Why The Convert's Action Sequences Are More Brutal Than Die Another Day Explained By Director

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Why The Convert's Action Sequences Are More Brutal Than Die Another Day Explained By Director
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Guy Pearce in The Convert

Summary In The Convert, Thomas Munro is a lay preacher sent to a British settlement in New Zealand in the 1830s. Where he hopes to find peace and escape the demons of his past, he is thrust into the middle of a conflict between two Maori tribes and a settlement full of ignorant British people who don't understand the ways of the Indigenous people living on the land they now occupy.

Lee Tamahori Wanted "A Story More About A Humanist Who's Hiding Out In Clerical Clothes" Tamahori explained how the story of The Convert changed after he got his hands on the script in order to make the character more enticing to him. Instead of following a religious zealot set on converting the indigenous people of New Zealand, as the title may imply, The Convert follows a different path. With Munro and the Maori influencing each other.

One of the things I was curious about is kind of the significance of the title for you, The Convert, because this completely subverted what I expected to see based on the title and knowing that there was a preacherat the center of this. Action is just something you make up in your head and you do it shot by shot by shot by shot, and work your way through it. To me it is always important, and in the difference between a James Bond action sequence and a Convert action sequence is The Convert the action has to be scarily authentic. It has to be brutal. It's fast. There's no slow motion, no trickery going on. It's just shot by shot by shot, edited down to a point.

Guy Pearce's Character Is "Fascinated To See What They're Like As A Tribal Structure" Tamahori broke down the dynamic between Munro and the Maori tribes he encounters in the movie. He revealed how Munro's mission was primarily to convert the Indigenous people of New Zealand to Christianity, but because of Munro's humanist tendencies and fascination with the Maori, this quickly falls to the wayside.

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