[on A Hologram for the King (2016)] Dave [Dave Eggers] had investigated the country quite intensely when he wrote the novel, and I kind of mimicked or recreated the trip that he made through the country. So, I went to the same hotel room, I met the same guide, was a really great guy; he was the role model for Yousef. He was really this funny guy and actually some of the experiences that I met came into the film, even though they are not in the book; the way he handles the subject of executions - that it's just part of his daily life. It's really weird, because it doesn't feel like it's really reflected, but at the same time, you can always say 'Well, we're not that much better about it.' {Laughs} And then his not liking Alan to pick up with girls here, and at the same time of course he's completely modern. It's actually contradictory, so he's obviously a transitionary character of the society. When I did this trip, I met all these kinds of people; and that people like Zahra, and then people like Yousef, and I met people who were really traditionalist and really conservative. So, you have a real big variety. And if you're honest, if you take a very representative trip, let's say, through the US, you will have the exact same experiences. [2016]
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