Anderson unravels love and work in ‘Phantom Thread’
NEW YORK — The day after last November’s presidential election, Paul Thomas Anderson boarded a plane to London to go make a movie about love.
“Phantom Thread,” which began shooting days after the inauguration, is a hushed chamber drama made amid a time of wall-to-wall cacophony. For his second — and as it has turned out, likely final — collaboration with Daniel Day-Lewis, the protean 47-year-old Californian filmmaker endeavoured to make his British gothic romance — his “Rebecca.”
“We have a really old-fashioned kind of film. It has nothing to do with the current state of the world. Maybe that’s good, in a way,” Anderson said in a recent interview in SoHo. “The more the world continues to turn upside down, the more appreciative we can be of all these small things every day that we have with each other.”
It’s a nice sentiment that Anderson is immediately suspicious of.