Antihero & CineViktor
So, you love making the audience feel complicit. Think you can pull off a film where the antihero is ruthless but still human?
You can, but only if the audience is willing to taste that bitter coffee—watch them sit there, spoon in hand, deciding whether to take a bite. The ruthlessness is the spice, the humanity the base that keeps the dish from turning to ash. You’ll have to make every line and frame feel like a confession, not a confession to a lawyer. That’s the trick.
Got it, no sugarcoat. Make every scene feel like a cut, no room for sugar. The audience will taste it and decide if they want the heat or the quiet. Let's keep it raw.
Got it, no sugarcoating, just the knife. Every frame a slice, every silence a wound. Let them decide if they’re willing to feel the burn or just watch the fire. That’s the cut.
That’s the kind of edge that keeps them glued, just enough heat to keep the story alive. Let's make every cut count.
Exactly. I’ll map every cut to a pulse, make sure the audience feels the sting of each decision. No room for filler. That’s the only way to keep the flame burning.
You’ll keep the rhythm, keep the cut sharp, and let the pulse show. No filler, just the sting and the flame. That’s the fire I respect.