CANNES, France — Before a journalist has even lobbed a question, Emma Stone and Yorgos Lanthimos spit out a string of overlapping answers.
''We have a great relationship,'' begins Lanthimos. ‘''We just love working together,'' adds Stone. ''It was cool to do a modern-day piece.'' ''Going back to some of the early stuff,'' says Lanthimos. ''A throwback,'' says Stone. ''Our relationship has evolved over time,'' Lanthimos adds.
''Totally,'' says Stone.
Stone and Lanthimos have by now honed their patter. They're just barely removed from the Oscar campaign for ''Poor Things,'' which culminated in four Academy Awards, including best actress for Stone. Just two months later, they're back together at the Cannes Film Festival with ''Kinds of Kindness,'' their third feature together and fourth film, counting the 2022 short ''Bleat.''
''We do have a bit of a double act going on,'' shrugs Stone.
Their collaboration has by now become so regular, and the talking points so scripted, that it would be easy to take it for granted. Minutes before they sat down for an interview in Cannes, a press release went out with the news that Lanthimos and Stone will soon begin shooting another movie together, titled ''Bugonia.''
Opposite as they may seem — one a 35-year-old star from Arizona, the other a 50-year-old arthouse filmmaker from Athens — they've rapidly formed one of the movies' strongest director-actor partnerships, a collaboration based on a shared sense of absurdity and a willingness to go, full-tilt, to some very strange places.
For Stone, the connection she feels with Lanthimos isn't so different than the one she does with Nathan Fielder, the darkly deadpan comedian of ''The Curse.''