NEW YORK — Steven Soderbergh isn't just the director and cinematographer of his latest film. He's also, in a way, its central character.
''Presence'' is filmed entirely from the POV of a ghost inside a home a family has just moved into. Soderbergh, who serves as his own cinematographer under the pseudonym Peter Andrews (his father's name), essentially performs as the presence, a floating point-of-view that watches as the violence that killed the mysterious ghost threatens to be repeated.
For even the prolific Soderbergh, the film, which opens Friday in theaters, was a unique challenge. He shot ''Presence'' with a small digital camera while wearing slippers to soften his steps.
The 62-year-old filmmaker recently met a reporter in a midtown Manhattan hotel in between finishing post-production on his other upcoming movie ("Black Bag," a thriller Focus Features will release March 14) and beginning production in a few weeks on his next project, a romantic comedy that he says ''feels like a George Cukor movie.''
Soderbergh, whose films include ''Out of Sight,'' the ''Ocean's 11'' movies, ''Magic Mike'' and ''Erin Brockovich,'' tends to do a lot in small windows of time. ''Presence'' took 11 days to film.
That dexterous proficiency has made the ever-experimenting Soderbergh one of Hollywood's most widely respected evaluators of the movie business. In a wide-ranging conversation, he discussed why he thinks streaming is the most destructive force the movies have ever faced and why he's ''the cockroach of this industry."
AP: You use pseudonyms for yourself as a cinematographer and editor. Were you tempted to credit yourself as an actor for ''Presence''?
SODERBERGH: No, but what I did is subtle. For the first and only time Peter Andrews has a camera operator credit. That's not a credit that I typically take because I don't need it and I typically have another operator working with me. But I felt like this was a workout. It was tricky, but really fun. It was another level of performance anxiety because I ruined more takes than anyone else in the film by a larger factor. I was the one going: ''Cut. I f—ed that up. We got to go again.''