Baz Luhrmann Doing 'Great Gatsby', and You Can Tell He Doesn't Trust You Knowing That

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Don't let Baz Lurhmann's narrowed, suspicious eyes fool you. Behind the icy glare lies a mind hard at work on once again bringing something called "Great Gatsby" to screens:

The director, as Risky Biz first reported last month, also said that he has officially acquired rights to "Gatsby." Luhrmann sees the pre-Depression story as a wake-up call as the economy comes crashing down and another gilded age, as he sees it, comes to an end.

"If you wanted to show a mirror to people that says, 'You've been drunk on money,' they're not going to want to see it. But if you reflected that mirror on another time they'd be willing to."

He said that he wants to move quickly on the "Gatsby" project because of that timeliness. "I'm going to move faster than I have before. I'd be surprised if it's another seven years," he said, referring to the period between "Rouge" and "Australia."

You're right, Baz. People don't want to see a mirror held up to themselves. They want a mirror held up to the past, so that they can kind of look at it from the side and think, "That reflected image sort of looks like me, but inverted because it's a mirror, and wearing old fashioney clothing."

Having read this in high school, I can tell you with confidence that this movie should be something about the eyes of the doctor billboard are like the eyes of God or something.

Luhrmann rushes from 'Australia' to 'Gatsby' [THR]