This is an interview with Bradley Cooper and it has been shown below verbally where there interviewer asks a questions and after Bradley Cooper answers.
The interview is an extract from http://www.indielondon.co.uk/Film-Review/limitless-bradley-cooper-interview and all credits go to them
Q. Unlocked potential is an endlessly fascinating subject, so would take the pill that could allow you to access 100% of your brain and what appealed to you about the role?
Bradley Cooper:
"I would take it. As for the appeal, Leslie Dixon wrote an incredible script that was just sexy, cool and it moved like a house on fire. It was based on a novel that an Irishman named Alan Glynn wrote in 2001, previously called The Dark Fields. But Leslie just wrote this story that it was hard to pinpoint what genre it was. It had a great concept, which was what would happen if you took a pill that could unlock your complete potential? It’s just a great hook… if you could change the neural pathways in your brain so that you could recall everything you’ve ever heard, taste, smelled or touched, basically from the womb on, and use it at your disposal, that’s an interesting concept."
Q. How faithful is it to the book?Bradley Cooper: "It’s very faithful to the character. In fact, I found it to be an invaluable source material. It’s written in the first person, so it’s basically Eddie’s journal you’re reading. It’s a journal that he’s writing in a motel in Vermont, at the end of his life. But things don’t go as well for Eddie Spinola [as he is] in the book as they do for Eddie Morra [the film character’s name]. So, it’s a completely different trajectory. And Lindy, the character that Abbie Cornish plays, is actually Carl Van Loon’s daughter in the book, which changes everything. There’s also no ice skating rink scene in the book, which is my favourite scene, and no blood drinking, which I love. The hope is that it would invoke a reaction of: “Oh my God, is he really going to do it? I hope he does because I want him to survive, but I can’t believe…”
Q. Do you think the film serves as a comment on drug dependency?
Bradley Cooper: It uses this idea of taking a pill as a way to drive the narrative. It’s the hook by which we tell a story about power. But because that is the hook, that is the subject matter, it hopefully will, like any piece of art, provoke discussion. There Will Be Blood, for instance, is an entertaining movie about this guy’s greed, but it’s also about what happened agriculturally to California, it’s also about zoning rights and property and fatherhood. You know what I mean? So, this movie is a fun ride and it’s about power and the abuse of power, what you do with it. But it’s also about drug addiction, politics, the political structure, the investment world…
Q. You have an executive producer credit on Limitless, is that a sign of doing more in the future for you?Bradley Cooper: I hope to, I really do. It was a nice gesture for Relativity to give me that credit. I don’t really think like an actor, I really do think in the way of the whole film, so any part that I could play collaboratively, outside of just me in the role, I love.
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Bloopers of the film and behind the scenes
Pictures where the camera work is shown
The man next to Bradley Coopers look like he almost went of script.. it's like he is almost day dreaming
The amazing transformation scene
After Bradley cooper takes this pill called the NZT, his vision becomes
better and now this is how he sees the world ... all clear and precise,
it's almost like his brain has transformed into a living video recorder
Another extraordinary film
Hangover part 3
Movie summary - It's been two years since the gang known as the Wolfpack narrowly escaped disaster in Bangkok. Now, Phil (Bradley Cooper), Stu (Ed Helms) and Doug (Justin Bartha) have happy lives at home -- but Alan (Zach Galifianakis) doesn't. Still lacking contentment and a sense of purpose, Alan has gone off his meds and surrendered to his natural impulses. It's up to the other members of the Wolfpack to get him through his personal crisis by embarking on a road trip to the place it all began: Las Vegas.Make sure you check out this movie.
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"Harry Potter. The boy who lived, come to die." Those chilling words from Lord Voldemort bear the truth of the eighth and final installment in the Harry Potter franchise. But they also hint at a lie. "
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