiting for her breakout film Past Lives to debut, she did.
That film is Materialists, a modern-day love story starring Dakota Johnson, Pedro Pascal and Chris Evans that's now showing in cinemas.
Johnson is the matchmaker presented with two different types of men for herself: one a poor struggling actor and ex-boyfriend; the other a wealthy "unicorn". The internet has already drawn battle lines.
25 HOTTEST POPCORN MOVIES THIS WINTER
Past Lives, Song's stunning debut, explored not only love and longing but the very idea that our romantic choices, right or wrong, bring lifelong consequences. Compared to that soulful film, Materialists might look suspiciously like it could be glossy, superficial and ... OK, loads of fun! But perhaps a bit more Bridget Jones than Celine Song.
That doesn't mean the experience rings hollow. Just as Past Lives wasn't really about a love triangle, Materialists is about something more than the question of which guy is the "correct" choice.
It's a smart rom-com that tries to be honest about life and still leave us smiling.
Song and Johnson spoke recently about the film, falling in love and the modern marketplace of dating. Remarks have been edited for clarity and brevity.
Question: How did you find each other?
SONG: We met up thinking that we were just going to get to know each other and be friends and I walked away from that conversation - this is just from my perspective - but I think I was still sitting there when I texted my producers and the studio being like, "I think I've found my Lucy." That's how casting works for me, it's always about falling in love. It's very connected to what we talk about in the film. Like, there's no mathematical anything. It just the feeling that you get talking to someone and you're like, oh I just know.
JOHNSON: I knew you had this movie that you were about to start making. I was basically told it was too late. I was like, but I really want to meet her because she's so smart, and I've seen interviews and obviously had seen Past Lives. I wanted to talk and get to know her as an artist and a person and so I went into this being like there's no chance that I'll be in this movie, but maybe she'll make another one. We just had such a good time talking, I didn't even know that I was someone she was thinking about. A few weeks later we spoke. It was very romantic.
Q: Where do we meet Lucy in life?
JOHNSON: She's sort of at the top of her game in her work and is very disconnected from her heart and focused on being a perfectionist and getting people to get married. On the surface, you see her as a very transactional person and not really invested in people's souls, but she actually is and really does want the best for them. She's also on her own journey of trying to figure out what it is she wants for herself in this life, and, essentially, do you fight for the thing that you think you want, or do you fight for that thing that you know you need? Is that right, Celine?
SONG: That's so good.
Q: What are you trying to say through the two men in her life?
SONG: It was never going to be a conversation about which flavor of a person. It's actually so much more about this marketplace of dating that all of us live in if you're single, and also the marketplace that Dakota's character is navigating. She knows the math better than anyone else in the film. She's an excellent matchmaker. Pedro plays somebody who is probably, in straight dating, someone of the highest possible value. Chris' character, in the spectrum in the marketplace of values of dating, is someone who is of the lowest value possible. I find them to be such adorable characters, very worthy of an adoration. Lucy knows exactly where they fall in the stock market of men. It's actually about the way that the math around that is going to blow up.
HAVE YOU SEEN THESE YET?
JOHNSON: Celine speaks so eloquently about the marketplace of dating and I glitch at those words because I'm like, you can't explain love that way. But that's actually how people are. Marriage used to be a business deal. It was like, my father wants your cows and my mother needs your wheat and whatever. It was a trade-off. But now there's all these books about how we expect our partner to fulfill every single aspect of our needs. And the world being dominated by social media, people don't meet in real life anymore. They don't behave normally in public. People are in a very strange place in evolution, and I think the difference between these two characters and these two men, sure they are different ends of the spectrum in terms of like technical value, materialistic value. But also each of them have the opposite in terms of psycho-spiritual value and emotional value and what they can offer the other person in terms of soul evolution and growth. Perhaps because she works in this world of trying to understand people and what they want, she's forced to go more inward and really interrogate herself and say, what do I really want and what is actually important in this life? Is it how much money I have or is it how truly loved I am?
SONG: To me, it's about this contradiction, right? It's this thing of how we talk about what we want in our partner, when we're asked to use language to describe it, and how we literally, spiritually fall in love. The gap between those two things is terrifyingly big. To me, that's where the mystery of the film is.
AP/AAP
Before Celine Song was an Oscar-nominated filmmaker, she was a playwright in New York who needed day jobs to pay rent.
That's how she found herself as a professional matchmaker.
What may have begun as a purely transactional gig, a way for her to keep making her art in an expensive city, taught her more about people's wants and needs and the true contents of their hearts than she could have ever imagined.
"I always wanted to write something about it because there seemed to be a story in it that is massive and very epic in proportion," Song said. "It affects every human being on Earth."
And while waiting for her breakout film Past Lives to debut, she did.
That film is Materialists, a modern-day love story starring Dakota Johnson, Pedro Pascal and Chris Evans that's now showing in cinemas.
Johnson is the matchmaker presented with two different types of men for herself: one a poor struggling actor and ex-boyfriend; the other a wealthy "unicorn". The internet has already drawn battle lines.
25 HOTTEST POPCORN MOVIES THIS WINTER
Past Lives, Song's stunning debut, explored not only love and longing but the very idea that our romantic choices, right or wrong, bring lifelong consequences. Compared to that soulful film, Materialists might look suspiciously like it could be glossy, superficial and ... OK, loads of fun! But perhaps a bit more Bridget Jones than Celine Song.
That doesn't mean the experience rings hollow. Just as Past Lives wasn't really about a love triangle, Materialists is about something more than the question of which guy is the "correct" choice.
It's a smart rom-com that tries to be honest about life and still leave us smiling.
Song and Johnson spoke recently about the film, falling in love and the modern marketplace of dating. Remarks have been edited for clarity and brevity.
Question: How did you find each other?
SONG: We met up thinking that we were just going to get to know each other and be friends and I walked away from that conversation - this is just from my perspective - but I think I was still sitting there when I texted my producers and the studio being like, "I think I've found my Lucy." That's how casting works for me, it's always about falling in love. It's very connected to what we talk about in the film. Like, there's no mathematical anything. It just the feeling that you get talking to someone and you're like, oh I just know.
JOHNSON: I knew you had this movie that you were about to start making. I was basically told it was too late. I was like, but I really want to meet her because she's so smart, and I've seen interviews and obviously had seen Past Lives. I wanted to talk and get to know her as an artist and a person and so I went into this being like there's no chance that I'll be in this movie, but maybe she'll make another one. We just had such a good time talking, I didn't even know that I was someone she was thinking about. A few weeks later we spoke. It was very romantic.
Q: Where do we meet Lucy in life?
JOHNSON: She's sort of at the top of her game in her work and is very disconnected from her heart and focused on being a perfectionist and getting people to get married. On the surface, you see her as a very transactional person and not really invested in people's souls, but she actually is and really does want the best for them. She's also on her own journey of trying to figure out what it is she wants for herself in this life, and, essentially, do you fight for the thing that you think you want, or do you fight for that thing that you know you need? Is that right, Celine?
SONG: That's so good.
Q: What are you trying to say through the two men in her life?
SONG: It was never going to be a conversation about which flavor of a person. It's actually so much more about this marketplace of dating that all of us live in if you're single, and also the marketplace that Dakota's character is navigating. She knows the math better than anyone else in the film. She's an excellent matchmaker. Pedro plays somebody who is probably, in straight dating, someone of the highest possible value. Chris' character, in the spectrum in the marketplace of values of dating, is someone who is of the lowest value possible. I find them to be such adorable characters, very worthy of an adoration. Lucy knows exactly where they fall in the stock market of men. It's actually about the way that the math around that is going to blow up.
HAVE YOU SEEN THESE YET?
JOHNSON: Celine speaks so eloquently about the marketplace of dating and I glitch at those words because I'm like, you can't explain love that way. But that's actually how people are. Marriage used to be a business deal. It was like, my father wants your cows and my mother needs your wheat and whatever. It was a trade-off. But now there's all these books about how we expect our partner to fulfill every single aspect of our needs. And the world being dominated by social media, people don't meet in real life anymore. They don't behave normally in public. People are in a very strange place in evolution, and I think the difference between these two characters and these two men, sure they are different ends of the spectrum in terms of like technical value, materialistic value. But also each of them have the opposite in terms of psycho-spiritual value and emotional value and what they can offer the other person in terms of soul evolution and growth. Perhaps because she works in this world of trying to understand people and what they want, she's forced to go more inward and really interrogate herself and say, what do I really want and what is actually important in this life? Is it how much money I have or is it how truly loved I am?
SONG: To me, it's about this contradiction, right? It's this thing of how we talk about what we want in our partner, when we're asked to use language to describe it, and how we literally, spiritually fall in love. The gap between those two things is terrifyingly big. To me, that's where the mystery of the film is.
AP/AAP

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Perth Now
a day ago
- Perth Now
Old Guard 2 director Victoria Mahoney hails Charlize Theron's dedication
Charlize Theron dedicated "1,000 percent of herself" to the action scenes in The Old Guard 2. The 49-year-old actress teamed up with Victoria Mahoney to make The Old Guard 2, and Victoria has praised Charlize for her whole-hearted approach to the project. The director told Deadline: "The thing about Charlize is, she comes hard, and she dedicates 1,000 percent of herself to every sequence, whether it's trauma or action, and it's visible. "People know that, for many years we've all seen it, and we've witnessed it. But there is something really electrifying to see it up close in person, and she doesn't leave anything on the field, as we say." Victoria hailed Charlize as the "engine on the Old Guard franchise". The director also suggested that the Oscar-winning actress actually helped to lift the performance levels of the film's cast and crew. She explained: "I worked in pre-production for months with our fight choreographer, Georgi Manchev to make certain that the action throughout the movie had some sense of emotion. "Obviously, and specifically the alley fight between Charlize's Andromache character and Veronica Van's Quynh character. It was vital that it had levels and layers and grounding in the heart, and this is why I mention this, I was excited when Georgi told me that Charlize was really moved the first time they auditioned the alley fight for her. Because, you know, it isn't easy to make audiences feel when two people are fighting. My belief is, if audiences don't feel anything in a fight scene, then what are we doing? "So, what happens when someone like Charlize comes hard like that to any role is that everyone on the ground, you know, crew rises up to meet her and help make her dreams come true. And I'm really proud of what we all accomplished, and, let me tell you, Charlize is the engine on the Old Guard franchise – without a doubt." Meanwhile, Henry Golding recently hailed Charlize as a "rare commodity in Hollywood". The 38-year-old actor stars alongside Charlize in The Old Guard 2, and Henry lavished praise on his co-star, observing that Charlize is one of the most professional people he's worked with. Speaking to People, Henry explained: "You know what it is? She leads from the front. She's like a rare commodity in Hollywood. "She is the female counterpart to a Tom Cruise. She's the producer. She's on set first thing in the morning, last at night, and she's creating what she wants and she's in there with the action. She's in there with the choreography." Henry believes that Charlize and Tom are unique figures in the movie business. He said: "She and Tom Cruise are some of the last of the movie stars."


7NEWS
a day ago
- 7NEWS
‘Grease' star John Travolta's fall from $20M Hollywood paydays to box office bombs
Once among the biggest names in Hollywood, John Travolta is now more punchline than powerhouse, with recent flops and career missteps overshadowing a legacy that once included Oscar nods and million-dollar paydays. Despite iconic turns in Grease, Saturday Night Fever and a major comeback with Pulp Fiction, the 70-year-old actor's more recent efforts have failed to land. His latest films, High Rollers and Mob Land, barely registered with audiences — the latter pulling just £138 ($A287) at the UK box office, reported. Industry insiders say Travolta's staying power may have become his undoing. 'If Travolta had stopped after his Pulp Fiction comeback, he'd be remembered as one of the greats,' one Disney executive told news outlets. 'But now he's like that sad guest who overstayed their welcome at the party.' The reviews back it up. The Guardian labelled High Rollers 'a heart-slowing work of staggering stupidity,' while Rotten Tomatoes has yet to rate it — an awkward silence in itself. Travolta also holds the rare (and unfortunate) honour of scoring two films with a zero per cent rating on the site in the same year (Gotti and Speed Kills, both 2018). In recent years, Travolta has become a fixture in low-budget, straight-to-streaming thrillers known in the industry as 'geezer teezers' — a label popularised by Bruce Willis. These films trade on fading star power to drive rentals, with actors often appearing on screen for mere minutes. Travolta's career has also been dogged by persistent rumours and controversy. One missed opportunity? Turning down the lead in American Gigolo — a box office smash — allegedly over concerns about the film's 'gay subtext.' The role went to Richard Gere, launching him to stardom. It's a long fall for an actor who once lit up the screen — and the dance floor — but in Hollywood, comebacks are always just one hit away.

News.com.au
3 days ago
- News.com.au
Dakota Johnson shows off bikini body on girls trip with Kate Hudson following split from Chris Martin
Forget ice-cream and a rom-com to mend a broken heart. For recently single Dakota Johnson, a girls' trip on a yacht is the way to go. Fresh from her break-up with Chris Martin, the actress stripped down to a skimpy bikini for some fun in Ibiza with her girlfriends. The Materialists star, 35, sported a white two-piece while her friend and fellow actress Kate Hudson wore a black bikini top with matching shorts as they frolicked in the Mediterranean with some girlfriends. The girls' getaway comes one month after Johnson spilt from Coldplay frontman Chris Martin, 48, after eight years of dating. They were rumoured to have gotten engaged in December 2020 when she was seen wearing an emerald sparkler on her ring finger, but their engagement wasn't confirmed until March 2024. '[They] got engaged years ago, but were in no rush to get married,' a source told People magazine at the time. Sadly, the pair will no longer make that trip down the aisle following their break-up in early June, reportedly over two major factors. 'They really tried to work through their issues but the age gap was often a problem and she'd expressed that she may want children in the future, whereas Chris is kind of done with that part of his life but they discussed it,' a source told The US Sun. The source added that the pair had been 'back and forth on issues for years' and tried to figure out a future. 'They made some beautiful memories as a family and it'll be hard for both of them to move on after such a long relationship but they will do it,' the source said. And it appears Hudson is helping Johnson since the break-up. The inseparable girlfriends were also seen on a night out in Rome, dining at the iconic Pierluigi restaurant, where they ran into pop star Ricky Martin. Johnson and Hudson, 46, have had similar paths in Hollywood. Both are the daughters of legendary stars Melanie Griffith and Goldie Hawn, respectively, who are long-time friends themselves. The pair grew up in the shadow of their famous mothers before breaking out and rising through the ranks of Hollywood. However, Johnson's dad, actor Don Johnson, didn't want her to become an actress but rather attend the famous Juilliard School in New York. 'He said, 'If you go to college, you still get an allowance,'' she recalled on the US Today show last year. 'And I was like, 'Well, I'm going to be an actress.' So he was like, 'Alright, well you're on your own. I was cut off.' The budding star turned to modelling for rent money as she pursued acting, but said she 'definitely had moments where I couldn't afford groceries and things like that and needed to ask my mum to help me,' she said. 'She was the nice one.'