What can be said of the most successful writer/director of all time? James Cameron is in a league of his own. His filmography doesn’t have a failure in it. From Terminator to the #1 and #2 biggest movies of all time, Titantic and Avatar. I can wait to see what he comes up with next.
Take a listen to James Cameron Masterclass as he discusses his films and storytelling techniques. The screenplays below are the only ones that are available online. If you find any of his missing screenplays please leave the link int he comment section.
We have on the show returning champion film finance expert Franco Sama. His first episode is one of the most downloaded episodes in the history of the show (Listen to that episode here). Franco and I joke that his last episode turned him into a celebrity at film markets and festivals around the world. I mean, he can barely walk the halls of AFM without getting recognized.
Franco is a wealth of knowledge in the film finance space, and I have learned tons from him over the years. We discuss the effect the Coronavirus is and will have on not only raising money for a film but also selling that movie to an ever-changing marketplace. Nobody knows what will happen to the industry after this virus passes. We also discuss which studios are more vulnerable than others and the dos and don’ts when raising money for an indie film in today’s marketplace.
Here’s a bit about today’s guest.
Independent feature film producer Franco Sama boasts a remarkable and extensive history in public speaking and public relations and nearly two decades of independent film development, production and financing experience.
Sama has Executive Produced and/or produced an impressive array of over twenty (20) successful independent feature films, including most notably, “Guns, Girls and Gambling” starring Gary Oldman, Christian Slater, and Dane Cook, which is now a cult favorite; this film was released into theatres and acquired a worldwide distribution deal from Universal Pictures.
Other films Sama has produced include; “Black Limousine” starring David Arquette and Vivica Fox, “Tooth and Nail” starring Michael Madsen and Vinnie Jones, and “Paid” starring Corbin Bernsen and Tom Conti. Sama also serves as Executive Producer on the film festival darling “Petunia,” starring Thora Birch, Brittany Snow, and Academy Award winner Christine Lahti.
His shingle “Samaco Films, LLC,” headquartered on the lot at the prestigious, privately owned and operated independent film studio, Los Angeles Center Studios in Downtown Los Angeles, is currently financing and producing a slate of several independent feature films, including, “Vodun,” “Alexis Colette” and recently wrapped production on the $1M thriller, “The Inheritance.”
In addition, Sama is also a highly sought-after public guest speaker, having launched his hugely popular film financing and distribution forum program “Finance Indie Road Map”, otherwise known as “The F.I.R.M.” which is designed specifically to educate and assist first-and second-time filmmakers in their quest to develop, fund, produce and release their first feature film(s).
This EPIC episode is by far one of the most important shows you could listen to. Please share it with all your filmmaking and screenwriting friends. If you want the latest information on what it is like to raise money in today’s crazy world, get ready to take notes.
Alex Ferrari 3:21 I'd like to welcome back to the show returning champion, Franco Sama. How are you doing, sir?
Franco Sama 5:40 I'm doing great, Alex, How about yourself?
Alex Ferrari 5:42 Um, you know, it's it's it's a weird time. The world is an interesting time in the world right now. We're all locked up here. A self quarantining ourselves. Here, it's it's a weird time, we're gonna talk a little bit about the weird time as well. But you were just talking off air. And it's been last time you were on the show was episode. I don't forget what episode it was. But it was 2017.
Franco Sama 6:06 Right.
Alex Ferrari 6:07 And it was one of the more popular episodes we've ever done. And I know you and I have joked over the course of the last two years that you are now a celebrity at a AFM, film markets and film festivals. People walk up to you and say, Are you the guy from indie film hustle podcast?
Franco Sama 6:27 And they still do. It happened two weeks ago.
Alex Ferrari 6:31 It is it is it's a new always, like I say you always give the best stories because it's never just like a guy just randomly meeting you. Like, there's always a situation, whether it's the place, or whether it's the people involved in there's always a character involved.
Franco Sama 6:49 And I gotta tell you, it really makes my life interesting. Because other than that, my life isn't that interesting. But it's so cool. Because it's so unexpected for me, you know, I've never had that my whole life like, people, you know, I've always people have known me sort of on my work. Sure. But they never known the face behind it, you know, they just know the the name or the or the company or something. But for somebody to literally walk up to me either out of market or in just the general public population and recognize me and know not only recognize me, these guys can actually quote me, like, they know some of my catchphrases, and, and it's freaky. It's almost like, I feels a little stalker, you know, it's like, how do you know so much about me? But I'm very flattered every time it happens, I really haven't. I'm very grateful that that it will, first of all, what I'm really happy about is that they are hearing the message, you know, and that they're able that they're receiving the message, because that's why I do this right? Well, isn't that why any of us do this is we you know, you to go out into the world and speak on these types of issues around our business and our industry and financing. And the whole point is to educate people to help them not make these gigantic mistakes that could potentially end their careers before they even have one to begin with. And I and I get that guy number one. And I was lucky to get out of it. And I've seen it so many times. So when I hear that, and I know that people are listening to you, and they're listening to me, and they are hearing what we have to say, and that they're actually taking that information seriously and implementing it into their into their work and into their lives. It's there's no greater compliment for me.
Alex Ferrari 8:35 You are by far the most recognizable film finance guy in LA, there's no question about it. They can't hear you. You can't even walk AFM without being being attacked three, four or five times every second
Franco Sama 8:47 At one point, it all happened at one at one time. And I'm telling you, the people that I was hanging out with, for sure, were convinced that I was wandering around handing out hundreds and colonies people to come up for 10 gig and because it was so it was so weird. It was very, very, that was a little uncomfortable. Because it literally happened like with four different people within a span of about an hour. And that was just a coincidence. But it was that was when I really opened my eyes open. I'm like, wow, this medium is so powerful. It's incredible.
Alex Ferrari 9:21 I do I do
Franco Sama 9:24 the work that you do, because it's not just you know, when I talk to people about indie film, hustle, you know, we get into these conversations about all of the work that you do and the different, you know, podcasts that they've heard and the value that they get out of that and so I'm always encouraging people number one, get on board with Alex and, and I mean it I don't just say it, because I'm so grateful for our relationship, but because it's true.
Alex Ferrari 9:49 I pray I appreciate that. Frank, I appreciate that. And you and you're, you know, you're a straight shooter. In the world of film finance, there's not many, there's not many of you out there. I call you a unicorn There's unicorns out there. There's just very special, unique, you know, limited amounts of people in certain areas of our business and you are definitely one of them. So, so let's get into it today, my friend, you know, a lot has changed since 2017. a lot. Back then, back then it's two years ago. But back then, you know, s VOD was all the rage. You know, and Ott was going to be the big thing. And now it's a VOD. And the there was, there was no Disney plus there was no HBO Max, there was no peacock, there was no, I mean to be was barely getting off the ground. Pluto was, you know, guest coming up as well. So in the current marketplace? Well, first of all, you know, we'll talk about the elephant in the room, which is, as of this recording, the virus is affecting a lot of people around the world. And is yes, I just did, and I just did an episode this week about how the Coronavirus is actually affecting our industry. And we've lost, you know, lost, I think in China, they lost $2 billion in revenue worldwide, already 4 billion in revenue. And it's no notes, no stop and cite, like literally China right now, which is I think it's the second or the first biggest market, I'm not sure now, I don't know if it overtook the US or not. But they shut down 70,000 screens and like they shut down their their box office, which is decimating a very fragile, and honestly, in my opinion, vulnerable film industry, which I feel that the China market has been propping up the losses that occurred from DVDs and all the other foreign sales and all these other things that were there before, that have been taken away over the years. And China was kind of like, bubbling it up a little bit. But then all of a sudden, it's gone. And everyone's like, Oh, crap. So how do you how do you see this affecting our marketplace moving forward in 2020?
Franco Sama 11:59 Well, I mean, absolutely. The rug has been pulled out from underneath the industry. I mean, not certainly just our industry, but every industry and worldwide. It's a it's a it's, you know, the consequences of what is occurring right now is gonna probably impact us for the next decade. That's what I believe. And I we will get past it we do we do, yes, we get thing. But it really is going to require a readjust and major readjust, almost protect, potentially a complete paradigm shift in the way we do business. I mean, the good news prior to this event of the viruses that because of all of these emerging, emerging sort of marketplaces, content is now much more valuable, right? Because I remember back, when I was first starting off, you know, you're trying to get knocked down a door to get somebody to pay attention to you, because you had something, a project that you wanted to bring in. And people would just slam the door on you and get out of here, kid, you know, those roles have reversed quite a bit now. And content is king, and there's so much space now that needs to be filled with content. So that puts the creative people in a in a better position in terms of that. But then the question is, you know, now, the throngs of possibilities, how do you penetrate that? How do you patent that, because now you've got a billion times more competition than you used to have. So even though there's more opportunity, and access, it's still sort of a funnel. And, you know, somebody's getting stuck in that, you know, there's only a few people coming through that from everybody that's pouring into it. So I think, honestly, more than ever, you know, this, this business has always been a business of relationships. And you and I are a testament to that, you know, and not just you and I, but all of the people that you and I have in common in our circle, you know, that we help each other at all the events in our little comic clan. Right, right. Well, that's the core of the independent of the independent film world, at least here in LA. And I think that especially somebody new, they have to really focus on building those internal relationships. And finding the good guys, right, because the, there's a lot of good guys out there. You know, I being able to identify those people, and stay with them and work hard to make sure that they nurture and maintain those relationships over a long period of time, because this is the long game this whole industry is about playing the long game. So if anybody's in it for a quick anything, you know, it's a quick book, or they want to get famous, you know, quickly or they want to win an Oscar in the first film. That's not of the mindset. It just isn't, you know, you're not seeing Got fa, that's can't be the mindset. You know, there's nothing wrong with having that kind of ambition and dream, but you also have to have your feet in reality and grounded. And and I think that, you know, as long as people stay close to people like us who are in it for the right reasons and have and have all of the right intentions, and like you said earlier, I'm a straight shooter. You know, I tell people, things they don't want to hear every single day. Yes. And you know, and I'm proud of that, because I know that they're going, Oh, harsh, you know, but at the end of the day, you know, I'm doing it because A, I haven't got time. For Bs, I just don't, I got 12 films in production just came out of principal photography. Got a million things going on right now. So the last thing I have time for is to babysit for somebody, right? And to hold somebody's hand, now, I am willing to take my time and work with somebody over the long haul. But they have to be doing the heavy lifting, at the end of the day, they have to make their contribution, especially if it's their their film, there's so many people that come to people like me, and they have an expectation, which is already a problem, they have an expectation that they're going to be able to hand something over to me and that I'm going to do it for them or take it from there. And it's the complete opposite. I will help empower them to do it themselves. And give them the tools and the resources and the knowledge and the information and whatever it is that they need for that. But I'm not, I don't work for them. And they don't work for me. It's a matter. That's what a collaboration. So as far as the global market is concerned, I really think it's kind of a wait and see, I think we've got to kind of wait and see how this thing flushes out. You know, with the spray example, South by Southwest being canceled was a major, major, major blow, you know, we're talking about $365 million in revenue potential is just wiped. And I'm working with a couple of organizations that I'm affiliated with, to try to help potentially screen some of these filmmakers films that would have gone they're here in LA. So that at least kind of give them a little bit of a leg up. Because I know that this must be crushed.
Alex Ferrari 17:29 I mean, can you imagine spending your whole life you like I got into South by like, I've my film got an insight and then all of a sudden, it's canceled because of a virus scare. I can't even imagine, I can't even imagine.
Franco Sama 17:43 I can't either. It's got to be gut wrenching. And, you know, it could be and for some people that could be an insurmountable problem, you know, something that they they may never recover from because they might have all their eggs in that one basket, which is another yet but um, so that's why I'm saying we're gonna try to at least do something I don't know yet. We got a couple of you know, organizations that I belong to, you know, I'm a I'm a I'm on the board of directors at New filmmakers, Los Angeles. We're partnering with some other groups here in LA, in, in combining our resources in terms of theatres and space, and being able to get some of these from shown, at least here in LA for audiences, despite the fact that they're not going to be able to compete in festival.
Alex Ferrari 18:32 Yeah, and I know our be our mutual friend Rb bado from stage 32. He's trying to do something as well to help those filmmakers as well. They'll be one of those partners that we're we'll be working with Yeah, yeah. It's It's, it's, it's, it's devastating. It's devastating. Now, I've been I've been yelling from the top of the mountain now for a while saying, Hey, guys, right now, things are getting really tight. As far as the mid level and lower level distributors, they're getting more predatory. You know, there's always good guys, but there's a lot of bad guys out there in that world. And we're in a, we were in a fairly good economic time. And I go, wait until the fit hits the Shan and all of a sudden, things start tightening. And we saw it in a way and you will go back to away you start seeing companies start falling left and right because they were fragile in this in the in the in the in the first place. Do you see you know, obviously as of this recording, the market has had one of the worst weeks few like last two weeks since 2008. A lot of people are saying that this is the first signs of something going to happen. We're do we're late. We're late for something to happen. Do you feel love to hear your opinion? Do you feel that some of the studios, and there's only a handful of big studios left but you think of the studios and also some of these larger distributors are vulnerable because they're there. They're fragile In the first place, because they're not diversified, like Disney, we're good, this is gonna be fine. You know, Warner's will probably be fine, universal will probably be fine. But they're super diversified, where some of the other studios aren't, and especially these distribution companies who are not diversified at all. And they're just, they're just making the money with distribution. If those channels start, like what we were just talking about, like China shuts down, and then all of a sudden the foreign market shuts down, all of a sudden, all this all this flow ends, do you feel that there's gonna be a reckoning, if you will, in our industry?
Franco Sama 20:32 I do. I do. And, you know, I have to say, this is a very unpopular position. But as bad as that is, and is probably going to be, the industry really needs to purge. And this might be that I believe this is the, you know, Phoenix Rising, because what's going to emerge from that catastrophic event is going to be a new perspective and a new way of doing things. Because, you know, I've been saying for a long time, I kept predicting about five years ago, I was started predicting that the overall model of the sales of more of the sales companies, as opposed to the actual distributors, right, the sort of middlemen between the from the middleman and
Alex Ferrari 21:23 the middleman and the middleman of the middlemen, right?
Franco Sama 21:27 That's where the all the breakdown is, right? I mean, you hear you have all these filmmakers, myself included, who spent, you know, years of their lives and dedicate, you know, 10s of 1000s, if not millions of dollars in getting investment, and doing everything they're supposed to do, they do it all right, not always, I mean, people make mistakes, but for those who do go down the path and and actually produce a quality film that deserves to be seen in the world, and then they go into the distribution market, and they get crushed,
Alex Ferrari 22:03 Decimated,
Franco Sama 22:05 They get crushed. And as a result of that domino effect backwards now, because the sales companies, some of them are are doing sales, recovering, proceeds and not paying, you know about that, right. And then there are others that are just in it for the, for the upfront marketing fees. And once they collect their fees, they lose interest in the film, and they move on to the next one, and then that one after that, so they're in the marketing fee collection business, as opposed to the distribution of film business. And I've been saying for five years now, that's going to implode at some point, it's going to come back and bite them. Because instead of having the mindset of well wait a minute, if we take care of these people, these talented seriously, right, if we No,
Alex Ferrari 22:57 I agree with you,
Franco Sama 22:59 These talented, young, talented, entrepreneurial filmmakers that really have their act together, and have the resources and the wherewithal to go out there and figure out how to raise 2 million bucks to make the movie in the first place. And then they make a great movie, right? Wouldn't it be who've us to, like build long term relationships with these people, and make sure that those in filmmakers are able to return those investments to their, to their investors and make with profits so that those investors will continue to keep investing in them, and we can continue to prosper and grow? Unfortunately, in the vast majority of cases, that's not the case. Because the mindset, it just isn't. I know. And, you know, like I says, I'm very unpopular position to be taking, but the mindset is more along the lines of there'll be another one right behind you. Correct, there's a long line is never gonna end. And you know, what we'll, we'll we're gonna do, we're gonna do, we're gonna get make this money and good luck on your film, and with your investors. And, unfortunately, if that falls off the wayside, there's going to be 100 more filmmakers in that line trying to get that same deal that looks on the surface, like a great opportunity, and then turns out not to be so I've been saying for a very long time that that has got that will self implode, like it can't sustain itself. It can't be sustainable. And to your point. Unfortunate, unfortunately, I think this could be a sign that, you know, those those are the most likely of people they're going to probably be the ones to fall by the wayside. And when when the dust settles in, everybody kind of comes back out of the ether and from whatever is going to be occurring over the next year or two. I think there is going to be a whole new way of looking at this thing and finding, I mean, even now some of the deals I'm working on, you know, we're working on a couple of I have a couple of film funds that I'm building in, you know, the name of a company, and, and I'm consulting on other on others. And I'm telling these people, you know that, that it, we can't go out and raise all these millions of dollars, and then dump it all handed over to some third party that's going to take the lion's share, and leave us hanging, especially now, if we're the investors and it's our money. So we're looking at ways to be able to minimize that one of those ways is to reduce that marketing fee, down to only like, about $10,000.
Alex Ferrari 25:43 Which is nothing in the grand scope of things. Yeah. But imagine, you know, taking what is traditionally a 5060, I've seen 8500 152, I've seen 200 Oh, yeah.
Franco Sama 25:56 Ridiculous. And it's, it's just wrong. It's just wrong. Just imagine if that number was kept at like, 15,000. You know. So those are the little things that, you know, we're trying to do internally here. And that's why I said goes back to my point earlier about new filmmakers, or even current filmmakers staying close to people like us who are fighting every day and working towards coming up with solutions for some of these things. So that infant when the bottom falls out of this thing, you know, they'll be a small group of people who will be able to survive it. And, and actually, you know, exceed expectations from there.
Alex Ferrari 26:38 I mean, in Oh, eight, when did Netflix start? Like the streaming side of Netflix, it was around? Oh, 8090 10, it was a matter of mistaken right. It was, that's when the beginning stages of streaming, which was horrible at the time, obviously. But that's when it started. And Netflix came out of the streaming side of Netflix came out of the Oh, eight thing and look how that completely transformed our industry. And they're there every once in a while there needs to be a purge. And I agree with you, I 100%. agree with you. I 100%. think there needs to be a wiping of the slate in many ways. If the companies are strong, and they have good business models that can sustain hits then right.
Franco Sama 27:18 Ethical and ethical. Correct. And they'll survive. Correct, survive, they have always, they have a better chance of surviving. You know, it's interesting, you bring up Netflix, because I remember, you know, in those days, me personally, my company, we made the vast majority of our money back then on DVDs,right?
Alex Ferrari 27:37 What is the What is it? What is it? What is the DVD? What do we have the flu? But anyway, coasters, like coasters, get that?
Franco Sama 27:46 Yeah, that's what they are now. That's what we use them for now. But anyway, um, yeah, we, you know, that was in the DVD days, right? When, when, as a distributor or sales company, we have these really exorbitant, exorbitant hard cost, right, because we're going to bring a film out to market who's going to go to like Walmart and all these places, but mostly in those days to blockbuster in the in an all of those 1000s and 1000s. of other chain, you know, kind of video West Coast video. Yeah. So there was the hard cost associated with that, that we had a cover while the distributor had a cover. And it was expensive, because now you have to print every one of those things, then you have to package it, you know, you have the artwork, you have the plastic, and then you have the shipping. And what a lot of people don't realize is back then, if we got an order for 20,000 DVDs, or a movie to Walmart, in 90 days, if Walmart wanted to, they could charge us back and send back 9000 of those 10,000 orders. And we'd have already cashed the check. So we have to now be on the hook for all those DVDs that they they rejected that never got sold. So that was a huge problem. So what was interesting about Netflix is you know, at the time, remember they were delivering the DVD to your home. And so it was great because you still got that thing that disk, but you didn't have to go anywhere to go get it. And from a distribution standpoint, from our standpoint, we were covering maybe the mailing costs of it because they came in a little sleeve, right. So there was a lot of that other cost was eliminated. But then when they switched over to streaming and the DVD just went out of style. That changed everything completely because now there is zero cost. There's nothing here real hard costs. There's nothing to charge back. And so now that profit margin significantly increased. And essentially we're still there today with the morphia but
Alex Ferrari 29:55 it's significantly creased, but the money that you can get for your film it Completely decreased dramatically. So the cost, so like, perfect, perfect example, though before DVD would cost you 15 bucks. Right? Yeah. We'll be right back after a word from our sponsor. And now back to the show. And now a movie cost you free. If it's on prime, yeah. Or if it's on part of your streaming service. So the devaluation as is really hurt the filmmaker in many ways, correct.
Franco Sama 30:34 100% I mean, it was five or $6, just to rent it for the night.
Alex Ferrari 30:40 And I know, even before that, the VHS Don't forget you used to get charged, if you didn't rewind, be kind rewind.
Franco Sama 30:47 It used to guitars be kind rewind. That was,
Alex Ferrari 30:53 Could you imagine I worked in the video store, I remember it was I piss people off dramatically, like, sorry, I gotta charge an extra bucks, you didn't rewind it. Ah.
Franco Sama 31:04 So I remember going out at three o'clock in the morning and stick it in that little slot they had that would drop into the trash basket. So it would be there in the morning. So I wouldn't get charged for the next day.
Alex Ferrari 31:14 It's it's I mean, we were barbarians. Let's just put it out that we were barbarians. We were just like just
Franco Sama 31:21 I was just talking to a filmmaker the other day about this and saying, look, you know, for the people coming up the young kids coming up, right? You know, today is like a such a different conversation. I mean, in terms, you know, when I started, somebody asked me, What about the origins of PMA, like, you know, why do they call it PMA. I said, Because back then when I started, the P was print. And the print was a 35 millimeter reel that was this gigantic. And you usually need a two for each film is the film didn't fit on one. And we used to have to deliver them and get into a band and bring them to the theater to bring them up into the screening room. On every theater, they have what
Alex Ferrari 32:05 was a print print, I know if I remember correctly, it would be like a $20,000 cost or $15,000 cost, right? Very expensive per print per print. Now you can literally upload it. And they can download it for free essentially, almost Yeah. Or
Franco Sama 32:24 you can you can literally walk into a theater with a USB in his mind movie. You know what I mean? But But I remember those days, I remember literally physically delivering those huge 35 mil millimeter prints really heavy and on the thick film, and it was it was a very cool thing. But yeah, we you talked about that kind of money for every single theater. It was it was just it was so hard to make money. It was you know, because that was your that was just your delivery cost to get and
Alex Ferrari 32:56 that was the cause that was you needed to get to look at the ROI and like how many how many assets and seats Could I get to recoup this cost? And then the theater was taken 50% and it was this I mean, like so it took a lot. That's what you had to pump a lot of money into advertising, and to make that money to make that money. But that's when VH like when a home video showed up. Of course the whole industry was scared to death. But then they figured out Wait a minute, we can make some money here. And all of a sudden it changed but then it's been slowly you've been seeing it from the days of 35 millimeter print all the way now to zero cost. But also really hard to generate revenue coming in from those channels. Unless you're creative. It's It's It's a very interesting journey that we've we've gone upon. Now I wanted to ask you something and and I wanted you to clear up something for me because there's a lot of you know, we have this this little group that I started on Facebook called protect yourself from predatory film distributors and aggregators, which started off as a distributor, Facebook group, and now it's become like this hub of the latest distribution techniques, who's screwing Who? Asking questions about, you know, certain distributors, or sales reps and things like that. And people just, you know, it's it's a wealth of information, I want you to clarify, and I'm not going to use the distributors name. But and when the second I give you the description, you probably don't know who it is, but I'm not gonna say it. But if a distributor is putting out 40 to 50 movies a month, a month, how much attention is going to each release. And they might be a very, very grandiose, the distribution company has, you know, this perceived value for independent filmmakers, and they're like, Hey, I'm with x company. Now, look at that I have arrived. But yet, you'll get $0 ever from that, from that situation? In many cases? What's your opinion of that scenario? And there's not there's a handful of those companies out there that just they just pump them out, and they're just throwing stuff against the wall to see what sticks essentially.
Franco Sama 34:56 Well, that was what I was gonna say. It really comes down to that right? It is it's the beginning. You know, let's say they sign up 10 films, right? in a given period of time in the in the, in the next 30 days, they they sign up 10. So that means they're finding, you know, these people that we've been talking about filmmakers who have worked hard who have, presumably, in most cases completed their film, sometimes not, but and they have to sign up this agreement. Well, we've you and I talked about this, those agreements can be 15 year commitments, you know, I mean, they tend to be five, seven or 10 years, I set them up to 25. Now they're going, they're getting so predatory, it's going up to 25. So now, because they want to lock the filmmaker in, like, literally forever, right, so that they can't go somewhere else. And the truth is, even if they don't do anything with the film, the filmmaker can't take it and go someplace else with it. So they're essentially being held hostage. So now they sign these 10 agreements. And let's say, just to use that round number, let's say that every one of those agreements, requires a $100,000 marketing fee that people should understand comes from the sales, right? I mean, it's not an upfront, we don't have to write them a check for 100,000. But the first 100,000 in sales that's generated, we are agreeing that they're going to get to keep as their quote unquote, marketing fee. Right? And that when it's legit, is fine. Because what it says to me as a filmmaker is okay, there's nine other people here I'm sharing the pot with. And so does that mean that when they go out and do the front and the back page, add of the variety and The Hollywood Reporter throughout all of AFM for that entire suite? That might my poster is going to be on there? Or it's going to be or they're going to be looping much my film on the on the on the screen? No, it doesn't mean that. It would, it means it but but I'm paying the same as everybody else, right. So now this in this scenario, this company, who shall remain nameless, has just is going to sell the shit out of that film for until they hit the $100,000. Mark, right, because that's their money. So now, they have just brought in a million dollars on 10 films, right off of the backs of the filmmaker and their investors, but then hit that plateau. And I've seen this happen to me other way. Once they hit the plateau, their commission goes from that 100% of revenue down to 20. Because that's their commission. So now they're only and that and if they do make a sale after that, that remaining 80% becomes my filmmaker, my first money, right. But now they've lost interest. And they kick the thing to the curb. However, out of those 12 to 10 films, two of them might be deforming like gangbusters. And the other ones are just kind of mediocre. But two, one or two of them might be just taken the lead without question. And for short hit. Those are the ones they're going to focus on. They're going to move the other eight aside. They're going to take those films and they're going to really push until they can squeeze every dollar out of it even at 20% now it's worth their while. And then next month, they're gonna go find 10 more filmmakers. And by the way, while we're all trying to figure out where we're going to get the money to go to can those sitting on a yacht pop in my way, hmm. $1,000 marketing fee off of my movie that I can't afford to go see at the festival.
Alex Ferrari 38:44 Now, I wanted to bring back something that's why I love having you on the show because we speak the same language. That that that's an area that you talked about the print ad in variety during AFM. Now, let's say on that print that they have 20 posters, okay, and that that ad cost 20,000 bucks, let's say right for that for that week on variety. Is it fair to say, because I've seen this happen? Is it fair to say that they're not going to cut up that 20,000 or prorate that? 20,000 per 20? They're not going to charge each filmmaker 1000 bucks in the accounting, they'll charge each filmmaker 20,000 bucks for an add. Does that make sense? Well, I've never seen that it wouldn't surprise me. Yeah, that's it. That's called it that isn't that Hollywood accounting?
Franco Sama 39:35 Well, yeah, but that's where it all goes wrong. And that's what I'm trying to say. I had gone to the executive, you know, first of all, your listeners should understand that in these agreements, the filmmaker has the right to win an audit, write it once a year at their own expense. So if you wanted to, you could go to this company after the deals done and everything's happening. You have the right to go in and audit the books and take a look at what the scenario actually is how much is being spent on what and what not. And so if that were the case, you would see what you just described. That said, you wouldn't know that it wasn't $20,000. But because in your mind you thinking I was on the cover of variety, or I was on the back cover variety. And it might make sense to a first or second time filmmaker, that it would cost 20 grand to do that, when you're right, they just made 150,000 $200,000 off of a $20,000 hat. The problem is, number one, nobody ever goes in for that audit. Nobody ever follows up on it, if they forget that,
Alex Ferrari 40:43 if it's even under contract.
Franco Sama 40:46 Right, but assuming that it is number one, you got I hate to say this, but it just it's only because I've actually experienced this, I'm speaking this way. But number one, you know, it's it's incumbent upon the filmmaker to initiate that process. Number two, it's like the IRS audit. You know, it's like, I'm sorry, you got to go to lunch. Can you come back next Tuesday? Right? So actually trying to find the time to get them to commit to letting you come in there to audit their books on your movie. Good luck. Forget about it. Right? And then even if that happens, what guarantee do we have? And I'm not accusing anybody of anything?
Alex Ferrari 41:29 You mean that there's a second set of book sir? No, no, stop it. You mean like mob style, like mob style?
Franco Sama 41:36 Like, here you go. Take a good look. Yeah, it's just and this is why I've been saying for all these years, that it's going to implode, bite them all. You know, it's got to come back. This is not sustainable. It can't be. It can't be it's no, it's no longer acceptable. The other thing, I think that's playing into this, you know, when I first started independent filmmakers, were a joke, we were considered a joke. We weren't ever taken seriously. And we, it was so easy for them to toss us aside. Like we were just a bunch of freaks, you know, until we started winning Best Picture every year.
Alex Ferrari 42:19 Right? This year, even even this year, Jesus a foreign film for the first time
Franco Sama 42:24 this year. So for like seven out of the last eight years, it's been an independent film, right? You're not seeing these big tentpole blockbuster films, when he goes picture, we're making those movies where we are making those movies, we might be distributing them through the studio system for exposures, perfect, you know, purpose, but were the ones who were making those movies, we the independent film community. So it became clear at some point that we as a community are now a force to be reckoned with. And you can't treat us the way you used to treat us back in, you know, 15 years ago when I got started. So. But the irony is that although a lot of the components of the industry have shifted and improved for us as independent filmmakers, as we've progressed, that one thing is just never changed. That distribution model of ripping off filmmakers doesn't change. And that's the reason why people are hungry for a distributor right to try to find an alternative to that they're trying to find a way to self distribute their films. And that's why people are, you know, doing it on Facebook get on whenever they can. They're looking for any means other than the traditional because that gap is starting to close.
Alex Ferrari 43:45 Right. And the thing is, unfortunately, if you have a half a million or a million dollar film, self distribution can happen. But man, you've got to be hitting it at every, every cylinder has to hit perfectly. You can't you got to know exactly what you're doing. So that's why I keep selling, if you're going to go down that road, keep the cost as low as humanly possible to be the ROI so you can get into the black faster, you know, $15,000 indie, which could be excellent, it's going to have a lot better chance than $150,000 indie to generate money back because both you and I know how difficult it is to get eyeballs to get people to look at your films. It's it's just an insane it's an insane system. It's like going back in the olden days, like how many I call it I and I've said this publicly and I have many many times. I feel what happened in the metoo movement, which was it was something that was a standard way of doing business in Hollywood like the casting couch. The casting couch was a thing from back in chaplains day everybody Oh yeah, I gotta go on the casting couch. You get that part. All of that right. And me to kind of exploded that situation and all for the better. Of course. I feel that what's happened Two filmmakers over the course of that same time, and even more. So now is a financial kind of raping of because you, you, you, you put up three 400 $500,000 of your own money or your mom's parents or whatever, or investors money. And there's literally just stealing from you stealing it legally, it's insane. So I think you're right, there is an absolute reckoning coming. And I think that the system can't keep going. I think it was easier in the 80s in the 90s. And even in the early 2000s, because the volume was a lot different, the distribution outlets were a lot different. But now because of so much, this, this system can't hold. That's why it stayed like that for what 8090 years. Because it was pretty much locked. But now it's a it's the Wild Wild West. And they can't they can't handle it anymore. They don't even know how to deal with it. So they're trying to go they're trying they're trying to use the horse and buggy on a on a Ferrari no pun intended. And it doesn't you know, the the whip on the lights trying to make the car go with the horse and whip like no dude, that that's car as an engine, it runs on gas, it's not a horse. Do you agree?
Franco Sama 46:09 100% on your say. And you know, the other aspect of this, that's this, it's already rearing its ugly head is on the investor side, you know, with what happened in the stock market just last week, week or two, you know, when they say investors, you know, when they talk about the stock market, in any other, you know, aspect. And so, we essentially are experiencing right now a freeze on investment. But nobody's The last thing somebody wants to do is talk to me right now, this moment about putting up a million dollars. Right? You know, it's getting tougher for you? Well, for everybody, because they're just trying to find a way to protect the money that they have. You know, and, you know, in some ways, it may be a good way to divert the funds and put it into something, you know, that has the potential to really grow. But he but this goes back to what we're talking about the whole time, is that one of the issues we have even with the investors that I deal with on a regular basis, is that these guys hear these horror stories. They know what's going on. And so what happens is you now I now find myself in a position where an investor might say to me, Listen, I'll put up the money for this movie, but I want a distribution deal. upfront, I want you to sign a distribution deal. And my response to that usually is that's a bad idea. Because it is because I understand Mr. investor, that this will give you a sense of security, because you've got this person's brand name attached to your film as a distributor. But let me tell you, as an experienced filmmaker with 24, or whatever films under my belt, I can tell you badly, that we are going to be better off if you just put the money up and let trust us to do our job and make a really great film. And then let us go out there and compete in the marketplace. Let us go to the film festivals, let us have you know, let's get us a bunch of distributors vying for our, for our project, let's not sell our soul to the devil today, just so that you can feel a bit more secure. Because in my opinion, you have a way better chance of not only making your money back but making a much higher upside. If you let us go make a great movie and go out and compete with it. Then if you lock us into some seven or 15 year deal with some schmuck who's never going to move, and we're gonna end up making this great movie and we can't even do anything with it. Because we already sold our soul to the devil. over what over your lack of security.
Alex Ferrari 48:50 Your insecurity?
Franco Sama 48:52 Yeah, doesn't make any sense. That's a conversation I often have to have with investors. And it's a tough conversation to have, because you're literally saying to them, you know, let's let me take the security away from you. And trust me to do what we do. And in the long run, you'll we believe that we'll be better for it. But as a person,
Alex Ferrari 49:13 but it's just a perceived security. It's not really security. It's not like you're signing with Disney or Warner's and they're giving you a massive upfront fee that's covering your budget. That's not the case. You're basically just doing it. You're just signing it up like anybody else in the Navy, if you're lucky, they give you a minimum guarantee of a quarter of the budget. And that's like amazing if they did that. But that's that's not happening. I was I was talking to a filmmaker. I was talking to filmmaker at AFM. And they were telling me like, Hey, you know, I made a movie for 150,000 there. They were from, I think South Africa or Australia as well and one of those two, and it's like we made 100 $150,000 film I'm like, and we got an mg. I'm like, Oh, great. What, you know, who did you sign with? And they told me the company I'm like, okay, that's fine. Um, what what because when I heard mg Mike, who gets it mg in today's world, like, for an independent film, how much do they do? And he's like, Oh, they gave us 30 and go 30. Okay, is that for a certain territory? He goes, No, we gave him worldwide. And I'm like, so you got 30,000 for a product that you paid 50 150,000 for, and you locked up your film for seven years. And he was just so happy that he got 30,000 ago, what other business in the world? Do you spend 150,000 to make 30,000? Like that? Doesn't? It makes no sense. But for, for filmmakers were like happy, right? And he's like, No, no, but my films gonna get out there. I'm like, dude. And I mean, I think he walked away a little deflated. I fixed boats. Like, do you realize what you just did? Like, it may I mean, if you if you're selling off one, right, or one territory for 30,000, and you still can keep going? Great. But you sold this, you sold your soul for 30? grand? Yeah, you're never gonna make your money back. It's insane.
Franco Sama 51:01 And people who have been in this business, as long as you and I have all know that mg is the kiss of death, because you'll never see another Penny, you'll get your, your the amount, you know, maybe, but but I've heard that. Even then, you know, I always tell people, you know, you got to look underneath all of this stuff, right? I have a lot of people send me contracts and agreements to take a look at, right? Because you got to really know how to how to read these things. And I had an mg once was for $400,000 is a long time ago, when they did that was for $400,000. Right. But what I didn't know, was they put in $100,000 of that mg was for producers. Now I was wanting my partner was one. So those 25 and 25. But then they put in 25,000 each for the two of them, which was the two partners at the company, right? So they're paying themselves 50,000 out of the out of the 400,000. So in real life 350 out of the 400. And it's really 300, right? And then the payout was something like $50,000. The first money didn't even hit until the year. So there was nothing upfront. And then it was like in 18 months, you get another 50 and another and then you get 100. And it was the whole thing was the most embarrassing bizarre thing I ever saw saw. And so on one hand, I was excited because I'm getting this $400,000 mg that I can get to that I could maybe go monetize, right, or I could do a lot of things. I could brag about it. But then when I looked at the thing, I literally it's interesting because that deal severed that 10 year relationship. Because what I said to them is, Are you kidding me? The fact that you would even suggest to put this in front of me means that you think I'm a chump. And we've had this relationship for 10 years. And this is such a slap in the face. And you know what their response was? Well, it was just a starting point. You know, we were we were open to negotiating. And I'm like, well go negotiate with somebody else. And I literally just tore up the document I walked away. It was horrible. And we haven't spoken since. Isn't it sad?
Alex Ferrari 53:21 Isn't it amazing? Like I met another filmmaker at AFM this year. And she was offered this is the deal that she was offered. She was offered a 20 year deal. For her thriller from Africa. It was an African thriller. And it was it was a 20 year deal with a $50,000 mg an IMG a $50,000 marketing cap. But wait, which doesn't sound with the 20 years is horrible. But the 50,000 like you know, and it see Okay, fine. I gotta kind of get it. No, no, no, no, it was 50,000 a year. A year for 20. So would have been $2 million in marketing and expenses over the course of the contract. And she even she as an experienced that she knew she was she's like this sounds a bit dodgy. So she went back to this guy. And by the way, this was a sales rep. This wasn't even a distributor, it was a sales rep. And they get a sheet like this. I don't think he's like, okay, okay, okay, Listen, why don't we just do 10 years and a $50,000 total. And he she's like, so basically you were trying to screw me? He's like, yeah, it was it was just a starting. He was a starting point. So they throw out these ridiculous deals. And by the way, that company that we were talking about earlier, the one that that is 50 or 40, or 50. They're infamous for this. I've seen the agreements, they'll they'll toss out 20 year, all the time. That's their standard practice now is 20 years. With 100,000 and then they'll and then I had a filmmaker, go back to them and go look, this sounds like all right. All right, seven. Like, I'm literally, it's like, you're gonna go buy a house and we're like, we need a million dollars. cash. I'm like, this seems a bit much. Okay. Okay. 250. Like, like, what do you? What are you doing? Are you in the car? You guys? Let me go talk to my manager, oh, the manager. And they go drink a cup of coffee and go. I think I got another live one. Yeah, yeah. All right. It's a racket. And now, I wanted to ask you because I know your budget. What did you budget ranges in the films that you work with? Generally? About a million million to three, right? Yeah. 123. Okay, so at that way, but I'm sorry, say that again. That's the sweet spot. Okay, thank you three. So you're, you're you're outside the normal independent filmmaker, because normal indepedent filmmakers in the current economic environment in the current environment and marketplace, in general, are half a million and below, once you start getting above half a million, you really need to know what you're doing is a general as a general statement. So the 123 from my experience, at least for 123, there's a smaller group of people playing in that and that sandbox. So I'm curious how you are generating your revenue? And how are you getting returns for your, for your investors? Because obviously, you've been doing this for a few years. So obviously, you're making some sort of money. So what is what are the revenue streams? And you have to give me numbers, but just curious, like, okay, I do this, I go here, I do that, how do you structure a deal? That makes sense?
Franco Sama 56:37 Well, I actually just in 2020, made a decision to get out of the under million dollar world In the end, because I've been doing it, you know, I've had a couple of these movies that are like, you know, 507 50, whatever. 600. But here's the reality today, and why I no longer do that, and why I stick to the 123. You know, part of it is because of the distribution world. And because the because the demands now are unreasonable. You know, when you talk about who, what, what level actor, these distribution people that sales companies require you to have in your film in order to, you know, even have a slight interest, or for that matter for the investors, because, you know, we run sales projections on every deal before we even think about going out to investors. And that's one of the biggest problems that a lot of filmmakers have is they're all running around trying to cast people and they've never even been running the numbers on people that they're going up against. So don't even get me started on that. But because that's a huge pet peeve of mine, because it doesn't work. And it makes no sense. But aside from that, when you're in that range, one of the things like I have finance partners that will monetize tax credits and, and presale contracts, right? Because those are hard assets, they're collateral. So there's very little risk involved. I mean, that doesn't mean that the state of Utah might go broken, or their film thing might run out of money. I mean, that that's all still possible. But for all intents and purposes, if you have a certificate from a state, you're going to be able to cash in on that and that money is coming in. So an investor feel safe doing that, because it's no, it's No, there's nothing, they're not the equity, they're not the risk taker, and then you win, then what we do is we package that with, let's say, there's a pre sale for 50 $50,000. And I have a tax credit of 200, I can take that whole 250. And I can with through my lending sources, I can lend to the filmmaker, that 250,000 put it in their bank account next to their equity, and now they have most of the money, if not all of it to go ahead and make the film. So that's kind of how that works. The problem is that even though the film itself, the budget of the film, let's say it's 375 might qualify in the state of Massachusetts for a tax 25% tax credit, it doesn't qualify for tax credit funding. Because it's too low, it's too small of an amount. And these guys apparently go do 200 do these, you know, 80,000 90,000 $100,000 loans, it's not worth it for them. So what happens is the criteria now has changed. So now the loan amount has to be 300,000. So if the loan amount is 300,000, your budget, it has to be a million dollars, and now you're qualified to us to be able to monetize that tax credit. And then if you can add a minimum guarantee, you know, or a pre sale to that we can bundle it in lended up lend out the money. So that's one of the reasons being and the other reason is in order to get a pre sale or potential mg based on what I mean if you're making a movie for $350,000, who we are going to Get in that movie that's going to justify a warrant any kind of an mg, you're not nobody. So so it just doesn't make the grade, when you get into that 1.5 2.5 range, you find yourself in a little bit better position where a, you do qualify for tax credit funding. And you might have a shot at being able to get a pre sale, or something in addition to that, that you can bundle up and input it.
Alex Ferrari 1:00:32 We'll be right back after a word from our sponsor. And now back to the show.
Franco Sama 1:00:43 And then, so that's the goal is to try to patch it that way, what I've been working on for the last year and a half. And I continue to and I hope to have done by the end of this year. And I think you know this because I think we've talked about it privately, but I'm working on putting together these phone funds, two of them, that will alleviate all of these problems by being able to advance 100% of the budget upfront for the spouse. So somebody brings in a project that gets approved through our fund. And it's $2 million, we're just going to write the check, and go make the movie and not deal with this nonsense of jumped through hoops, and figuring out textures. Now, we'll still go to want to go to a tax credit environment and and recoup that, that 25 or 30% for ourselves as the fund as part of our recruitment. But we're not required to, which means that if I want to shoot in a state, or wherever, that doesn't happen to have a tax credit, I'm not prohibited anymore, by the numbers, I can go, I got the whole money. The other benefit to that is you have the proof of funds upfront 100% of your budget. So when you are making those offers to those actors, you're now negotiating from a position of strength by saying here's my proof of funds, I have $2.5 million in the account. And here's my offer for 250. And even then I'm going to be in a position to be able to write a check for 10% of that 25,000 as a down payment towards that offer. So it elevates me and puts me in a place where I can start making stronger offers to better, you know, bigger names, which will yield, you know, better returns. And so that's why I brought everything up into that into that space. And it's a great space to be in, in terms of, for me, at least in my resources. Once you break 5 million, and you go up into the eight or 10 it comes a little bit of a black hole. And then from 10 million up. It's another whole ballgame. You know,
Alex Ferrari 1:02:37 now you spoke about pre sales. And I know that back in the day pre sales was a way to finance your whole film. Honestly, there was you know, you could literally go to all the markets pre sell all your moving. You had your budget, essentially, how is it in today's world? And I can only imagine what it's going to be like in the next four or five months, but or the rest of this year for that matter. But historically, within the like, let's say the last year, where are you getting these pre sales? Are they foreign pre sales? Are they like you? Are you carving out rights? Yeah, yeah, it's it's it's individual territories? And that's relationship that you just have?
Franco Sama 1:03:17 Yes. Yes, it's in its in its individual territories. I mean, you can go to a sales company and have them do it. But then we just said you're locked in. Right? So but there are lots of people, you know, when you're going around as long as I have that you can pick up the phone and say, Hey, Latin America, I need a sale. Here's my film. Can you get me something? Let Mary Yeah, I can get you 125k All right, I'll take it you know, because it because if you're right, in the old days, you could go theoretically, and just make your whole movie by selling off your pre sales but but at the same time, you really don't want to sell off your pre sales because it limits your your ability to earn revenue, right? Yep, sounds you make that sale. Right? It's gone. So now you're, you know, they can go exploit that phone territory, but you get nothing you get nothing out of that because you you cashed out. So you want to be strategic about you know, how where you sell those territory. So I'll get projects A lot of times, well, they want they're looking for funding, but they'll say okay, but five territories are already spoken for. And to me, that's a negative on my side, because that's five less territories I can I can work with revenue wise, but on the other side, it's very good thing because that indicates to me Well, if this if I've had territories have already purchased this thing, it must be good.
Alex Ferrari 1:04:40 So obviously has Eric Rob as Eric Roberts and Michael Madsen in it obviously so they have both that's an inside joke guys, everybody, Eric Roberts did how many movies last year 3535 movies. And I haven't done one with Eric but I've done my Michael so that's another so it was it was funny I joke about that because when I was doing posts there was a year I did three Eric Robert movies in one year I did all the posts on three Eric Robert movies and I was like, and my poor producer who spent like a lot of money to get Eric Robertson's movie was that was that was the anchor. He would go to distribution company. They're like, no, we're good. We've got three of Eric Roberts movies this year. We don't need a year. Another one. It was the diluted the market. Well,
Franco Sama 1:05:28 it's true. That's exactly what it is. It's a saturation it they get to a saturation point. And that did happen with Michael. But Michael is fine. He still makes us money.
Alex Ferrari 1:05:37 Yeah, he doesn't put 13 a movie every few years. And that brings it back up.
Franco Sama 1:05:42 Yeah, they're all gonna be fun. I mean, they're all fine. But it's true. There. There is a saturation point. And then the other thing I'd like to tell people too, because a lot of people don't understand this. And I think it's really important to understand, you know, people when people are pitching me these actors, you know, first of all, I have what I have this thing called a parenthese rule, the Privacy Rule. All right, now remember, I'm talking about international, so I'm not talking about domestic, right? Like the movie I did. Guns, girls and gambling. We had Christian Slater and Gary Oldman, right. So Christian Slater is a great domestic play. He's a great name, the United States and Canada, North America. But Gary Oldman is an international value name. Christian is not an international value name. So in a perfect world, you want both you want an actor that's going to pull your domestic audience, and then you want an actor that's going to give the buyer in Germany and UK and China a reason to want to buy your property or your rights, right, because Gary Oldman things is on the cover. Right? So that's the the kind of balancing act. But so the parenthese rule is, when people say to me and happens literally every single day of my life, they're pitching me something and they go, Oh, yeah, we got, you know, so and so. From such and such a movie, or from this TV show, she's on The CW right? She's
Alex Ferrari 1:07:02 rich, she's really hot right now. She's really hot.
Franco Sama 1:07:05 Yes. Okay, that's what I'm getting at. Right? So that may be well, true. But first of all the prints the test means if you can walk out this middle of the street, and just pull a random person and ask, give them that person's name, and have them know who they are, then they cut. It's great. If you can't, they can't they don't cut. So if I pull somebody up the street, and I go, Cameron Diaz, they go Yeah, love her.
Alex Ferrari 1:07:33 Right. Nicolas Cage, yes, again.
Franco Sama 1:07:36 Love them. Yeah, got it. But then you go, you know, Alex Ferrari, they're like, Who?
Alex Ferrari 1:07:42 First of all, I'm insulted. Sir. Secondly, I'm, I'm I am huge in Zimbabwe. I'm just saying, I'm you I can't walk the streets in Zimbabwe.
Franco Sama 1:07:53 That's like me in Japan, Japan, but but the thing I want to say about the point you made is the up and comers, right? It may be really true that they literally are on that skyrocketing trajectory. But even at close to the top of that, it takes about three years for that to translate into value on the open market takes three years. So somebody could out in this big huge movie, that's a blockbuster and everybody's crazy over them. And now they're getting parts from every single direction, and they want every movie that you go to see. But that doesn't give them that level of value in the international market, yet they have to earn that because you know, a lot of these people rise and fall.
Alex Ferrari 1:08:46 Oh, right. Oh, and in today's world,
Franco Sama 1:08:49 they do, they catapult up to a certain level, and then they just drop up, you never hear from them again. So that's not necessarily an investor, what investment you're looking for people who are going to be able to sustain that well beyond their rise period, you know, and maintain that name and face recognition. Those are the people that have value. And for that reason, it changes every year. And that's the reason why I tell these filmmakers one during through our program through the development program, we spent a lot of time researching, and figuring out making lists of actors that make sense for a given movie. Now that list down to five names for each with a casting director, and then bring that into the sales team, including the director By the way, so it could be the male lead the female lead, and then the director, we take all of that and sort of crunch the numbers with sales to figure out what kind of projections we can anticipate based on these people. And what combination of those people gives us the best numbers in the world. And then once I'm armed with those numbers, And my rule of thumb is they give you three columns, right, the low, the middle, and the hot, my rule of thumb is your low should be two times budget, one and a half to two times budget. So if you're making a movie, like I do at 2 million bucks, you want your low estimate to be at least three, between three and four, and you need the name power in order to get to that number. But now you have a strategy, because it when you do that, now you got a plan, these are the five actors, I got to go get one of these five actors. And if I don't, I, my investor can take his money back. Because I'm going to take the investment contingent upon me being able to deliver on my end, right, but I have to know what I'm delivering. So instead of just running around, talking about, oh, I want someone to be in my movie, that there's a science to this. It's not perfect. But at least it's a strategy that helps us determine, I tells filmmakers all the time. If you haven't done this work, if you don't know exactly what your budget is, and you don't know what your sales projections are, and you don't have a strategy around your cast, you do not have the right to be talking to investors, you shouldn't be doing it. If you're going out too soon, you're out there, having conversations with people with money, that you shouldn't be happening, because you're not prepared to have this conversation because you don't have the information that's required for them to be able to make a rational sound decision of whether or not you're a good investment.
Alex Ferrari 1:11:27 Now, frankly, it's your job. You're you sound very logical here, you sound like you're making sense. But I'm gonna I'm gonna play the devil's advocate here. I'm an artist, man, I am an artist, I, I just want to make a film with this actor. And I can't do it for less than 3 million, because my vision depends on $3 million. And I'm not going to worry about how to make money with the film. That's your job, not mine, as as a director and as the creative muse of this project. I don't want to get locked down with, you know, what actors are worth and what they're not worth internationally. I want the best person for the part now, but I also want the best person for the part in my opinion, who by the way, I've never made a movie before. So it that I've never made a feature, but I've seen it on TV. So it doesn't look that difficult. So I've seen a lot of behind the scenes, I could I could do what they do. I mean, it's not that hard. If there's green screen, I it's fine. So. So look I'm making I'm making a jest of this. But this conversation I'm sure you've had multiple times. I've been on the other side of this conversation earlier in my career, when I would do something I was that's that naive, let's not say that naive, that egocentric. And what I always tell people is like, Look, if you want to play in a very large sandbox, there are different rules and a larger sandbox. So like my last movie I did for the thau, a few 1000 bucks, which you saw that sandbox I have all I know you said you love that Thank you, thank you so much. I know you love the that sandbox, I can do what ever I want cast to ever I want to whatever story I want not worry about international sales, not worry about my cast, I could cast whoever I want. Because the VAT the cost is very low. It's kind of like building a shed in the back, or $10 million mansion. You could do whatever you want with that shit, that's going to cost you five grand of your own money. But when you're asking for 10 million to build that mansion, that by the way, you've never built a mansion before. It doesn't work. Is that a fair assessment?
Franco Sama 1:13:48 Yeah, well, that's exactly and you're right. I hear that all the time. And, you know, you're right Is it is it is is a vast difference? Because the question becomes at that point, well, what's at stake in your, in your scenario with your 3000 $5,000 film, that's what's at stake, right? That's, that's your world, that's you want to grieve that world. And as a filmmaker, I encourage people to do that, because that's when you learn how to do all of this, right? Because the process that you'd have to wait that you went through for a $5,000 film is no different than the $5 million, we're still gonna go through the same process. The difference is that the stakes are higher. Right. And now, in your scenario, a you're the only person person that you're accountable to, or the few people that might have helped you, financially to get to them. In my world, you got investors who are going to be breathing down your back, and they're not only going to be breathing down your back, but you know, you if you if you mess up on a two or $3,000 film, you can recover from that and go make another $5,000 film and then 10,000 if you mess up, especially if it's your first one, if you miss up on a two and a half million dollar film and you can only recover $250,000
Alex Ferrari 1:15:00 You're not making that mansion, you're in
Franco Sama 1:15:02 your deep, deep trouble number one and number two. Now, what inevitably happens is that same filmmaker Gets a bright vision for the next film. And they're, they want to go embark on getting number two done, right. And they, and they're so buried in number one, that there are a million and a half dollars behind. Right. And then on top of it, you got the whole distribution thing that happens on top of that, so. So where I'm coming from is this is what I tell people, there's sort of two paths you can take, when it comes to this business. There's what I call the pitching, sell. And then there's the DIY, right? The pitch and sell. I know writers that are great writers that just want to write it just want to write, write, write, write, write, and they write really well. And they're out asking people like me, hey, do you want to buy my script? Right? No, I don't want to buy your script. Because I don't, I don't buy scripts, I make movies. Like there's a difference, right? So if but there are people who do buy scripts, and you can make a living, and I know lots of folks are doing probably due to that make a living writing scripts for other people to go knock yourself up. And once that check clears, they're good, they don't care what happens to that project. And they'll because they got 10 more behind it, or 20 more behind it. So that's one avenue, the world that I live in, is to produce your own material, and maintain both the creative control over it, because you'll lose that the heartbeat. Otherwise, maintain the creative control and maintain the financial control so that you're the rights holder, to your story, you wrote it, you own it, and it stays that way, throughout the whole thing. So you can have the reap the benefits. If you go down that route, there's a whole nother set of responsibility. It's like going from the minor leagues into the Olympics, the training is different. You know, yeah, yeah, you have, the training is different. You can't, you can't, you can't mix one up with the other. So if you're going to go play softball with your friends, it's one thing if you're going to go try out for the Olympic team, that's a whole different way of operating. So and that's what happens is a lot of people get stuck in the transition. You know, I've got a lot of filmmakers that come to me, and they've made a couple of short films, right? When they, you know, they, they paid 2000 bucks. And, you know, they they did a great job. And they're winning awards. And it's great. I love that, because I think that shows a lot of character, right? The same time, I know people who come to me and they've made 12 shorts, and I'm like, stop making shorts, like, like we get it. Like, with all of the time and energy and money that you're putting into all of these shorts, you can be making a feature that you can sell. But But my my point is that there's a mentality around that experience, especially if it's their first time on set. And now all their friends are there and they get to boss everybody around and they get to be the big boss and the Big Cheese, and they sit in their director chair. And, you know, they're
Alex Ferrari 1:18:07 playing the part, right playing the part to play the part
Franco Sama 1:18:11 they walk away from, but then they think that when they go to a movie for 2 million bucks, it's going to be the same thing except bigger. And it's not the same. Same thing, and no, you can't bring your buddy out of film school to be your dp. Do you know what I mean? No. Or to do your budget? No, at that level, when you're talking about millions of dollars, you have to build a team. And when I tell these guys is when you made that short film, you probably didn't do it alone, right? You brought in a dp and a first ad and a script supervisor or whatever you had to bring in, you needed to build an infrastructure around you so that you could direct that film. Well, in my world, I do the exact same thing, except we do it in the business. And I surround people with the people that they need to build their business team so that they can go out and properly the keyword raise the funding to be able to make the movie that they envision and then we go out and put together the team of professionals that are going to support and surround them so that they that they can make the best movie possible that we all have the same stake and because we want to see it get distributed and sold and return investment because if you can do that, especially on their first film, if that should be the goal. The goal shouldn't be to win the Oscar on the first round although that would be lovely. The goal shouldn't be to Sundance box office right
Alex Ferrari 1:19:39 Sundance can South by Southwest yes yes.
Franco Sama 1:19:41 I have people say actually say to me Well, I'm gonna I'm gonna I'm gonna bring it to Sundance like they're gonna walk in and Sundance is gonna go come on in here. This is a screen open right there. I just go shoot it right up there. Hold on. Let me go get a couple of people to watch this video. Would you
Alex Ferrari 1:19:54 like some popcorn sir? Would you like some popcorn and we can massage your feet while you watch it sir. Is that is that yeah, that's not the way it works. You're trying to basically you're just mitigating risk, you're mitigating risk, because the higher the number goes the budget, the more risk you have at that thing, and the studio's do it all the time. That's why now it's just reboot after IP after, you know, established properties, because they don't, at $200 million, you can't risk. It's very difficult, like avatar was the last time I saw a studio take a $500 million risk on a new IP, but it was James Cameron, and he could do it. That's why they're, that's why it's always reboot, reboot, reboot IP, ip ip, because they can't, they can't risk that much.
Franco Sama 1:20:36 And even then, about I don't know when this happened, but I remember it's good. It probably been a good 10 years now. There was a time when there was never any such thing as seeing two Studios on one film, right? Everybody was competing for universal web. Now you see them working together. But for that reason, because if they're going to if they're going to work on $150 million project, why don't we put up 75 million each and share the risk and utilize our resources, instead of fighting with each other one, we join each other and make this thing a huge hit, you know, and that's what's been happening now is that they're they they've started to smarten up and
Alex Ferrari 1:21:19 azeema. And then there's, and then there's cats. Which I can't wait to see it. I'm dying. But I mean, I am dying to see only if it's inside, sir, because obviously we're not allowed out anymore. But no, but I keep telling this to people, I've never seen it. I don't want to bash anybody. But I mean, it's when you have a once in a generation, it's a once in a generation situation where you have 100 million plus studio film that fails at such a just a Goliath of a failure. It doesn't happen. And on paper, that movie had everything going for it. It was a it was an IP that world renowned, the best how multiple Oscar winners. And the behind the scenes is the director, the writers, the actors, this the visual effect, it had every thing going for it. And it obviously was a colossal failure in many, many ways, was like the
Franco Sama 1:22:27 opposite of the producers. But it was the opposite. But it's interesting, because it brings up a really important point that I that I've talked about for 10 years now, I have a I have a phrase that I use, I say to filmmakers, when they come to me, they have a lot of expectations, right. And that's understandable. But there's a reality to all of this too. So because it costs a lot of money to do this, you know, this is this, nobody's working for free here, this is a business. So there's a lot of money at stake, there's a lot of hard at stake, a lot of stress. But at the end of the day for people who are willing to go through the process and develop a film properly and figure all that stuff out in, in my world, I'll help them I'll take them by the hand and carry them through that process, which is an arduous process, especially if they've never done it before. But I say to them, you can do everything, right, like literally everything right from day one, you have a beautiful script, that's like top shelf script, you can go out there and make a shoot a gorgeous film, beautiful, you can go into the editing room. And you know, because you could lose everything right there, the whole thing could fall apart. But assuming that assuming that you don't, and then you come out on the other side, and you've got a beautiful piece of art to be able to display. What I tell people is no matter what we do together as a team, or whoever's involved. At the end of the day, there's only one thing that's going to ultimately determine the success or the failure of your film. And it's the film. No, stop.
Alex Ferrari 1:24:01 It's no, it's everything else. But the story is
Franco Sama 1:24:06 not the writer. It's not the acting. It's not the sound. It's not the lighting, it's not the music, it's all of it. And that catch is such a perfect example. You know, because anyone in their right mind who might have been given an opportunity to invest in that movie would have been crazy not to do it.
Alex Ferrari 1:24:23 Of course, like I said on paper. It's perfect. Yeah.
Franco Sama 1:24:29 But but that's why that's why it's such a great example of what I'm saying is because it was perfect until it wasn't. And now people are you know, hurting from that. I mean experience
Alex Ferrari 1:24:42 that's, but the thing was, so if we analyze cats for a second, that's the beat. Let's beat up cats a little bit more because God knows it hasn't been beat up enough. There was a risk involved that no one took into consideration and this is the best minds in Hollywood, Oscar winning minds as well as the best I miss universe. There's no slouch. As far as making movies is concerned. No one. No one, everyone has underestimated the risk of the CG. Everyone assumed that the visual effects were going to be solid because they had a great company doing it. But no one took in consideration pushing the visual effects artists to fast and unrealistic deadlines, constant revisions, no one took all of that into consideration. Because that director who is a fantastic filmmaker, from my experience did not have he's not a CG guy. He's not James Cameron, he's not David Fincher, he's not someone who understands that world and understands timelines as though he was, you know, he did the King's speech and, you know, more, you know, those kind of films. So I think that was no one took that in consideration. And it just felt because I talked, I saw the talk the actress, I saw the actors afterwards, you're just like, we were on a set in green screen. Like, we had no idea we were going to look like that. Like, we were good. I worked 10 days, I had a ball. It was fantastic. You know, you got it. But no one under no one ever did the test to go, hey, maybe these guys look creepy. I've said this. I've said it's the best review ever of cats. And I'm gonna say it again, because I've said it on the show before but I can't stop saying it. The cats is the worst thing to happen to cats and dogs.
Franco Sama 1:26:27 Oh, that's funny. That's good. That's good. And it's probably true. Oh, God.
Alex Ferrari 1:26:34 All right. So let's, let's get off the couch for a second. Now, I wanted to ask you a couple more questions if you have some time. So because I know you're a busy man. We we've talked a little bit off air about this, and I just did a podcast recently about this where there is not only is there a lot of predatory people and scam artists in the distribution space and in the sales rep space. But there is oddly enough in the film financing space, which is a space you live in. And now with the episode and I'll put it in the show notes, which was about the minimum guarantee scam, where now you go, you know, to someone who's pretending to be someone like yourself, and says, Hey, we will package the movie for you, we will get an mg a minimum guarantee from x or these distributors who we have all the connections for all we need is 40 to 60,000, maybe 80,000 upfront to do this work for you. And I just got off the phone with a poor filmmaker who got and it was like a million plus film, dollar film and he got screwed for 40 or $50,000 out of this one of these companies. And I wanted to just throw it at you to say what can filmmakers look out for? Because, I mean, obviously you and I would smell that coming from a mile away. But a lot of young filmmakers or even people who are just not familiar of this side of the business, what can they look out for? What are some some signs that we can kind of protect yourself from these, these these predators?
Franco Sama 1:28:03 Well, you know, because I've been doing this for 20 plus years, I have to say, I've become very jaded around all of that. Because I am at the point where I literally don't believe a word anybody says to me a great
Alex Ferrari 1:28:22 until, until the check clears until the check clears.
Franco Sama 1:28:27 That's the baseline. The baseline is when they say to me, I'm working on this film, and I got it's a million dollar budget. And I have 300,000. I'm thinking No, you know. So let's start there.
Alex Ferrari 1:28:41 Let's prove to me that you have the 300,000.
Franco Sama 1:28:45 Yeah. And even then they scam you because that I was telling somebody the other day that I had a guy that needed $750,000. And we were looking for proof of funds. And what he did was he's delivered me a a redacted like a like a Charles Schwab type of investment account. certificate. Sure. And it was real. It was real. And it had but it had the name in the social security number and all that redacted. So you couldn't see that. But I could see the balance of something like $6 million in there. And he and this was a long time ago. This is years ago. And he said, See, this is my guy, he's got $6 million, so 750 might be a problem. So I went with it. I haven't run around town tell anybody I had $750,000 in the movie, only come to find out that although the proof of funds, paperwork was legit. There was just a friend of his that did him a favor and gave him a piece of paper to use. The guy had no intention of putting any money in the movie. There was nothing connecting the money that I could see to the film that we were trying to put together. So they're the we used to have the phrase prove the money And I've had to change that now to move the money
Alex Ferrari 1:30:04 Into an account that we all agree on. Yeah. We'll be right back after a word from our sponsor. And now back to the show.
Franco Sama 1:30:21 We'll establish the account you put the money in. And unfortunately, it's come to that. Because if they're not willing to actually move funds
Alex Ferrari 1:30:31 Into an escrow account, by the way, that's an escrow account. That's not like a personal account for you. It's an escrow account.
Franco Sama 1:30:36 Place to tuck Did anybody can touch it? Right, but just to the physical moving movement of the foot of the funds, now we have a basis for a conversation. Even then, that's all it is. Right? Because they can take it back out. But at least if it's there, now I have a basis for a conversation to engage. So you know, what I tell in this kind of ties into your your hypothetical scenario about the filmmaker, you know, that was making the first movie is that really, what I did at the beginning was I got on IMDB Pro, back then this was 20 years ago. And I found a filmmaker event randomly, who I believed sort of when somebody who I felt like I looked at a couple of them. But I started taking people out to lunch, I started meeting people on the phone. Now I was in a unique position because I had investors. But I didn't have any projects. I didn't even know what that meant. I didn't even know what the requirements were, I didn't know any of that. So I went out, I found this executive producer, who my deal was, I will bring my investors to you. In exchange, I want to be a part of this, of all of this, I want to learn. Yeah, I want to learn, I want I want, I want money, I want to credit, I want to build something. So I wasn't in a unique situation. But it worked. Because by being in those rooms and listening to those meetings, and actively participating in all of these conversations, I got to a point where after a while, I thought I got this, you know, I can do this now on my own, I feel competent enough and being able to do all that. And I had watched her make her own mistakes. So I knew what not to do in a lot of cases. So I think today, you know, it's hard to do, I'm not suggesting for a moment, it's easy, but I am saying it because it happens, because I'm on the receiving side of that now. So a lot of the times I'll get these random emails and stuff, especially like on LinkedIn. People say, I'm looking for an executive producer. So for me, executive producer is code for money. So when somebody says to me, I'm looking for an executive producer, my response is how much you know, I'm looking for an executive producer, how much do you need, because that you know, who you kidding. But but at the same time, you know, being able to partner or be mentored by or find some way of getting to be around the people who are doing it and are doing it well, and who are trustworthy, you know, and have who have good names and reputations in the industry is really a good way to get started. Because you know, you were joking. But the truth is, most of these people that I meet, they are on the creative side, and they don't want to do this stuff. They don't want to learn this stuff, but they don't want. And, and those people aren't the ones I'm interested in, you know, I because I don't want to work with them either. You know, I want to work with people who want to work hard figure this thing out and do it and do it the right way. And I want to is more of a collaboration at that point. You know. So that's, that's really what you have to do. And because if you have a foundation like that, when that guy comes and shows up, and says, Hey, give me 50k. And this is what I'll do for you. You have two or three point people like me, and you know, that have that kind of experience to be able to pick up the phone or shoot an email and go, Hey, you know, and I got probably 10 of those people out there in the world that I have a policy with, if you have a problem, if you have an issue if you just want me to look over an agreement or something I'm having to take a look at in order to protect those filmmakers, and I'll tell you, but they have to build that relationship with those people. One of my biggest pet peeves is when somebody just shoots me an email with a pitch package.
Alex Ferrari 1:34:49 I get them I get them and I'm not a financier. How does that work? Do your homework.
Franco Sama 1:34:55 I got I mostly got two or three of them today. Right now. There's no introduction, there's no nice to get to know you. There's no Hey, blah, blah, blah. They just literally send you this long email. And then, uh, and then five attachments with their script, and their pitch deck, and all of this. And I'm like, Hello. Nice to meet you. Like, what happened to a report? What happened to earning?
Alex Ferrari 1:35:26 I'm not a piece of one. I'm not a piece of meat, sir. I have a heart. I have a soul try to get to know me, Franco.
Franco Sama 1:35:35 It's true. It's like it's it's etiquette. It's courtesy. It's professional with diplomatic. It's like, because because that's what I'm attracted to. Right. I'm attracted to commitment. People who make commitment, you know, people who are willing to go all in and make commitment. And there's a lot of people who say that, that they're all they make commitment, but they're not really there. And I'm, I'm interested in people who are willing to go all in and make commitment. But I'm also interested only in people. Look, I say this all the time. I always say this is great projects. And shitty people pardon my French. Right? And then there's shitty projects and great people. Yes, is great projects and great people. I want the great projects with the great people, because even if they're shitty projects, but they're great people, we can go find another project, it's not so shitty, and we can still work together. Right? But people is the problem, then I'm out. And anybody who feels that it's okay to bombard anybody's email yours or mine with just puking out all this information without at least making the effort to establish some kind of rapport is out in my book, ie they might have a great project, and I might pass it out might be the next big thing. And I lost. But you know what I would have, it would have been a nightmare. And I'm not interested in that.
Alex Ferrari 1:37:15 And I've been saying this for years as well, if filmmakers do not understand, look, I'll go back. The problem, I feel that a lot of filmmakers in general have it is not their fault. They have been taught this old system from film schools and by Hollywood, that you got to do this, this, this and this to get your movie made. And you don't have to worry about the business will take care of it for you. And but that's what that's that's the message that's been sent out at film schools and sportsmen sent out in the industry. Why? Because it benefits the industry, it's that's how the business works. That's Hollywood accounting, they don't want you to know too much about what goes on behind. They don't want you to know how the sausage is made. They don't want you in the room where the decisions are made. If I may go Hamilton, they don't want any of that. Because once you are informed, you become harder to deal with, because now they can't scam you. So I think any filmmaker in today's world that does not understand the entire process, even at a rudimentary level, you know, understand what the DP is doing. And also understand what the distributor is doing. At a simplistic level you are do you're going to get taken advantage of in one way, shape or form from somewhere. So you need to understand the entire ecosystem, the entire process as much as possible. Look what you did. When you were first starting out, you're like I want to learn I want to learn everything I want to know about everything. You know, I'm not going to hire you to dp my film. I know that, but you but you know what a good dp is. And you know, when a good dp is trying to pull one on you because they want something cool for their real. And they're not making their hours and they're not making their pages because I need to get this one shot. That's nice. But we need to move it along.
Franco Sama 1:38:49 Yeah. Am I right? Yeah. Yeah, you're 100%. Right. And you know, one of the things I'm often quoted as saying is that film school teaches you how to make a movie, but who's going to teach you how to get a movie made? So those are two different things. And it is my opinion, based on experience that film schools literally, like you just alluded to, they don't want you to know the stuff that I teach people, because they're gonna scare these guys away. They're gonna scare them away. So what happens is these these people go out and spend 30 4050, whatever. $1,000 on film school, a year a year. Yeah. Yeah. So I'm not taking that away in terms of the value from an artistic, creative perspective. But then they come, they get and they graduate, then they come knocking on my door. And they're like, Dude, what do I do? Like, I don't even know step one. I don't even know where to start. And so that's actually one of the reasons why I initially I started why created the development program is because it occurred to me that these are really talented people. They have just spent all this money and they don't even know Step one, they need to be educated, somebody has to pick up with film school left off and say, Look, let me show you how this works. Let me at least explain you said the basics. Let me at least explain it to you. So that you understand the concepts of the basic concepts of financing, equity, debt, tax, credit, financing, distribution, casting, every element legal pose, really post production levels, budgeting, scheduling, all of the stuff that that they just don't have, they don't they don't see it in relationship that leads to actually going out and raising money and putting funds together. So I think it's a big void. It's been great for me in the sense that, you know, I've been able to build a whole branch of my, my company, on based on educating people, they fit into that category, and they love it. They love it. And but that's the point. If they don't love it. I don't want them there.
Alex Ferrari 1:41:08 No, no, absolutely. Well, because look, it's
Franco Sama 1:41:10 at recourse, I want them to be excited, I have this one couple I talked to you know, I do this on Skype, because most people don't live. And it literally every Monday, we can't, we can't wait to sit in front of our computers and talk to each other. Because we just know that for an hour and a half, we're gonna have a lot of fun, while they're learning how to do this. And they're so excited and animated. And it just gives me such a joy to be able to work with them. And that's what the people want to invest my time and energy into.
Alex Ferrari 1:41:40 Right? No question and but the thing is, and that's where a lot of filmmakers get caught up in is I've said there's a lot of times, Hollywood is really good at selling the sizzle, not so much the steak, but the sizzle, man, they're the best in the world at the sizzle. And film schools, you know, they sell the sexy part of this process. It's this it's sexy to to work with the actor to work with the actors to look play with the camera and the lenses and, and editing and all that it's really sexy to kind of be the creative part. But when you're done with that product, it's like it's really sexy to bake. Like, you know, like all those baking shows like, Oh, look at these cool things I'm making. It's all great. They're like this cake that, you know, explodes and does all this. It's fantastic. Now how are you going to make a business out of that product? Yeah. And that's the thing that nobody nobody talks about. Because that's not the sexy part. I love that part. I think it is the sexy parts. It's more exciting. It's actually one of the most exciting part marketing and the business side is excites me a lot. You know, being a film intrapreneur so I really love I love that part of it. But most filmmakers just want to sit back, go to the red carpet, sign the autographs, hang out with the actors and and play the role and play the role but then play the role at a $3,000 budget don't play the role on a $3 million budget.
Franco Sama 1:43:02 Your own money. Yeah, don't come. Don't come to us. Yeah, and I do I feel that same way like so because I am that like, I love that. I love it. I love to develop a process. I love watching people like go on and go oh my god, that's such great information. I feel so good. Because what happens is by the time we finish what my my job with first and second time filmmakers, yes, education, but empowerment. Like, I want them to be able to go out into that world and have those meetings and sitting around those people, and really have a good solid foundation and a confidence about them and err confidence above them that they can sit down. And if they happen to meet somebody on a subway or a restaurant, that's and they spark up a conversation about they're making a movie and the guy happened to a woman happens to be an investor and they're curious. I want them to be able to sit there and hold their own and have a conversation. They may get to a point where they go, you know what I better shut my mouth and have Franco talk to these people. Because I don't want to say the wrong thing. But they but they want them to be able to be empowered to be able to be confident enough to be able to initiate because when you're talking to investors, people, it's a different language. And this is what I tell people. People say to me all the time, what's the number one thing that will make us do well, when it comes to raising money? And I always say and I've said it, you've heard me say it a million times. They go out too soon. They're not ready. They're not prepared. They're not in a position to be talking about that. And part of the reason is because they're pitching story to money, people. It doesn't compete. Yeah, pitching story, stories. Critical. It's important. But an investor doesn't know what you're talking about goes right over their head, and they're gonna walk away and go what a frickin nutjob that guy asked me for $2 million. And I got nothing. I got a story,
Alex Ferrari 1:44:54 isn't it an equivalent of me going to the bank and going I want a small business loan and I'm gonna put up a bakery. And all I talk about is the ingredients, the the fond on the how it's layered how many you know, the cupcakes and how beautiful that that's all I talk about is the product. I have no understanding about how I'm gonna make money with this. But that's the equivalent. It's the equivalent you can't talk store your creative to business people, it doesn't work that way.
Franco Sama 1:45:20 And in what, in what other business in the world? Is that? Okay? Why is it okay for us? Like, that's the part that bothers me. You know, I think I might have told you this before, but a guy come up to me after one of my one of my seminars. And he says to me, I'm so frustrated. He says, I've had five investors, I pitched my movie to five investors, and every one of them shut me down. He says, What am I doing wrong? And the first thing I said was, you had five investors Really? Because No, you didn't. You might have had one or maybe two, but you didn't have five. So let's start there. All right, cuz there's a lot of this going on out there. And three of those a PS. Alright, so I didn't have fun that you feel any better. You didn't lose. Then, but if you even had one, like I said, What are you saying? Like, what if five people walked away and said, No, what are you saying? Because maybe something you saying is making them say no. And I said, Give me your elevator pitch. You pitch the story. It sounds great. Now what? Usually Well, that's it. And I'm like, That's it? Like, that's alright. Yeah. And how much you need 2.5 million. Really? Okay, that's cool. Um, so you have, you know, I just think you should do me a favor. And I love playing this. I said, Do me a favor. I gave my business card. I said, Can you email me? He goes, Yeah, yeah. I said, No, no, no, no, your script, I don't want you to script. I said, I want you to eat me your budget, the $2.5 million budget, and the guy's face just draw. And I said, What's the matter? He says, Oh, I don't have a budget. I said, You're already spoken to five investors, asking for two and a half million dollars. And you know, you don't even have you don't even know if it actually is 2 billion, like the divorce
Alex Ferrari 1:47:14 Or schedule, or schedule or caste,
Franco Sama 1:47:18 Or, or proposal or anything. He's literally pitching story to money people, and it doesn't compute, it's a disconnect. So what I do is I spend time educating people on how to speak to investors, not just where to find them, how to find them, and what to do with them. But what what to say to them, or more importantly, what not to say to them. And that way, whether I'm in the room or not, because more often than not, I'm not, I am to help support them. They can keep up like they're in it. They're not sitting all in the corner going I hope Franco closes this guy. You know what I mean? They're like, this is my movie, man. And I'm here to sell it, you know, and I'm empowered. Because I know, I'm ready. Hit me with the questions. I've got the answers. And if I don't, this guy will help me. That's what you want to do. And that's why I'm saying partner partner with, you know, with people who do have that base of experience, and don't try to go along.
Alex Ferrari 1:48:14 I know this has been an epic conversation so far. And I know we could talk for another three or four hours. But I do want to ask you one last question, because I think it's very important that we talk about this. What are your thoughts? What are your thoughts on the changing world of the film market? Because you and I have gone to AFM many times, I know you go to Cannes and all the many other film markets this year alone, I think it's going to be very interesting. They already zipties already got canceled. I can't I don't see how can is going to be able to go which is insane to say out loud. But I know Berlin just is it just happened or is finishing happening or something. But I heard I've heard through reports that was pretty empty. And the Chinese Chinese market the guys were not there. So where do you see before the Coronavirus showed up? It was already starting to go It was starting to the world has changed. How do you feel that these filled markets are are going to what place? Do you see these film markets going because it is built on a time of the 70s 80s 90s and early 2000s. That's when the markets really were kind of in their prime, where now there's so many other options. I'm just curious on what part they are going to play in this new ecosystem that we're moving forward with. I think they still have a place in the in the ecosystem. And there's things you can do in a market you just can't do anywhere else. But I'd love to hear it. I'd love to hear your point of view.
Franco Sama 1:49:44 Yeah, it's because just like in any other industry face to face, you know, is the is the best, most
Alex Ferrari 1:49:51 mask mask, the mask mask, the mask mask.
Franco Sama 1:49:55 It's definitely the most productive way to conduct business, right and so That's what the hype is around all of the markets, right? Because it's exciting. You get to travel around the world, you get to meet people, a lot of times you're meeting people that you see year after year. So you reconnecting with people. That's one of the things that I love about about the market, particularly FM, because it's right here. And but I think that there's, I think that there's been a lot of this stems from the first conversation we had about the purge that's about to take place around distribution, because that's what the markets are for. Right. It's buying and selling and, and, and promoting film. And so if the, if the core of that is unstable, which it is, which is what I think the purge is going to at least address, I don't know, if it's going to necessarily rectify it, then that foundation is shaken. And then you add the Coronavirus thing on top of it, where people are going to just be gone, nobody's going to show up. And I think that that's all going to contribute, I think it's going to go way bigger than just distributors having sales, people having to wake up to a new reality of the way they have to conduct themselves in just in terms of their internal business models, but on a global on a global scale. And I think it's going to be a hit, I think it's gonna, I think the virus is going to be the biggest part of it. I think, like I said, next year, or the year after that it will recover. But it'll never be the same. It's never going to be the same. And I think in a lot of ways that might be a good thing. Because, you know, the the the the traffic is down, and the crowds are different. Like it's a different.
Alex Ferrari 1:51:46 Oh, and there was a lot of filmmakers. It was a lot of filmmakers this year at AFM a lot of filmmakers as opposed to a lot of distributors.
Franco Sama 1:51:54 Right. And here's the thing, there's a lot of filmmakers going AFM for the wrong reasons, you know,
Alex Ferrari 1:52:00 Selling story selling their story.
Franco Sama 1:52:03 Yeah, they're walking in with pitch decks, trying to get distributors to come up with their project before they even have any money or they have any, any they haven't even done any development. Sometimes they have. Right, so. So that's what's happening. In my opinion, it's turning into sort of a, you know, a money pit, you know, because it's great, I love it, because I get to go and see my friends every year. But also I get to meet these people from all around the world. And a lot of the filmmakers that I work with, are from around the world. And my relationship is built completely on a on a on a computer Skype. So it might be the one time in three years, I'm actually going to meet people that I've been working with all along and be able to sit down and have a drink or a meal with. So from a social aspect. I think it's a very powerful place. But from a business perspective, it's just starting to read every year, it's just changing more and more and more. I mean, I do think that at AFM specifically, it was probably a good move to kind of restrict who can come in, because I know there. I remember the years when crazy. We used to run through bikinis and trying to, you know, all the crazy stuff. And I do think that that sort of took away, it was fun for a minute, you know, but I think it took away from the seriousness of the business at hand for serious filmmakers and buyers. But I, I also think that it's kind of gone a little too far now. And people just like you feel like you can't even move, you know, around. So so. So I don't know, it's hard to say I don't know what the answer is. I do think that this business, this industry as a whole is extraordinarily resilient. We've gone through so much. I mean, all the way back to the writer strike, and, you know, everything that what we're what we're saying, I mean, Jesus. Yeah, it's a resilient business. And like I say, I think that we've had enough lead time now, as indeed people that we've stablished, who we are out there in the world, I don't think we're going to have to, we're going to suffer any more or less than anybody else. But I do think it's the kind of thing that's just gonna have to play itself out and see what the repercussions are of this lack of physical attendance. And try to re maneuver away to be able to continue to manage do business, on the global market in terms of sales and distribution, without necessarily getting on a plane and in going to brands. You know,
Alex Ferrari 1:54:40 Right? I mean, that's nice, though. I mean, it's nice to go to France, and they can it's a fun time.
Franco Sama 1:54:47 And that's what so that's what that's what makes it such an exciting business to be in is to be able to travel around the world or the country and be able to explore all of this is literally your job. It's part of your Your job, you know, so that that is great. And I think that that will return. After this thing settles out,
Alex Ferrari 1:55:10 it's gonna be just it's gonna transform like everything else like everything settles in after after VHS after DVD after streaming. It there's just different evolutions, and it's just happening faster and faster and faster and faster nowadays, everything.
Franco Sama 1:55:24 We all thought it was gonna be a catastrophe and life was over as we knew it, and it was in a way, but then it got bad, you know, or something new came along, and, and so I think we're, we are all going to be fine. I think the most important thing for everybody right now is to just really stay focused on the present, like what's in front of us the projects that we're working on, and make the commitment to the thing that's right in front of us, you know, I've got two or three right now, you know, to be able to focus on I've got projects coming in from different directions. And I don't want to, I don't want to, I don't want to shift the way I do things, because what I'm doing has been working for me and for the backers. So I don't want to change that until our lesson until I be it becomes a situation where I'm forced to, in order to adapt to whatever this is that's going to be coming down the road.
Alex Ferrari 1:56:18 Franco, this has been an epic conversation as I knew it would be. This is going to be a mandatory lesson for anybody in the indie film hustle tribe in the film entrepreneur tribe, because this is a wealth of information that you've spit out some amazing knowledge bombs today. So I do truly appreciate it. Now, I warn you my last thing I'm going to say, Be careful what you wish for. How do people find you, sir? your home, your home and your home address and phone number would be best?
Franco Sama 1:56:48 Yeah. What maybe the computer and I'll show you my building. This year, I've my summer co films headquarters has moved, very proud to say, We are now on the lot at Los Angeles studios, which is downtown LA, great little Independent Film Studio. So I'm very happy to be there. It's great to be on a lot to be in that environment and be in that creative environment every single day. So that's our where we physically are at La center studios downtown. But the best way to reach me is really just directly through email. But there's two ways you can get to me is my website, of course, which is just summitgofilms.com. And I do recommend people go kind of take a look, they can see my all the films I've done. But also they can see the films that are in development and in the projects that we're working on moving forward. And my email, I'm happy to give it out,
Alex Ferrari 1:57:51 Be careful, just be careful.
Franco Sama 1:57:53 I always do it. And my email is simple. It's just [email protected]. And so by all means people are welcome to either email me through the website, or email me directly if they have any particular questions or anything. They would like to run by me if anybody's interested in the development program, I can send them information on that. Or I do a one on one six week course that they can inquire about to most of that informations on the website. But otherwise, they can just reach out to me and it might take me a moment to get back to people so I asked him to be patient because you're absolutely right. You expect a good influx of of emails and I welcome them. Sure it just might take some time to kind of get get my cut my way through them.
Alex Ferrari 1:58:45 So then this make sure you send when you email send your script your pitch deck, do not introduce yourself and just tell them your story. That's that's that's the protocol. That's the protocol.
Franco Sama 1:58:54 Not even hello, not even interested in Hello,
Alex Ferrari 1:59:01 Franco man, it has been an absolute pleasure. We have to do this at least more than once every two years. because things are things are changing so rapidly. And we are on the front line. So I do appreciate you brother, thank you so much for doing what you do and trying to help as many filmmakers as you are, man. Thanks again.
Franco Sama 1:59:16 Thank you Alex. I appreciate it as well take care.
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Take a listen to the legendary Steven Spielberg as he discusses his screenwriting and filmmaking process. The screenplays below are the only ones that are available online. If you find any of his missing screenplays please leave the link in the comment section.
Today on the show we have a director who shot a time travel feature film in two days, his name is Grant Pichla, and his film is called Making UP Time. Making Time’s 110 pages were shot in just two crazy, fast-paced days, separated by seven months and a house renovation.
After traveling back in time, a divorced workaholic must repeat his past footsteps in order to return to an unaltered present but struggles when it means re-proposing to his ex-wife. How’d they shot a full movie in 2 days? This documentary series explains it all.
This remarkable documentary is available on Indie Film Hustle TV. Grant and I discuss the insanity of shooting a film in two days, how he came up with this crazy idea, and what it took to put this beast together.
Alex Ferrari 2:42 I'd like to show Grant Pichla man thanks You so much for coming on the show, brother.
Grant Pichla 5:01 Hey, Alex, thank you so much for having me.
Alex Ferrari 5:03 I appreciate it. Man, you, you reached out to me that we've been trying to get this done for a while now. So I do appreciate your patience. But your story is extremely interesting about how you made your movie. And we're gonna get to it in a minute. But first, how did you get started in the film business?
Grant Pichla 5:20 Well, I think I got started probably the way most boring story start. So I was a kid, Junior High High School, making films with my friends shooting stuff for sports teams editing them. And it wasn't till I got to college, where I thought like, maybe this is something I should really focus on and go kind of all in on, so to speak. And so when I graduated from Central Michigan University, I started a grad school program. And I knew after two years, either a, you end up writing like an 80 page thesis or be you go for some sort of production. And against some of the teachers like, wise words, we said, we're not only going to do a production, but we're gonna do a feature and eventually had 100 people involved. It was in 20 locations. It was a massive script. So back when Amazon Studios are still a thing I had tracked down like all these scripts, that could be potential that we could shoot low budget, reached out to a writer got the rights to just shoot it for a student project and turn out being awesome. But 3034 shoot day schedule, and we came in at 33. So it was a very like, like, how do I say a streamline long is streamlined, but it was a lengthy kind of typical production? Yeah, so like, 30 some days, basically.
Alex Ferrari 6:48 And what was the budget of that film? That I believe was $6,000.33 days for six grand? Didn't nobody get paid? No, we are all students. We are all volunteers. It was just it was it was basically a learning experience. Yes. Yeah. Got and did you directed that film?
Grant Pichla 7:07 Yeah, it was, it was definitely the biggest undertaking I've ever had. Like today, it was just, it was very large, but never no egos on sets, everyone. By the end, we felt like we were so so much better than our first shoots, I was just a very positive experience. And it kind of leads into like where I am now. Because when it comes to shooting a movie in two days, for example, back then in school, you're like, yeah, if we just spread these days out, we've got time. That's the one thing we have in college, and we don't need money, but we can figure out windows of opportunities for here for this and that. But with making time, like, I'm currently employed full time, I have a side business, my wife and I shoot weddings. And then at the time of doing making time, my wife and I were in the middle of renovating our whole house DIY. And we were on like year, two out of three years of working on it. And we were about to do this huge kitchen renovation. So basically, my time was very limited. So it was like, if I'm going to go for a feature again, there's no way it could have been like 30 days, you know, like, I couldn't imagine taking 15 weekends to shoot a film while there's way more important life stage things happening, you know.
Alex Ferrari 8:24 So So you mentioned making time tell us about this, this movie and the process of making how you got the idea and so on.
Grant Pichla 8:33 So making time is a feature length, time travel adventure, romance, that is shot in just two crazy chaotic days, with those days being separated by seven months, and they House Renovation. So it was definitely the biggest gamble I've ever taken in my life because I going into it like there's no handbook that says, alright, this is what you need to know to shoot your first 61 pages on day one that just doesn't exist. So we went in feeling like a I hope this works. And B I also really hope all actors can come back in seven months and like nothing crazy happens. So it was every actor knew going in that this was like it was kind of gamble, but it's also very well thought out. So we knew kind of every pitfall that could happen before it came. But I'm I guess I'm getting off topic. So the story is Mason Hydra who was in Batman vs. Superman. Cast by Zack Snyder, pretty freaking awesome that he was willing to donate his time to our project. We were doing it just for the love of film, but it was also a great opportunity for him to just show off his stuff because, hey, it's a leading role, and how many people in the history of film can say I did 106 pages of dialogue in two days and probably have less than a dozen blooper moments. Like it's insane it's a performance of a lifetime is what I would call it. But like getting him on board, it's basically a shit now I'm gonna forget my logline now that we're right on the brand on the podcast, it's a workaholics scientist must complete his round trip to the past. But in order to return home basically must do all of his footsteps. I must fuck me Oh, I'm sorry. I'm totally ice in here.
Alex Ferrari 10:39 It's all good. It's like I get the idea. The idea of basically you know, you have to go back in time to do so it's it's a it's a it's a time travel movie at this point in the game. Yeah. So it's, you're making not only an indie movie, not only in two days, but you're also doing a time travel movie which time travel movies in general are not in the indie world other than primer Exactly. And but other than primer, I really don't remember there being a lot of this, this kind of filmmaking in the indie space. So it's a unique film. In that sense. That's probably one of the reasons it caught my eye so much, was that that vibe, and I've had a chance to kind of over I saw your trailer, and I've kind of had a chance to kind of look over the film. And I have to say, does have a vibe of of the most famous, the most famous time travel movie of all time, which is the Back to the Future. It has like that whole very cool energy to it. I'm assuming that's what you were going after?
Grant Pichla 11:42 Yeah, definitely. That was, it was like not the biggest inspiration in terms of right where the writing goes. But the feeling definitely that mixed with anything, Pixar mixed with pretty much anything Spielberg, a lot of it was, can we, what I was most interested in is if you did do this, and yeah, it's you know, it's science fiction, so it's fine. But what's more important is, if you went back in time, and it actually worked, the art and the inspirational, it would just be so just kind of unbelievable. And I wanted to capture that and then also capture, you know, the downfalls of the hero's journey and all those things, too. So definitely Spielberg hook was an inspiration for score. Yeah, picks ours up on the family, man. Even with the feel good ending, we did a little bit of whatever, we can move forward, but yeah, definitely that feel good vibe.
Alex Ferrari 12:44 Yeah. And that's kind of missing in today's world. There's not a lot of feel good movies anymore. I mean, they're even even Spielberg is not making feel good movies anymore. They're he's making, you know, heavy dramas at this point in his career. Occasionally, he'll do a Ready Player One like and you know, he hasn't done a fun fun movie in a while. And he's kind of set that hole. And then Zoo Meccas, and all those kind of guys, they they're not doing those kind of movies, I think we missed them in the 80s, that 80s, kind of 80s and early 90s kind of films that just make you feel good when you watch. That's why we go back and watch those movies again. And like Back to the Future I can turn on right now. And just watch it while you watch all three of them. They're just so much fun, and you feel good afterwards. And there's adventure and all this kind of stuff. So it's really, really a great idea for your film. And I think it was very smart of you to align yourself with that vibe, as opposed to primer, which is a completely different kind of
Grant Pichla 13:46 Very dry. And what what I was the film I can't remember is it's a wonderful life. So like that was I told I knew going in, I want something that when the movie ends, and you get out of your seat to go home, you're smiling, you're not shaking, you're itching your head saying like did that how did the time what was the big twist? or How did it not like I don't get this or I don't get that I just wanted people I just wanted to bring bring a little bit of happiness into the world by the time you walk out of the theater. So right. Now, is that
Alex Ferrari 14:18 Or turn off your streaming? Yeah. Or as you switch over to Netflix or something? I know it's the world has changed, sir. The world has said. Now I thought was really cool about your idea is that you had a large piece of production value, which was an unfinished home. And a lot of people would just look at that as an unfinished home and other people would go and you of course said no, no, there's production value here. We could do something because the cost of doing what you would you eventually did would cost you a lot of money to you know, get a house, do what you did to it and then build it back up. I mean it but you just kind of piggybacked on your Your life, which is real good indie filmmaking move. So did that come up? Did you did the did the house? Start the idea?
Grant Pichla 15:12 Basically? Good question. Yeah. So I was originally inspired by like Victoria, which was shot in a day actually just shot in two and a half hours a single take, you know? And I was thinking like, what would it take to pull something off in a day, and I was trying to write a script based on that. And I actually had one finish, but I put it to the side when I started looking at our house. And I was just like, you know, this, maybe you're like, the coolest idea I ever had, like the dumbest. And thankfully, with my wife's blessing, like, Oh, my God, if I didn't have that, she was she was okay with us going, all right. We can't slow this House Renovation down. Because we don't have a usable sink. Right now, we don't have floor, we don't have like, there's so many things that are life, Canada that
Alex Ferrari 15:59 I've been there, I've been there.
Grant Pichla 16:01 But what that did mean for me is I got to write a script as fast as I can and go through the revision process as fast as I can get it really good really fast. And then try to start shooting in this house before it gets too far along. And we lose that. And I knew that. All right. So let's say we shoot all back to like, in two months from now, and then bring everyone back in like a year or whatever. Well, when you actually watch the film, and he goes back in time, and now he lands in this house is completely different. That sort of magic is what I wanted to capture. Like, that's the promise of the premise. And that is it's not us just like taking some picture frames down or hiding something. Like all like 30 boxes of cabinets are just laying on the floor. It's nothing but sub floor, the paintings 92 everything's just like, bear. That was something I really wanted to. And, of course, in that moment, we got to start going for wide shots and like really show we're not hiding stuff with zoom lenses. But yeah, that did kick off the movie. And I thought, okay, if a guy is going to go back in the past, who's the best guy to do that? Well, maybe he's doing all this time travel stuff. And he's a workaholic. And maybe he's getting divorced in the opening scene, and maybe goes back to the past. And he meets all of a sudden his younger girlfriend who used to be his wife now. And that would be a very interesting dynamic like seeing your old loved one even though you despise her now. And then what if you learned that night when all of your friends who are showing up who you've neglected are now patting you on the back because they're excited because you don't even know tonight's the night you invited them all over because you're gonna propose to her. So now he's got to propose to this woman who he despises in order to get back home or else the machine won't connect. So it's like, that creates the juxtaposition I guess.
Alex Ferrari 17:55 And when does the killer robot come back? A robot killer robots? No Armageddon What's going on? Now? no space time continuum. I mean, you're gonna just make the whole world universe explode.
Grant Pichla 18:10 Now that's the thing we didn't want. This is sci fi but it's so far from sci fi. We don't even I hardly I put some research in the science but I don't care. I don't I don't want that.
Alex Ferrari 18:19 It's irrelevant.
Grant Pichla 18:21 Yes, it's more about an adventure and the romance that brings it all home in the end. You know,
Alex Ferrari 18:27 I love that scene in Avengers endgame when they're going back in time and then like the reference point that everyone who uses for like the spate is Back to the Future and they're like, that's not the way it works. That's not science. Yeah. Are you really talking about the Back to the Future as your scientific reference point on time travel? I thought was a great scene. But at the end of the day, it doesn't matter you could you could throw holes through to me Terminator has insane amounts of holes and all the time travel movies doing but but you you're you're you're you're feeding a master, the different kind of master you're appeasing a different kind of Master, which is story and met and trying to make people feel good. Yeah. Now, what I what I do find interesting is a lot of and I've preached this a lot on the show is the back into what you have access to you look around at your resources, and you write around those resources. And you've taken that to a whole other level by creating this entire kind of story and subplot around, around the time traveling around, I mean, it's just I just I never thought of it. And I thought it was just like, man, I hadn't I think of that I've been in a house that didn't have that I was renovating I couldn't like it was a very smart way of adding an immense amount of production value at essentially no cost. And by the way, what if you don't mind me asking, Can you tell us the budget, you're close to, you know, just generally what the budget was on this budget for this was $4,000. That's fantastic. That's fantastic.
Grant Pichla 20:00 Yeah, we came together basically for the love of film. And when I pitched it to everyone I said, your total commitment on this other than, you know, memorizing lines, and some actors only had small scenes or whatever, is basically a day or two days, depending on if you're in day one or day two. So you show up, busted out. And like Dustin said, Yeah, Mason said after, after day one, he came into day two, and he's like, man, I keep forgetting this film exists, like it was so big, and then all just halted and then disappeared out of my life for like five months. And I started memorizing again, but it's, it's just so different,
Alex Ferrari 20:41 Go ahead.
Grant Pichla 20:42 To add to what you're saying about using what you have available. The guys at draft zero podcast, they once did an episode on movies that are all in one location. And I knew, okay, so if this is gonna be super low budget or done, like all in one, it's going to be done in one night or two nights, then it kind of has to be mostly one location. And what those guys discover at the end of their analysis is like, if a movie is supposed to take place just in one location, then as far as story goes, that location better be really freaking important to the story. So that also turned out. Okay, now this movie is actually about this couple. And the renovations aren't just they're not just there for like, set decoration, but it's a part of their story. And it's an ongoing conversation that happens in scene. So yeah, but we can continue. So I just want to go
Alex Ferrari 21:36 No,no, absolutely. Now, the biggest challenge I would imagine, is working with actors in such a short period of time. Like, I understand that they memorized lines, but I'm assuming it's not verbatim. I'm assuming you let some things fly. There was some dialogue, ad libs or things just kind of like generalized a little bit or did everyone literally go word for word on this?
Grant Pichla 22:02 Okay, so I know that mumble core exists, and I know that scriptment exists. But I did not want to spend two years on a project in which could be like, you know, it could be the last thing I do for 20 years, I don't know. Because life takes you in all different directions I didn't want to do, I didn't want to bring everyone together, get all this stuff prepped and start editing it. And often I'm, I'm realizing that dialogue is flat, or we're missing key things. So my request was that everyone be off book. And I swear to God, Mason Hydros a champ like I could not believe it. He knew every person's line because he he he recorded himself reading the whole script. And just listen to it day after day. All the other actors had such a easier workload compared to him. But there was a couple actors who I said and in particular, his lead counterpart, torey, titmus, she had trained with the second city Conservatory, all improv, she's a Maestro. She's amazing. She walked in, and I started realizing She not only had lines down, but she could improvise things to add to them and improve my dialogue, just by allowing her character go a little more up and down at times. So for the most part, I'd say lines were about 98% as written, which I'm really proud of why it wasn't like blooper after blooper, it was just people came in, and they knew what they had to bring. And they brought it it was really, really awesome.
Alex Ferrari 23:29 I think, from my experience working in the business is when you raise the bar for for crew, for actors, for everybody involved with the project. They either show up in and rise to the occasion, or they completely crack under the pressure. And I mean, it's the bottom line and something like making a film in two days, like you were doing. You'll know real quick if you're cracking or not. And I guess it's just so much pressure. Such fat, like how many takes did you do? I must I mean, I can't imagine you doing more than a couple takes each day.
Grant Pichla 24:05 Yeah, but the maximum we did any scene would have been like three and a half, four takes. And there was a few that we nailed just in one and never really looked back. Like we just did it and we're, we're like, that's good, let's go. But there's some things that I think you might find interesting pertaining to the cast. So like the movie Birdman looks like it's shot on one take, but it's like 13 shots stitched or whatever. They rehearsed that for 30 days or three months or something leading up this movie. And this may sound super irresponsible, and I wouldn't ask anyone else to ever do this, but it was a nature of what we were put under the circumstances. I had never even met our lead actress Tory nor had Mason until 9pm the night before shooting their 61 page act to Roll Matt Stone. Yeah, so it was freaking crazy. So they were like, Hi, nice to meet you. it's game time tomorrow. So let's take the next hour and a half to talk it out. And Reason being is the day before shooting date or sorry that Yeah, 24 hours before shooting day one, we got hit with the biggest Blizzard in like the last three or four years in Michigan 15 inches of snow in 24 hours and no one can drive. And Tori and two other actors are coming from Chicago up to the Detroit area where we are. And they're taking the train and the trains getting stuck. And at one point, the train just lost power. And then Tory missed the train and it it all boiled down to like, holy shit, this film may not happen unless people get here. And we had a crew of 10 which deflated to five the day before shooting. And so it came down to me on steadycam which was you know, pre planned to shooters on long lenses a sound recordist or audio supervisor listening to the four different lavalier mics going at once. And a first ad who took on off five other roles that were missing. So this just due to the blizzard, this became like, it could have been a complete bust. If we were missing like one or two more pieces of the puzzle.
Alex Ferrari 26:25 I feel you because I mean, when I did ego and desire at Sundance, I had never met any of my actors. And it was the day of and they just showed up at Sundance. And before then it was just Skype calls. And they've never I think they had to had the pleasure of meeting each other shortly because they were all coming from New York. But you know, it's kind of adds to the vibe there. It kind of adds to the to the energy of the situation. I mean, you gotta be planned, but you I mean, you're crazy. I mean, me, me doing what I did you doing? You did, we're not we're not doing something like that. So you've got to kind of embrace the nuttiness of it. And just kind of like, you know, don't hide away from it. Like, don't pretend to be what you're not, like, this is what we're doing. This is how we're doing it. Get on the train, because it's already left the station.
Grant Pichla 27:17 Yeah. And it, it totally works. It's just like some of those directors who shoot on film. And they say, the minute you hear the film gate shut, and everyone realizes we're gonna run out of film at a certain point, like the deal, just, you'll just run out, everyone has to kind of like the vibe changes, and we're all in it together. We're either going to make it or we're not. And as much as I was hoping the day was going to go pretty close, like day one was going to go pretty close to my schedule. Man, the whole, it all went completely different. Like, of course, yeah, yeah, it just crazy ways. Which I could elaborate on, unless you want to discuss other things. In the meantime,
Alex Ferrari 28:02 I'm sure I look. I mean, we could talk for hours on everything that went wrong. I'm sure that you know, I'm not wrong that much, but then not as planned. Like, I didn't plan a lot of things on my movie. And sometimes they weren't good. Sometimes they weren't. But you roll with the punches when you're doing a movie like this. And I want everyone listening on to understand this, when you're doing movies that are two days or four days or something so quick or very ambitious. You've got to roll with the punches on a 30 day shoot, you can kind of really take your time, you know, do things Oh, this doesn't work, we can come back to it. There's no time for that. So you've got like, Oh, we only have five crew members. Now, what are you going to do? We got to roll we got to go, what can we do? And you got to kind of adapt and move forward no matter what. Because, as I said, the train has left and there's no stopping it. So either you jump off the train, or you get on and just go with whatever comes. Do you agree?
Grant Pichla 29:05 Yeah, that's the only way you can do it. And it has to be sort of top down leadership. So if you are fretting, then other people start to fret and it'll all the wheels fall off. So you just have no you almost have to know going in, like you said, we're not to even attempt it. So as I was like, sending out like proposal videos to actors, like I have an offer for you, I'd love for you to play like a supporting role this or that. I kind of I I didn't laugh through them. But I I totally recognize that. This may sound crazy to you. And yes, we're still gonna do it. So are you in and yeah, it creates camaraderie for sure.
Alex Ferrari 29:43 There's two things I wanted to you. I wanted to point out that you just said one is the leader, it starts or starts at the top into a casting when you cast the film like this. You really need to be very careful on who you bring in. Because a lot of times you'll have an actor say oh yeah, yeah, I can do it. I'll do it. But They really need to be on board with this process because it's an unlike any normal filmmaking process. And if they're used to doing it one way, and they, they say they're going to do it and they come in and you're like, you're off and running, the whole thing could come crashing down. If your lead really started it mean you everything had to go perfectly for you to make this work. And if your lead would have forgotten lines, had attitude, ego, any of this kind of stuff, the whole thing would have come off the tracks, would you correct? Yeah, that's, that's pretty true. We'll be right back after a word from our sponsor. And now back to the show. So we're insane to even attempt this, because there's so many moving parts, and everything has to land perfectly. There's no room for Oh, you know, there's a mistake here, there's a mistake there, this guy's not doing his job, he's not pulling their weight here, or she's got an attitude, he's, he's crying because you can't feel the pressure, whatever it is, you don't have the bandwidth to handle those kinds of things, because of the speed you're doing it. And so be very, very careful on who you cast behind the scenes and in front of that lens as well. I mean, I'm assuming you agree with all that?
Grant Pichla 31:23 I do. But I would argue that I don't think like, when you say that the only way it can happen is if everything goes right. Or if we get very lucky. There. And I'm not. I'm not like reacting really to that. But I will say there was things all along the way that you just hit, you hit them and you keep going and right. I already I already knew like, hey, if someone can't get lines, or if they if it wasn't an org, we already just had a script waiting. And I would even do it one line at a time if I needed to just to push through. So it's just sort of like, for me, it didn't seem like there was a lot of pressure. until we hit the point where it was 6pm we had nine scenes done and we had 25 more scenes to do before midnight. That's when that's when shit turned up. And it went to 11. And there was no time to breathe. And it was just go go go. That's where it was sort of like the money. This is where you put your money where your mouth is. And you really realize what it takes to shoot half a movie in a night. It's it was it was freakin crazy.
Alex Ferrari 32:37 Without without question, and when I say everything has to kind of work is like if you would have had your lead actor or one or two actors just break down and not you forward the machine, the machine stops working, because those cogs need to be there, or you're going to have to adjust story or you're going to have to move things around. And that's the risk of going in through this. But I'm assuming because of your experience and and shooting as much as you have you felt very comfortable that you could do this. And this is not something you should do. Right out of film school, generally speaking, you should have some sort of have some wealth of experience. And also people who you hire have some sort of wealth of experience that they can fall back on. Because when things don't go the way you want them to go. And they won't. Because it everything wasn't exactly the way you planned, I'm sure. But it's but you have something to fall back on as opposed to like, well, I only know how to do it this one way. And if it doesn't do this way, I can't move forward, you have to have two backup plans. But you gotta keep moving. But it's very, you have to be very careful. And then secondly, the the leader, the leading from the head, from the front aspect of this, when you're doing something like this, it is so outside the norm of the filmmaking process, that if your leader which is the director, who falters has stress has a breakdown. Everything will just stop. Yeah, fair enough to say,
Grant Pichla 34:05 Yeah. And man for me, when I'm doing two jobs and renovating a house, and this is my one chance to kind of break free from all that and just shoot. There wasn't even a question about cracking or anything. It was more So hey, I've shot 25 weddings where it's one and done you they only kiss at the altar once or they only enter the reception aisle once so you gotta be on it. So at this point, it's like, even if we screw something up, hey, we could do a second take right now it's fine. Or I'm just happy to be in this room with all these people at once and be working with so many talented people that even if something breaks or doesn't work, I'm still doing it the smile because this is the funnest part like this is like Jim Jarmusch says this is the act of sex in the filmmaking process. So it's just fun.
Alex Ferrari 34:52 Absolutely. And that's the mentality you have to go into that with if you're not having fun. Like what you know, when I was doing my film I'm running around, I had a ball. And I think I don't get to talk to filmmakers who do the things I've done very often. Isn't it kind of exhilarating being out on a tightrope with no debt? With no net? Like, there's on a creative standpoint, as an artist, you're on uncharted territory. And you've got a group of people around you. And I find it exhilarating, I find it, you know, other people would crack, they would just lose their mind because they can't control everything. I love being out there, What's your feeling on it?
Grant Pichla 35:34 I feel like it's like, took me back to high school basketball, it's fourth quarter, your team's down 10 your shot is on. And like, let's go, let's duke it out to the end. And every every decision you're gonna make is just gonna be fun, or just, you're gonna make your best choices you can with your best people behind you. Like, you got a awesome shooter on your left and awesome shoe on your right, you've got to trust them. You can't go over their shoulder and say, What are you setting up? Let me see that. It's like, No, just, I trust you your own. You're your own mini director and cinematographer. So are you. And so am I and I might cross your paths or something when I'm steady camming. But for the most part, if you miss a shot, just pick it up know that you got two other stellar shooters who are doing their best to do that. And, like, time, time told that at the end of the process, the footage we got and the performances we got amidst sort of the chaos was awesome. And in no part about that, like act two felt, oh, they just rushed this off or like this, you can tell you can feel the actors are rushing through or the cameras aren't ready. Like it pretty much just worked. But like you said, it takes years of experience to go in. If the Canon c 200 didn't have the ability to do like face tracking, and autofocus things on lenses that we have, then I would have shot it completely differently. I probably would have just called like sitcom style, and just stay wide. But I was trying to infuse, you know, Dally portions or to an extent with a steady cam and reveals and things like that. So sorry, I went off on a little tangent.
Alex Ferrari 37:10 Oh, no, that's fine. That's fine. Now, how did you convince everybody to come back? and seven, try to gather up the first time is it tough enough, let alone trying to bring it back seven months later?
Grant Pichla 37:22 Well, it's, it's not so hard to convince them to come back. It's just are their schedules open. And the last thing I want this to be was like, the minute we got a day that could work. I was like, we gotta lock it in now. Because if we if we say no, let's go for like a month later and try that. And then something happens. And then one person can't make it. Now you're talking do I rewrite scripts do I? Do I you start sacrificing everything. So it's mostly mostly just getting them there. And in terms of like, shooting the crew, they're just pumped, because this is Michigan and we don't get films, especially with people you know, like your old college classmates, and you know, they're good. And they know that you're putting together a good team, so they just want they want in. So you know, it's just a really great opportunity for everyone involved. Basically
Alex Ferrari 38:12 Now that never underestimate the power of people wanting to belong to a mission, a group, an event of some sort, and filmmaking, def, especially when it's outside like an LA. Everybody's making films, everyone's shooting films, everyone's working for free on little projects here and there. But outside of la mayor, people get really jazzed up when someone comes up and goes, Hey, follow me into the into the promised land, I'm going, it's gonna be crazy, but follow me. And people were like, well, there's nobody else around let's do this. It just seems like he knows what he's going. Let's go follow him.
Grant Pichla 38:48 So I did. I did that when I was in Miami, and with a lot of my projects there. And it just there's people were very excited. And I used to make my film into an event. So it made it made it bigger than it was in June, obviously to the sake of making that tight. That's how you get people willing to donate food and coffee and things like that, because it's so exciting. It's not the norm. And
Alex Ferrari 39:13 it's one day it's just it's, it's today's
Grant Pichla 39:16 The commitment is like any three dozen box of doughnuts and coffee as opposed to can we like nag you for a month of free stuff? It's just it's a lot to ask. So the one day commitment or two day commitment over the course of like a year. In some ways, it makes things a lot more achievable. Because if we were set out like let's really let's do this epic this time travel epic. And if I would try to shoot it traditionally, and don't get me wrong, our shots our lighting isn't it would make cinematographers cry because I can recognize there were things that had to be sacrificed. But to be able to just do it in two days and say, let's prioritize stories number one acting's number two sound in scores number three after that, like we can't skimp on those. But after that, man, we're going to get the best shots we can, we're going to do the best props and like, set design and wardrobe as you can. But man, those three things and when you get people, people like Mason Hydra tori titmus. It's just, you almost feel like in the same way you can trust your other shooters. You can just trust the actors. And even if they miss a line, it's okay. They're in character, they might cough in the middle line, but they coffin character and things like that.
Alex Ferrari 40:33 So, you know, how did you like? How did you like the scene? How did you like the movie? Because I'm assuming you, you don't have two hours to light a scene. So how did you do the lighting.
Grant Pichla 40:43 So it's like 50-50 in half the scenes like allow the basement scenes or in our main like kitchen, we had our main kitchen had overhead can lights, eight of them. So basically an array, and in our basement, we set up for practicals that were also an array. So pretty much like grid lighting. So as long as characters were within a certain zone of the room, there was always a backlight hitting on, there's always at least three angles hitting them. And it's Don't get me wrong, it's not even like like cinematographers are gonna say you're an idiot. But when you don't have time, you just gotta roll with it. And the other half, we would be like in a bedroom. I know that photographers, they turn their flash and point out the ceiling shoe and you bounce the ceiling and get a great floodlight, that's like 90% of solving the issue with bedroom scenes, just shoot that soft light at the sky or at the ceiling, let it flood down, and then some practicals as kickers behind them.
Alex Ferrari 41:43 Alright, and you know, a lot of people always, you know, will say, you know, try poopoo on your lighting or poopoo on on, like, Oh, she's not as perfect as this, there's not perfect as that I'm like, well, while you're still talking about it, I finished the movie.
Grant Pichla 41:59 Right? And the audience is listening to the next line of dialogue, they're not looking at the way a light is pointed. You know, they just
Alex Ferrari 42:06 As long as it's clean, as long as it's somewhat clean. People will accept that much more than they would 2530 years ago, like in the in the world of YouTube and the world of you know, films, you know, films being shot on an iPhone and things like that. People will forgive. Okay, lighting, web forgiver bad lighting. Like I'm watching the show right now, which I will remain named us, which is a really good show. But I can't stand the cinematographer like a he drives me nuts. I my wife is like, what, what? What is that? Who color graded this what's going on. But unfortunately, the show is really good. So I hope in the next seasons, it'll get better, but you will forgive. You will forgive bad bad lighting, if the story is compelling. I mean, look at paranormal activity. I mean, I mean, Jesus, you know, or even or Blair Witch Project. I know, those are two very young people always use those. But even primer primer wasn't lit amazingly well. But people weren't enthralled with the story, you know. So, it, I want everybody listening out there to understand that, that if you sit around waiting for everything to be perfect, you just gonna be waiting around 1015 years, you know, or you could just make your movie the best you can and get it out there and move on to the next project, which I think you've done that to the next level.
Grant Pichla 43:31 Exactly, it just if I hadn't shot it in these two days, and just kind of like, broke the rules and all that stuff. Like no one wants to break. No one wants bad lighting, and no one wants, like mistakes on audio here or there and things like that, or something might be slightly out of focus. You don't no one wants that. But where I was in my life, there was no more make. There's no more directing films unless I gave it a shot at something very, very short. And you know, maybe the marketability of shot in two days is something that would intrigue so on, but even still, it was more so it was more sort of just do something to just give it a horizon. See, see what we can make for film sake.
Alex Ferrari 44:14 Right, exactly. Now, what is the endgame of the film? Like what do you want to achieve with this film for yourself?
Grant Pichla 44:21 I hope Well, hopefully it rich and famous and everything else.
Alex Ferrari 44:25 It's a lottery ticket. Yes, yes. We're all just submitted to Sundance. Just wait for the check. Wait for the the the bidding war to happen. And and you should get to $3 million for it. And then you do the next Marvel movie. So I think it all worked. Perfect. Now when you wake up, what is the truth?
Grant Pichla 44:48 Um, my hope is that it has a hallmark vibe to it for sure. Now I'm not I can't just sit here and say like, Oh, I'd love to see it on Hallmark. Oh, I I think this could work on On the sci fi channel, like, that's just my hope is that with our festival submissions, someone somewhere accepts it. First of all, maybe no one will. But if they do, then I hope someone sitting somewhere, hears about it or sees it or even on your podcast, someone comes across and says, Oh, this is something we might be interested in or anything like that. Because right now I'm at a stage of just getting I need people don't even know it exists. So you first have people have to just find out that exists. And me posting to like our page, our page are our page on Facebook, like, oh, we're getting great audience reviews means a whole lot less then some festival picking it up and someone writing a story about it. Because my opinion, like either the film's priceless or worthless. It's it's depends on Who says so? And I to answer your question, I don't know, I'm hoping I'm going to take all the proper steps that you've outlined to the best of my ability and other resources. I'm going to try to get distribution, I don't think self distribution is really my answer here. Maybe because it was shot. So uniquely, there could be a niche market of filmmakers who are interested in how films are made, we did shoot, we shot and edited an eight episode behind the scenes as to how it was done on day one, day two, and all the follow up. So we've got great content. It's just a matter of like getting the word out and seeing who or where might be interested.
Alex Ferrari 46:40 Okay, and you in because you have such a low budget, you can kind of have a loosey goosey approach to it. Because it's not if this movie cost you 200 grand? First of all, I don't think that you'd be freaking the hell out. First of all, and so and also, you probably in all good conscience would not have done a movie in two days for $200,000. You know, it doesn't make sense. And I think that's another thing that filmmakers just have such a, you know, they'll just go in all in on a film. And they just like, yeah, let's just do it. We're gonna like, you did a smart man, you have a very low, you know exactly what I preach a film intrapreneur, which is keep your overhead low. So, you know, if you can't make four grand back, you're in the wrong business. Right? I mean, I mean, and from what I've seen, if you're on the show, there's a quality level there that I see that I was like, oh, there's, this actually has a really good chance of making money and generating revenue. And I'm really curious to see where it all goes. So basically, your distribution plan is going to be film festivals first, and see what happens. Basically,
Grant Pichla 47:44 I'll see what happens then I'll probably reach out if nothing I'll after that, then I would reach directly out to distributors, such as any film rights, other people you have recommended, and see if they'd have any interest. And if not, maybe reach out to a new branch of distributors. And if not, it's hard to say like, I don't really know what I would do after that point. Like I feel like I other than self, other than just blast my Facebook and do Google targeted ads. Yeah, try to sell it. It's that's all it's a whole lot of money spent hoping you sell some back. It's hard.
Alex Ferrari 48:22 It's it's No. And that's it. I'm so glad you said that. Because it's so many filmmakers think that, Oh, I'm gonna self distribute. And I'm gonna, I'm just gonna do some targeted Facebook ads and this and that. And like, it's you have a broad spectrum movie. Like you. I know. You. Yeah, you don't have a niche. I mean, the niche is time travel movie, the time travel, feel good movie. It's huge. It's a man's massive niche, you know? So it's not, you can't really target it. If you would have made I'm sure you've heard this, if you like, if you would have made it the vegan chef time travel movie. Yeah, you might have been exactly that audience. You can target that audience or you know, or he's a surfer or he's a skateboarder or whatever. It makes it really part I'm just using that as an analogy, but but make it really part then it's something that you may be in that's a big, maybe able to do the Facebook targeting and reaching out to that niche. But that's work that you would have had to have done a year ago. Not now, you know, so, but I do but I do feel that your film does have really good possibilities, really good legs, and from my experience should sell and should sell very well. And I'll give you some advice off air on what I think you could do with it. But I do think you have you have something that could could do very well for you, especially at that price point. Well, Question two.
Grant Pichla 49:41 If you don't mind me interjecting, then yeah, the nice thing is we sent the film to about 15 test audience members, when it had it's like 99.9% cut done with all score with all color everything basically done. And so much of the feedback we received Like, overwhelmingly positive Wow. So invested in the story or the characters. And then they'd say, oh, man, I can't, I still don't get how was this done in two days? Like I can't, I don't, I can't wrap my head around that. But the audience is like sort of general audience members. They love the idea that was shined two days, but they just love the story. So that's great. So I feel like we've got the story. And we've got real acting talent, and really solid sound and music. So it's just a matter of like, waiting for the right person to discover it. So we're just trying to get it out. And oh, and to add, I feel like the because the Internet has really radically changed how distribution goes and all these companies can sort not be outed, but sort of exposed and all the knowledge that you're filtering through in every podcast, people are wising up. I don't think right now, there is a perfect answer. Because like eight years ago, or maybe five years ago, people were saying, self distribute, self distribute, and now they're like, well, don't pay the cost of the aggregator cost put on iTunes, because no one's buying it, because there's too much content. And who's paying $3 to watch something when Netflix is free? All like forever? not free, but forever prime or prime? Yeah, prime, like new stuff. So it's just it's very interesting. I don't know.
Alex Ferrari 51:26 Yeah. And again, I'll point this out is that you're in a perfect scenario, in a perfect place where you have a movie or a piece of product that you've created for $4,000. If you would have made this for 50,000. It still be a bit it just it just makes it so much more harder. So if you're able to generate 30 4050 grand off of this movie, I'm assuming that would be a success to you. Hopefully, more if if distributors are listening that no, no, no, no, no, no, I understand. Yeah. Yeah. Trust me, I don't even know if a distributor Will you know, that's a whole other conversation as far as distributors and MGS and stuff.
Grant Pichla 52:10 No, it's all relative. But to your point, that's 10 times the cost that the film, you know, took to make. So yes,
Alex Ferrari 52:18 Yeah. Yeah, of course, I would love it a quarter of a million half a minute. It's all relative, right? It's all relative on on the thing. And if you're able to do more of these smaller budget films, you start creating that portfolio of films, where now you're starting to generate multiple revenue sources coming in from these films. And and then, my God, you might even have a career in filmmaking and make a living doing what you love to do, what days a year, it is, two days a year. That's that's your niche, your niches today movies. That's all you do. Time Travel today. This is the beginning of a trilogy. So you should do now another get another house do another.
Grant Pichla 53:02 Yeah, maybe the Property Brothers were just one step away from realizing what could be done. Now? I don't know.
Alex Ferrari 53:08 Exactly. Now, I'm gonna ask you a few questions. I ask all my guests, my friend. What advice would you give a filmmaker trying to make it in the business today?
Grant Pichla 53:18 I would say where I live in Detroit, there's no such thing as making it in the business for like for anyone outside of LA, because I can't give advice on what they should do when they go there. So I would just say, at this point, read the books, read, read the books, do the pre production, write the scripts, revise storyboard, do all those things you can before you spend a dime, and do them tailored to all of the most useful and unique and maybe maybe even things people don't see enough on screen. Whether it's a house run out, or something like I don't even think the inside of the house is all that unique, but to see it transform and then transform back in the end. Very different. But like look for things that should be on screen that make your film stand out. Maybe you got a really bad ass car. Maybe there's just a junkyard behind your neighbor's house. And this junkyard could be settings for some Red Dawn remake or something or script like that. But like, do everything for nothing. then figure out who's in your market that is an actor or go to local colleges figure that out. And then you just start making stuff so you shoot that movie with them. After that you've got some tiny tiny street cred. Use that to do something that's a little more Polish this time with better people. And then after that maybe approach actors who could learn like their name alone could help in the selling, although that jump that going from $4,000 Indy to like $100,000 and we're paying this actor 10 grand to be here for the day. That's a massive job. So I don't I don't even have advice. For that, I think that's very intimidating.
Alex Ferrari 55:02 Yeah, got it. And you you said a lot of great things in that answer a lot of great things that you should everyone should listen to and take notes on. Now, what is the lesson that took you the longest to learn whether in the film business or in life?
Grant Pichla 55:22 The longest for me to learn was probably stop trying to juggle 200 things at once.
Alex Ferrari 55:34 Brother, I feel
Grant Pichla 55:34 Yeah, it's the name of your frickin podcast, man. It's a hustle. So you know, if you get in that mindset young, and I was raised on a farm, where you just busted your ass period, because there wasn't, there was no other option, you just were told, that's what you got to do. So for me, it's like learning to turn it off and not. And it kind of goes with the themes of the film I made. Don't let your ambitions or your time machine take over your life and like, make your relationships with people around you crumble like it's okay to just turn it off at 5pm and then just go live normal live, because we can't I feel like preaching the dream of this business or industry is it can have negative consequences and people can go for broke. And you can go for broke for $4,000. Or you can go for broke. mortgaging your house and doing a half a million dollar film. Which one's gonna if they both fail, what's the better outcome out of those two? You know, so? I don't know. Maybe that's the that's what I've learned. Next question, sir.
Alex Ferrari 56:45 Fair enough. Fair enough. What is the biggest fear you had to overcome to make this film?
Grant Pichla 56:51 Um, biggest fear? Probably. Probably giving in to the the nature of what it was. So it happened kind of early. So it was sort of like, hey, if we're gonna make this, like, How the hell am I gonna like this? How, and then just realizing, no, you've told people before, it's not about lighting, it's about story. So let it go. And you know, try to light but let it go. And throw the boom mic away. Let's just love everyone. You can buy $33 mic j, or sorry, $20. Mic j off. Amazon sounds just as good as the sennheisers. And don't get me wrong, the sennheisers aren't cream, they're not even necessarily like the CLS. 11 Ds are anything. But dude, for like, very cheap, you can mic every single person in that and 12 people mic and then just switch the wireless pack each person in the room person and yada, yada. But it's just sort of like letting things go. And knowing that the 80% rule like if, like I told my shooters, if you get 80% of this pretty darn good, we're moving up, we can't reset something to help you get a shot. Because we started that way in the beginning. And we just had to right away, break, break old habits and realize like this, this is just gonna keep moving. And you're gonna let things go and you might miss a shot, but suck it up. Like you'll get your next shot in the next scene, or 20 years from now or 30 years from now. And we're still shooting tonight. That's probably it.
Alex Ferrari 58:29 All right, and the three of your favorite films of all time.
Grant Pichla 58:33 I would say Jurassic Park, Up and Fargo.
Alex Ferrari 58:37 Wow. You had you had them listed ready to go nice.
Grant Pichla 58:39 Yeah, watch your podcasts enough to know that.
Alex Ferrari 58:43 This is a good combination, a good combination of films? And where can where can people find you?
Grant Pichla 58:48 They can find me honestly, you can just email me straight up [email protected] or here will be at gmail here for how much solicitation? Well, um basically Facebook, we do have a Twitter for the film, if you just search it or if even if you just go on makingtimethemovie.com you'll see more things about it. And I did have I did set up a link for any podcast listeners. I don't know if you want me to mention that or no.
Alex Ferrari 59:17 As far as I could put it in the show notes.
Grant Pichla 59:21 Okay, um, but otherwise, yeah, so pretty much hit me up on Facebook or Twitter. I don't even have an Instagram and our Twitter is just the movie Twitter, and I'm tired for that stuff. So
Alex Ferrari 59:33 You're too busy making today movies, man. Yeah. Great, man. Thank you so much for being on the show. Brother. I do appreciate it. You are an inspiration to hopefully a lot of people listening and hopefully somebody listening right now is going to go You know what, if this guy can make a two day movie up in Detroit, Michigan, I can go do something in five days. You know? So hopefully, man so thanks again for being on the show brother.
Grant Pichla 59:59 Thank you. So Much, Alex, I really appreciate it.
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The amazing story of megastar Arnold Schwarzenegger is a true “rags to riches” tale of a penniless immigrant making it in the land of opportunity, the United States of America. Arnold Alois Schwarzenegger was born July 30, 1947, in the town of Thal, Styria, Austria, to Aurelia Schwarzenegger (born Jadrny) and Gustav Schwarzenegger, the local police chief. From a young age, he took a keen interest in physical fitness and bodybuilding, going on to compete in several minor contests in Europe. However, it was when he emigrated to the United States in 1968 at the tender age of 21 that his star began to rise.
Up until the early 1970s, bodybuilding had been viewed as a rather oddball sport, or even a mis-understood “freak show” by the general public, however two entrepreneurial Canadian brothers Ben Weider and Joe Weider set about broadening the appeal of “pumping iron” and getting the sport respect, and what better poster boy could they have to lead the charge, then the incredible “Austrian Oak”, Arnold Schwarzenegger. Over roughly the next decade, beginning in 1970, Schwarzenegger dominated the sport of competitive bodybuilding winning five Mr. Universe titles and seven Mr. Olympia titles and, with it, he made himself a major sports icon, he generated a new international audience for bodybuilding, gym memberships worldwide swelled by the tens of thousands and the Weider sports business empire flourished beyond belief and reached out to all corners of the globe. However, Schwarzenegger’s horizons were bigger than just the landscape of bodybuilding and he debuted on screen as “Arnold Strong” in the low budget Hercules in New York (1970), then director Bob Rafelson cast Arnold in Stay Hungry (1976) alongside Jeff Bridges and Sally Field, for which Arnold won a Golden Globe Award for “Best Acting Debut in a Motion Picture”. The mesmerizing Pumping Iron (1977) covering the 1975 Mr. Olympia contest in South Africa has since gone on to become one of the key sports documentaries of the 20th century, plus Arnold landed other acting roles in the comedy The Villain (1979) opposite Kirk Douglas, and he portrayed Mickey Hargitay in the well- received TV movie The Jayne Mansfield Story (1980).
What Arnold really needed was a super hero / warrior style role in a lavish production that utilized his chiseled physique, and gave him room to show off his growing acting talents and quirky humor. Conan the Barbarian (1982) was just that role. Inspired by the Robert E. Howard short stories of the “Hyborean Age” and directed by gung ho director John Milius, and with a largely unknown cast, save Max von Sydow and James Earl Jones, “Conan” was a smash hit worldwide and an inferior, although still enjoyable sequel titled Conan the Destroyer (1984) quickly followed. If “Conan” was the kick start to Arnold’s movie career, then his next role was to put the pedal to the floor and accelerate his star status into overdrive. Director James Cameron had until that time only previously directed one earlier feature film titled Piranha II: The Spawning (1981), which stank of rotten fish from start to finish.
However, Cameron had penned a fast paced, science fiction themed film script that called for an actor to play an unstoppable, ruthless predator – The Terminator (1984). Made on a relatively modest budget, the high voltage action / science fiction thriller The Terminator (1984) was incredibly successful worldwide, and began one of the most profitable film franchises in history. The dead pan phrase “I’ll be back” quickly became part of popular culture across the globe.
Schwarzenegger was in vogue with action movie fans, and the next few years were to see Arnold reap box office gold in roles portraying tough, no-nonsense individuals who used their fists, guns and witty one-liners to get the job done. The testosterone laden Commando (1985), Raw Deal (1986), Predator (1987), The Running Man (1987) and Red Heat (1988) were all box office hits and Arnold could seemingly could no wrong when it came to picking winning scripts. The tongue-in-cheek comedy Twins (1988) with co-star Danny DeVito was a smash and won Arnold new fans who saw a more comedic side to the muscle- bound actor once described by Australian author / TV host Clive James as “a condom stuffed with walnuts”. The spectacular Total Recall (1990) and “feel good” Kindergarten Cop (1990) were both solid box office performers for Arnold, plus he was about to return to familiar territory with director James Cameron in Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991). The second time around for the futuristic robot, the production budget had grown from the initial film’s $6.5 million to an alleged $100 million for the sequel, and it clearly showed as the stunning sequel bristled with amazing special effects, bone-crunching chases & stunt sequences, plus state of the art computer-generated imagery. Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991) was arguably the zenith of Arnold’s film career to date and he was voted “International Star of the Decade” by the National Association of Theatre Owners.
Remarkably, his next film Last Action Hero (1993) brought Arnold back to Earth with a hard thud as the self-satirizing, but confusing plot line of a young boy entering into a mythical Hollywood action film confused movie fans even more and they stayed away in droves making the film an initial financial disaster. Arnold turned back to good friend, director James Cameron and the chemistry was definitely still there as the “James Bond” style spy thriller True Lies (1994) co-starring Jamie Lee Curtis and Tom Arnold was the surprise hit of 1994! Following the broad audience appeal of True Lies (1994), Schwarzenegger decided to lean towards more family-themed entertainment with Junior (1994) and Jingle All the Way (1996), but he still found time to satisfy his hard-core fan base with Eraser (1996), as the chilling “Mr. Freeze” in Batman & Robin (1997) and battling dark forces in the supernatural action of End of Days (1999). The science fiction / conspiracy tale The 6th Day (2000) played to only mediocre fan interest, and Collateral Damage (2002) had its theatrical release held over for nearly a year after the tragic events of Sept 11th 2001, but it still only received a lukewarm reception.
It was time again to resurrect Arnold’s most successful franchise and, in 2003, Schwarzenegger pulled on the biker leathers for the third time for Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines (2003). Unfortunately, directorial duties passed from James Cameron to Jonathan Mostow and the deletion of the character of “Sarah Connor” aka Linda Hamilton and a change in the actor playing “John Connor” – Nick Stahl took over from Edward Furlong – making the third entry in the “Terminator” series the weakest to date.
Schwarzenegger married TV journalist Maria Shriver in April, 1986 and the couple have four children.
In October of 2003 Schwarzenegger, running as a Republican, was elected Governor of California in a special recall election of then governor Gray Davis. The “Governator,” as Schwarzenegger came to be called, held the office until 2011. Upon leaving the Governor’s mansion it was revealed that he had fathered a child with the family’s live-in maid and Shriver filed for divorce.
Schwarzenegger contributed cameo roles to The Rundown (2003), Around the World in 80 Days (2004) and The Kid & I (2005). Recently, he starred in The Expendables 2 (2012), The Last Stand (2013), Escape Plan (2013), The Expendables 3 (2014), and Terminator Genisys (2015).
Below are all the screenplays available online. If you find any of his missing screenplays please leave the link in the comment section.
I can’t be more excited to bring you this episode. On today’s show, we have the legendary writer/director Alex Proyas, the filmmaker behind The Crow, Dark City, The Knowing, Gods of Egypt, and I, Robot.
Alex Proyas had a huge influence on my filmmaking life. The Crow was one of those films I watch a thousand times, in the theater, when I was in film school. He began his filmmaking career working in music videos with the likes of Sting, INXS, and Fleetwood Mac before getting the opportunity to direct The Crow.
The Crow was one of the first modern comic adaptations but as Alex puts it…
“The Crow was my anti-comic book movie.” – Alex Proyas
BothThe Crow and Dark City had such a HUGE influence on films and filmmakers for years after their initial releases.
Alex’s films are visually dazzling and have the voice of a true artist. You can see a direct line from his genre-defining work to films like The Matrix, Alita: Battle Angel, Equilibrium, Underworld, The Dark Knight, Inception, and many others.
I feel Alex’s contributions to the visual aesthetics of modern cinema have been extremely undervalued. Director’s like Christopher Nolanpoint at Alex’s films as inspiration when he was putting together The Dark Knight Trilogy. The Matrix has Dark City visuals and style oozing from the screen.
Alex and I discuss his career, working within the studio system, dealing with insane interference in his creative vision, why he is shooting short films at this stage of his career, his new film studio The Heretic Foundation, and his misadventures in Hollyweird.
He has also launched a YouTube channel called Mystery Clock Cinema where he showcases his short films and amazing filmmaking tutorials, philosophies, and live streams.
Prepared to be inspired. Enjoy my thoroughly entertaining conversation with filmmaker Alex Proyas.
Alex Ferrari 2:59 I'd like to welcome to the show Alex Proyas. How you're doing Alex?
Alex Proyas 5:35 Yeah. Hi, Alex. Good, good. Good to see you. Good to speak to you.
Alex Ferrari 5:37 Yes, it's been I am. I'm honored that you come on the show. I'm a huge fan of, of your work. And I know the tribe is going to be very excited to kind of dig into your, your history, your films your process. You are easily one of the most visual directors of your generation without question. And I argue to say that a couple of your film specifically kind of changed the way films were shot afterwards. Because you could see the stylistically how things changed after the crow. And after dark city you just like okay, like the matrix picked up a couple of things from from, from, from the crow.
Alex Proyas 6:19 Thank you for saying thank you saying so and it's a mutual admiration society, because I very much appreciate what you're doing as well. I think it's awesome. In fact, I've been sort of scaring your your website. And I think it's a terrific initiative that you're taking. So well, well done to you, too.
Alex Ferrari 6:35 I appreciate that. Thank you very much, my friend. I appreciate it. So first and foremost, how did you get started in this insane business?
Alex Proyas 6:44 You know, it's something I've always wanted to do. I started making films when I was a kid like really 10 years old. All I got my first Super bugged the hell out of my parents. Being an only child, they eventually succumb to my, to my wishes and bought me a super eight camera. I didn't buy me a projector, I just save up for that myself. But yeah, that's how it all started is literally like, you know, my dad was a big film film goer. He loved he loved films and take me to like, totally inappropriate films for for a young kid, you know, like, you know, I remember him taking me to 2001 A Space Odyssey when I was when I was probably about six years old or something like that. And it completely, you know, fried my brain, you know, it was like, fried.
Alex Ferrari 7:30 So many more things are open, right? It makes so much more sense. Your whole career now makes so much more sense.
Alex Proyas 7:38 Yeah. That's right. I'm mainlined you know, big, bold commercial, experimental filmmaking, the ultimate trip, you know, at a very young age. So, you know, obviously had no idea what the hell was going on is most people didn't anyway. But, you know, from that moment, I think I went, you know, I want to, you know, the whole experience, the big screen, the big sound, and, conceptually, what was going on was just so amazing. It was transporting me into outer space. And so since then, I've always wanted to, you know, I think I started wanting to be an astronaut soon after that, and then I eventually over a few years, evolved into going well, I don't need to necessarily go there. I can create that sort of stuff, you know, and that's what I wanted wanted to do, you know, so yeah, that was the whole instigation of it all you know,
Alex Ferrari 8:28 And then you and then you your career started with music videos, correct?
Alex Proyas 8:35 Yeah, well, I I got into film school actually, you know, even before that, I was working in an animation studio straight out, you know, I left high school early. And because I knew what I wanted to do. And I went and worked at an animation studio for a while you know, and because I was kind of an I was kind of good at animating as well and and then got into film school and then through film school, we you know, we came out of film school, me and other my colleagues at the time and in Australia, there was very little potential for big getting in breaking into the film industry. Particularly as a young a young person, it was really hard to do, you know, there's so so few opportunities and still to this day, and in many ways, because we don't have the studio system, we have very limited you know, commercial TV stations and stuff to work with. So me and some friends set up this little company and by setting up a company I mean, we rented an office and rented a phone and a couple of chairs and a desk and and would sit in there and play card games all day long waiting for the phone to ring and you know, we had we had friends in bands, you know, we were all like the whole scene at the time was very music oriented. And so we started off doing a couple of you know, music videos for is for friends in bands and and you know, for like nothing for the cost of the film stock or whatever and, and eventually, you know, record companies started paying attention and I, you know, we got more and more into the music videos you know?
Alex Ferrari 10:04 Now what are some of the bad habits you picked up at film school?
Alex Proyas 10:09 Numerous numerous ones. Yeah, it's, uh, look, you know, it's it's a whole new world, you know, when I went through film school it was it's, that's like ancient history now, you know, people these days, I think, you know, YouTube is people's film school. And that can also teach you some very bad habits, I think as well, I hope you're not teaching anyone bad or
Alex Ferrari 10:29 I'm only teaching people how to survive, how to survive and thrive in the business, sir, I do not, I do not teach the latest camera here. I'm not teaching the latest camera gear and things like that. That's not my bag.
Alex Proyas 10:42 Yeah, because it's a bit of a trap these days that you, you know, because you can shoot on your phone and, you know, cut on your, your, your computer and stuff. And that's all it's fantastic. I mean, in my day, I just save up, you know, my dollars to buy a little cartridge, a separate film and wait for it to be processed in some other city and mailed back to me and stuff, you know. And, and, you know, these days with such a accessibility to the technology that makes film that's got its own fair share of traps as well. But in my day, I guess the bad habits that were taught to me, I mean, there were there were numerous, you know, and I was being taught by, you know, sort of, at that time, you know, experienced industry professionals who weren't really working in the industry anymore. anymore, they've, you know, started teaching and working as lecturers there. And, and I guess they were teaching us stuff, you know, the old school way of doing stuff. And a lot of that was how to how to sort of conform to the film industry and how to find your niche in the film in the traditional old fashioned old school, film, film industry, you know, and, of course, in Australia, they usually let you go and work for a TV station, you know, shooting news footage or something, you know, incredibly tedious like that, you know, and, you know, we were all you know, you're young and wanting to take over the world, and we wanted to be directors, we wanted to make films, you know, so, you know, I sort of quickly broke, broke away from that model to still subscribe to that, you know, I still go well, if you want to make a film, just make it Don't wait for someone to sanction you, or your budget or your story, you know, just get out there and do it. And so even in those days, that was my attitude, you know, even when there was no money, and, and, and I get to scrub the enough footage to shoot anything, you know. So that, you know, that's, I guess that was in a way, that's a good habit that was taught to me through bad habits in, in film school, you know, and I think it still holds true today, you know,
Alex Ferrari 12:47 So, so in the 90s. I mean, obviously, there was a couple movies you made that really just changed changed my world. One of them being the crow. And the you know, I was in film school when the crow came out. I was literally in films, it was 94. Right when 94 when the crow came out, correct? Yeah, yeah, I believe so. Yeah. And I saw, I must have seen it in the theater a dozen times. I just kept going back every weekend and watching it again and again. And that amazing soundtrack. That was so so good. That, you know, in many ways, that was one of the not one of the first we actually was an early comic book adaption it was before Hollywood became comic book happy. It was after Batman was obviously after Superman, but it was I think the first that's your indie comic adapted, correct?
Alex Proyas 13:38 I think I think so. Yeah. Yeah. spawn was also around the same. Yeah, I'm, I can't remember whether it came before us or after us. It was it was around a year. Yeah, it was about about the same. And, but you're looking Sorry, go ahead. Yeah,
Alex Ferrari 13:54 no, no, I mean, it's gonna say like, how, first of all, how did you get involved with that? That film? Because, I mean, it was, it wasn't definitely not a guarantee blockbuster by any stretch of the imagination. But I guess there was something in the story that caught your eye.
Alex Proyas 14:12 Yeah, you know, look, I wasn't looking for guarantee blockbuster. I guess that was the part of the key. I, I, I got an agent in Hollywood. And this is like, you know, that many years between making music videos with my friends, you know, you know, one room office and and this of course, and through that interim, I'd made a lot of music videos, became very successful making music videos, some big acts and also started doing a lot of commercials as well. And I got involved with a company called propaganda films in LA that they got me out to LA that, you know, produced a bunch of very well established directors now. His name is you would know. And I started making videos in in In LA, and through that, I mean, I got an agent at the time, we're very open to finding new talent from the fields of music, video and commercials and, and I nabbed an agent, which was CIA, which is one of the powerful, very, probably the most powerful one at that time. And, you know, they started sending me out to producers and meeting producers and I got offers of, you know, films such as, and this is all on this. On the strength of my commercials, work, etc. I started getting offers things like Nightmare on Elm Street number something which I can't remember which number it was, I think it was five or four or something. And it's not really what I wanted to do. I mean, I've always been I've always had very specific, you know, desires and tastes of what I wanted to do, and I love genre, genre, but I like a particular kind of genre, you know, I'm not, I've never been a fan of franchise plugging into franchises or sequels or remakes or anything like that. I just because for me, the fun of it is building that world creating that world. That's what I get off on. You know, as we've cited 2001 A Space Odyssey transported me to another world. And so I've always, that's what I've always been hungry for, you know, creating that world is what's so. So basically godlike and exciting in filmmaking. So plugging into someone's already existing world and characters. And in situations, I just, I just can't get excited about it. You know? I like coming. Stuff like that comes out of my own imagination. So anyway, To cut a long story short. After I met all these producers, I spent like a month, every day meeting producers, where their producers would ask you this basic question, which is always impossible to ask. And I'm sure they're asking it to this day of young, young filmmakers, they say, Well, what sort of movies do you want to make? You know, these are people who, you know, haven't seen any of your movies or haven't? Don't you haven't made any movies? Yeah, you know, and of course, my answer to that as it still is to this day's good movies, right? I don't, I don't answer myself. It's a good answer. Anything other than that, you know, or excellent movies, but I want to make you know, because I like or I like all genres. I like all kinds of stories if they're good, you know. So eventually I after getting sick about asked answering that question for about a month, I walked into Ed Preston's office who is the producer of the CRO and he was refreshingly unique. He's a pretty eccentric guy, and really stood out after seeing or meeting all these very, you know, kind of Hollywood cigar chomping type types, you know, whatever they were, they were really cigar chomping, but that's kind of like,
Alex Ferrari 17:46 Oh, no, I know that I know exactly what you're talking about like that. And Hey, kid, all I need is a poster and a trailer and I'll sell anything.
Alex Proyas 17:53 Thanks. You met those guys too. But, um, yeah, so and he had this thing called the CRO, he gave me a script. And he gave me the comic book. And I didn't particularly care for the script. It was already a draft. But I liked the comic, I thought the comic was really intriguing. Again, and I really enjoyed working on love the central concept and, and because it was coming from a very unique, original place, you know, and I mean, I was in no, you know, I had no illusions about the fact that I was kind of reinterpreting the comic book genre, which was already as you as you've pointed out, established through Tim Burton's mainly through Tim Burton's Batman movies over the most recent offerings in that in that world up until that stage, so I went, well, this is kind of like Batman, but it's kind of like anti Batman, right? It's, it's, um, you know, even to the point of what he's wearing, the costume is wearing that long black leather trench coat. I, you know, Brandon, up with this idea, because I kept saying to him, this guy's got a got to have something like a cape, you know, wanting to have something that moves around, it's gonna be really cool in action scenes, if he's moving around, and capes gonna be great, but obviously, we don't want to Cape because it's not the character. And we want to sort of like an urban version of that a contemporary urban version of that. And we can, we came up with sort of, like full leather trench coat, which became a sort of iconic part of that genre ever since that point on, but that's where it came from. And it was kind of like reinterpreting some of the Batman stuff, you know, and just this the city, you know, it was like, the city that it took place, you know, was kind of like, you know, a sort of a Gotham City, noir ish kind of Gothic, you know, Gothic city, but it was kind of just completely flat up and sort of falling apart and just everything's broken down, nothing's working and people set it on fire now and again, you know, which again, made it Akin for me a contemporary kind of concept, you know, so that was kind of it was trying to ground the comic book genre and bring it into a contemporary, you know, milieu, like a contemporary sort of feel. Which was very much against the sort of, like, fantasy kind of over the top fantasy environments of, of, of something like that, you know, my reaction to that. And I also, you know, like it gets Richard Donner's Superman and all those Superman movies, which were very kind of light and frothy and kind of, you know, a little cheesy at times, you know, so I wanted to very much work completely go against that. And even Tim's movies were very, very, um, Phil had a tongue in cheek kind of, we can only do comic books with tongue in cheek, kind of humor, you know? Because, and, and, you know, I mean, teams not like these, but to a certain extent, it makes you feel like, the filmmakers are not taking the medium the concept seriously the medium seriously. So I wanted, I wanted my movie to be like, you know, serious, you know, I wanted, like drugs and staff and, you know, things that that are kind of scary and dangerous and real, real world, you know. So, yeah, that was my response to what had gone gone before.
Alex Ferrari 21:06 Yeah. And when you when you look at the CRO, which still ages is aged extremely well, I mean, extremely, extremely well, that, you know, I think you are right, I don't think the whole trench coat thing, which was so powerful, like it became a thing and so many sci fi, world building kind of films, I think equilibrium I think was one of them. And, obviously, the matrix. There wasn't a movie before then they had these kind of trench coats in a sci fi environment that I can remember. It was in this Gothic
Alex Proyas 21:36 We, we based it on Carlitos way, actually,
Alex Ferrari 21:40 Yeah,
Alex Proyas 21:40 because I'm a big 70s movie fan, right. And so actually, we were looking at, I've done that, I also do that in a robot with with wills wardrobe. And I remember we were looking at 70s movies and how they dressed the characters in sort of, like, you know, hard boiled crime type movies, you know, so pachino and Carlitos way had a had a, it wasn't full length. I mean, we came up with the full length because it was the was the cape thing, but we know I know for a fact that that didn't exist as an idea in science fiction or fantasy and, and it sure did exist afterwards. Matrix being the main one. But also, blade was also another one that had that sighs You know, every everyone everyone was doing it
Alex Ferrari 22:27 Afterwards. Yeah, afterwards it was but but i think i think you were right. I think the Crow was the first and you were the first really dark because I mean, Batman had a you know, Batman one and returns had a dark, you know, comic book field. But you're right, that's tongue in cheek was still there. But you were the first to really come up with a comic book adaptation that was dark. I mean, that's a dark film. dark, dark hero.
Alex Proyas 22:52 The hero man was dark, dark light. Yeah. Dark light. And it was dark, dark, you know? So.
Alex Ferrari 22:59 Right. Exactly. And I think Nolan's, I think Nolan's Batman was much more in the in the realm of the Crow, meaning that it's because, you know, dark night. It's a fairly dark, you know, as well.
Alex Proyas 23:13 Oh, yeah. Chris has been very influenced by angry Christmas, Tommy, he has been very influenced by both the Crow and dark city, you know, I mean, you know, the Batman Chris's Batman, it was it was partly because David Goya wasn't involved on the crows. There's a weird convoluted relay relationship there. David Goyer, who co wrote dark city with me was involved with writing Batman movies, Chris, and he was involved with writing the crow too. So he studied the Crow, the original Crow, it very intensely in order to write write the script for the crow crow movie. And so, you know, I was very amused to see literally lines of dialogue pop up in the Batman movies in Chris's Batman movies, the verbatim, you know, out of the original crow not out of David's grow out of micro, you know, that was quite that's funny, really. And, and, and yeah, Chris is, you know, I was I was working with Chris for a while, I wasn't really working with him, but we were developing something together for a short time. They didn't, they didn't work out. And he was, you know, going on about how influential dark city was, in particular to, to what he's what he's done. Now, he's very satisfied. And now I have much more success with myself.
Alex Ferrari 24:37 Great. Chris is doing okay. Chris is doing he's doing he's doing just fine. He's doing all right. Now. I remember buying the book, the white our I think it was the art of book or the movie book of the Crow, and flipping through it, and there was this character in it. That's not in the movie, which is the skull cowboy. Oh, you know, can you talk a little bit about what the legend of the The skull cowboy and wide never made because, you know, you shot footage of it, so why never made it?
Alex Proyas 25:04 Yeah, we shot him. Michael Berryman went through incredible, amazing, elaborate makeup to, to portray this character. And, you know, at the end of the day, I mean, you know, obviously, due to the tragedy on Necro, there was a lot of stuff we didn't get to shoot. And when we went back to Wilmington, to finish the movie, we had, I had to kind of rewrite and read, restructure to, in order to shoot the linking stuff, obviously, with our brand and to make it work somehow without him, you know, and digital tech, you know, lots be made out of the digital technology that we use to make it work, but it was very early days for that stuff. Oh, I remember very, yeah. Yeah, very, very stuff. You could do you get away with it. I mean, you know, it really big ended up being you know, take Brandon out of one scene, you know, rotoscope him out and put him into another that's really the extent of the digital, you know, expertise that we could could bring to bear you know, so yeah, the skull cowboy Hartley, but we'd shot the scenes with with with Brandon, one. I think one of the scenes, I think we there was another one that we hadn't actually filmed. We work with, it was just echoed I put this it just didn't seem to play in the story in the in the, it seemed like this other story worked fine. Without him, you know. And because he was used, he was used less than then we originally intended. And he needed a lot of VFX work to help him be more convincing than he was in the photography. I just, you know, every time he popped up in the film, when I was watching the Edit, he it felt like another movie, it just felt like something that was not the grounded kind of storytelling that I was trying to achieve. And And so yeah, I we had to excise him. And, you know, sadly, we try, we just removed him and looked at the Edit. And it seemed like the film didn't really suffer, because his role was really kind of like a, you know, an expositional one where he would appear until Eric Draven the rules of what was to happen, then, you know, he those, the, the, the important scene that I thought we couldn't live with is, is the the moment when Eric go is about to walk into the church at the end of the movie, to save Sarah, the young girl. And, and Scott cowboy appeared on the steps and said, you know, if you work for the living, you know, you're here to work for the dead, if you work for the living, you will be vulnerable, you will lose your powers. But it seemed like, you know, the people started to the audience felt that the crow itself was the source of Eric's power. And so when they shot the Crow, in the in the church, it felt like that, that was the moment when he lost his power. And then you know, it was such a simple way of doing it, rather than having a cow hollow the character appearing. Tell us the rule book at that, at that point in time.
Alex Ferrari 28:24 Sometimes it's sometimes it's difficult to let go of those babies that are there are beautiful on their own, like the skull cowboy by itself is a character might be but it might not work in the whole in the whole story. And that's where that's where the big boy pants Come on. And you got to go book that's got to go even though we love it.
Alex Proyas 28:41 Exactly, it's, it's a hard call to make usually always is a hard call to make. But you know, you make it sets that story where you make you make a different movie, one movie, when you write it, you make another movie, when you shoot it, you make another movie, in edit in Edit, and you have to try, you know, objectivity for a director is the most important thing and, and the tool that you lose most easily and most quickly, as you get stressed and tired. And you know, you struggle to make it all work through the production. It's very hard to retain that objectivity. But you've got to try and keep that because you need to be the audience as well as the filmmaker and you need to be able to step back and go, you know, is this really working? And if it's not, as you said, you say it's it needs VR, when in doubt, cut it out, you know?
Alex Ferrari 29:35 So you actually work there after the crow when when it was released, that obviously was a fairly a fairly big hit. If I remember correctly, did it did well at the box office obviously spawned a few sequels as well. You decided to do some shorts, right afterwards? Is it Can you tell me a little about the series of shorts that you did afterwards?
Alex Proyas 29:57 Yeah, the series called book of dreams, and I'm kind of still doing them all these years later, funny sort of way, not calling them that anymore. But
Alex Ferrari 30:06 we'll be right back after a word from our sponsor. And now back to the show.
Alex Proyas 30:17 I like shorts, you know, I like I like, I like your short form, it's like an author who makes he writes novels, it's great to write a short story now and again, you know, and get directly to this to the font of imagination, you know, in a short, so they can exist in a short story, you know, where you don't have to explain everything. And you know, it's just, so I started making these films based on people's dreams, and they weren't really there. I was pretending though, based on dreams. So just something I was coming up with, you know, but the the format is always someone who describes their dream on camera, and you then you see it acted out, and you can, a lot of them are kind of humorous, and you can kind of respond to what they're saying in a kind of visual, oddly, oops, you know, contradictory way visually. But they were fun. And, you know, we, we might have made three of them that were call that up to date. And they became increasingly more expensive until I found myself on, on the set of a 10 minute black and white science fiction 1950s science fiction homage, which was costing me $300,000 of my own money, right? And that's when I went, you know, this is just incredibly stupid, what I'm doing, and I've really got to get other people to pay for this stuff, you know, but look, it was, it was, it was, you know, they were great fun to do, and it was, you know, a part of my my kind of, you know, recovering from the horrific experience of the Crow and sing is sure a friend die. So it was a it was a way to reignite my love for being on the set and making films, you know, so I think it paid for itself, you know?
Alex Ferrari 31:59 Yeah. And, and there's, I mean, it when you're saying that you like and then I find myself on a set for $300,000. It's like, it comes to me, like I'm thinking to myself, because you're mad because we're all mad if you're a filmmaker, there's a spark, there's a spark of madness that there's no logic to, and it's so refreshing to hear that even directors like yourself, still have this madness in them. It hasn't been known.
Alex Proyas 32:23 We wouldn't be doing I mean, we are eternally shouldn't naive children, right? And it's we have to be do what we do. And you never grow up. If you grew up, you probably stopped doing because it's a mug's game from a from a financial point of view. I mean, that's the only thing that explains things like Francis is capable of making. Now there is no other explanation for why someone would a filmmaker, we put them themselves through that with their own financing and under such arduous circumstances, except for this absolute and explainable inexplicable love for this thing that we do, you know. But yeah, we're most of us, you know, dumber than we, then we
Alex Ferrari 33:09 Then the marketing the marketing problem than the marketing, the marketing or the branding, sir. It was so funny because I just had, I just had James v. Hart on a who wrote Dracula, and I was talking to him about and Coppola called up one night to James and said, James, I hate you. I hate the script. I hate the movie. I hate the actors. I hate you even more because you you wrote this damn thing and got me involved in this, come out here and see this rough cut it is garbage. And I'm like, and when anything we goes on to the deeper story. But the genius of that is is that if Francis Ford Coppola is having issues with a cut that that stage in his career, what hope is there for any of us? No matter who
Alex Proyas 33:55 Doesn't surprise me at all. You know, it's look, you know, and that's also to do with the fact that we you know, it's the reason it's such a wonderful medium is because you're always learning you never stop learning. Every film you make doesn't matter how many movies you make you make you're going to keep learning getting better and better at it and write stuff it doesn't mean the film's will always be better. But it because there's so many unknowables are going to making a movie, but certainly your craft as a director becomes better and your ability to to kind of navigate the whole process becomes improved, you know? But I think that's the thing is like you just you know, you're always going to doubt yourself. That's why it's so destructive when you end up with a studio that's doing all doing all the doubting, you know, which might be a good segue to go into iRobot I don't know. Well, no, because I want to I want to do anyways filmmakers.
Alex Ferrari 34:49 Yeah, I wanted to I want to touch on. I wanted to touch on dark cities before we get to iRobot because because you forgot about that little movie called dark city. Dark city was one of those films that has become a cult classic, because I remember when it came out it if I remember correctly, please remind me it wasn't definitely wasn't a runaway hit. But it was Oh, no, not at all. Not at all right. It'd be like people didn't know what to do with it like that, you know, and it was well beyond its its heyday. But it is so visual, and so beautifully crafted. And up to that point. I mean, I can't remember other than maybe the crow of something being so viscerally visual. In its storytelling tech. I mean, you mean, you look at dark city, there is a direct line to the matrix. Like there's like, I'm not saying that they took anything, but I'm just saying that there was definitely inspiration picked up from dark city, you could just, you could just see the you can see the through line. So clearly, yeah. And you and you, and you know, and that was the that was new line. So that was Warner's at the time. And you know, how does like a movie like that obviously would never get greenlit today do the crow would have been greenlit?
Alex Proyas 36:07 Oh, yeah, the crow would have a slightly easier time because it's based on something
Alex Ferrari 36:11 IP, right?
Alex Proyas 36:12 Original like that. It would be really hard to make, you know, very, very hard to make.
Alex Ferrari 36:19 What was the budget? By the way? What was the budget of dark city, if you mind me asking?
Alex Proyas 36:24 He was like 25 million or something at the time, which was even at the time was was not much, you know, it should have been probably at least 75 million for what we were trying to do in the film. I remember just the visual effects budget itself was $1 million, which sounds like an Austin Powers
Alex Ferrari 36:41 Is that is that all of us, it was only $1 million,
Alex Proyas 36:44 A million a million dollars was the entire budget, the VFX budget, you know, because we built a lot of a two layer sets and stuff and barely managed to well, you know, we we shot. We shot as much as we could. And we basically had to they shut us down we because we didn't we've just ran out of days. And they had to give us an extra some extra money like another million bucks. I mean, to get to bring the actors back and finish it. You know, I remember, they basically new line basically said, That's it, you know, I was saying, but I'm not done. I go We'll show us the cut, come over and show us that card. And we'll decide whether you're done or not, you know. And I showed it to them. And they said, well, it doesn't make any sense. It's a bit of missing I go well, there's a reason for that, because we're not done. So anyway, they eventually gave me some more money to finish the bits that were missing. And but yeah, it's it was a it was a low it was a low budget movie. There's no question it was it was harder. What we were doing in that for roughly double the budget of the CRO but what we were trying to do was actually much much, much harder than that.
Alex Ferrari 37:51 Yeah, I mean, look, I remember what you built a lot of the you did a lot of modeling in the CRO, if I remember correctly to right, you did models of the city and that and that's why that that's such an MC because that was all pre CG worlds. Really, I think Jurassic Park had just hit. So yeah, that whole world is it was just starting to come up. So you did a lot of practice. And I know you did a lot of practicals on on dark city as well. You know, anyone listening who has not seen dark city Do yourself a favor and watch it because you'll see it and go, Oh my god, there's so many movies have taken from this. It's kind of like you watch the matrix and the like, oh, everyone's stolen from the matrix. Like all it's it seems passe. But the matrix was leading one of those one of those films that kind of just, you know, blew the doors open on a lot of stuff. And so many people just took it and took it into I mean bullet time Jesus Christ.
Alex Proyas 38:44 Yeah. So you know, the matrix didn't invent bullet time. But time was invented on commercials, the gap and just to take a little bit away from the matrix for a moment,
Alex Ferrari 38:56 They have enough. enough.
Alex Proyas 38:57 Where I went terribly wrong in in dark cities. I should have had some more kung fu in which I think I would have been probably more successful
Alex Ferrari 39:04 If you would have a kung fu Absolutely.
Alex Proyas 39:06 Yeah. Yeah. So So um, yeah, it's all it's all related. Yeah, no dogs. It was definitely an influence, though. As you as you rightly pointed out, it was a disaster at the box office is partly a disaster because he took us they kept putting it off the release. Originally, it was to be released maybe a year before it came out. And they went. They said, oh, there's this film called The Titanic coming out. And it looks like it's going to be it's going to do Okay, so, listen, I think originally going to open on the weekend, the opening weekend of the Titanic, you know, and then we'd let's put it off a couple of months, right? And then a titanic came out. And of course, we noted that the Titanic and it kept building and getting bigger and bigger and building. And they kept saying, oh, we'll put it off another couple of months. Again, you know, and eventually it ended up being like, as I say, I think it was eight or nine months later than the rest Release. Now, wow, when the film was eventually released, you know, because they were just staying away from the Titanic, they had no idea how long they'd have to wait to stay away from the Titanic, you know? Yeah. So yeah, that was that was kind of amusing. But it's also the film was not it was not really promoted very well, because the studios themselves didn't really get it, you know, no one got it. No one's got the film. And you know, it was even like the trailer that came out was like a I think it was a good trailer I liked the trailer was done very creatively done. But it was didn't really tell you anything about the story. It was just a bunch of images, you know, and so people, people were kind of, you know, if you don't tell them something about a story, it doesn't matter how pretty the image the pictures are, they're just not gonna go and say,
Alex Ferrari 40:49 Can you?Can you remind me there's a there's a French director, who did a movie and it reminds me a lot of dark city. He eventually did an alien. He did alien resurrection. And they brought him over. Children. Is it
Alex Proyas 41:02 Oh, yeah, yeah.
Alex Ferrari 41:03 What's his name?
Alex Proyas 41:03 That some? Yeah, um,
Alex Ferrari 41:06 What was the movie?
Alex Proyas 41:07 Like when he's name but but the movie children are called city of Lost Children said I was so scared of beauty beautiful film, absolutely gorgeous imagery. You know, and, and, you know, cat came for dark city, but he was really conceptually very different. Oh, you know, there's some visuals. Hilarious. But, but yeah, I mean, we always my film was more about we were kind of riffing on metropolis, Fritz Lang's Metropolis without question. And Akira. era to ascending. So, you know, that's kind of more my it,
Alex Ferrari 41:48 Would you ever have would? Would you ever make akira if they offered it to you?
Alex Proyas 41:53 I'm not a huge fan of I mean, I love a cure. I love I love the comic, and I love the movie. But I'm not a huge fan of remaking stuff. Because I kind of go Well, I mean, it's been done. It's been done, it's been done really well. And so wise, why would a Hollywood version, particularly in our current climate, data, I just don't? I don't I don't think it's possible. You know, I mean, look at what, what happened to Ghost in the Shell? You know, that's a classic example. Yeah. You just can't, you know, this stuff can't be done. Can't be overly refined. If to put it nicely, overly developed, you have to go with the raw ingredients that you've you've got to work with. And there's I don't think there's anyone in Hollywood now, who would finance such a version of any of this stuff? You know, I just don't think it's possible.
Alex Ferrari 42:51 So after dark city, you know, which is obviously did not do well at the box office for that the reasons we spoke about, but yet still very well respected for the craft. And the film. I know. I mean, and you please tell me if I'm wrong. I know a lot of other filmmakers respect it, and were influenced by it. How did the town treat you after, you know, having a, you know, essentially a box office disappointment? And how long did it take you to get out of that? Because I always am fascinated with you hear the stories of directors gone out of it? When you've made a few movies since then, so I'm obviously someone games. You've made a couple more. But that doesn't mean it just out of curiosity, like how does that how does the town treat you? Because I mean, I know after a big hit, they treat you one way. And after a disappointment that you another way? I'm just curious, and I don't know, obviously, it's a different time period to I was in the 90s. But just curious.
Alex Proyas 43:49 Yeah, a different mentality, where people were willing to take chances, but only to a certain extent, you know, and the only reason they took a chance on dark city is because the crow had been so successful. That's really how it works, you know, you know, you make one hit, and you theoretically you get the license to do something that pushes the envelope a little bit. But I'd argue these days, that's less and less likely. Because these days, hollywood have determined that original fantasy and science fiction just doesn't work, commercially speaking, and sadly, to a certain extent, when it comes to big budgets in the cinema release the big screen release, they are probably right. You know, it's sad that we're in that place. And it said that I think the superhero movies have put us in that place. With the audiences but there you go, that's, that's it is what it is, you know. So yes, you're, you're absolutely right. You know, I was, I was courted after the CRO and everyone was cool. The studios were calling me saying, you know, we'll make anything that you want. And I had this thing already written dark city had written actually written dark city before the crow. And I said, here's this script, and this is what I want to do, and they I'd usually say, Well, what else do you want to do? You know? So I eventually found people who and we went through quite a development process through various studios, you know, Disney were on board at one stage and believe it or not, and, and then we ended up in new new, I think we, we ended up in new line and, and, you know, they were like it was all about the casting and Mike DeLuca and Bob shade, a new line, we're like, we don't care what the casting is, you can have whoever you like, as long as you support them with some, some names, you know. So I got got to cast Rufus Sewell, which was terrific, because that's who I wanted to be in the film. And yeah, and then after that, after the course, being such a disappointment. The, you know, it was very hard to to make the next one, you know, so I went back to Sydney and made this film called garage days, a very low budget, Ozzy Ozzy movie. I've got to say, though, that the dark city is built in a huge following over the over the years, I mean, it's often to rival the CRO as well. And it's, you know, the increasing rate of offers to do sequels or a T, you know, the big one is right now, because cinema is such in such a poor state is to do a TV version of like a series version of dark city, which I've turned down several over the years, but more and more, I'm thinking maybe that's a good idea, you know. So that's, that's quite a turnaround from, from a film that did bad. Bad box office, it's quite a, it's a, it's a great thing about I mean, look, I have, you know, physical media to thank for that, as we all do, which allows a film to have a shelf life is not about it's not just about its opening weekend, and if you make particular kinds of films that are challenging, not not the sort of the norm, that sort of slam dunk, then physical media has traditionally been a great support of that kind of long process of your success process. You know, and duck city is a classic example of that, you know, so many people, people over years discover more people discover it, you know, and it builds its its, its fan base.
Alex Ferrari 47:28 Yeah, well, I am, I'll be first in line to see the dark city series. So let us know when it's available. And I think and I think honestly a series for, if I may be so bold to say a series in with with someone in your, in your hands, you might have the budget and the freedom, especially with certain streaming services to do what you want to do with, hopefully not as much interference, because I feel that and we'll get into iRobot in a second, which kind of leads into that. I always I've always felt since since I started following your work is that like, you are obviously a very unique filmmaker, you have a very specific vision, you the specific stories you'd like to tell, but a lot of times they just don't leave you alone. And, and because of that, they just don't leave you alone. Like, you know, like, Tim, like Tim, I you know, I you know, I quote someone like Tim Burton, who has a very unique style, that's very him. And, you know, he built up a lot of credibility after Beetlejuice and then Batman, and then in then he started to be able to do his thing and they left them alone for the most part. But you never got like, really left alone. Like I would love to see you with a $200 million film where they walk away with an original concept and your school just let the man do that to ya. just for clarity. If anyone's listening with a million hot in their pocket, Alex would love but that but I always felt that I'm like my God, thank you for putting that message out. I'm putting it out there anyone to you'll take 175 I think I think we can work with 175 songs.
Alex Proyas 49:11 Hell, I take a lot less if they if he left me alone I take way less than that.
Alex Ferrari 49:15 But you're one of those artists one of those filmmakers that that you just need to tell your story and trust that you're going to go where you are and with the crowd Did you have a fair a fair good amount of creative control over that?
Alex Proyas 49:28 Yeah, I mean, look, I was I've been I was very lucky to a certain point which is why so blindsided when I did iRobot left me alone on they left me alone on it and everything and you know, this came out of a career of of commercials chosen or I'd achieved success in advertising and music videos where they also left me alone. So how I just thought that's what a director got, you know, I thought they just give you this film and sometimes they don't give you a good enough budget but they creatively they just they just bugger off and let you do your thing you know and and I've made for features No. Yes. For us. Yeah, for I made four features under those auspices and before I'd made iRobot. And so suddenly I was in, but suddenly I was in with the big boys. Right, suddenly, I had a huge budget. Would you start? Double it? It's definitely a double edged sword. You know, I mean, you get all these great toys to play with and stuff, but but then they're not, you know, and I also had the misfortune. I think I've working with one of the worst studio regimes at the time, in terms of micromanagement, right. And so, so suddenly, I had the studio, multiple people in the studio breathing down my neck at every stage, and actually, the weirdest thing is they cost the production money, because I want to move ahead with a certain thing, like, building a car, for example, for the hero to drive in. We were designing room, you know, wanting to build a car, and they're basically just holding us back to the point where it just became so expensive, and actually became impossible. And then we had to go elsewhere to get this car made in time, you know, just stuff like that. And I just found that just utterly infuriating that I was having to challenge I was being constantly challenged creatively and having to constantly challenge the studio and on a on a budgetary level, actually, to save the film money, you know, which I just thought was just absolutely insane. You know, because I'm a very responsible guy, I'm a, I'm a working class guy grew up in a pretty poor situation. And, you know, in working class in Australia means kind of, you know, poverty line, almost, you know, so I'm, I'm not, I take any very seriously, I don't waste it. And I like to make sure that it all ends up on the screen, whatever amount of money I've got, you know, so having a studio that we're taking these stupid decisions that would cost that production money, I just got, you know, I saw it as a personal affront, I'm going well, this is more money that my movie has to make for these these guys in order to be a success, you know, but yeah, it was a whole different world. And it was it was not a definitely not a good experience on any on any level. So I warn people that it's a that it's a you know, it's a it is a dangerous double edged sword, it's it's a it's a very ego gratifying you have all the big toys, but you get your hands get, get, I described it as a, you're running a marathon, which is what you do on a on any movie, big or small budget. But in this case, the marathon is all the studio execs lined up on either side of the road, and they throw chairs on Sunday, as you're running, like, wow, that's kind of the additional part of a big budget, big budget movie, you know. And because it is about, you know, you're right, I have a specific vision and a specific way of doing things. And that's what I like to do. And I like to make movies that couldn't be done by anyone other than me. A, you know, it's not ego, because I just happened to see things in a certain way. And I want to do things that feel unique, you know, so often i'll i'll i'll have I'll avoid a particular storyline, or a plot or a visceral event or a visual, because I've seen it done by other people. And I'll try and try and do it in a unique way. So it's an experimental, it's sort of an experimental approach, but it's, it gets more refined as I go, as I know more through the years, but I that that to me, is kind of what I bring to the to the, to the show. So when they're sick second guessing me and telling me to do my job. I feel like well, why am I even here? You know, what, what is it? Why do you want me to do it? Surely, you know, you want someone who's more bendable to your will as a studio executive, you know, who will give you exactly what others can give you You're exactly what you want. Want, you know which is even more stunning concept because often they don't know what they want, you know? And that's partly why I haven't done a lot of you know, after I robot I didn't do a lot of I haven't done any big big Hollywood studio movies. You know, I've Gods of Egypt was a big budget movie, but it was a huge indie movie, you know, there's a way they put the financing together. But again, even that was you know, from a creative point of view was really arduous because and it became clear to me that beyond a certain budget is not a playground that I should be playing in really because it's an absolute kind of correlation between how high the budget is and how much fear that the the studio executives have and fear is not a good way to create. It really isn't, you know, you don't want fear. You've got to be fearless in the way you create the best, the best acting comes out fearlessness out of being brave, and doing and going where you feel creatively is necessary. And it's the same with with a director with a filmmaker is you've got to be brave, you know. And you can't be brave when every, every other factor on the boat around you is like we've got work. We're gonna drown you know, I you can't you know eventually your your your bravery gets gets whittled down if you're the only guy saying, you know no we will we'll make it we're going to be okay guys, we're going to make it you know. So anyway, that's it. So it's just like, you know
Alex Ferrari 55:41 I mean, you were working with one of the biggest movie stars in the world at the time Will Smith, as well. And it was it was fun working with with Will?
Alex Proyas 55:50 Yeah, wills wills, an absolute wonderful person. And, and we had a great time, you know, and honestly, if we hadn't been on that film, and I'd had someone on who was less enjoyable to be making film with I may have actually actually walked off that film. That's how far they pushed me during production. Yeah, but but, but will will made you know, would often make my day and to the point where he made me laugh so much. Sometimes I'd have to say, just please stop with aquilo because it's on the on the video screen. But yeah, now he's, he's terrific.
Alex Ferrari 56:29 Yeah. And you forgot the actor who played the robot. What's his name? He was in Ireland. Ellen today. Oh, my God, what an amazing performance. I think that was the first time people were starting to have a conversation about letting go like nominating actors for their performances.
Alex Proyas 56:47 Alan's great you know, yeah, he, um, he and he's, and he's, he's done a few other robots, I think since.
Alex Ferrari 56:54 No, he's Yeah, he's he's he turned up some Oh, calves robot for something. Yeah. Yeah.
Alex Proyas 57:00 This was very early days. I mean, Gollum had been had been, I think, had been around for one one movie, early Golem. But it was again, it was also early days for this kind of, you know, performance capture technology. And, and it was kind of have an amusing story. story to tell about Alex who we were, the I this is after the shoot, we were working out of digital domain that's in, in, in Venice in in Los Angeles, and I I'd be working with them as they're animating Allen's character, sonny. And I would go for a walk down at the beach occasionally just to get some some fresh air and get out of a dark room, which is what you spend your life in, you know, and I bumped it up into Alan and Alan turns Allen lives down there, you know, and, and I go, Hey, come come and have a look at what we're doing, you know, come and have a look at this incredible footage that we're making with your your character and, and he was really excited, he came along and we and we walked into a theater of their digital domain, sit down next to each other and they start running shots from from, you know, the film, the fully realized Robert Allen's like, this is amazing. It looks fucking amazing. It's great, whatever. And then and so then he's still there when we then go into the next part of our, our what we're doing, which is where I guide the animators in terms of recreating the Allen's performance to the CG animation. And in those days before we had fair facial captures, actually kind of keyframe animation, the way they did that is I basically, they'd look at Alan's performance that we filmed, and then they'd reproduce it with the with the sunny robot, right. So what that meant is, they would put it up on the big screen one side of a bit like our podcast right now. One side is Alan and the other side is this is the the crude version of the robot that they're animating in middle in the middle of animation. And we'd literally look at every frame and they'd show me the shot and I go great or I'd go you know what on frame 13 I think he raises his eyebrow just a tiny bit more and he like there's a little twitch twitch in his nose gives a little bit of vulnerability or whatever and we look at it over and over again and they go the direct animation right he goes you're right there is a twitch in his in his left nostril for about three frames from frame 13 to frame 16. And after we do this for like about 10 minutes Alan, Alan Tatiana challenges. I've got to put a go and go. Yeah, okay, well, thanks for coming. Yeah, I'm sorry, gotta go but this is like, this is insane. I'm going to I'm going nuts. This is going to destroy my acting for all time. The fact that someone is sitting here all these guys sitting here, looking at my performance like a frame at a time studying or not I just can't I can't take it. I'm sorry, I, you know, I've ruined that lives forever.
Alex Ferrari 1:00:08 I mean, it's true, but it's it's true. I mean, actors are, you know, actors, you know, are actors. And if you if you're telling them that, like, oh, we're gonna analyze every frame of your nostril, before shot, forget it, you'll never be able to get up there. It's just tough enough to be an actor, let alone being that kind of skirt. That's amazing. We'll be right back after a word from our sponsor. And now back to the show. So So, you know, again, we discussed those that dream of working in Hollywood making these big giant monster films. What, you know, we I think we talked a little bit about it. But are there any other misconceptions about working on such large projects? Is it just a loss of control? Because as that budget goes up, and there's very few directors, even some of the biggest directors in Hollywood, have had issues from Spielberg to Fincher. I mean, they are they all have, they all have What is it? Like?
Alex Proyas 1:01:13 I mean, part of the biggest problem right now is they don't want to work with guys like us, right? Because I'm talking about most of the movies that get done. I'm not talking about Chris Nolan, people, people like that, who they sanctioned and can spend big budgets on original ideas. Is there there's such rarities now real, really, you know, the the in particularly in the sort of science fiction domain, you know, it's, it's, they don't want to work with I think they want to work with people who are. I mean, I call them puppet masters, right? I call these producers people like the Marvel guys, and whatever. I call them, call them puppet masters. And there's a lot of sort of media coverage of the fact that, you know, they'll bring in a director, but they won't let the director do the, you know, shoot the action scenes. For example, I'm like, What the fuck saddle about I mean, it's like, because they've worked out, I mean, they've worked out their formula, when you do a Marvel movie, it's like, You're, you're a TV director doing an episode of a series, right? They've worked it all out, it's one of the reasons I haven't done, you know, episodic TV, because you walk onto the set, the actors know what they're doing. They know the characters, they got the costumes worked out, they got, they got everything worked out on, someone's going to shoot the action sequences for you. We've already pre visit them and worked, it all worked out all the shots. So yeah, well, what is it that a director is actually doing, you know, the scripts written? You can't change a word? So it's like, what? Well, why are you there? What is it that you're actually providing in that situation as a director, so I kind of go, Well, you know, the right to work, the producers are right to work with people that they can plug into that mission in, who have a, who have some kind of progress they want to make in their careers to allow them to do such a big, you know, ego gratifying projects, to make 150 zillion dollars, so that then they can maybe go and do something that they that they really want to do that they really love, you know. So I mean, I think from a career point of view, that makes sense. Unfortunately, I've already been through all that. So all I really care about these days is I you know, I don't particularly I'm not particularly driven by by finance, I mean, so I mean, it doesn't really matter money, they could offer me to do something like that, really. And as I say, I'm just not the right person to do that sort of stuff. You know, I would rather just sit at home and write and work out how I am going to make my films that I really, really care about, or if there's a great script that's in the, in the US, you know, long Ranger, I know, they're gonna let me do what I what I do, you know, I have much greater set and job satisfaction from that sort of stuff, you know,
Alex Ferrari 1:04:02 Now, do you, uh, what advice would you give directors about directing actors on set? You know, because you've worked with some, some great actors, you know, any advice on directing and how you direct actors?
Alex Proyas 1:04:15 That's a very hard question to answer, because it really depends on where you're at in your career. And where and who the actors. I mean, every actor is different there is there is variable as every individual, you know, a lot of people ask me about storyboarding. And it's the same answer, which is, you know, I know how I work with storyboarding, but I can't give, you know, new filmmakers that advice because it doesn't, it's not what will work for them, you know. So yeah, it's hard to say I think the only nutshell thing I could offer is, is as I say, every actor is different. Every actor has different requirements in order to achieve what they do to get the best out of them. What I've learned over the years is Try and find what it is that they need, and try and try and give them what they need the circumstances that they need. And only and only so much, you know, I think, you know, the one, the one, the one that Dane, maybe new directors have, or the one or the one cautionary note I'd give them is, don't over direct an actor, don't feel like it's your job to sit there and specify every detail and give them line readings or whatever the whatever you might be inspired to do. If you're a writer, you might, you might be inspired to tell want them to say the words etc. You know, if you're having to do that you've picked the wrong actor, because, you know, the key really is to find the right actor for your, for your role for the cat for the role, and then let them work their magic as as studios interfere with director's vision and the frustrations that I've expressed from that. I'm sure actors experienced the same thing from directors, you know, and so don't don't overdo it. You know, and, and, and, you know, I mean, I have, I've had situations in the past, working with less experienced actors where they come up to me, and they say, one guy, one chap, in particular, we just said, I'm, I don't, why don't you ever say anything to me? Why don't you give me any sort of direction, whenever I go? Well, it's because I like what you're doing. Right? And so I don't want to fuck up what you're doing. So that's why I want you to, you know, if I start saying stuff to you, it's because I'm not happy with where it's going. But, um, and but I'm really happy, you're doing great job, just keep doing your great job, you know. And that's a example of I cast the right person for the role. They did exactly what I was hoping they would do, and they keep doing it well, and then it's, you know, you temper certain moments, you tweak certain scenes, you give them a one little bit of direction, and have them look at, you know, do you know, do it in a slightly different way, unlock it, but, but really, the rest of it, there's no magic, there's no trick to it, there's no, it's, it's, it's kind of just let the magic happen, you know, and, and if it's working, don't don't touch it, leave it, you know,
Alex Ferrari 1:07:07 what is? Do you rehearse? Do you do rehearsal?
Alex Proyas 1:07:13 I do. Um, so I do look, for me, the most important part of the actor director process is what happens before you come on to the set, which is, through the about, I like to have at least three weeks with the actors before we start shooting, and what we'll traditionally do is start start with a table read, do move very quickly on to discussing character, discussing scenes, breaking down scenes, etc, etc. And we'll do that, you know, half a half a day in the morning, usually, and then the rest of the day, the wardrobe makeup pair, everyone else has them for whatever they're doing. But I'm, I think that's, that's the most important part for me. And that's more often it's not so much about actually acting it out, as about discussing in incredible detail backstory, and, and building those characters so that we come out of that process with them, the actors, each actor, owning in their character, and understanding their character, even if it's something that I've written, understanding the character better than I do, you know, or at least as well as I do. And that's when I start to trust them, I build trust, you know, we build mutual trust, I start to trust their opinion and their view of things. And sometimes I'll realign my, my view a little bit. And it all comes through that process at early disk and it's more about discussion, you know, than anything else. And if there's lines that don't gel eventually when they say to me, I don't think my character would say that which I'm very happy to hear from from an actor and I hear it often because I encourage that sort of collaborative spirit I'll will change it will change the line and or if they can explain to me why their character wouldn't say you know, I won't just do it willy nilly, but you know, and that to me is the that's the creative process as a collaboration where you bounce between between actor and director. The reason I like working with people like Will Smith so much and Nicolas Cage also is that they're fully storytellers. They're not just acting their their character they are they they're aware that they are integral to telling your story or telling the story and that's why I love both of those guys so much because they really bring that quality to their to their work, you know, and I'm sure with other directors as well, we and you worked on the film obviously called the knowing with Nick with Nick Cage. How is it to work with Nicolas because he's obviously become almost a cultural icon in the the performances that he puts out sometimes.
Alex Ferrari 1:09:50 I mean, he is a very, I mean, I absolutely love on the Wild at Heart and I mean, so many mean raising Arizona all these amazing performances over the years. How Is it to work with? Like, he seems like? I mean, I'm sure it's not, but I seem I see, I think he's like lightning in a bottle, you just kind of try not be able to direct them in a proper way.
Alex Proyas 1:10:10 I'll describe him as the Ferrari, you've acted where actors have, you know, four gears, he's got six, you know, anything go go there, if you need him to, you know, speaking, you're being brave. I mean, this is a thing about Nick and why he is such a kind of guy, you know, he's incredibly brave, you know, and to him paramount to, to, to the film is great story, you know, and it's not about him looking a certain way or acting in a certain way so that the audience like him, or or any of those those considerations, or big movie star people make, you know, he will go where the story dictates, and he'll go away into whether the story dictates you know, so he's completely brave, and fearless with with what he's doing. And that's a pretty much a unique thing in with actors of his stature, you know, so he's a wonderful combination of old fashioned character actor. When movie star, Ill, you know, they don't make him like Nick anymore. And that's why he's, he's, he's great to work with. And on top of that, I mean, he's, uh, you know, Nick is a guy's a, sees a surrealist, you know, he has a really brilliant mind. He's, he's really funny. And he's totally, totally aware of all this stuff. Everyone's kind of been going on about with his with his, with his, over the top crazy performances, but he's trying to push the envelope into different areas to keep himself fresh, you know, and it's kind of exactly what I do with films, you know, like, after dark city, I made this thing, erasure days is low budget, Ozzie Comedy, Romantic comedy, and go figure, the guy who made the Crow and dark city would make a romantic comedy, you know, and I did that for a very specific reason, because I want to keep exploring and pushing into new areas, and I don't want I don't want to feel secure. I know how to do this. I want to feel nervous in like, you know, excited about experimenting and coming up with new stuff. And that's very much the way he approaches his performances. He's He's a, he's a very brave explorer of new new frontiers, you know, so it's about it's about the thing I could say about any actor really, that I've, that I've worked with.
Alex Ferrari 1:12:38 Now, what do you wish someone would have told you when you started out in the business that you didn't know, now? Or that you didn't know when you started?
Alex Proyas 1:12:47 Don't go there. No, no.
Alex Ferrari 1:12:50 Run away. What did you do and get a real job
Alex Proyas 1:12:53 Run away Yeah, no, well, as we pointed out, that's impossible to say to any filmmaker, and it's impossible to say to any, certainly any young filmmaker, because when we're young, we we don't even believe we're going to die. You know, we're, we're a bortles. Right? It's, it's, you know, you know, look like, it's one of the things I just don't know, that you you can ever really, and as I say you constantly learning, so you never really, completely work it out anything anyone does. And you got to kind of go through it to go Okay, now I understand. Now, I understand what some of those other filmmakers experienced filmmakers, said what they did it, I try not to discourage people, because that's the worst thing you can do. You know, I think it's really important that we retain, you know, extra excitement for for this, this, you know, this craft, this is some, some thing that, making movies and you know, my excitement came from, as I say, the big screen, the big sound and that immersive social experience of going to movies, and it's incredibly depressing that we're looking at the sort of maybe looking at the end of that. And it's something that I try not to think about too much, you know, because it just does spiral into depression. But, um, look all I can all you know, I'm not answering your question just because I don't know that I can. I think all you can, all you can do is a, you know, be true to your own self, you know, be true, Be true to your own originality, right? Tell a story that you feel really, really passionate about and stick to that, like crazy. Don't let anyone talk you out of it out of if you want to make a particular killer film, that particular story. Don't let anyone talk you out of it. Just do it because the fact is, everyone He's gonna try and talk you out of it, you're gonna get knocked back by every single person. I mean, look at Star Wars is a classic example. Every studio knocked knock George Lucas back, and he finally managed to convince one last person to make the film. So that's how fucking wrong these people are, and they continue in it, today, they're more wrong than ever before, they have no idea, they wouldn't have an idea of a good script to fulfill over on them, you know, if they fell over fell over it, you got to just stay true to what you believe as an individual is having a story that you are about telling, you know, I've got this thing called a new country that I'm trying to make. I've been trying to finance it now for a couple of years. And you know, it's it's, it's, again, a very, it's a very bold science fiction piece. Genre bashing blending thing that I've not seen anyone do before. And that's why I'm excited about making it, you know, and I just, you know, I have to convince others of that, which is the eternal struggle that film filmmakers have, you know, so that's the thing is like, you don't you know, you got to be, you got to be thick skin, and you got to be tough, and you got to just, you know, you gotta have a real belief in your own vision, you know, that's the most important thing.
Alex Ferrari 1:16:19 And again, if it was 175 million work for that movie. I mean, if it does, we'll put the word out. Let's see if we Yeah, I mean, we'll get that crowdfunding for you. I do that 100 for 150. Okay, you're gonna bring it down. I appreciate that. Now, can you tell me about, tell me about the Heritage Foundation.
Alex Proyas 1:16:40 It's a studio that I've built in Sydney, which is a very sensibly a virtual production studio. And, but it's a it's basically an umbrella for all aspects of, of the production. So we, we, we edit we, we do all the VFX we shoot it without using Unreal Engine. And, and it's basically a way to, to make an entire film, you know, it also comes down to logistics and the budget, exponentially you have you I can work with small crews, but I can put them into environments and situations that are there. I don't reduce the scope of the scope is bigger than ever before. So for example, we've done this little short film, film, 20 minute film, finishing up, which we're hoping will be released in January of next year, which is rapidly approaching. There's a trailer for it, it's called mask of evil apparition is a trailer on YouTube at the moment. And it's a it's all been done virtually. And people are saying it's it looks like dark city and, and there's for that, because it's kind of partly intentional, I think a lot of it is is is as the imagery is as intricate as dark city, but dark city, we built real sets. And this way, we're creating computer generated sets. But I think, you know, visually it looks to my eye looks very, very similar. So you know, and it's a fraction of the budget that we spent on on it.
Alex Ferrari 1:18:19 So this is the same, this is the same technology that Mandalorians using.
Alex Proyas 1:18:24 It's the same technology. It's it's our Ozzie stripped down indie version, because obviously Mandalorian has the all the all the big pockets and the big bucks behind it, we have basically what's in my bank account behind it, which is not not not very much these days, I can tell you. So yeah, we've rebuilt that kind of concept, but in a Indy style, you know, and that was kind of the intention when we went into this is I went, you know what the, this you get this question, you know, this film, the short film we shot. It's a 20 minute film, we shot it in in a week right now, I couldn't shoot 20 minutes of film in less than a month on the big budgets, you know, yeah, probably about a month, you know, just because there's it's an extra exponential process. The more crew you have, the more support crew you need, the longer it takes to do everything, right. So so in this one, I was shooting as quickly as I would would have shot on a short film or in film school, you know, we had great fun doing it. We worked we worked reasonable hours, you know, what, almost nine to five hours. We weren't working a lot of overtime and we got 20 minutes of footage done. A very, I think very good, good footage. You know, there's one sequence where we have cloned a guy, an actor, you know, 100 times he plays 100 versions of himself in the one scene, which which we shot in, you know, we shot shots or scene in three hours. You know, we did a similar scene like that in Gods of Egypt with a character and the scene. Set, one of the things that didn't even make it into the finished film, we were shooting for, you know, five days just on that one scene, you know, he's so that shows you how much faster you can work with this with this, this technology nology, you know, he could shoot one environment in the morning, have lunch, and go, Okay, now we're going to the mountain top and press a button on a computer, and suddenly you're in another location, you don't have to drive the unit across town, you know. So this is the way forward, this means that we can create, we can compete as an indie, as indie filmmakers, we can make films very high visual standard, compete with the big the big boys, you know. But do it you know, and do it at a at a budget, you know, and this all works in with, you know, streaming and all everything else to sort of like reclaim our, our industry, strip back, reclaim our, our craft our art back so that we can do it. You know, I've always been jealous for all my career of writers and painters and composers, yes, I can wake up one morning, go down to the piano in the alleged room and knock out a song, you know, right? Right, the next chapter of their book or whatever, and I'm like, why can't we as artists be like those guys? Well, because other people have to anoint us and give us the money to do it. Well, I think Heritage Foundation my studio is is a small cog in, in turning that around, you know, as the technology has been, you know, as what you're doing is all it's all part of the same puzzle. That, you know, the technology, for example, is allowing us to shoot films, again, we can if I want to make a film in the morning, I can make it it's not going to be a Marvel superhero movie, but it's going to be it's going to be you know, it's going to be a film it film, you know. So that, to me is the exciting world that we're in right now. And if we can, if we can break that one, that one extra little piece of the puzzle of how to get how to monetize this stuff, effectively, the content effectively get it out to the to the audience, then to me, it's a brave, that I that I certainly want to be a part of it's visual,
Alex Ferrari 1:22:18 Now. And you also have a YouTube channel called mystery clock cinema, which is so much fun. And I recommend everybody go into that channel. It only doesn't only have your short films, but it also has some master classes by you. I love that video, what the bad habits that film school taught me. Things like that. You know, you know a lot of directors of your statute, don't, don't give back don't want to help filmmakers don't learn that they don't want to but they just don't want they just don't know, you know, they don't do as much. And I'm so glad that someone with your experience in your artistic design and in your abilities are making an effort to give back to the filmmaking community. And I just love that you're doing that. How did the mystery clock cinema come about? And why did you start it?
Alex Proyas 1:23:08 Well, mystery clocks, my production company that sets my the some of the some of the time. And you know, I just I started looking at stuff on YouTube and going you know what I should I could do this stuff, you know, and it's it's great fun. I mean, there's also an there's a there's a diabolical agenda behind it, of course, which is I'm trying to, as you're doing in a much more successful way than I am doing in a much level, but I'm trying to realign things into that new world that I was told brave new world that I was talking about. And I feel like it's important for people to hear people like me who've come out of the old world, and now embracing this new way of doing stuff. I think that hopefully is an inspiring thing and being and hopefully they can realize a lot of new talent that is going to help build this new world you know, so I'm still doing it for my own selfish reasons really. But also I'm you know, I look i like i like I really enjoyed talking to people. I've done a lot of, you know, live I've masterclasses before, before we weren't allowed to congregate in groups this year, but up until that point, I was doing a lot of live ones and going to film school and teaching there. And I just really enjoy I love the energy that young filmmakers bring to this and often they end up teaching you more than you teach them you know they if only just to realize, reacquaint yourself with the the enthusiasm and the excitement, the energy that that filmmakers can can bring to this to this craft. You know,
Alex Ferrari 1:24:43 I mean, I remember I remember my first day in film school, I still remember it to this day when they were touring around the studios and the back lot and stuff like that where I went. And I just remember that enthusiasm that I could just do anything and there was no bounds and that that's something that Obviously, the business starts to squash little by little. And it's about you trying to fight your way back out of that to be able to still hold on, hold on to that flame. But yeah, you know, now both you and I are covered in shrapnel from the years of being in the business, obviously, you're still pulling it out. Oh, no, you've got much, much more shrapnel than I do, sir. But, but inside you, the key is to hold on to that flame and to hold on to that love of what why you started this journey. This insane. Yeah, business if you you know, it's just an insanity. It's insanity. But, but I'm so glad that you you're doing that as well. And I'm gonna just ask a few questions, I asked all my guests. What advice would you give a filmmaker trying to get into the business today?
Alex Proyas 1:25:48 I think as I said before, do do your own thing, you know, in sticked. stick to that thing, you know, what you love, find those stories that you you know, those? What kind of movie do you want to tell and, and, and, and stay true to that, you know, and really try and focus on that and don't be sort of sidetracked into into other areas. I have this pet peeve about it about people who film at young filmmakers who try and do proof of concept type movies to get a gig with, you know, with a superhero franchise, you know, and I feel like, that's really limiting. There are some people that that's all they want to do, then good luck. Best of luck to them, but all you want to do, then maybe you're better off servicing your own original vision, and showing people what it what it is that you can that you can bring, to even to the event to get a franchise movie, you know, I think those producers will surely appreciate that much more than seeing, seeing someone cloning something that they do and doing it, you know, on a much lower budget and not doing it as well, you know, surely that would be a more, you know, so make sure you you put your resources into something you can do well, and pull off well, rather than something that's going to be half hard. Because if anything that's going to just show people that maybe you can't do something, you try to show them that you can do. But the most important thing is is is staying true to your own vision. You know, I feel like as a as a director, I mean, I you know, I think writer, writer, directors, great writer is a rare and and even though they may have one success, maybe they won't continue to have successes. So you don't always have to be a writer, as a filmmaker, you don't have to be an or a writer, director to be an otter filmmaker. But I think that I feel like, you know, to be an otter filmmaker, to be someone who has a vision, who has a style, who has something unique that they're trying to bring that that's what it means to me, you know, it doesn't mean that you try and do everyone's job on the set. Because there's particularly if you're if you're new, you need to listen to other people's opinion. You need to value other people's opinions, particularly if they're more experienced than you. But I think, try and find what it is that makes you new makes you fresh makes you original and unique. You know, and try and stick to that. While people are telling you that that sucks. You know,I think that's really important.
Alex Ferrari 1:28:32 And what is the lesson that took you the longest to learn whether in the film business or in life?
Alex Proyas 1:28:39 Ah, God life, I'm not going to go into that. Let's stick to the film stick to the film business. I think I touched upon it early on, which is storyboarding, which is he took me a long time to when I first started, I would do very elaborate storyboards, shot shot descriptions are actually, you know, drawings of every shot I wanted in a scene. And often I'd written a script as well. So I was very specific with where I wanted the actors to stand and what I went, What line I wanted them to turn around, on and on and all that sort of stuff. Because I thought that's what that's what being directed was, you know, sort of controlling the entire process. And, you know, I'd read a lot about the my heroes like Kubrick and a lot of its mythology too, because Kubrick is a far, far better director. Rector, then some of this mythology might allude to, which is, you know, he does 150 takes someone walking down and down a corridor or whatever, you know, if he does that he's doing it for a reason. which hasn't been properly explained. But, you know, and also Hitchcock, which you know, there's mythology about Hitchcock, which set which is another filmmaker that I that I really admired. Where he said once I've, you know, once I've storyboarded the movie written the script storyboarded the movie, the movie, He's done, then I just get the actors to do you know, the
Alex Ferrari 1:30:02 I don't even look through the camera. I don't even look at the camera.
Alex Proyas 1:30:05 Yeah, yeah. Which is just it's a again, it's a complete myth, right? So so so I but I listened to those myths it's and I thought that's what you did is every single nuance every detail so I'd say to the actor, okay now he already know we're ready to rehearse the scene and you stand here on this spot mark that I marked out which works on my 24 mil lens, and then you stand down there, and you tell him that you love him, you know, and they go, but but I am too, too far away to tell him that I love you seems really odd. And again, never mind just do it. It'll work out, it'll be fine. You know. So there I am completely throwing away what is instinctively something important for the actor for the character and overriding them with my authoritarian rule. Right. Which, and that's not what a what a director should do? Absolutely not, you know. So I took me a while to learn that you need to be flexible, particularly when you're doing scenes with actors and I just someone running down the street being chased by a dog or whatever, you need to give them the flexibility to create this the same for you. And it's at the end of the day. You You can't you might have a view about how you want to shoot it. But you've got to learn to let certain things go in the shoot in the heat of the moment. Right. And that's something that took me a long time to understand that kind of comes through experience.
Alex Ferrari 1:31:25 And last question, sir, what are three of your favorite films of all time?
Alex Proyas 1:31:33 Well, 2001 still is it has been for since I've probably since I saw it, I don't know. But it because it is, as I say the the biggest, most famous experimental movie of all time. And the fact that it found an audience at that time is mind boggling to me that if I had any at any level of successor,
Alex Ferrari 1:31:55 there was no there was some. Yeah. And there was also some drug use involved with that. That's what actually made it
Alex Proyas 1:32:02 He probably hit the desired guys. Well, in that respect. Yes. I believe that only came in the second because they pulled the film. I think it's correct, because it was not doing well. And then they rereleased it again as the ultimate trip. Right? And that they did it in bed literally.
Alex Ferrari 1:32:19 And they figured it out. And they because I'm a Kubrick fanatic. So I've done so much research on Kubrick is after the fact, they started he seeing that the hippies were really loving it. And that's when they're like, wait, I'm here. Let's remarket this as a trip, and boom, it was a hit.
Alex Proyas 1:32:35 Yeah, that's exactly right. Yeah, we found our audience Hallelujah, you know. So there's that. And then stalker is my other one that I've that I've passionately loved since I saw that film. And I saw that film actually in film school. tarkowski. stalker, because it showed me again, and similar to that one in many ways, but it's, it showed me how to tell a more linear story. And I do believe it is more it's more linear than 2001. But it told me to how to tell that story through told me how to tell that story through visual poetry, you know, which I think is what it is, you know, you know, and I mean, both of those songs, what I think is why they will remain my favorite films. And I like and you know, I like normal movies, too. So, you know, don't worry, I do like a good grounded, well told normal story. But But I love those movies because they do stuff. Stuff only movie, right? You can't possibly tell the you can't not not just tell the story, but you can't express the experience in any other medium other than in cinema. Right? Right with those two movies. And that's why I love them both so much. And I'm struggling as I speak to think of a third third one that compares but excuse me, I'll throw the exorcist in which is another eternal favorite of mine. Because it again he gave me an experience that no other film has ever been able to replicate such a unique experience. reasons I'm incredibly driven, powerful terrifying. story that with with incredible simplicity. I mean, that's the amazing thing about a film is it's honestly it's the simplest narrative and it's the simplest amount of elements you could possibly use in a movie right and so many people have tried to replicate again that movie over the years and and with various levels of success but that one really was a again like a game changer in movies. So they've been they've been many there have been many I could I could list.
Alex Ferrari 1:34:51 One movie, I get one movie that just comes to mind when I think of you I think he must like that and I please tell me if I'm wrong Blade Runner.
Alex Proyas 1:35:00 I love Blade Runner. Yeah. As a kid when I saw blade runner and it was, at the time, it was that I heard is the most beautiful film I've seen. You know, compromised, of course, because it was the board Harrison Ford voiceover at the beginning where you go, why does that guy sound so bored? You know, it's like, you see this amazing world and he just sounds like he's bored out of
Alex Ferrari 1:35:27 You know, and we're down here on this replicants and blah, blah. I remember I
Alex Proyas 1:35:36 That's obviously an alien. Both of those two movies were incredibly inspiring to me alien was another one, alien, maybe even more so than then Blade Runner for me, because the the chestburster at alien again, was one of those moments in cinema that will never be reproduced. The impact that that thing had, at the time was just he just, you know, the audience were just like, I remember that palpable experience of being in that in that it's in that screening, you know, sure. Stuff like that, you know, and, and studying and stuff that you can't, he can't, I don't think we'll ever read reproduce it. That's it. Like, it'd be like, seeing psycho, which is another favorite film of mine, when it first was released in the theaters, which I'm too old enough to have seen, but I cannot imagine because I remember seeing it on TV again, as a kid and going. Well Hang on a second. Second, I just killed the girl who was supposed to be the hero of the film. It's like, Who am I? Who am I following? I'm completely lost in this film. I can't imagine that the the impact that would have that bold narrative decision would have had in a theater on the first release, it would be mind boggling, you know? And so stuff like that. I just don't think i think a lot of filmmakers we were trying to we keep reaching for those moments. I mean, I reach for that moment at the end of dark city for that incredible, like mind blowing moment when you realize the entire story is not what you were thinking is some something actually different, you know? And, you know, I was riffing off. Actually another movie that I love is the original plan of the Apes where you know, Chuck Heston ends up on the beach and you see the Statue of Liberty and you go, which I think has gone beyond being a sort of a
Alex Ferrari 1:37:33 Cultural phenomenon.
Alex Proyas 1:37:34 Or when you know, when you give something away in a movie, what is it?
Alex Ferrari 1:37:38 Oh, it's Yeah, the reveal the secret? Yeah, like in the six that six sense or psycho or like Yeah, yeah, what? The ending you that twist ending the twist ending? spoiling.
Alex Proyas 1:37:49 It's a spoiler, right?
Alex Ferrari 1:37:50 I'm sorry. Sorry. Spoiler guys, all those movies, you haven't seen them stop listen to this podcast.
Alex Proyas 1:37:55 Pretty sure. I'm pretty sure everyone's aware of this. That's that particular spoiler, you know, maybe not as many people are aware of the spoiler that I could give away dark city. But, but yeah, that was, again, one of those moments where it's like, you know, wow, this is not another planet. This is actually our planet, you know, the future, stuff like that. And I just don't know that you can do that. I mean, six senses, probably one of the last of them that were people were talking about it and you know, it film it achieved some soul God, incredible thing, you know, but it's like, I don't know that. People you just can't. I mean, and you do it anymore.
Alex Ferrari 1:38:34 I mean, well, I mean, I remember like I met I can only imagine being in the theater to see Star Wars, like, or jaws.
Alex Proyas 1:38:41 Yeah. When I was I actually there's another one that I that I, I look, I'm a big fan of the original trilogy, and I find it hard to wax lyrical about Star Wars on level just because I think it's, well, I won't say I don't like saying negative things about things. Now. I will I just think it's a bit of a disaster these days. But um, but yeah, I was there. I was in the original screening of the first Star Wars. I think I was, there must have been a me is 1414 in your mind must have been blown. Your mind must have been blown. He was you know, but look, the thing is, for me, at the time, I was big into science fiction already because as we've said, 2001 and I was looking at you know, I would there were certain magazines like this is amazing, called starlog time. Yeah, of course, I'm and a bunch of other magazines, that I would collect voraciously. And I would seek out any information on films like Star Wars that were coming that were coming up, you know, in those days apart from a trailer, it was really hard to find any detail. Films. You know, it wasn't the internet world that we now live in. So I was four, I was tracking that film diligently up until the moment it came out. So it was already a really exciting And also movies came out. They came out in the states first. So we already knew that it was a it was a cultural phenomenon already had been out a few weeks and people were lining up to see it. And so there were high expectations when me and a bunch of other kids. We we call wagging. We got out of school, we pretended we were sick. And we all went down to the Star Wars flu movie. Yeah, the Star Wars flu. Yeah, it was they they didn't do like midnight screening in seven days, as it was, we were there for the first post for morning or something like that. first session Friday, 1111 o'clock Friday morning. And we went down, we saw the movie, we went straight back in on the next the next session and saw it again, you know, of course, because it was just such a such an experience. You know, the last the last time I saw people
Alex Ferrari 1:40:51 Like the the last movie that I remember that happening to was probably Pulp Fiction. Like when I saw Pulp Fiction rock in the theater, I remember literally falling out of my chair with some of the dialogue. It was just like one of those events just like holy because there was nothing like Pulp Fiction before Pulp Fiction, like there was, it was it was one of those groundbreaking film, it was a week of keep geeking out about film for at least another four hours. But I will respect your time. Thank you, Alex. so so much for being on the show. It's been an honor talking to you and and thank you for sharing your knowledge and with the tribe. And I truly, truly appreciate everything you do. And I'm gonna do my darndest to get you the 100 and 50 million my friend.
Alex Proyas 1:41:36 Thank you very much Alex, much appreciated and lovely talking to you as well. It's been it's been great fun. So keep up the good work.
Alex Ferrari 1:41:44 Thank you, my friend.
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Originally planning to become a lawyer, Billy Wilder abandoned that career in favor of working as a reporter for a Viennese newspaper, using this experience to move to Berlin, where he worked for the city’s largest tabloid. He broke into films as a screenwriter in 1929 and wrote scripts for many German films until Adolf Hitler came to power in 1933.
Wilder immediately realized his Jewish ancestry would cause problems, so he emigrated to Paris, then the US. Although he spoke no English when he arrived in Hollywood, Wilder was a fast learner and thanks to contacts such as Peter Lorre (with whom he shared an apartment), he was able to break into American films. His partnership with Charles Brackett started in 1938 and the team was responsible for writing some of Hollywood’s classic comedies, including Ninotchka (1939) and Ball of Fire (1941). The partnership expanded into a producer-director one in 1942, with Brackett producing and the two turned out such classics as Five Graves to Cairo (1943), The Lost Weekend (1945) (Oscars for Best Picture, Director and Screenplay) and Sunset Blvd. (1950) (Oscars for Best Screenplay), after which the partnership dissolved. (Wilder had already made one film, Double Indemnity (1944) without Brackett, as the latter had refused to work on a film he felt dealt with such disreputable characters.)
Wilder’s subsequent self-produced films would become more caustic and cynical, notably Ace in the Hole (1951), though he also produced such sublime comedies as Some Like It Hot (1959) and The Apartment (1960) (which won him Best Picture and Director Oscars). He retired in 1981.
Below are all the screenplays available online. If you find any of his missing screenplays please leave the link in the comment section.
Imagine you are in a film school and you make a student film. Then that student film get’s seen by Steven Spielberg and he calls you into his office to offer you a deal to direct a feature film version of that short. Well, that is exactly how today’s guests go his start.
On the show, we have the legendary writer/director Kevin Reynolds. Kevin directed the worldwide blockbuster Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves, the epic Rapa Nui, and the infamous and misunderstood Waterworld.
Kevin Reynolds made his big career leap from election lawyer and political speechwriter to pursue his childhood passion for writing – enrolling into film school at the University of Southern California.
In 1980, Reynolds’s debut film Proof landed him a shot right out of USC to work with Steven Spielberg. The film was later produced as Fandango in 1985, written and directed by Reynolds.
Five college buddies from the University of Texas circa 1971 embark on a final road trip odyssey across the Mexican border before facing up to uncertain futures in Vietnam and otherwise.
In 1991, Reynolds directed the $48 million action-adventure film of the time, Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves, that grossed $390 million worldwide. This action-filled fan favorite follows Robin and his Moorish companion’s adventure to England and his fight back against the Sheriff of Nottingham’s tyranny.
He followed up Robin Hood with the epic Rapa Nui. The film the love between the representatives of two warring tribes changes the balance of power on the whole of the famous Easter Island. The film failed to find an audience in its initial release but has since become a cult favorite.
His next directorial outing is the legendary Waterworld starring Kevin Costner. Waterworld was labeled the most expensive movie ever made ($175 million) until Titanic dethroned it a few years later. The press said it was the biggest flop of all time as well but nothing could be farther from the truth.
When the film was finally released it made $264 million worldwide. The film went on to become one of the most valuable IPs in the Universal Studios library. The company created a theme park out of the film that has last over 25 years in multiple parks around the world and has generated hundreds of millions of dollars for Universal.
In a future where the polar ice-caps have melted and Earth is almost entirely submerged, a mutated mariner fights starvation and outlaw “smokers,” and reluctantly helps a woman and a young girl try to find dry land.
Reynolds’s critically acclaimed historical adventure film adaptation of The Count of Monte Cristo novel in 2002, which starred versatile actor James Caviezel, was a remarkable comeback project after a five-year hiatus. The film is about revenge after a man, falsely accused by three jealous friends, sought to avenge his wasted years of somewhat imprisonment serving a wealthy Italian cleric.
Kevin and I discuss the highs and lows of directing in Hollywood, working with Steve Spielberg, his ever-changing relationship with friend Kevin Coster, how he dealt with directing Waterworld and so much more.
Alex Ferrari 0:37 I like to welcome the show, Kevin Reynolds. Kevin, thank you so much for being on the show.
Kevin Reynolds 3:57 My pleasure.
Alex Ferrari 3:59 I am a big fan of your work for many, many years. Some of your films that specifically in the late 80s and early 90s had very big impact on my life. Because I was I was working at a video store back then. I remember putting together this standee for Robin Hood.
Kevin Reynolds 4:18 Why are you dating yourself, Alex?
Alex Ferrari 4:20 I am I am I will the gray hairs date me more and more every time.
Kevin Reynolds 4:25 Yeah.
Alex Ferrari 4:27 So before we get started, how did you get into the business?
Kevin Reynolds 4:32 Ah, well, that's a bit of a long story. But I you know, originally I was a lawyer. I always loved film I what I really liked was to write I wrote since I was like a kid.
But you know, a career in the film business just seemed too far fetched. So, I followed a responsible career path and went to law school, even though I didn't like it and I practiced for a couple of years. I was in Austin, University of Texas, which had a fabulous facility and the nice thing about being a lawyer was I had some money. So I could, I could go in, they had a great facility, I could pay for film, I could do stuff I could I could pay to do movies. So that's really where I kind of educated myself. Initially, it was at University of Texas. And while I was there, one of the visiting professors was a, an old Hollywood character named Edward Demetrik. He was one of the Hollywood 10 and talked to him and said, look, I think this is really what I want to pursue, because I was practicing the daytime, I was staying up till two o'clock at night at UT, working on movies, and after about a year that I said, I gotta make a decision here. So I talked to him. And I said, I want to I want to go to film school at USC. And he said, Why? And I said, Well, I want to be a director. And he said, it's the toughest job in the world. And I said, No, no, no, I said, I really want to do this. You know, I've been practicing. I really wanted this. He said, You don't understand. It's the toughest job in the world. He said, You got a good career here being a lawyer. He said, don't do it. And, you know, I said, No, I want to. So anyway, he gave me a letter introduction. I flattened it, mort zarkov, who's the chairman. And I applied, and I got accepted. And the next day, I quit my job.
Yeah. Like a month later, I packed everything up in a car and moved to LA, and started film school. I had like $3,000 to my name. And it was, you know, taking a big chance. And I was there for two years, I loved every minute of it. I realized this is really what I'm meant to do. It was 24/7 for two years.
Alex Ferrari 6:41 Was it? What did your parents say? I don't mean to interrupt people. What did your parents or five.
Kevin Reynolds 6:47 I'll never forget the look on their faces. I got my car to drive away to LA. You know, but they didn't say no, you can't do this. They were just deeply concerned as well. They should be now as I would have been, you know, with my kid. Anyway, so I get there. Like I said, for two years. It was great worked on movies. My goal was to leave USC and have a screenplay I could sell and a movie I could show people. So at the end of the two years, I was very fortunate, I get to do what's called a 580, which was the highest level of film at USC. It was this little movie called proof. And at the same time, I was writing my thesis screenplay with something called 10 soldiers, which ultimately became the movie Red Dawn. And I finished the film. And I the next week, I got really lucky I met this guy who had known at UT he was working as an agent at William Morris on somebody's desk. And he just been promoted agent. So he read my script and said, Sure, I'll represent you. And I was his first client. name's Mike Simpson. We're like, best friends. Anyway. So I said, Hey, would you send us movie saving since Steven Spielberg says, okay, so like two weeks later, I'm still at USC. And I'm out in the courtyard one day and Mort Zarkov comes out in the courtyard. He goes, can you come here and and walk in zombies puts his arm around you guys, Steven Spielberg's offices on the phone, they want to talk to you. Right. Okay. So it was Kathy Kennedy, and she was even watched your movie and he really liked it. He'd like you to come in and talk to him. I think I can find time for that. So I, I went in the next day, and met with Stephen, he couldn't have been nicer. He was in the mess he was shooting at at the time.
And we talked for a long time, and I went back to my crappy little apartment Studio City. And the next day, I get this phone call from Kathy Kennedy. And she goes, hi, Stevens making arrangements for you to expand your student film into a feature.
Alex Ferrari 9:02 Oh my god. Okay.
Kevin Reynolds 9:05 Literally, I just sat in the chair for like a half an hour and I picked it up and I called her back and I said, could you say that again? I did not bling and she just laughed. And he did. He did he, when he you know, he went to Warner's and got him to make what became Fandango. And it was the expanded version of that short film at USC proof and that plus selling my script that became Red Dawn, that's how I got started. It was a you know if it was a things like that don't really happen.
Alex Ferrari 9:44 No, you are that is a man that is that is a lottery ticket. That is a lottery ticket times two. Because you you sold your first script out of film school and a short film you made Got the eye of Steven Spielberg? arguably the biggest at that time, easily the biggest director in the world, now one of the most legendary directors in the world. And he calls, he calls you out of film school. Hey, can you come in? I mean, it's an insane story. I mean, I'd heard this story a little bit, because I, I love hearing these kind of origin stories of, you know, accomplished directors. But this is, you know, this is I think what people hold on to so much sometimes film directors hope for this and it doesn't happen
Kevin Reynolds 10:28 I said to myself, I just, I couldn't believe it. It's like, How could this happen? I never expected to be that fortunate. And, you know, my whole philosophy about success in the film business, I guess, in any business is it's it's about a third talent. And it's about a third hard work. It's about luck. And not necessarily in that order.
Alex Ferrari 10:52 Yes,
Kevin Reynolds 10:53 I was extremely lucky. Now, I'm going back to your short film proof, which I saw, by the way, and it was fantastic. I found I found it on YouTube. I found it on YouTube. And I'll put links I'll put links to it in the show notes so people can see it. It was I could there was like this one shot that I was like, how did you get the camera in the cockpit? to look up at the at the pilot? Like because the cameras were not that small back? So it must have been interesting how to how you did that?
I'm not sure what you're referring to. But I mean, we were shooting 16 millimeter.
Alex Ferrari 11:26 And so you might have that little like a little ball left or something like that.
Kevin Reynolds 11:30 Small. It's a smaller camera. But I mean, if it was on on Truman, pilot, it was probably, you know, it was not. It was a saint camera. So it was a little bit bigger. But I mean, we we broke all the rules.
There were several times when, you know, we were lucky, nobody died. It was one of those kind of deals. I mean, the guy who was in my production manager who, you know, I was very close to at the time, he was a pilot, you know, he was 21 years old, and he was a pilot. So we would go out in the desert, outside of Lancaster, California, in this old airfield. And we didn't, we would go and rent a plane. Each weekend, we drive up there, we stayed in a Winnebago. And he would go over and rent a plane not telling them what we were doing with it. And we would fly and he would have landed on this dirt strip. And we would paint the plane. You know, we would spend half a day painting this plane, taking the seats and stuff out so that it looks like Truman's plane, and then we'd shoot all weekend. And then like on Sunday night, we'd have to put all the stuff back in a plane wash it, and then he'd have to fly it back to this place and turn it in. And we'd never tell him what we were doing with it. And he was doing stuff like diving down on the thoughts and stuff and all illegal. And we're very lucky.
Alex Ferrari 13:19 It's the insanity of youth, isn't it? It really is. It's the it's it cuz I did dumbest things when I was, you know, teenager in my early 20s things that you just like, what, I didn't do that. But I didn't say insane. But let's just let's just you know, call a spade a spade, you quit your law practice to go to be a film director. So you're not altogether there at that age. Is that a fair? Is that a fair statement?
Kevin Reynolds 13:47 That's a fair statement. And and I think one of the problems especially when you're younger, you know, think you're immortal. In a movie, you think nothing bad can happen because this is make believe. And because we're doing make believe, you know, all the Jeopardy is make believe too, but it's not. And you forget that. So again, we were very we were very lucky.
Alex Ferrari 14:13 Now what was you know, I was like asking this question, what was the biggest lesson you learned from that first short film because that was the first time you directed really right.
Kevin Reynolds 14:23 I had done smaller films at USC. But that was the first big one. They have to stab two levels gone. I don't know what they do now. But it was called for 80s in 580s. Before he did a 580 You were supposed to have directed a 580. And to do a 480. We're supposed to have worked in a crew position on the short film as either an editor or production manager or something cameraman and they gave me a waiver. They gave me a waiver and let me go ahead and direct a 580 having only edited a 480 again, you know I was I was very lucky but they like the script for USC, and I mean, that was such an amazing place to go to school. Again, I don't know what it's like now, but it was just, I learned so much there. I still remember when I, when I first went to see more markup, and I'm sitting there in his office, and he's telling me, you know, all the classes you have to take, and you were supposed to start at shooting these non sync little movies.
And I was at trying to get him to wave me. And let me just skip those and go on to the next level of film and stuff. And I'm talking to him, and he just stops me. And he goes, look, he says, we'll teach you how to make movies here. He said, We want people that have something to say. And that's always stuck with me then.
And I realized, finally, the strange collection of personalities that were going to school there, they were all from all different walks of life, I was an attorney, there were people that had been doctors, and stuff. And for whatever reason, they just looked at their resumes and said, this person might have something to say. And they're they're all attitude is will teach you the technical side, which they did. But then once you got there, you had to figure out how to how to have the wherewithal to say it. In other words, you had to be able to work the system to make your movie. And it was so frustrating at the time, because you're competing with all these other people with limited resources and limited slots for the movies that were allowed and stuff. And when you get out, you finally realize it's the studio system. What they're teaching you is the studio system that you have to fight other people, and you have to battle other potential filmmakers, for those slots. And you learn all the tricks, you know, like, every weekend, when you're making a student film, you had to sign up for equipment out of the out of the equipment room. And it was always limited. You know, you could always get the cameras you wanted or the grip gear and stuff like that. So I figured, okay, well, here's what I'm gonna do for my Chairman, I hired the guy that ran the equipment room
Alex Ferrari 17:11 Smart.
Kevin Reynolds 17:13 So we got whatever we wanted. And it's just stuff like that, that you learn, okay, this is how you have to work the system to get what you want. And it goes beyond film school, it goes on to professionally too. And to me that was that was, you know, the most important thing I think I learned at USC was how to game the system.
Alex Ferrari 17:37 A very useful skill in Hollywood to say the least.
Kevin Reynolds 17:40 Yeah.
Alex Ferrari 17:43 Now, how did you come up with the idea for Red Dawn, because that was a pretty awesome idea. Just a concept was very, it's very cool. Yeah, the original, it was titled 10, soldiers, TN. And, you know, I did it for the no, in fact, there were 10 people involved, but I also liked the idea can tie in, so. But I don't know, I don't really know where it came from. I think at the time what it was, was in the early 80s, we were, you know, there was a there was a lot of drum beating against the Russians and stuff. And B, we're gonna let's go to war with Russkies. And I thought how stupid and people didn't understand why the Europeans weren't behind us and stuff. And I was like, Well, the reason is because they just had a horrible war about 40 years ago, and they know what it's like. And, you know, had been over 100 years since we'd, Americans had had a war in our own backyards. And so we were sort of removed from that experience. And I thought, Okay, what would it be like if we actually had to fight a war on our own turf? What would it be like for people to really have to go through that to fight a guerrilla war like they did in World War Two in Europe. And that was really the genesis for the for the screenplay, where the idea came from. And so I sort of incorporated that into what was going on at the time with the with the Russians, and all in it came out the way it did.
Kevin Reynolds 19:10 You know, John melius took it and
Alex Ferrari 19:12 Yeah
Kevin Reynolds 19:13 I think he made it a little more jingoist at I don't think he did he did he made it more jingoistic than what I intended it to be what what I wrote was more like Lord of the Flies and john was trying to make more of a political statement. And I just wanted to show this is what war does to people. This is what it would do to you if it happened here. Anyway.
Alex Ferrari 19:35 Yes, john. John has that does? Does that to say the least? God bless him, man. God bless him. Now when you when you were doing your first feature, Fandango, you hired a little unknown actor at that time. I think Kevin something or other I don't even know if he's doing anything anymore. Mr. Koster, Kevin Costner, you hired him and he did he actually is become, in your career? a collaborator for a lot of a lot of big films that you worked on? How What? How was it working with, like putting Fandango together? And because I remember watching Fandango, there's such a youthful energy. It's created by young filmmakers acted by young filmmakers. And you can sense that energy there. How was it like putting that whole thing together? And also having big daddy Spielberg? Like, in the shadows, must have been terrifying?
Kevin Reynolds 20:33 No, it was an interesting experience. I mean, it was just kind of handed to me, okay, go make this movie. And, but I knew it had to be an expanded version of proof. So I had to write a movie backwards, you know, I had to write, how do I take this one sequence and make an entire feature around it.
And, I mean, unfortunately, I think Stephen expected it to be more like Animal House, which is sort of the quality, a little bit of proof. But I guess at the time, I wanted to do something a little more soulful. And like so many filmmakers, you know, it was that sort of my first film was a sort of quintessential coming of age story that everybody has to get out of their system before they can move on to something else. And that's sort of where I found myself as I sat down to write it. And I think it was more soulful, which I don't think was a bad thing. But I think it was not necessarily what some people expected it to be.
And as for Costner, I actually met him when I was in film school, because when I was making proof, he came in and read for the part in the student film, he was. He was the stage manager at Raleigh studios. In Hollywood. He was in floors, trying to get gigs as an actor. And he came in and read for the part, and I really liked him. But I guess somebody else, as you can see, improved, but I called him and I said, Look, man, I'm sorry, I thought you were great. I really liked you. But I don't know why. You know, I've cast this other guy. Then he was, you know, very gracious and thanked me and all. And then, like, a couple years later, when we were actually making Fandango, casting it, he came in again to read for it. And we remembered each other and we talked and, you know, I remember him very well. And he sat down to read for the party gardener Barnes and literally within the first two lines out of his mouth, I know he was the guy. And
Alex Ferrari 22:32 Did he switch? Did he switch something from two years earlier? How, what is what what made no difference was
Kevin Reynolds 22:37 I don't know what it was, it was just I don't know, if the in those couple of years, you know, he'd he'd done a couple of smaller parts. He was, you know, cut in the Big Chill and stuff. But he was in that if
Alex Ferrari 22:47 I remember correctly, he was a dancing extra and night shift. Ron Howard's night shift
Kevin Reynolds 22:52 He was he was he was, but there was just, you know, he had he had the quality of the character. And I think it was more we had the quality of the character in the expanded version, because Gardner Barnes and Fandango is a much more complete character with a much deeper arc than the character in the short. And maybe that's what it was, was that the character himself had changed a lot in those two years, then he just, he just fit him. That's why I asked him.
Alex Ferrari 23:22 Now, when you're going into a film, what is your pre production process? I mean, do you do you rehearse with actors? Because I know some directors love long rehearsals, other directors wanted on the day, how do you how do you prepare? What's your pre production process?
Kevin Reynolds 23:37 You know, it's evolved over the years. And for me, personally, I, when I started out, I would have rehearsals and stuff. And a lot of times, it's awkward, because people show up, they don't know each other, and I and ultimately, I, I've come to realize it for me, the most valuable thing about rehearsal is not so much learning the lines and stuff, it's really getting to know the other people. It's, it's creating a rapport, and a bit of a shorthand before you show up on the set. So you're just not like showing up with strangers. It's really getting to know each other. You know, yeah, you'll sit there and you talk about the characters and you explore them, and you'll do scenes and stuff. But I think it's ludicrous to expect that whatever, whatever performance level you achieved in rehearsal is going to be the same thing you get two months later when you're actually doing it on the floor, because things evolve. And that to me is the greatest benefit of rehearsal is simply getting to know the actors and letting them get to know you.
You know, so that your there's a familiarity before you start to do it. It's easier to talk to each other. And that that's what I like about now. There are some actors that that really liked to rehearse to a tee. I respect that, you know, that's what they need. every actor needs something different and others hate rehearsal. They don't want to do it, they just want to show up on the day. And I get that too. And I think personally, that's kind of where I am, I prefer to just discuss the characters, maybe try some things. But don't say, Okay, that's it, that tape right there the way you played it. That's it. That's how we're going to do three months from now. That's BS.
And I've also learned and performance wise, on the set, when you're doing a scene, I don't like to rehearse too much before you shoot. I like to block it. So everybody kind of knows where you're supposed to go. And you kind of get a loose rhythm. And I encourage people, when you're rehearsing on the day of the shoot, to not get up to performance level, I just say, let's just loosely block this and figure out where you're going to be. Because invariably, what I find is you burn out. And you can spend a couple hours rehearsing something and they'll give you their good stuff, and then it comes time to shoot, and they've already given it to you. So I like to hold it back as much as possible until you actually roll cameras, I prefer to rehearse on camera, because you never know. You know, again, every actor is different. Some actors show up and they're just exploding, you know, they've been thinking about it all night, they're ready to go. And within the first three or four take, they've given you the best stuff. So if you rehearse, you know, six, eight times, you've lost it. There are other actors that show up, and they need a lot of coffee, because they're not even remotely there. And it may take them, the better part of the day to get up to a full performance level, they need to do it a lot. And so as a director, you got to recognize these differences in them. And so the guy that's right there from the get go, that's what you want to cover first, you know, and the guy is gonna build into it, you want him off camera for half the day until you turn around, start to shoot him. It's just, you know, it just comes from experience. It's just you learn these things about working with people, and you have to respect everybody's got their own way. And so you're trying to make all those different ways jive for what you're trying to do.
Alex Ferrari 27:12 It's kind of like what the what that the director told you in film school, this is the most difficult job in the world. He was right.
Kevin Reynolds 27:21 He was that, you know, and it's like, another thing I tell people, I think 50% of directing is just having the willingness to subject yourself to the process. Because it's not everybody can do it. And and to get through it, you have to want to do it. You really have to want to go through that process. I mean, you know, like, it's not like combat or anything like that something horrible. But it's strenuous. It's very strenuous. And you kind of have to put yourself in that place and be willing to run the gauntlet, you know, to get there because it is if you do it right, I think there's some people that just sit back and just let it happen and don't put themselves into it too much. But I don't I don't think I think the product is affected by that.
Alex Ferrari 28:11 It's not It's not for the weak hearted, you know, or weak willed to say the least. There's so many directors I've known over the years that I've got my start in post production. So I had directors sitting on my couch while I edited and color graded and did all this stuff. And you see it you see the personalities you see like this guy and going to make it this was the and I've had many directors who got that one shot. They got their Fandango, they got their Fandango, and then they're like, you know what, I'm gonna go back to being a lawyer. This is not for me. And then there's other ones that like, are just just in the mud, and you're like, he's gonna make it or she's gonna she's gonna keep going.
Kevin Reynolds 28:50 It's Yeah, it's crazy. It's you have to be a little crazy. You really do I don't know why this story. I can digress from Oh
Alex Ferrari 28:59 Sure, sure.
Kevin Reynolds 29:00 All right. The guy who was my producer of Fandango, Tim Zimmerman, great guy, and Tim had been an ad for a long time. He worked on a lot of shows. And I won't say which show but he worked on this one in the South Pacific. That was just a disaster. You know, delaurentis thing. And, you know, the chaos was crazy. And he had actors that we show up in Dino's office and rip your clothes off and scream at him and stuff. And anyway, the director was just losing it. And and he said one day, you know, the call was like seven or something. Everybody shows up, they can't find the director. They're on an island. They're on an island. And they wait and they wait and wait, can't find him. And Tim finally just starts walking around the island. It's not that big. He's looking for the guy. He's not in his quarters or whatever. Finally, he walks around the island like half an hour and on the far side of the island, he finally finds this guy sitting in the sand. Looking through binoculars, it crashed.
Alex Ferrari 29:57 He lost it. He lost that just quickly
Kevin Reynolds 29:59 He lost it. Gone.
Alex Ferrari 30:01 Wow, that's like a Terry Gilliam film. Like, that's something I would see.
Kevin Reynolds 30:08 You just yeah, you know, you don't want to get to that place, you have to be stupid enough to think you're right. And stupid enough to think I'm gonna power through this, I can do this, you know? And that, you know if other people can do it, I can do it. Because if you start to doubt yourself, you're dead. You wrong. But if you doubt yourself, you're dead.
Alex Ferrari 30:32 Absolutely, I couldn't have said it better myself. So as as you're going through your career. Your next film, I think, was the beast, if I remember correctly, which I remember recommending heavily at my video store, because it no one had heard of it. And I don't think Jason Patric was a very big star at that point. He might have just been starting out. But I was like, wow, this is really great. And I got a lot of good, good, good comment cards. For my recommendation of the beast, I remember. And as this is going on, Kevin, the other Kevin Kevin Costner, he's he's kind of growing as a star, fairly high, to the point where it comes to Dances with Wolves, which cements him as probably one of the biggest movie stars at the time. You also did a little part in Dances with Wolves. Can you tell me what you did? Or what you helped with? I mean, from what I from my understand.
Kevin Reynolds 31:34 Yeah, I went out there to the Dakotas for a few weeks and did some second
Alex Ferrari 31:41 Best second unit director, I'm gonna say
Kevin Reynolds 31:46 We knew each other and, and we talk a lot. You know, Kevin, and I spend a lot of time together. And so he asked me to come out, and I did it and tried to help him out. And there were rumors. You know, at the time that I was directing the
Alex Ferrari 32:02 Of course, there's always stuff. No,
Kevin Reynolds 32:04 That wasn't just wasn't true. But yeah, I worked on the buffalo hunt some other stuff.
Alex Ferrari 32:09 That's Yeah, that was awesome. And so that that kind of cemented him is a very big movie star. And then right afterwards, I think it was the next year or so. Were you guys already working on Robin Hood? During dances after dances? That's when Robin Hood showed up?
Kevin Reynolds 32:22 Yeah. I was a This was after the beast. And I'd been on and off a couple of different things that, you know, didn't happen. And I was actually on another picture at Universal, we were in prep. And they they'd asked me to come, they'd asked me to leave another project, come do that. And I was reluctant, because they said, Look, this is a $40 million picture, which at the time was a lot of money. Huge. They went up now it's not 40 man. I said, Look, it's a $40 million movie. And they said, Look, don't worry about we're making this movie. Come do it anyway. So I did a bale and I started doing prep. On the other show. We said production option, everything. And after about two months, finally the budget came in $39 million. And they go we're not doing that. And I'm like, I told you it was gonna be $40 million. Yeah, well, you got to bring it down to 30. Because we're not doing I was furious, because I've wasted all this time. Literally the next day I get this phone call. They said hey, you want to do Robin Hood? Little did I know. There was a there were a couple of competing projects.
Alex Ferrari 33:27 Yes.
Kevin Reynolds 33:28 John McTiernan. So I said, Sure. If you're making it, yes. Because I was, I was so angry. So I did I, I bail. And the next thing is that I'm out of here. And so I went on to this other route. And the next day after I got onto that, I get this call from Kevin and and he goes, can I talk to you? And I said, Sure. Just come on over. So he comes over to my new office and he walks in he goes, did you know I was on this other Robin Hood with McTiernan? No. He said, Are you serious? He goes, yeah. He said, You know, I was, we were talking about doing this other thing. And I said, I have no idea. And he was like, Oh, God, okay. Well, whatever. Long story short, the producer who was very widely realized costume was doing this. So he asked me to do the Robin Hood. And so Kevin bale on the other one came on to that Robin Hood. That's how it came to be.
Alex Ferrari 34:24 Yeah, there was a cup. I remember. It's it always happens. Like there's the asteroid movies where there's competing asteroid movies, Robin Hood's in the volcano.
Kevin Reynolds 34:32 Yeah, it's crazy. And you know, it's happened a couple of times to me. And in fact, just recently, I don't know why I had this idea. God, you know, an interesting subject for a film would be Edddie Murphy. And so I read a couple of books on him and stuff. I was like, this would be an interesting story. Literally. The next day I read this thing and in the trays somebody was doing an Eddie Murphy series based on my
Alex Ferrari 34:58 So I had been decimated. On on the show as well, who's the writer of, of Robin Hood for everybody in the audience. And Penn is just one of the sweetest human beings I've ever met. I absolutely adore Penn. And, and I told him the same story I'm going to tell you, I was working on the weekends and movie theater, I was working weekdays at a video store, working weekends, movie theater. I was definitely a glutton for punishment. And that year 91 comes out Robin Hood, me and my friend went to go see it sat in the front row, because it was packed, he couldn't get anything else, looking up at it, got out, walked right back and watched it again. It was it was such we were so enthralled with that movie, and it was so much fun. And it was it was just like such a fun movie. And I have to ask you, like you're taking on a character like Robin Hood, which is a beloved character, you know, obviously, the Errol Flynn thing from years ago. And he's just such a well known character. And I know from what I understood it, I've done research on that movie years ago, Kevin did not want to wear tights. He's like, I'm not wearing tights in this movie. So you can forget that. How do you approach a character such an iconic character? And did you feel any just pressure by tackling that kind of character?
Kevin Reynolds 36:19 Yeah. Yes. You know, I just plunged into that, because I wanted to make a picture, like I said, had been on and off. So a couple things. And finally, I was just like, okay, is this going Is this for real? Um, I'm in. And, you know, I read the script. And I liked the idea of it. I wanted to do some things with it. And the one of the problems was, how do we make this not, you know, look ridiculous, like,
Alex Ferrari 36:44 Right.
Kevin Reynolds 36:48 And I'll tell you a couple other things. But first off, when we were two weeks from shooting, and the wardrobe guy, you know, is working on it, and he wouldn't show me anything. I'm like, see, I gotta see what you're thinking about. And so he's Okay, come tomorrow afternoon, I'll have it laid out. So I go into the warehouse, where he's working. And he lays all this stuff on the table. And it's literally like, you know, green tights and the little scalp thing like, little green half with no
Alex Ferrari 37:19 Oh my god. So is there a flood? Is there a flood?
Kevin Reynolds 37:21 Yeah. And I'm like, this is a joke, right? Where's the real stuff? And I could tell from the look on his face. No, this was it. This was the wardrobe. \
Alex Ferrari 37:31 Oh, my God.
Kevin Reynolds 37:32 I was horrified. So I fired him.
Alex Ferrari 37:37 I as you should, sir.
Kevin Reynolds 37:40 And I hired John Bloomfield. And John literal, he came in with less than two weeks, and created an amazing wardrobe. John was a genius. And he saved, you know, he came in, he did something that was classy. You know, that really worked. And I mean, hats off to john, because we were in dire straits. You know, he did that. On the movie itself. And I don't know what it was about it. But you know, as I as I was reading it, something didn't quite, it wasn't enough. And as I started to explore the characters, and I was trying to find something that would get me excited. I realized I didn't want to take things too seriously, in places, and consequently, the sheriff evolved the way that he did.
And it was great, because when I met when I met Alan Rickman, we were both on the same page, that he you know, he didn't want to play him as some mustache twirling villain. He wanted to do something different to and we just completely clicked in that regard. And I think that, you know, that was a lot of what made the picture work was was Alan, you know, and that was a lot of fun. That was a lot of fun.
Alex Ferrari 39:07 Yeah, he he was fresh off of that other independent film called Die Hard. He played another amazing villain. So he started that, you know, you went right from I don't know if he did anything in between, but then Diehard and then Sheriff for Nottingham, it's just like, me, he steals, I don't say steals every scene, but he just eats up. Every scene he's in.
Kevin Reynolds 39:32 It was fun. It was fun. Because I you know, I'd say what if you do this and you go, okay, but then what if I do this, you know, and it just kept building on itself. And it was just, it was it was fortuitous.
Alex Ferrari 39:46 Without question. And then you have Morgan Freeman who's not a slouch. It was it was it was it was a good it was a good time. It was good times. Now that film claims comes out and explodes. I mean, it was a shame huge huge hit that summer, if I remember correctly, was miss a massive, massive hit. And and really, you know Kevin is on us, you know, Dances with Wolves, Robin Hood. And then and then I think the next picture with your next picture Waterworld right after that.
Kevin Reynolds 40:19 No, Rapa Nui
Alex Ferrari 40:21 That's what I'm sorry. I thought that was after. Yes, so rep rapid Nui. So yeah, after the success of Robin Hood, you went, What attracted you to that story? Because that's such an It was so beautiful. It's such a, I've never even heard of that story. It was such a
Kevin Reynolds 40:34 Nobody, nobody had and that that was what attracted me to it was just I'd done some reading about Easter Island. And you know what happened there so long ago. And from what they understand, you know, they think that Polynesians landed there about fifth century AD, and they think there were probably four cases they were fleeing political strife. There, they came, probably a couple dozen people landed there. They were led by a guy named hotu Matilda. And over the centuries, they populated the island. And it's the most isolated island and on the face of the earth, populated Island.
It's 2300 miles west of Chile, 1500 miles east of Pitcairn Island. And they live there, you know, for centuries without any contact that we know of from anywhere else. So I was fascinated by the fact that what they know is that it wasn't even discovered again until 1722 by Dutch navigator on Easter Sunday, and that's where the name came from Easter Island. But what they found at the time, was this just barren place, no trees, and all these toppled statues, and these people living in caves in the ground, just almost like animals.
And I'm like, how did that happen? You know, nobody could understand. But what they what they came to realize historically from the oral history was these descendants of Houma to populate the island they divided ultimately into two different clans, the long ears are kind of nobility in the short ears who were the commoners. And they basically degraded the island, environmental and they cut all the trees down. They overfished it.
Unknown Speaker 42:18 They overpopulated it, they think at one time, there were 20,000 people on this little eight by 11 Mile Island.
Alex Ferrari 42:24 Oh, wow.
Kevin Reynolds 42:25 And they ultimately fell into internecine warfare. And, you know, the showrunners killed most of the lawyers. There's this one guy named aurania, who's supposed to be the descendant of the lawyers who survived. And they had this huge statue building called nobody can understand really, why did they build them so big they were statue building throughout Polynesia, but nobody can understand why they did them so big there. But they cut down all these trees and, and cut all these statues out of these craters and roll them around the island and erected in their hundreds of each little community. They're called Mui. So my story, what I wanted to do was try to explore why did they do this? And what is it about human beings that no matter where we are on the planet, there's something inherent in us, that makes us destroy ourselves environmentally
Alex Ferrari 43:19 Rght? You take this isolated group of humanity without any outside influence, and they did it to themselves. So that's kind of what I wanted to explore in the story.
Kevin Reynolds 43:30 You know, and coming off Robin Hood, being hot and thinking I could do anything and you know, I can overcome any obstacle. I will go to Easter Island and shoot this. It's the hardest movie I've ever made.
Alex Ferrari 43:45 Wait a minute, let's rapanui is the hardest movie.
Kevin Reynolds 43:49 Yeah
Alex Ferrari 43:50 That's your filmography? Sir. That is a statement and a half.
Kevin Reynolds 43:54 Yeah.
Alex Ferrari 43:56 Really? Yeah. Cuz I was because I saw it. I was like, I wonder if they shot this. I mean, it looks like they shot this on Easter Island. And I'm like, you, you you were crazy enough to go shoot this on these?
Kevin Reynolds 44:06 Yeah, we were. There's so many ways I won't bore you with it. But it was just it was nuts.
Alex Ferrari 44:12 It was it was insane. And, and, but it's beautiful. And it has that, that that Kevin Reynolds kind of style to it, that you carry throughout your filmography. And I think it's and I remember it coming out. And it did. I mean, obviously, it was it didn't do well. Nothing. It didn't it was it wasn't necessarily as successful as Robin Hood. That's a fair statement.
Kevin Reynolds 44:37 Yes.
Alex Ferrari 44:40 Yeah, I mean, really, it just like was it wasn't because of lack of, you know, because you don't have any major stars and I mean, Jason, Jason, Jason Scott Lee was just off of Dragon right. It was before dragon .
Kevin Reynolds 44:53 Yeah. And he saw Mirallas and yeah, it was it, you know, cast relative unknowns. But I mean, you know, we had to do it that way to try to cast people look like up a New Orleans.
And another part of the problem is the vast majority of public has no idea what happened on Easter Island. I mean, we would show it at screenings. And people would ask, Well, where is this place? And like, what what century was this? And, you know, they had no concept of what we were trying to portray. It could have been on Mars, for all they knew they didn't they just didn't grasp it at all, then I don't think I think in a lot of ways, the picture just simply didn't work. You know, it didn't translate from from screenplay to screen we had hoped it would.
It's the most, in some ways, I think it was the island itself, because that's the most haunted place I've ever been to.
Alex Ferrari 45:46 Really.
Kevin Reynolds 45:47 Yeah, it's almost like the island didn't want us to tell the story. It was. I know, it sounds ridiculous.
Alex Ferrari 45:54 No, no, I get you. I get you.
Kevin Reynolds 45:55 It's a creepy place. I mean, God knows what happened in that island.
Alex Ferrari 45:59 I mean, God knows what kind of I mean
Kevin Reynolds 46:02 A lot of bad things. A lot of really bad. You can just feel there's a malevolence there that I've never felt anywhere else. And
Alex Ferrari 46:11 I'll tell you know, I actually, when I went to New York the last year, as if it hadn't been to New York in probably a decade, I went to to ground zero. And when I was literally walking onto Ground Zero, you could just feel I mean, I don't want to get hokey hokey pokey on everybody here, but you felt you felt something, there's definitely a heaviness there. So I can imagine. That's kind of like the only thing I can equate it to.
Kevin Reynolds 46:43 Or you have to you have to realize these people are isolated. They had no concept about what was out there. To me. It was like, our concept about where we are in space, because they had to wonder what's out there. They've been so isolated for 100 years, they had no idea what was in the rest of the world. You know, and so they they conjured up these notions themselves and this religion that they had. And I remember one day there was a guy who was a word with Jacques Cousteau, and he lived there on Adelaide Marietta, Rapa Nui, and girl Monday, he was taking me around on a tour, we went up to one end of it called the pinkie peninsula. And I'll place it like an open archeological site. But we we just pulled off the road near where we'd been shooting recently. And he said to me, I want to show you something we walk over and he just lifts this rock off the ground, there's a hole about this big. He says, Come on. So he gets a lamp, and we just crawl down in this hole, probably about 15 feet down. And I'm like, where are we going, and it's just so tight. And finally, we get down there to the bottom and crawl into this chamber that opens up and He shines his light. And there are 20 human skeletons in there.
And it's like this family place where people had buried their dead, you know, for centuries, you know, and the islanders know, is here, but you're not even aware that it's like everywhere. And
Alex Ferrari 48:04 Because there's nowhere else to go, like you're not shipping this off somewhere, nowhere else to go.
Kevin Reynolds 48:09 And I remember the first time I went, I mean, well before shooting a couple years before, just explore the place and there were no rules. And you could just walk all over it. I mean, there's, you walk up to the ahoo, which are the platforms that the mo is set on, and you look down inside, and there'd be human bones and stuff. And there are no paved roads. So we hired a jeep and we're driving around, we hired the Jeep, you know, from the guy and and he said, What are you gonna bring it back and I go tomorrow? He goes, Okay, we'll just park it there and leave the keys in it. And I'm like, Well, what if somebody steals it? Because where are they gonna take it? Like, it's good point.
Alex Ferrari 48:51 What is it eight miles by 10 miles?
Kevin Reynolds 48:52 Yeah, exactly.
Alex Ferrari 48:55 That's hilarious.
Kevin Reynolds 48:56 Yeah. So we were driving around the island off road, come to this amazing ahoo look inside and it's just, it's stunning. You can walk up in there all these human bones and being the asshole that I was I took this little piece of bone.
Alex Ferrari 49:11 Ohh
Kevin Reynolds 49:13 Yeah. It's like,
Alex Ferrari 49:15 it's like, it's like The Brady Bunch. It's like the Brady Bunch. It's like the Brady Bunch episode when they took the totem. And now all the bad luck starts.
Kevin Reynolds 49:24 We get over to the other side of the gun later that day, and we come over this rise, and it's you know, it's like windy and stuff. We're the only people there's nobody around us. And we come over and we're trying to get to this other giant ahoo. And, you know, it's amazing. But as soon as we come over this hill and down the hill, everything goes still. There's no sound. All the insects stop the wind stops. You can see the ocean and it's like a millpond. It's completely caught as just like creepy. We get out we're walking around and I'm looking around and saw who and out the corner of my eyes. I look up and I see something like a finger something dropped down behind this. Ah, who am I? What was that? And I walk around behind it. There's nothing there. Was it a dog? What was it but just chill just went up my spine. So I said, My buddy that I'm with Mikey, my agent Mike and I said, Let's get out of here. So we get back in the jeep and we drive away. And as we go back over the hill, all the sound starts again, the wind comes up, the insects start.
We get back to town and this little place that we're staying that night, the hotel, you know, it's after dinner, and we're talking to the lady that runs the place and describing our day. And I tell her about this, you know what had happened? And she goes, when I finish, take anything.
Alex Ferrari 50:46 Did you take anything?
Kevin Reynolds 50:49 I said, Yeah, she goes, put it back.
And she explained to me that every month, they would get packages from all over the world sent by people who'd taken things it said, I took this rock or I took this bone and ever since I did terrible things have been happening to me. And I know it's because I took this and the Polynesians had this thing called mana, which is this power that exists in things and they believe in it. And I thought it was just BS. This is why it's the most haunted place I've ever been to. So yeah, I put it back.
Alex Ferrari 51:26 So it was literally The Brady Bunch episode where they took the total
Kevin Reynolds 51:32 but I I must.
Alex Ferrari 51:35 Yeah, they had it was a lot It was Hawaii. They took a totem and and then they start all this bad stuff started. Wow, I'd heard of stories like that. In Hawaii then like you take a rock and you anchor the the Hawaiian gods. Yeah, there too.
Kevin Reynolds 51:52 Yeah. Yeah
Alex Ferrari 51:53 It's really wow. I'm glad I didn't take any rocks when I was in Hawaii. So So after Rapa Nui the you know, because of the massive success of rapanui. They decide to give you one of the most expensive because Hollywood. Hollywood knows what they're doing. Apparently they're like, you know this? No, I'm joking. But, but you you you get on to Waterworld. And how did that whole project come together? Was that Kevin leading the charge? Julie the charge? How did that whole thing fit together?
Kevin Reynolds 52:28 Well, Kevin and I weren't getting long after Robin Hood I don't want to get into it, but more. And so somebody sent me the script, man. And I really liked it. And it was Larry Gordon, who at the time was the head of Fox and he asked me to come in and talk to him. And I did and said there and I was telling me I really like this. You know, I think it's a really cool script is Peter Rader script. Yeah. And Larry as well, there's a huge movie star that's really interested in it to really wants to do this. I'm like, Oh, yeah, who's that? And he goes, Kevin Costner. I'm like, I don't want to do that. And anyway, long story short, Larry gets back together again. And we agreed to do it. And that was
Alex Ferrari 53:20 The beginning.
Kevin Reynolds 53:20 There were stories. You know
Alex Ferrari 53:23 No. I know. I mean, we everyone's heard the stories of, you know, the legendary stories of Waterworld. And I've had Peter on the show as well. So I heard a lot of a lot of stuff from his point of view. He was like, Alex, I was on set for two or three days. I don't know, you know, however long he was a week or two or whatever. He goes, I just got to sit and watch some of the stuff. But again, just like Easter Island, like, hey, let's go shoot on Easter Island. You said hey, let's go shoot this in the ocean. Which I get it makes sense. But I guess you underestimated the power of nature. And, and everything. How was that? Like being in the middle of that storm? Literally and figuratively?
Kevin Reynolds 54:02 Yeah, it's, uh, you know, when I first decided to, again, you're still in that mode. As you know, young filmmaker, like I can overcome anything you throw at me, I'll figure it out, and I'll make it work. But I called Steven Spielberg when I decided I want to do this. And I asked him, I said, Look, there's a project Waterworld. It's all set on the ocean. And, you know, you did Jaws, and do I do I really want to do this. And he goes, you may use that I would never work on the water again. Okay. And, you know, I didn't heed his advice. And I went and saw Sid sheinberg, who was the head of universal did the show. And I'm talking to him and I'm like, you know, we're talking about the budget and all this stuff. I go said, you know, we're gonna be responsible stuff, but, you know, I was talking to Steven and Steven tells me that the original schedule on Jaws was five days. And they ended up shooting 155 days. Instead just sit there for a second. Yes. I don't remember the schedule, but I do know they went 100% over budget.
Alex Ferrari 55:20 Wow.
Kevin Reynolds 55:23 Okay, is that I, you know, I hope you remember that he goes, Oh, I do. And they were they were aware of the, you know, the danger, dangers of what could happen shooting on the water. And the thing that annoys me about people, you know, criticize movies and stuff is a you know, there are a lot of people felt like, we were just being profligate that we just went out there. And we were just, you know, all sitting around eating bonbons and drinking, you know, pina coladas. And we weren't, it was, it was very tough, you know, yes, we were, you know, very well taken care of, but it was a very, very difficult picture. But anybody that shoots on the water like that is going to encounter it. And consequently, you know, 25 years later, that's why people do CGI. I don't know if that people ever do something like that, again, because so much of what we did was in camera, it was nice. And you just don't appreciate the difficulty. It's just stuff you take for granted where, you know, you set up a shot, you got a camera boat, you've got somebody on a boat in front of you, and then you've got background loads, you got a horizon behind because you're always having to shoot so that you've got a clean horizon, to maintain the notion that, you know, there's no land. And so we pick the west coast of the Big Island of Hawaii, where there was like 160 degree view out to open water, relatively little traffic. That's what we chose to shoot. But when you set up a shot that looks very simple in the in the film, like I was just describing, you don't realize their currents. And so your camera, and your subject boat here in the background, they're all drifting differently. So you can't hold a frame. So ever to try to move things back into frame just to hold the frame, ultimately, ever times where if the currents really bad, you can't turn a sheep towards land, you always have to shoot out toward the water. And sometimes the sun would be low, and it's looking, right, you're looking right into the sun. So you have to find all these variations for how you can get around that. There were times where we'd have to send divers down, attach a line to the boat or trying to shoot, anchor it to the bottom on a pulley where they could move it and pull it to try to maintain some control over the boat that was in front of camera.
And so when you see it on film, you go big deal. Yeah, it's a boat. And there's some background behind it. You don't realize what it took to do something that would be relatively simple on land to do it on water like that. And every day was like that every day.
Alex Ferrari 57:59 And and everything you just described can be done in about five or 10 minutes. It doesn't take a long time to send the divers down, lock in the boat. It control you know, it just what when when you're talking about Steven and Jaws, I mean, he had one boat and a mechanical shark. You had like a floating city. And it seemed to me I know, it wasn't hundreds, but it seemed like you know, 20 3040 support vehicles, whether it be you know, land, water skis or boats, or that it was it was what Peter said, it's Mad Max on the water. It's that
Kevin Reynolds 58:34 We had a Navy department that did nothing but run boats. I mean, if you think about it, we had this a toll was anchored about a mile offshore outside of a harbor called Kawhia. Literally, The Big Foot floating a tunnel and there were multiple lines from that went down to the bottom was about 100 feet deep and they anchored it on the bottom they had to otherwise it would drift away. And it would rotate on those lines. But when you go out there when you're doing a big scene, like a battle scene where you've got hundreds of extras, and you've got special effects and stuff, you don't realize, okay, you've got a whole barge is nothing but porta potties, you know. And so you get up in the morning, you have to run all those people through wardrobe, you have to feed them. You have to put them on boats and ferry them out to the a toll get them in position for whatever shots you're doing. And then once you shoot for a little bit, it's lunchtime. And so then you have to ferry all people back into shore to feed them and then go back out for the afternoon. And that's it. It's just incredibly cumbersome.
Alex Ferrari 59:42 I I'm just baffled that the studio agreed to go down this road. I mean, if everybody knew like there's no way you can make a day. Did you ever make a day? Like it's it's out of your control?
Kevin Reynolds 59:56 A few times? Yeah. Original I think our original schedule was I think we finally agreed on it, like 120 days, and I think we should, you know, almost shot 170 days.
Alex Ferrari 1:00:07 Jesus, that's actually impressive,
Kevin Reynolds 1:00:11 though, I mean, you know, I defy anybody else to, you know, overcome it, dude, do what I think we did. It was it was tough, like I said, and it's all most of it's in camera. Yes, there are effects in the show, but most of what you see was shot in camera.
Alex Ferrari 1:00:29 And and heard if I remember correctly, there was a was there a hurricane that destroyed a whole bunch of sets or something happened like that?
Kevin Reynolds 1:00:37 You know, that was that was the rumor that the whole a toll sunk? That's true. Yes, we had, we had we had an earthquake off the coast of Japan once one morning, we had to like, move everybody in shore up high, because we didn't know if there's gonna be a tsunami or not. It will happen. They have we not lost another half day just on that. But the thing that did sink, there's one sequence where the mariner approach is just it looks like this big. Oh, I don't know. It's like a big mushroom sticking up out of the water. It's a trading post. And the smokers and Dennis Hopper have arrived there and they've killed everybody. And they've rigged their arms to wave and stuff. And we shot that that sank. That sank. That was not the a tool.
Alex Ferrari 1:01:22 Okay, so alright, so I remember at that time, that the press and the town, crucified the movie before a frame of it was even shown to people, you were being. I mean, it was and I remember being I was I was there. I remember just from a distance looking at it and going, Oh, my god, they're pounding on poor Kevin Reynolds on this like, so how? How do you direct? Because I'm assuming you were aware of this? Yeah. So how do you direct? How do you deal with that kind of stress.
Kevin Reynolds 1:02:07 It's, it's very difficult. It's not it's my least favorite filmmaking, because there's so many forces working on you, you're you're you really can't be flexible. Because when you have a shooting day that costs $300,000. You know, you can't change your mind about things is really, you have to kind of stick with the plan. Even if you get on set, you know, that doesn't work that well. But if we change that we lose a half a day, and we can't afford to do that again. So you can't be flexible. And you've got all these people looking over your shoulder. You know, and I understand because it's a hell of a lot of money. But it's it's not a fun way to work. It's just not a fun way to where I'll tell you one story that kind of summed up the whole press thing for me because we had you know guys who show up speedboats and try to combine shoot it and stuff and all these inflammatory things and exaggerations. One day, the we were shooting a sequence outside the harbor on the catamaran and I had a camera, the camera guys up on the mast at about 40 feet up to guys and it was trying to do a shot, we were looking down and on the activity down below and then tilt up to the horizon.
And we're anchored offshore in the swell comes up and the catamaran starts kind of going like this. And I look over and the mast is kind of bending a little bit like that. And so I turned to the boat guy, boat master and said Bruno, is this safe? He looks at but it goes now.
Okay, well, we have to wrap out of this and go inside because we can't have these two guys fall off here. So we did we had to wrap, go back inside the harbor, shoot something else lose another half day. Okay, the next day, our publicist from the States, some journalists who goes, Okay. I've had this confirmed by two sources. So don't lie to me. I want you to tell me about the two camera guys that were killed in the accident yesterday. Because what? You don't lie to us, we know this happen and you guys are covering up. So tell us the truth. We know you lost two people in an accident strategies. It didn't happen. That was the kind of stuff that went on.
Alex Ferrari 1:04:25 Oh my god, I can't look. Directing a film is arguably one of the most stressful things a human being can do. And that again, war and all of that I understand when the creative arts. absolutely one of the most difficult things you can do. Right? Working in Hollywood in the studio system is probably one of the most difficult things you can do working with 150 $175 million budget on your shoulders. And the stress of that is one of the most difficult things you can do and then having to deal with that kind of lunacy. I mean, you must have it's kind of the presidency like when you see one come in, and then four years later, eight years later, they've aged 50 years, I have to imagine that the habits with the end of this process
Kevin Reynolds 1:05:09 Yes, it does, and it changes you, you know, it really changes you, and your outlook. And you know, after that, I don't really like those kind of movies, honest. They're not fun. They're just not fun.
Alex Ferrari 1:05:24 And the making of them, or the kind of story or
Kevin Reynolds 1:05:27 The storytelling aspect of this story is interesting, but the making of them is so difficult, and it's not as organic, I prefer smaller pictures where you have more control. You can be more flexible than then big ones like that. I mean, you still see it that I mean, all these big superhero movies and stuff. They're very much like that, you know, but it's all CG, CG, CG, but it's still it's it's hundreds of millions of dollars in his filmmaking by committee. And it's, it's just not that organic. Some people thrive on that, and they like it. I'm not one of those people. I prefer to do smaller things where you're, it's more your domain.
Alex Ferrari 1:06:07 So the movie comes out. And everyone's like, it's the biggest bomb in history and all this stuff, which was such, you know, for to use a term of our of our time fake news. Because it ended up actually doing well. And then I was talking to Peter. And he said, it's one of the most valuable IPS and profitable IPS in the entire catalogue of Universal Studios. Right. So do you feel a little vindicated?
Kevin Reynolds 1:06:37 Yeah, I mean, I look at some of their pictures that were much people want, they lost a lot more money than Waterworld. It's just once you sort of get tainted with Oh, yeah. You know, you can't lose that. It's very difficult. I mean, Hollywood. It's more interesting that something's controversial, and it's going bad. And to hear that everything's going well, was boring. It's more interesting. Of course, it's more interesting. And so they thrive on that. And somebody told me the first time they screened a picture in New York or something for critics, and they walked out. And this one critic was so disappointed. He goes, Well, it didn't suck. And that was his comment.
Alex Ferrari 1:07:20 Right? They wanted it to be the worst.
Kevin Reynolds 1:07:23 Nope, play. Horrible.
Alex Ferrari 1:07:26 And I'm disappointed that it was not as bad as I thought it would be. I actually, I watched it when I watched it. I watched it again recently. It's fun. It's a fun. It's just a fun film. It's just a good, good adventure film. Dennis Hopper, again, chews up the scenery.
Kevin Reynolds 1:07:50 You're being kind I mean, there are a lot of problems with the movie.
Alex Ferrari 1:07:53 I know. But you got it. I know I look I under I understand like it, but it's enjoy. I look, I enjoyed it. It is an enjoyable film. And it's just a good fun adventure. adventure film, but it is, is one of those films that is historically, you know, tainted, but the truth. And that's what I tried to do even in my little way, with Peters interview and not with yours. I'm like, no, it's arguably one of the most profitable IPS that they have. And I think they're working. I know, you can't say yea or nay. But I heard they're working on trying to do something new with it. Because it's a, it's a great IP.
Kevin Reynolds 1:08:27 I, you know, I don't know if they're gonna do their picture or not, you know, they made a fortune off the ride
Alex Ferrari 1:08:32 Oh, we're
Kevin Reynolds 1:08:34 You know it's been gone for 25 years now.
Alex Ferrari 1:08:36 It's still it's still there. I've seen that show probably three, four or five times and maybe more in my in my life, and it's still going.
Now, I have to ask you, because you've had both you've had extreme highs in this business, and you've had extreme lows. How do you deal with that as a creative professional, like I said, like, I mean, because it's being being an artist, and being a creative in general is tough. But, you know, I'm just curious, how do you do with it?
Kevin Reynolds 1:09:07 You know, I think you just have to have something inside you that makes you want to continue to tell stories so badly that, as I said before, that you're willing to subject yourself to the process. And I don't know why maybe it's a masochistic thing. You know, they're probably certainly better ways to make a living, but it's a compulsion I guess
Alex Ferrari 1:09:31 I equated to an illness is once you get bitten by that bug, I always say that I've said this a million times. It's like if you're getting if you get bitten by the bug, you are infected, and then we'll never go away, it will flare up. And it can go dormant for 30 years because I got I got guys reaching out to me who are in their 60s, and like like I just retired, but I really want to do is direct, so I and it's like and I'm like how do I start? You know, I've been a doctor all my life.
But I've really just want to tell stories. And like if they got bitten, it was suppressed for 30 odd years and now it's it's flared up. It never, ever goes away. And it's it's fascinating that that whole thing. Now one of the one of the films in your filmography that I think it's not as you know, not as known is 187, I absolutely loved 187. And when I was directing some, some of my directing work, I actually would bring in my DPS, and we would watch 187 because some of the stuff that you did in that, with the color grading choices you did for the time, was pretty this is, was this pre I think this was pre DI right
Kevin Reynolds 1:10:42 There.
Alex Ferrari 1:10:43 It was pre di so there was no, no digital color grading. So you were doing stuff in camera. So it was really remarkable. How did you what what guided you in your color grading choices in that film? Because it's pretty, pretty intense?
Kevin Reynolds 1:10:57 Well, I mean, coming off of Waterworld, as I said, which was not fun, I wanted to do something that was more experimental, where we could just really take a lot of chance, you know, creatively. And God bless him. I mean, it was Mel Gibson's company icon that came to me with the project. And I have to say, you know, males had all kinds of problems. So but he was, he was, maybe the greatest producer I've ever worked with. He was he could not have been more supportive, and nicer.
You know, and though in the way he let me make that picture, he was wonderful. And so we were able to take a lot of chances. And I brought in a young guy named Erickson core his DP. And we just went to town we we looked at every scene is an opportunity to do something different, you know, from color grading, we use a lot of swing and tilt lenses, and the frame or some stuffs out of focus and some stuff sharp. There's a sequence where in a classroom we wanted to, we wanted to show one of the characters like on a TV, like on a TV.
Alex Ferrari 1:12:12 Yeah, TV, a TV monitor, yeah
Kevin Reynolds 1:12:14 TV monitor. So Erickson went out and bought a fisher price toy camera. And that's what we shot it with, and then took that image and translated it to film. And so we just did a lot of stuff like that. And it was really exciting. And it was really invigorating. And it just kind of rekindled. You know, a lot of creative energy that I'd lost doing. Waterworld. That picture didn't do that didn't do any business, but I'm very proud of it. Sam Jackson was great.
Alex Ferrari 1:12:44 That was his first starring role, like you've source like, you know, he was the leading character in it like it was out.
Kevin Reynolds 1:12:51 I mean, he done Pulp Fiction already.
Alex Ferrari 1:12:53 But that but it wasn't. He was it wasn't like, it wasn't the Sam Jackson show. Like it was he was the star of that movie. And I and I like it because I mean, you know, Sam has sort of a persona that everybody knows him for. And he really sort of went against character.
Yeah
Kevin Reynolds 1:13:10 That role. And he wanted to do it. He came to us, he wanted to do it. And I'm like, great. And he was he was wonderful to work with. He's a total Pro.
Alex Ferrari 1:13:20 Now. There was that one scene, by the way in in 187. That deer Deer Hunter seen. How do you How did you approach that? Because that's intense. intense. I just re watched it the other day. Such an intense he?
Kevin Reynolds 1:13:35 Yeah.
Alex Ferrari 1:13:36 How do you how do you like directing a scene like that? Because both those actors have both Sam and I forgot. Clifton. Yeah, he, so there's just just two juggernauts in acting. How do you direct a scene like that?
Kevin Reynolds 1:13:51 You know, is they I still remember the day we shot that there was so much energy on set. I mean, everybody was amped up for that scene, really amped up, and everybody, I mean, not just the actors, but all the support personnel, cameras, everybody and everybody, it was great, because you could just see everybody kind of sitting back delicately and watching it unfold and trying to be supportive, you know, and their own way me for makeup effects everything. Everybody was really into it. You know, a lot of times when you shoot sometimes people don't care, they just kind of show up do their job, like everybody's really into that scene. And you feel it, you feel it. And it really imbued the moment with that energy. And, and that's why you do pictures is for those kind of occasions, you know, kind of energy to experience that.
Alex Ferrari 1:14:39 That's awesome. And there was one film in your filmography that I absolutely just adore, which is Count of Monte Cristo. I absolutely adore Count of Monte we just my wife and I just watched it I think probably like two or three months ago, we watch it every few years because it's such a wonderfully I mean, obviously the story, Dumas did okay. If you I mean, he's alright he's alright. But um, I'm gonna give you all the credit. No. But that's such a fantastic story. And the way that that the actors and Richard Harris and Jim Caviezel and Luis Guzman, I mean, just so brilliantly done. What about the revenge story? In not only in cinema, but in literature is so satisfying? Why do we love watching that? Because obviously, I think, Count of Monte Cristo is the ultimate, just wonderfully constructed revenge story. What is it about? About it that destroys, but everybody has things that go on in their lives that they'd like revenge for. And so they can sort of vicariously appreciate someone who managed to get it. And that's why I think people empathize so much with characters who've been so wronged. Turn the tables and on the people that have done it to them, because I think everybody feels like I've been wronged in some way. And I would love to do that, too. And I think that's why it's so appealing to an audience. That was a tough, I mean, Jay Walpert, the guy that did the adaptation did a really fine job, he changed a lot of things. And there are a lot of people that complain, because they say, well, this film is not the book. It's not.
Kevin Reynolds 1:16:21 My attitude is it can't be I mean that the book is 1500 pages long. It's like, how long did it take you to read the book? And they'll go, Well, it took me a week. Yeah, well, we didn't have a week to tell the story. So we had two hours. So necessarily, you have to compress and combine and do things to try to keep the spirit of it.
You know, it's just a necessity. And so, because of that, you're going to leave a lot of people's favorite moments out.
Alex Ferrari 1:16:49 Of course
Kevin Reynolds 1:16:50 Everybody's different area what you love this out. You love that? Yes, I'm sorry. But we had to pick and choose because, as I said, we only had two hours of screenplays, 100 pages, 120 pages, it's not 1500 pages. So you know of necessity. That's what happens when you take a novel and turn it into into a film.
Alex Ferrari 1:17:09 And then you also did the Hatfields and McCoys which you reunited with Mr. Costner? Well, first of all, I loved it. I saw it on the History Channel, and it came out and I was just like, this is awesome. How, how was it just working with an old friend, I guess, back, you know, back.
Kevin Reynolds 1:17:28 It was great. I mean, you know, we had a shorthand, you know, we knew each other could communicate in a way that you can't always communicate with other people just because, you know, the past and the relationship and all but that was avios McCoy's, ever. That was a special production. It was a great cast.
Oh, Bill Paxton. Oh, God, he was amazing
Bill Park. And I have to thank you know, Fern champion, who was our casting director and the Hubbard's from Hubbard casting in London, you know, put together fabulous cast, everybody was good. And that was what was great. And, and it was another one of those shows that you hoped for. I mean, we shot Romanian Romanian crew, and they were so eager, and so wanted to prove themselves. And they were just wonderful. And, and it was, everybody really got into it wanted it to do well. And it was a real team.
And, you know, I'll always remember that one time, like, yeah
Alex Ferrari 1:18:27 And, and, and one thing to be said, I mean, obviously, you've had your ups and downs with Kevin, over the years. When I saw you guys get back together again, for Hatfields and McCoys. I was like, okay, they, they've, they've, you know, they're they're working together again. Is there something to be said about, about just getting older, and just, you know, figuring things out? Because there's things like, I'm, I'm, I'm definitely I mean, I'm, I'm older, but I'm not, you know, I'm not older, older. Let's say, it depends what you say, I'm getting into the weeds here. My daughter's think I'm ancient. So there you go. They're like, Daddy, when Titanic came out, it was 97 was that before you were born? I'm like, Oh, Jesus Christ. I wish it was. I was born in it.
But, um, but how just as a director, the things you do as a young director, you age your filmography changes. There's things that got me excited in my 20s, as far as storytelling is concerned, that I wouldn't even think of doing today because it's just not the kind of stories I want to tell. How can you talk a little bit about that whole process and then just also working? Again, like we talked a little bit about it, but just like, understanding the maturity of an old friend, regardless of the ups and downs of relationships.
Kevin Reynolds 1:19:42 Yeah, you evolve, you know, I mean, like everybody does, as you get older, you kind of mellow and a lot of ways and things as you said that were extremely important to you 30 years ago aren't so important now and you have more perspective and that enables you to approach things, I think in a more objective way. The downside is, I think there's a lot to be said, when you're young of being kind of young and stupid and enthusiastic and blindly going into things and finding stuff out of your own stupidity, you lose that as you get older, you know, you do, you do kind of rely on experience more. And so it's a balance, it's a balance of trying to realize, okay, it's important to remember the prior experiences and to not repeat mistakes, but at the same time, be opento new experiences, and new ways of doing things to just keep yourself fresh. Otherwise, you get ossified, because God knows things change, especially in the film business. I mean, it is so not what it what I started today, it's very different. completely different. It's always evolved. I mean, look, you know, 100 years ago, we're doing silent pictures. It's it's always evolved. I'm a little disturbed by what it's become now. I don't know. And I'm sure I sound like a Keizer when I'm talking about, you know, wow, when I was doing it, you know, it was much more exciting. And we didn't do it that way. And it changes, it changes.
Alex Ferrari 1:21:21 Yeah, no question. And it's changing now, by by the month be like, every, every month, there's something new happening because of what happened with code, what's happening with COVID, and all that stuff. But up until the 80s, really, the business hadn't changed a whole lot. Like it was pretty, the 90s. It was the 80s, VHS showed up when VHS showed up that started to change. It did, it did. But I mean, you know, even the 90s, the studios were healthy. We were still shooting on film, to the agencies and all had not really changed that much. People saw it as a golden time and anything was possible. There's a lot of fear. Now, there's a lot of fear, because things are not as lucrative as they once were. Sadly, I think theatrical cinema is dying. It's, I mean, you can, you can pretend that it's not and, and, you know, God bless Chris Nolan and hisyou know, and his adherence to film as a medium, I mean, real film, but it's going away, you know, it, the digital age is here. And you have to, you have to be flexible enough to realize that technology changes, and this is the way it's going to be in the future. And the actual is just it's dying, there will still be showcased pictures out there. But in terms of the way the vast majority of public consumes their content, that's forever changed. And it's it's going, it's streaming inside the home. That's where it's going now. And I don't think we're going back.
Now I'm going to ask you a few questions. Ask all my guests. What is the one thing you wish you could tell your younger self?
Kevin Reynolds 1:23:08 25 words or less?
Alex Ferrari 1:23:10 even got 26?
Kevin Reynolds 1:23:14 That's a tough one. Boy. Be more flexible, be more flexible?
Alex Ferrari 1:23:25 That's Yeah, I always I always said, My answer is always be patient, because it's not gonna it's not gonna happen as fast as you think it's gonna happen. You You did you actually didn't move as fast as you thought was good.
Kevin Reynolds 1:23:39 Yeah, I mean, it's, look, I've had a great ride. And, you know, nobody does it perfectly. And yes, there are things I wish I'd done differently. As I'm sure everybody does, but I've been incredibly fortunate, you know, to get to do the things that I've been allowed to do. Because there's so many people that would like to be in my shoes and have the same opportunities and they're not able to. So I'm extremely grateful for all it's been handed to me.
Alex Ferrari 1:24:10 Now, what advice would you give a filmmaker trying to break into the business today?
Kevin Reynolds 1:24:18 It's tougher than ever. It's the toughest job in the world. Like Demetri said, but don't let that stop you. Because you have to take the attitude. If somebody says, look, only 1% of people make it in the business succeed. You have to approach it and believe that you're that 1%.
Alex Ferrari 1:24:39 It's insanity. It's insane.
Kevin Reynolds 1:24:41 You may not be and the odds are against you, you know, but you have to believe you're the guy that's gonna make it because if you don't, you won't. It will get ground up and you may get beaten down. But if you're gonna try to do it, and you want to go down that path, you have an even have a chance at making it. You have to have that attitude.
Alex Ferrari 1:25:05 Can you can you own this? I want to say one thing I always tell two people and I want to see what you think about it. I totally junk filmmakers coming up all the time I go, look, I want to prepare you for the realities of the business. I have a lot of shrapnel, different shrapnel than you but I have shrapnel from 25 years of being in the business. You're going to get punched in the face. I don't care who you are. Everybody, anybody you look up to in the business, from Spielberg to Nolan to Fincher to Kubrick, everybody got punched in the face, not once.
Kevin Reynolds 1:25:41 Over, and over and over.
Alex Ferrari 1:25:43 And I want you to be prepared for the punch. Because a lot of times I see these young filmmakers who have these stars in their eyes, you know it we all I was that you had those stars, and I mean, to a certain extent as well. And they don't see the punch coming. And when the punch comes, sometimes it knocks them out for good. Like I said earlier, I want them to be able to take that punch. And then maybe as you get older, I think you would agree with me. Occasionally you'd learn how to duck.
Kevin Reynolds 1:26:08 You do you get smarter. But it all goes back to as I said, originally, you have to be willing to subject yourself to the process.
Alex Ferrari 1:26:16 That's great.
Kevin Reynolds 1:26:16 That's what I have to do. And you have to realize, as you said, you're going to get punched repeatedly. And you'll get up and you'll get blindsided because you won't be paying attention because you're focused on what you're trying to do. And you'll get hit again and you'll get knocked down. But you have to get up. And that's the career that you've chosen. If you're going to do this. It's a battle royale every day, the entire career. And you have to ask yourself, Am I willing to do that? Is it worth it to me? Do I really want to tell stories badly enough to subject myself to that? And if the answer is Yeah, then do it. If you if you waver and if you're not sure, don't go down that road because you'll be destroyed.
Alex Ferrari 1:27:00 And last question, and arguably the most difficult one, three of your favorite films of all time. Well, three that come to your mind right now. Three that comes to your mind right now.
Kevin Reynolds 1:27:11 Right now? I always say this because the one I remember had the most profound effect on me originally was Dr. Zhivago. I've always loved I've always loved David Lane, but I still remember that how that picture made me feel. And I guess maybe the second one is probably 2001.
And then the next two that immediately come to mind probably Butch Cassidy Sundance Kid and the I'll say the fourth one. Badlands Terrence Malick.
Alex Ferrari 1:27:40 Yes. Badlands those are good good good choices sir. Good, good propped up my head.
Kevin Reynolds 1:27:47 There's lots of them. But those those four, I can go down a Kubrick rabbit hole with you anytime I saw Jesus. But Kevin, thank you so much for doing this. It's been an absolute pleasure and honor talking to you and talking shop with you. So thank you for, for enriching my life with your films over the course of your career and for everything you do my friend, thank you so much.
Thank you so much for inviting me. It's It's fun to sit down and relive these things with someone that can understand. Thank you, my friend.
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Bond, James Bond. Mr. Bond is responsible for one of the most successful film franchises in Hollywood history. Here’s a collection of every James Bond screenplay available on-line. If you find any of his missing screenplays please leave the link int he comment section.
Well, I put out an episode back in 2019 putting my dream list of guests out into the universe, and in the past four months, I’ve been humbled to have some amazing filmmakers and screenwriters on the show. Incredibly one of those dream guests has made his way on the show today.
We are joined by indie film icon and Oscar® nominated writer/director Richard Linklater. Richard was one of the filmmakers who helped to launch the independent film movement that we know today with his classic 1991 indie film Slacker. As a bonus, we will not only dive into the extraordinary career of Richard Linklater but also that of collaborator and longtime friend writer/director Katie Cokinos, the filmmaker behind the film I Dream Too Much.
If this is your introduction to Linklater and his work, here are a few highlights you must know; Linklater helped launch the 90s indie film renaissance with his film Slacker.
The producer, director has juggled the TV, film, short-film, and documentary genres seamlessly over his career – typically focusing in fine detail on generational rites and mores with rare compassion and understanding while definitively capturing the 20-something culture of his era through a series of nuanced, illuminating ensemble pieces which introduced any number of talented young actors into the Hollywood ecosystem.
One of the talents to emerge from this era is the Texas native, Matthew McConaughey in Linklater’s third movie and VHS smash hit, Dazed and Confused. Based on Linklater’s years at Huntsville High School and the people he encountered there, the film shadows the adventures of high school and junior high students on the last day of school in May 1976.
Throughout his career, Richard has chosen to tell stories about the human condition, while many times making us laugh and cry at the same time. I found an immense philosophical undercurrent to most of his life’s work. From The Before Trilogy to Boyhood, his films tackle topics in an honest, raw, and deeper way that is not normally seen in filmmaking.
Many of the actors who work with Richard call him the “Zen Director” on set. His philosophy can be felt throughout his work. He often tells a long and transformative coming-of-age story over years, if not decades, something that is unique to him.
His Oscar® nominated film Boyhood is a groundbreaking story of growing up as seen through the eyes of a child named Mason (a breakthrough performance by Ellar Coltrane), who literally grows up on screen before our eyes. Starring Ethan Hawke and Patricia Arquette as Mason’s parents and newcomer Lorelei Linklater as his sister Samantha, BOYHOOD charts the rocky terrain of childhood like no other film has before.
Snapshots of adolescence from road trips and family dinners to birthdays and graduations and all the moments in between becoming transcendent, set to a soundtrack spanning the years from Coldplay’s Yellow to Arcade Fire’s Deep Blue. BOYHOOD is both a nostalgic time capsule of the recent past and an ode to growing up and parenting. It’s impossible to watch Mason and his family without thinking about our own journey.
Now the other remarkable filmmaker in this conversation is Katie Cokinos. She has made over ten short films and in 2000 wrote, directed, and acted in the feature film, Portrait of a Girl as a Young Cat which premiered at SXSW. Katie produced Eagle Pennell’s film, Heart Full of Soul (1990); was a publicist for Richard Linklater’s Slacker, (1990). She was the Managing Director of the Austin Film Society, 1990-95.
Her latest film is the coming of age story I Dream Too Much, co-produced by Richard. Here’s a bit about the film: Presents a day in the life in Austin, Texas among its social outcasts and misfits, predominantly the twenty-something set, using a series of linear vignettes. These characters, who in some manner just don’t fit into the establishment norms, move seamlessly from one scene to the next, randomly coming and going into one another’s lives. Highlights include a UFO buff who adamantly insists that the U.S. has been on the moon since the 1950s, a woman who produces a glass slide purportedly of Madonna’s pap smear, and an old anarchist who sympathetically shares his philosophy of life with a robber.
So much was covered in this EPIC two hours conversation. I need to stop here and let you dive in.
Enjoy my conversation with Richard Linklater and Katie Cokinos.
Alex Ferrari 0:12 I like to welcome to the show Richard Linklater and Katie Cokinos. How you guys doing? Thank you so much for being on the show, guys.
Richard Linklater 0:19 Right. Good to be with you, Alex.
Katie Cokinos 0:21 Yeah, so much fun.
Alex Ferrari 0:23 So, um, you know, I'm excited to talk to both of you about your latest project. I dream too much of the project you guys did together. I know. It's been around for a few minutes. So it's not the latest latest project. But we're going to talk about that that project a little bit. But I wanted to kind of talk about not only Rick's filmmaking career and what he's done, but Katie, how you how you've, you know, come up as a director as well and, and all these kind of other conversations about Phyllis philosophy and other things we're going to get into, but before we get started, because you actually, so because Katie, you were with Rick, when you guys were working. I mean, Rick, you were making slacker and Katie was around at that same time. Correct.
Richard Linklater 1:06 I first met Katie, I kind of was finishing it. Okay, you know, just right at the you with me those first premieres and yeah. So,
Alex Ferrari 1:19 you've been friends ever since?
Richard Linklater 1:23 Yes, yes.
Alex Ferrari 1:25 So let me ask you a question, Rick. What for so many, so many filmmakers coming up, especially have that magical time, which is the early 90s, which is the kind of like the birth of independent film as we know it today. You know, I mean, yes, there was, you know, prior to slacker, obviously, there was a month, you know, Easy Rider and things like that. But the whole Sundance, you know, for lack of a better term, kind of like the lottery ticket, kind of filmmakers like the Kevin Smith's and Roberts and those kinds of things. You were one of the first to come out in the early 90s. A lot of them look back at you. Like I just had Ed on the Edward burns on the show the other day, and he was talking about it was slacker I saw this the breakdown of the budget of slacker and it gave me hope that like, Oh, I could do it. There's someone else who did it. So you're like you broke the four minute mile, essentially, for a lot of filmmakers of that generation?
Richard Linklater 2:21 Yeah, you know, I think that perpetuates itself. Because I'm sitting there in 1989. Making my first I've made one feature before and a bunch of shorts, but I'm like, okay, I can do a no budget feature. But at that point, I'm thinking, you know, I was coming up there was an 80s paradigm to it wasn't Sundance based. I think that's really difference between the generations. It didn't have Sundance as a launch. It was just indie films. You know, john Sayles, right? wing wings Chan is missing. There were all these like 20 Eagle panels at Texas filmmaker Katie workwith. And I knew she has to make the low budget backyard. No budget personal movie that was a really kind of a archetype in indie filmmaking. He still is, you know, that's what you can do. You make what you know. And it's kind of interesting. And that's what I felt I was doing but at the time, I guess it was sort of a unique to Austin, that did mostly like horror films and things like that, right? Wasn't unique to cinema. You know, surely Clark had done it. And he had been happening in the 60s, the 50s. You know, there's a nice history of indie cinema. It just didn't really it was gaining more traction as a business as a, it had an outlet. There were these in a theater, there was a lot of festivals springing up, you know, cable and, you know, VHS tape, you know, there was suddenly there was an economy around it. So, in the 60s when you made your indie film, you showed it at a few film, the few film festivals, you played it at. You know, Jonas Mekas played in New York and they showed at Berkeley and a few it was a real scrounge around thing, you know, Cassavetes would hire a bunch of young, hungry, future distributors and like, Hey, we're going to distribute this film. We're going to get it out there, you know. So, it was just by the time I felt I came along and got lucky enough to get one of those distributors. The path was sort of a hit it already been. It was out there. I was just like a I was a 90s version of that.
Alex Ferrari 4:34 Right. And, and you um, yeah. But when you submitted slacker to Sundance, it got rejected right the first time.
Richard Linklater 4:41 Yeah. The first year 1990 number that Katie because we got Yeah, and it wasn't quite finished, you know, when I got it there, but I was still disappointed, but you know, came back the next year. In the meantime, I've had a very interesting year with it. You know, showed it in Berlin in the marketplace to four people.
Alex Ferrari 5:05 Stop right there. How did that How did that work out?
Katie Cokinos 5:09 That's a good festival. But when you
Richard Linklater 5:12 Oh, yeah,
Katie Cokinos 5:13 when you guys real breaking festival because it was we were standing outside watching all these people going in and we're like they're coming to see slacker like yes, it's sold out like here's,
Richard Linklater 5:26 we're in Seattle in summer of 1990. Right. So what does it look like? It looks like everybody in the film. Yeah, everybody in line looked like it was this perfect match. Yeah, you're preaching to the choir. I know. It was a first really great response that really was I had actually premiered it in Dallas, there was a thing called the USA Film Festival.
Alex Ferrari 5:51 Yeah.
Richard Linklater 5:52 And yeah, I got some really dismiss it. I remember waking up that morning to some really dismissive like, and this might have been a good short, but it's a bunch of awesome people not doing anything. You know, I read these to my first reviews ever, for something I worked so hard on it was just these total like poor reviews from Dallas. And then I think God, why even go to the screening? I was so like, oh, they're gonna hate it. I'm in Dallas, you know?
Katie Cokinos 6:19 It was Great,
Richard Linklater 6:20 but we did have a very good audience.
Katie Cokinos 6:23 They totally got it.
Richard Linklater 6:25 Yeah, so that was encouraging.
Katie Cokinos 6:27 But Dennis Hopper was there and it was a really fun festival. You're like that kit? Carson? Yeah.
Richard Linklater 6:36 Yeah, because meeting Sam are cough. Remember, they were featuring the great Spanner.
Katie Cokinos 6:42 terrible name. Mars needs women. Now that's a million dollar title. $30,000 movie?
Richard Linklater 6:50 Yeah he was like, kid. Yeah, I met it was just cool. All these you start meeting people. You're just so enthralled with meeting film history. sammarco Yeah, when he got to film here, well, what's your name? What's the title? a slacker. Oh, bad title. Bad title. You gotta have you like, how to stop a wild bikini. Now. That's a title. That's selling foreign. million dollar title $30,000 movie.
Alex Ferrari 7:19 And obviously, you've and obviously, you've been stuffing bikinis ever since in your career. And both of you guys ever since that's all you women.
Richard Linklater 7:29 Yeah, I remember watching all those movies on TV growing up. And you're meeting these guys behind it. He's like, we would have the poster made before we even did the movie just to see if it worked. If we could sell it. I go. There's a genius there studio should do that. You know, I've made enough movies where they go. We don't know how to market this is like, well, maybe you should. We should have done all that before. You know, if no one wants to see a movie called this that looks like this. And I mean, I'm glad I got to make it but you don't have yourself to blame. Do it. Sam arc cop did.
Katie Cokinos 8:00 Roger Corman. Yeah. Oh,
Alex Ferrari 8:02 I mean, he's the he's the king without question. Alright, so So who was? So for both of you? Who was the filmmaker? That was that catalyst that's that you said, Oh, I can make that because, you know, you can study Stanley Kubrick all day, and you can study, you could study the greats and the Masters. And we could all be depressed at 23 because we're not making Citizen Kane which is the the passage of the rites of passage, every filmmaker. Except so who was that one filmmaker, that you Rick and you Katie said like, you know what? They did it. I think I can make something.
Richard Linklater 8:34 Katie, why don't you jump in? Because we're probably on different timelines there as far as when we start thinking I can do that.
Katie Cokinos 8:43 Well. Okay, so growing up in the 70s and watching the Hollywood renaissance of cinema. I never thought I could do it. Because all I saw were guys names. And I would stay till the credits, just dying to see one. One female one Polly Platt, who was the production designer, one Elaine Mae, who was the screenwriter, you know, I'm never, I never thought I could do it. And it wasn't until college where my professors were turning me on to, you know, Agnes BARDA, Maya Darrin Shirley Clark. shawntel Aquaman. And so for me, it wasn't a budget thing. It was more of a I'm a woman. You know, and it looks like the boys club to me. You know, Howard hops john for john Houston. You know, and I, so, so do what I even have to say. would would that even be cinematic because I don't want to shoot Anybody, and I don't want to, you know, there's so many things I don't want. Don't want to do. It's like reading a book koski and going, Yeah, that's great. But, um, but I'm not an alcoholic, you know, or jack Kerouac going but I, you know, uh, you know, dude just says those things. So it took me a while, um, you know, but I do think I remember clearly checking I'm renting last night at the Alamo and taking it over to my sister's in Houston because I didn't even have a TV and watching it and thinking, wow, this was made for $30,000 because it was very well known Eagle got that film, from the National Endowment for the Arts grant. And it was all in one location. So that's when I started kind of thinking, Okay, you know, it's just First off, it's going to take some time to, to, to experience things that I even want to talk about, or even want to tell the story about. But then, you know, then then it you know, you just you get inspired, I'm in stages, I think, you know, so and then you see bad movies. I mean, Verner Hertzog is always telling, you know, don't see, you know,
Alex Ferrari 11:29 masterpieces.
Katie Cokinos 11:31 Yeah, don't see, you know, Chinatown.
Alex Ferrari 11:35 That's gonna depress you,
Richard Linklater 11:36 it's gonna depress you
Katie Cokinos 11:38 watch a movie. That's, that's, that's terrible. That's how you want to make to make movies. But anyway,
Richard Linklater 11:45 that kind of gives you confidence. At some point, when I say this. I just talked to a big class of grad students two days ago at University of Texas, via, you know, zoom, of course, but the thing we ended up talking about was confidence. You know, just how do you get the confidence to lead a group? How do you get the confidence to think you're worthy of a film? I mean, I didn't have that same restriction in a certain way that you had Katie, like, you don't see names that make you think you're wanted. It's just the way you would as a black or brown or Asian person. He's like, that's a white space. You know, right. I didn't, even though I'm a white male. I saw it as a white trash kid from East Texas. I saw it like, that's not open to people like me who come from where I come from, we're not gonna make a film. Why would they don't let us do anything? We're just stuck, but I didn't feel I also, the more I got into it, I thought, well, you know, you can work hard. And I don't know, I just I definitely felt outsider II but not as much as what you were describing, you know, I mean, I but I think as a white male, you, you definitely have no, there's some doors you can potentially get to that. You know, I don't know. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, both. It's closed off of arts always feels open. I mean, everyone feels that way.
Katie Cokinos 13:21 It's Yeah. Olympus. Are you kidding? me growing up in Beaumont, Texas, you know, you'd walk into the theater, sit down and watch, you know, reds. I mean, you just like, it's hard to process.
Richard Linklater 13:38 question though, Alex. To me. It was a slow formation of I went from feeling I was a writer to being a playwright. And then at age summer, when I was 20. I started watching movies seriously for the first time and very systematically. And I realized I was discovering like, oh, film, it's kind of the way my brain was working. And that was right that I remember that. Summer I watched return this to caucus seven, the john Sayles film, and it was there were these indie film, American indie films were happening. And I was watching a lot of foreign films. And it was a great time I was at these, you know, repertory theaters in Houston and college. You know, I was just seeing four films a day. So it started to dawn on me that Oh, yeah, you you know, maybe just by camera and you see enough indie films, but I'd studied it for several years and it's funny, I'll reference the same movie, Katie talked about last night, the Alamo by Eagle p&l which there's been a restoration of in the last few years you know, I showed that film in Paris recently and I showed it and public film around the world sometimes when they asked me to show some films from Texas. I'll show like tender mercies and last night Alamo to show like, some a variety of Texas films. But yeah, ego pinel got a $25,000 I think $30,000 NEA grant. He had made one feature before that I hadn't even seen at the time. But it was playing at the Houston Film Festival. I remember going to that screening and they showed it in 16 millimeter. And I was I was inspired just because it looked like a lot of other indie films I saw but he had done it in Houston, the town I happen to be working out of. It's just starting to feel closer.
Katie Cokinos 15:25 Yeah,
Richard Linklater 15:26 yes. But also like, oh, okay,
Katie Cokinos 15:28 At this point like closer.
Unknown Speaker 15:29 Yeah, cuz Yeah, we have Hollywood is a mythical Yeah. So far with the films from there. And they are the special movie star, hollywood people who make them and all we do is consume them, you know? So there's really two levels of falling in love with them. Cinema as a future filmmaker. There's films that just make you love cinema, and that is your Kubrick's and your you know, all those. It's like, Oh, my God, cinema is the greatest art form. Ever invent? You know, it's just like, it's everything. But it's intimidating in its essence. But don't you think kind of films that you see, and you go, Oh, that's a little closer to home. That's how my brain works. Maybe I could do that. Yeah, cuz
Alex Ferrari 16:15 you can't you can't watch 2001 and go, Oh, yeah. Yeah, I can do that. Like, that's not a conversation version of that. Yeah. Like it's hard. For Tarkovsky.
Katie Cokinos 16:26 It's very important, though. And this is, this is, um, it's important that we do have the gods sitting on Mount Olympus because it's something that you need to work towards. And I think, yeah, that's where the Film Society came in. So, so great. Well, I was interviewed recently from somebody from Texas Monthly asking me about the early days, the thumb society, or just working Film Society. And it just it hit me in this talk that, yeah, you're working on slacker. But you're also like, showing some of the greatest films ever made. And it's this nice, you know, um, what you want it where you're headed, where what you'd like to be, but but what you're dealing with, you know, with your own personal vision, your own, you know, what you want to do with cinema?
Alex Ferrari 17:27 Yes. I was talking to Katie OFF AIR a little while ago. And when I asked it kind of asked this question, she said that she hadn't seen anybody that, you know, no, no female names or anything like that. And for me, it was I'm a Latino filmmaker from Miami. So I didn't see any like, there was no Latino filmmakers. So for me, it was Robert, like he was the first one. Robert was the first one that I saw. And in 91, I was working at a video store in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, and mariachi showed up and I went to the theater See it? And I was just like, and it was right next to a picnic. It was right next to a poster of hardboiled. I'll never forget, a hard boy, john woo with the with the baby and the shock, and I'm like, What is that? So that was a double feature that day. That was a fantastic feature. But it was the first time that I saw someone that was and that he came up with this book. And I studied all that kind of stuff. But it was the first time I was inspired to like, you know what? And I'm not I'm not, by the way by any stretch, alone, and that he inspired multiple filmmakers. But for me, specifically, as a Latino filmmaker, it was someone that really, really drew me I think we all need that we all need to see ourselves. Yeah, do it at that level. Because, you know, you can look at you know, there's a lot of Latino filmmakers out there, maybe who look at Guillermo del Toro. And they're like, Oh, that's great. But he's at a, at a whole other level. It's nice to see someone be able to make something like, Oh, I just need 30,000 bucks, and maybe I can make something.
Katie Cokinos 18:55 yeah.
Richard Linklater 18:56 Yeah. Well, it's inspiring on a couple levels. I mean, it's interesting with Robert, you know, he was like, a year or so too, after me, even though he's, he's younger. And I met him around that time, but really, with Robert all it's that last name, Rodriguez Roberts, a kid from San Antonio. He didn't really speak Spanish when he made that film, like so many of that generation. He picked it up, you know, but it's just like, yeah, anyone can do this. And then you see those female names. It's like, and then the black filmmaker, the Gordon Parks, you know, we all just, it's so funny. It's like politics. You know, just we were all look, there's identity and identification. And yeah,
Katie Cokinos 19:33 And yeah identification
Richard Linklater 19:35 feel open. I think that's what's so exciting about the world right now is tumultuous as it is. And I think barriers are really down for everybody. I mean, they're they've either come down or they're coming down. I don't think anybody feels that they're technically not. Well, it's still culturally they know it's difficult, but I just think it's an exciting time. When I don't know, I just think the access, is there. The I don't know. I think it's,
Alex Ferrari 20:04 I think
Katie Cokinos 20:06 I love the Cocteau quote, about film, he says it will only become an art form when it's as readily available as a piece of paper and a pen. You know, when people can you know, and, and, and on another level, which he didn't also speak, but was that the representation is there to that you feel like what my story is? Yeah. Telling and, and it's, you know, and I can do this I think it's only it's, it's, it's gonna Yeah, I think it's really exciting. I think you're right.
Richard Linklater 20:42 It's finally come about it was always a theoretical, you know, Francis koplow there's that little girl in Cincinnati is going to make a film. Well, exactly when he first started saying that's like how No one's going to give her 30 camera. But that thing from decades ago really has happened. You know, there's no barriers,
Katie Cokinos 21:01 but he also said it was the last vestiges of dictatorship. Don't making
Alex Ferrari 21:09 it interesting.
Katie Cokinos 21:12 He said that he said that while making the Apocalypse Now.
Alex Ferrari 21:15 He wasn't in a good headspace at that point. He wasn't in a real good headspace and Apocalypse Now.
Richard Linklater 21:20 Yeah, I hope.
Katie Cokinos 21:22 I don't have a problem with that. That was not a comment.
Richard Linklater 21:26 I just wish in the political sense with the rise of authoritarian thinking everywhere. If it was the last vestiges, I would sign up right now. about it. I'm worried about that spilling outside the arts. only accept? Exactly. Yes. Society not so much.
Alex Ferrari 21:44 Yeah. So um, so you both have made films of coming of age and of youth and, and youth kind of going, just kind of analyzing youth and also not only youth, but specifically with, with you, Rick, that you know, obviously over the passage of time, but I really want to kind of focus on youth because there are a lot of young filmmakers listening to this. And I've got some gray in my hair. Right here my beard. So I've been around the block a little bit, you guys have been as well. There's something that you could only see when you look back at your youth. Why is it and I'd love to hear your perspective. This. Why is it that youth always assumes that the world is there for them? That it is everything is owed to them? And it should have gotten here yesterday? Like, because I remember I remember what I was gumming up like I'm like why am I not in Hollywood already? Like I Why haven't they given me $20 million already? Why is that happening?
Katie Cokinos 22:39 Well, frontal lobe isn't fully formed in their 2425, is that
Alex Ferrari 22:49 that's just science.
Richard Linklater 22:52 Yeah, I tell these film class, you know, that I speak to I said, it's gonna take twice because you know, the world doesn't really reward your passion in the way that you put it out there. It's on its own time schedule, all you can do is try to outwork it, you know, but yeah, it's not, it's going to take twice as long. It's like building a house or something, it's going to take twice as long and cost twice as much. I said, it's gonna, it's gonna require more of you than you think you even have to give. But that's not a bad thing. You know, it's kind of like a long term relationship or something, you know, it's gonna, yeah, there's gonna be a lot of effort you're gonna put in you're not thinking about right now.
Katie Cokinos 23:35 So Alex, are you talking about the characters we created in boyhood, and I dream too much? Are you talking about
Alex Ferrari 23:43 youth general youth in general? Like because you guys have you guys have obviously studied and have delved in those kinds of characters a lot and explored youth and what it means to be young and, and the naivete of being young. And by the way, I wish I had some of my Navy tape back, because you become very jaded as you get older about because you just been around so you just know things. But really great art is done by I mean, slacker. El Mariachi clerks, mean a bunch of you know, young filmmakers who just did she's got to have it like they just went out and did it. Not thinking about how you're going to sell it, where you're going to get your money back. Who's how is this going to, you know, build my career. There's none of that thought. So there is some power in youth. But it's, it's hard to it's like a wild stallion. It's hard to kind of.
Richard Linklater 24:34 It's so interesting to be in the throes of that too. You're a little crazy. I remember the era that I was doing slacker. I mean, my God. I think I was technically crazy in a way you know, you have to be obsessive crazy. you're risking everything. And you're you're kind of at this pitch of and there's there's no guarantees. You're you're risking everything but you're so compelled to Do it and that's what the the arts, it should be doing scary things that you're just compelled to do. And without any thought of what the results will pay,
Katie Cokinos 25:11 you have, you have to bring yourself to the point where you cannot not write out a story. I mean, if going out to the lake and hanging out at the lake or going to the beach sounds so much nicer than sitting home alone and in your room, you know, cultivating and picking at your psyche and trying to create characters in a certain story. I mean, it, it has to be almost, it has to be almost not to sound hyperbolic or hyperbole. You know, it has to be as you breathe, I mean, it's got to be Air, Water shelter, and you must get this story out, or else on a certain level, it just doesn't really make any sense. And having said that, I also recommend short films. Do as many short films as you can, you know, just I, you know, I did? I did. I was inspired by music, I would just create little narratives to songs I did, you know, 32nd films, I did three minute films. I mean, my 10 minute film was like, I was making Berlin Alexander plot.
Alex Ferrari 26:36 Like, yeah,
Katie Cokinos 26:37 yeah, tell us for 10 minutes. And, you know, I just I think it really has to be something, it's got to be steps, I'm very much into steps, you know, you don't skip things, you you value where you're at, and you have to be okay with that, you know, you might go see, you know, so and so's biggest film that just came out. But when you come home, you got to bring it back down to what is it you want to say in the medium of film? And how to how to say it, you know, and I do. I do think short films for me, were always extremely liberating. We showed them in Austin. I mean, raheel had her Short Film Festival, and I would walk out there going, Oh my gosh, you know, I mean, with every, um, you know, Bob Fauci film or, or, you know, Kubrick film, there was a Stan brakhage film that made me feel just as happy because it was an artist, figuring it out, just figuring it out, you know, and just creating your own vision. But,
Alex Ferrari 27:47 but isn't that like the greatest kind of films when you're actually watching a film where you see the artist, figuring it out, like literally, as you're doing it? Like, they didn't really know what they were doing here. They're just kind of like, oh, here, they went over here. And that was, and it's not only with film you could do it with with writing with art and any kind of art in general,
Katie Cokinos 28:05 just figuring it out. I mean, I felt like all of them vendors, early films, he was figuring it out. And they're so beautiful and so spiritual. I mean, I go back to Allison the city kings of the road. I mean, you just, I don't know, that is the nature of cinema. You know, it's a feeling thing. It's not a thing.
Richard Linklater 28:30 For me that feeling to it's a question that the films are asking questions. Yes, they're seeking answers, but they don't have an answer. The absolute goal in making the film is the process of the question that they're trying to answer. It's not like, Okay, I'm gonna make this whole film to deliver you this answer. I already have their quests, you know, their visual quests, and you can feel that, you know, and I, I feel sorry for when that artist suddenly has answers, right? Things start to change a little didacticism and I hope that's not just with age, or, but that is kind of the great thing about youth because you're just talking about youth and cinema. Youth, by definition doesn't really have answers. It's being formed. And that's why I've come back to that over and over again. I mean, here recently, I've made some middle definitely some middle age films, you know, about that stage of life. But I think youth is always very unknown, evocative. We were all young ones. You know, we're all still attached to that young, unformed person who's just figuring out the world, you know, so I've done that a lot of just people searching for their own identities or, you know, figuring out how the world works, you know, that's kind of a, that's kind of a constant, you know,
Alex Ferrari 29:59 well Good,
Katie Cokinos 30:01 I'm sorry, no good. Well, I was just, you know, a quote that really literally hung above my computer while I was writing I dream too much was, you know, when you're at sea stay far from land, you know? Because, like you said, you know, when you're, you're young, it, you have all the, all these questions and, and, you know, and and looking back on this time where Dora is 20 years old graduating college, one life is over and another hasn't formed. I really was trying to do like, a love letter to that time saying, Just don't rush into anything, don't want to know everything just be in that ditch, be it be lost. as uncomfortable as it is. There really is so, so much there, you know, and I I'm really sad when I see kids you know, want want everything to be fixed. And done. You know, the minute they graduate, and they're done. They've got their job. They're all you know. Oh my god, you're just headed for a midlife crisis, you know?
Alex Ferrari 31:19 at 22 at 22 you're gonna have a midlife crisis.
Richard Linklater 31:23 yeah. You see it though all the time. At that age. We all were we just talking about we're all in patient. We think we want tangible Yang's world that because we're passionate about it should be giving us this and yeah, then know what you don't know. You know, I just try to encourage young people I said, it's all about the process. I mean, your whole 20s is going to be just build that foundation under you, you know, read every watch everything and work hard. And you know, but
Katie Cokinos 31:51 both of our characters, I think it's interesting, your character and boyhood and my character, and I drink too much, essentially both turned to the arts. I mean, we're left with him in college with a camera, and Dora is just got up and read a poem. Yeah, he wrote him. And to both of us it was the arts. What created this inner freedom? Yes, is extremely valuable. And I just, I, I, I really can't emphasize it. Yes,
Richard Linklater 32:25 you can make that leap with that I made that I think even as a teenager, I said, Well, I just really wanted my life to be full of literature, and music. And it wasn't even movies yet. It's just the arts thinking, what expression? So once you kind of jump on that path, everything else is just a practical consideration, like, how do I pay my rent? How do I raise money to make a movie that I've picked an expensive medium, I wish I could just write a novel, I could afford that. Or paint, even painting that requires supplies. And you know, that can be expensive to canvases. It feels it when you don't have anything.
Katie Cokinos 33:01 You know, the tension? Yeah, tension, you have to have that tension. And that's what
Richard Linklater 33:11 I've been talking about. lately. I've been talking to Ted class and young people I said, film really is and I made a short film. Katie, did you?
Alex Ferrari 33:20 Yeah, I saw it. I just saw it
Richard Linklater 33:23 Pompidou the 20 Minute.
Alex Ferrari 33:25 Yeah, yeah.
Richard Linklater 33:26 The one with that with the therapist.
Alex Ferrari 33:28 Yeah, I saw I just saw, I just
Richard Linklater 33:31 you saw it.
Alex Ferrari 33:32 I saw it. I watched it. It's amazing. It was I was just sitting there going. This is this is awesome. And I could just tell you here just kind of like it at least the way from what I saw. It's like another day at the office is calling another day at the office or something like it's got Yeah, any the other day the office and watching it. And first of all that conversation with the development execs or that whatever that I'm just sitting there going steaks, you got to lean into. All that stuff was great. But when you went in with the therapist and started talking to the therapist, I truly felt that you were working stuff out like that, at least from my point of view.
Richard Linklater 34:06 It was so interesting at this point in my life, like seriously, that film is like the most personal thing. Imagine what, Katie, I'll give you the assignment, like in the spring of the year before I had, oh, the Pompidou had gotten in touch with me and said, Oh, next Thanksgiving. Yeah. Well, I looked at the calendar. They said, Oh, we want to do a retrospective, a complete retrospective, all your films and everything, but we want to fly you out. I said, would you bring my family over? And I asked him, Well, I have twin daughters to go to Paris next Thanksgiving. They're like, yeah.
Alex Ferrari 34:39 You said that in a short. You said that in the show.
Richard Linklater 34:42 I know. That's what I'm getting. I made a choice in February or no, it was even earlier. It's like it's so far in the future. It'll be a little family vacation to Paris. Okay, I'll do it. Sure. That's kind of how you make your decisions at a certain point in life. And what They said, Oh, when he director does this, you have to make a short about where you are, where you are right now. And I saw some others. And they all did like little documentaries. So I put it off. It's like that term paper, I put it off, put it off, put it off. And then at the last minute, it's like, over that summer, I said, Well, I got to do, I started thinking about it. And I didn't do it. I actually wrote it. I wrote a script about where I really was at that moment, which was kind of in development hell on one project, and, you know, with feedback, that was annoying, my transcendentalist thing and then a Yeah, visit because I had kind of been diagnosed informally for at for ADHD, which once I really got into that it explained a lot of my own explain me to myself to some degree, right. You know, I think filmmaking really is like, being a director is kind of the, it's the territory for like, Okay, let's go on the spectrum, ADHD, Asperger's full blown OCD. You do well, those you can hang out in film, because it's that
Katie Cokinos 36:13 I have ADHD. I you, you are able to sit and focus, like I've ever met.
Richard Linklater 36:24 That's one of the ADHD things is an inch deep. But absolute focus on a very limited amount of things. Like,
Katie Cokinos 36:36 okay, yeah,
Richard Linklater 36:37 that's what I found out. Like I was, I was a really mediocre student, because my brain wasn't couldn't process. It was thinking so.
Katie Cokinos 36:45 Yeah.
Richard Linklater 36:46 But I did have my one gift. And that's what came out in his therapy session. So well, you know, pick a task. And so I really just wrote it like a short. So I'm actually I'm an actor. Yeah, a movie. It's all scripted. But it looks like kind of a documentary.
Alex Ferrari 37:02 But what I love about it, but what I love about it, you bought it love about is when you're talking to the studio execs. You're like feeding horses and doing stuff on the farm and you have your like your earbuds on. And I'm just like, that's just so brilliant. It's like the one line. I think it was just the one line you said that just it just rang so true. One line that you said that they said to like, Well, you know, if that thing is not in there, I think it was something like if that lines not in there if that part is not in there. Why? Why no one's gonna miss it not.
Richard Linklater 37:35 We wouldn't miss it.
Alex Ferrari 37:36 Yeah. And then you said, Well, we didn't make the movie. No one would miss it either. Which was just the best. Never
Katie Cokinos 37:42 It was like, Yes. Great.
Alex Ferrari 37:44 I'm so happy like that in the next meeting I have with studio. That's amazing.
Richard Linklater 37:53 I've been sitting on that line for a while. Where did you see that? Did you go on the
Alex Ferrari 37:57 Pompidou website? No, it's on YouTube.
Richard Linklater 37:59 It's on YouTube. okk. You can watch it. I said.
Katie Cokinos 38:04 I'm so excited. Oh, I
Alex Ferrari 38:05 have so much fun. Short,
Richard Linklater 38:07 I felt great. Because, you know, before I made a couple features, I made about 20 shorts. For when my first short got over. I made a 15 Minute. It was like a 17 minute epic. I was like, Oh my god, it took me six months. It was like, Oh, yeah, so yeah, it's a little bit sad. Cuz you're like your head's in the clouds with the greatest films ever made. But you do. Yeah. filmmaking absolutely necessitate you pull your head out of the clouds and out of your own head focus on your the reality in front of you. Like, okay, here's who I am. Here's what I got. How do I work from here? You know, that's all you can do. And people who can't do it are the ones whose brains are just too far too far ahead of themselves and not accepting and also accepting. It's a real craft, it takes a long time to kind of get you can have these flashes of you know, it just takes a long time for your skills to catch up with your ideas. Put it like that. Oh, that's
Alex Ferrari 39:11 that is. I could not have put it more perfectly. Yeah. Because when I when I walked onto onto into film school, I went to a film school in Orlando. And I walked onto a set and I had like, shots and things laid out because I had been studying Scorsese and Kubrick and I had these all these like, no cut takes and everything. I had no idea how to do any of this. None. None. What did you just know I didn't even understand it. But my ideas were so even to this day. I have ideas that cost lots and lots of money. I have a little bit better understanding of how to do it. But you really, when you're young, you just your ideas are so far ahead of your skill set. It's pretty fascinating.
Richard Linklater 39:52 Yeah, bring it bring it back to reality. That's, that's always the challenge. But you know, I admire the guys who you know can create this unreality and get it, you know, the Kubrick's or the the
Katie Cokinos 40:05 yeah to have he never made Napoleon
Richard Linklater 40:09 no, he sure didnt
Alex Ferrari 40:12 make the polling he didn't make. What is it the? The papers?
Richard Linklater 40:16 Yeah, so many people it's the frustrating thing. Remember Antonioni wrote that book, toward the, in the last, I guess, 15 years of his long life. It was just, he was called bowling alley on the Tiber. And it was all the films, he's never gonna make just like a page or these ideas. And, you know, I have a, I have a book of those myself, but it's important to probably not make every film that crosses your mind. But it's great. If the film that crossed your mind is still in your mind 10 years later, 20 years later, maybe you should pursue that.
Katie Cokinos 40:50 Well, that is, that is a good point. I mean, I do. I do give certain ideas a test of time. And still, if it's still kind of nine, then then you got to kind of start putting it down on paper and, you know, bringing it down
Richard Linklater 41:07 into but that's because there's different kinds of filmmakers, though. Yeah, someone like we mentioned Kubrick numerous times. He didn't do that. He, he was looking for a great narrative out in the world as he self, it's a different skill set to create a great character out of scratch, you know, yeah, a great story he talked about a great cinematic story is like a pop song. It's a really rare thing, and you only write or do like a pop hit. You know, it's really hard. So he was looking for that, that narrative that he probably own his own blank slate, not his skillset. That's not the his brain works. Yes, it thinks stories, that doesn't mean you're not a great, you know, so there's a kind of filmmaker who's working super close to home in a personal way, characters coming out of their own lives. A lot of people don't do that. They're, they're really in the form. Kubrick wanted to make a science fiction movie that didn't suck. You know about space drive. That's where he started. He started with genre and the form and he just knew he had something in him. So and that's, that's really valid. You know, so many great filmmakers work that direction. I think the indie world, by nature, we all work the other direction.
Katie Cokinos 42:27 You work more like Fassbender were FOSS bender wanted to make sure that he actually what he experienced actually did, he actually did experience the emotion. So then he would, you know, create from there.
Alex Ferrari 42:47 Now I wanted to I wanted to touch something about both of your films. You're from I drink too much and kind of a bunch of your films. The in your filmography Richard, I mean, Rick, the spiritual, the spiritual aspect of your projects, and your characters and the journeys that they make the spiritual, philosophical tube, I mean, obviously, the first scene and slacker with you spouting off philosophy, you pretty much set the tone for your career in so many ways, but the spiritual aspect of things. I love to see it because I see and this is just my interpretation of the art. I see it in both in both your work a spiritual undertone in it, is that something that you are placing in it purposefully or you kind of organically it just comes out of the characters, because there's definitely something there and majority of of your work, Rick and as well as yours, Katie
Richard Linklater 43:46 I was always kind of obsessed, or naturally I fell in with the what Schrader calls the transcendental, you know, style and film, The ozuna is a sawn dryer, and Mizoguchi you know, you Bergman tarkowski, you know, the people who had these kind of spiritual concerns, and he see it in in his, it's in a lot, you know, it shows up in American cinema. Plenty too. It's just usually, you know, it's around the edges of narratives. Often it's not the sole subject. But yeah, I think it just kind of, if you think film is kind of a spiritual art, on some level, it sounds kind of pretentious, but I don't know when you're talking about life and representing. I don't know the world and I think that's there, but I don't, I never had anything I really wanted to say. In that on that front. I really don't I don't have any practice or any thing. I think it's just what's on the mind of young people and how they communicate and what they're going through. Or maybe there's some magical thinking sometimes that, particularly at certain points in your life, you know, I feel I felt myself change, you know, like, I go back even 20 years, I wouldn't be making waking life today probably because I just think differently about certain things. I'm more skeptical. I'm more science based, I kind of had these ideas, or I think I used to be a little more into just the pure aesthetic of ideas, whether I mean, you see it a lot in slacker, the conspiracy thinking the, the kind of, I'm just kind of magical ideas, not that they're that necessarily, but just just alternative ways of thinking, let's say, that really just did me a lot. You know, I felt that that was very real in the world would fade was a certain kind of buzz of the world I was experiencing. And you could say it's kind of schizophrenic. It's kind of crazy. But I thought, well, that's the world. That's what I'm feeling. But I was a certain age. And I don't know, you kind of see it play out in the public arena, like, say, conspiracy, for instance. And that's taken on a real malevolent, I think super damaging where it was kind of fun in the 80s to talk about, oh, some of this stuff. I don't know, I just think when it's kind of the ideology now of a large percentage of our population. What I want now is like, well, I want verify, I want like us to be on the same page, I want there to be like, actual deeper thinking and factual, you know, but I don't think that affects the film so much, but it's just, I don't know, certain flights of fancy maybe not so much. Got it? How about you, Katie?
Katie Cokinos 46:46 Well, I think it um, I think it's sort of circles back to what we were talking about, about the question, you know, the filmmakers who are seeking questions, and to me that that's spiritual, you know, and, and Rick, you are very, you know, Tolstoy and Dostoevsky and conditon Hamsun, you know, these were all writers that were very much alive to you and inspired you and they certainly, you know, come from a very spiritual place. And, you know, I, I, you know, I think of a film like you said, tender mercies, where there is, you know, Horton Foote was going after something, something else, but as per song says, keep the important stuff hidden. Yeah. And I, and I wonder, again, I wonder, you know, through that tension of, of telling us a story, but, but trying to connect it to something greater and something that, that we could all participate in, does sort of make it something a little bit more spiritual, you know, I mean, I,
Alex Ferrari 48:11 I mean, to me like to me boyhood like, it's a commentary on the human condition. I mean, there's no question and about the journey of dismissal this this boy going through life and also not only the parents as as you get older you like, I watched it when it first came out. And then now as as a father of older children, you just are like, Oh, I Whoo, I feel a different and that's what good are does it changes with you as you get older? Um, but there is, I mean, I guess, I guess anytime you're dealing with the human condition, there's, in many ways you touch you touch the spiritual in some, some way, some way somewhere, some way or another without being like, I'm not talking about religion or anything. Like I'm just talking about just the human condition.
Richard Linklater 48:56 I know I think we're all looking for connection that is what's makes cinema such a powerful medium, because you can really, it the spirit kind of permeates the images sometimes it does. If you're not too direct about it, you just you lay it out there and let we're all feeling Yeah, wanting to connect, you know, in a film like boyhood. I was kind of amazed. But on the other hand, I wasn't it's sort of what I was going for, but the way people did connect to it even all those years, I was thinking like, Am I not going I'm not going very big here. I'm making it about this minutia of life. Right not i'm not even doing the first kiss. I'm making it the little things I remember and just the smallest things, but I had a I had a great belief in the cumulative power of of that of time and what that would maybe just feel like as a human to experience watching it, you know, like to see life. Just move like that. That's what I thought. would be interesting. I didn't want to weigh it down with a lot of heaviness. I mean, it's plenty heavy, it's got a lot of detail that runs the gamut. But I just thought the the physical process, I did kind of think it would be this kind of moving thing. So it was amazing to me to get the feedback from people saying what they liked about it. And it was unique to me, it was very similar every time it's like, oh, my parents divorce or, you know, my kid went off to college, or I just went off to college, or, you know, it was always some detail from the film triggered so much from their own life. So I got to hear so many people's life stories, or, you know, what they connected, and I said, Oh, that's really beautiful, that people are just connecting with some aspect. But every film, you go for that the thing is with boy, there was an overabundance of it, because that's all there. I got back an overabundance. But I like a film, if I can just, if there's a couple of scenes that, take it to that level, that you just get a rush of feelings, you think maybe the whole movie moved up, was for that one moment, right now, look on someone's face, or just the contemplation of something. But it's gonna be different for you know, you just got to leave some room for it. But it's really just how you got to give the you got to give the power to the medium we're in it, you have to acknowledge the power of cinema and work with that you don't have to it carries so much itself, you have to work with,
Alex Ferrari 51:39 I think, and then also, Katie, in your film, I drink too much, the grandma character, and in so many characters in your films as well, Rick, I find that, you know, human beings as we are, we constantly are carrying our past with us. And it completely determines our future. We're unique as an animal species on this planet. We're the only ones that do that. I mean, there's not many dogs who are carrying around their past and, and really affecting their future so much. Why do you think we do that to our detriment? Like it is, we know consciously, it's hurting us. But yet we still kind of thrive in it. And I know a lot of characters in your, in your films do that? Because that's the human condition. I just love to hear your take on that. Well,
Unknown Speaker 52:22 I mean, it's funny, having just watched the Ken Burns Ernest Hemingway series that was gone. It reminded me how it Veera, I was really I created her in honor of, you know, Hadley, Hemingway, or Martha Gell. Horne, you know, one of the, you know, married to the great journalist, and she gets cast aside for a younger woman and they take their death and, um, you know, I completely forgot about that and how Veera holds on to it, it becomes like, her her reason of being and Dora kind of lands lands into this into this world, and they both figure it out. But, um, so you're asking, why, why
Alex Ferrari 53:15 we do it, why we do it as a as a hold on to things Yeah.
Katie Cokinos 53:21 Just sacred. Feel it takes you out of the ordinary,
Alex Ferrari 53:27 you know, but to our detriment, not like hold on to the past, like the good stuff. But like, we have things that like we hold on to that constantly are hurting us and hurting our forward motion, completely. I've done that in my life when an incident happens, and and you just hang on to it, and it stops you from going anywhere. Why?
Katie Cokinos 53:43 well I think you create a narrative or watching it with you, you have a trauma, then you form a narrative around it. And then, you know, you create, to live up to that narrative. That's who you are. And you create it until you, you know, sit down and write a script about it.
Richard Linklater 54:05 You know, it seems like we're in some therapy session. But yeah, that narrative is are you the hero overcoming great odds? Right? Think through all the muck that's been thrown at you? Are you the victim, who's held back by these traumatic, you know, it's like, you can, you know, we do have to some degree, you know, how we, where we put it, you know, in our compartments, you know, you can hide it away completely. You can deal with it, you can you know, my sister said watching boyhood is like, Oh, we went to therapy, you made a movie. Or your upbringing. It's like, Yeah, I was allergic thing to therapy. But I wanted to deal with some of this somehow. So again, the art solves all problems. It is there, but that's why
Yeah, what about religion? I said, you know, all the great things that are in the great holy books I said, you know, all that exists in the arts and science. You know, if you really focus on Arts and Science, all the questions, are there, so many answers are there and all the beautiful mystical feelings? Are there everything, it's been expressed throughout time, you know, there's, it's so much there, you know, if religion is not doing it for you, and you have this other thing, it's really tangible. So I just, I really do believe in the art as a sort of church, as it will provide all meaning. Yeah, myth and whatever you, whatever you're questing for, you know, it's, it's all there, you know, well, even person
Katie Cokinos 55:48 quotes, the liturgy, in his notes on cinematography. I mean, you know, the Greek Orthodox, and the liturgy on Sunday was supposed to do what art does. I mean, you get the whole operatic vision in front of you for an hour and a half. You're supposed to, you're supposed to walk out going, huh, I feel so much better. But now I think art is now you know, that taking over that.
Alex Ferrari 56:21 Oh, oh, no, he did. And he just busted it out. Not.
Katie Cokinos 56:25 Did you get a first edition?
Alex Ferrari 56:28 sign? You see, all right. Now you're just now you're just bragging. Now you're just bragging. Okay, look at that little person. Let her let her
Richard Linklater 56:45 gift. It was a gift someone gave him.
Katie Cokinos 56:48 That's awesome. That's
Richard Linklater 56:52 I had it right here on my shelf. I thought,
Katie Cokinos 56:54 thank Robert,
Alex Ferrari 56:55 that's amazing. That's I'll have to bust out my George Lucas autograph on my Akira Kurosawa as well. So
Katie Cokinos 57:04 the Anderson, he autographed by john Ford, the john Ford book he wrote,
Alex Ferrari 57:09 that's amazing. I don't know where it is the one thing one thing you said Wednesday
Richard Linklater 57:17 I'm sorry? No, I think of Lindsey quite a bit and I carried the torch for him Lindsay Anderson. You know my daughters have recently become very cinema literate just finally this lat the pandemic put us together in a theater once a day to watch a movie and there What are we watching tonight before I thought I lost them to you know YouTube ever all the other things that kids are distracted by but yeah, they finally kind of got cinema. And we watched so many movies but their favorite film and these are kids that just turned 16 was if and then the whole Mick Travis trilogy, going back and revisiting those was really profound, truly radical beautiful movies. I just admire him so much and we were lucky to have hung out with him.
Katie Cokinos 58:04 Yeah, this sporting life is not be shown enough. We watched that
Richard Linklater 58:09 and did you see Malcolm McDowell? No apologies his documentary about Malcolm McDowell did this one man show. It's just him on stage with slides and images. And it's really all about Lindsay his relation with Lindsay and his own career, but it's beautiful. You can get it on VUDU can rent it on VUDU just no apologies. Okay, Lynn, everyone dals tribute to Lindsay Anderson. It's It's beautiful. It's a beautiful light from to a mentor and a great artist from a guy whose life he affected profoundly, who loved him dearly and kind of saw the contradictions and frustrations Lindsay went through, personally, professionally, you know, it's great. It's a great portrait.
Alex Ferrari 58:57 That's wonderful. One thing that you said earlier, Rick, you said that it's going to take twice as long and you're going to work twice as hard than you think. Which is great, by the way. Great, great quote. Can you just just dig a little deeper into the patient's
Richard Linklater 59:14 and you and you're gonna there's one more thing if it was meant to be you're gonna love every minute of it, you know? Yeah,
Alex Ferrari 59:21 that's a good that Oh my God, that's amazing. That's a great addition to that quote,
Richard Linklater 59:25 because you're you're doing what you love in this life. You're serving your cinematic you know, destiny I I look back at those years where I would just take the windows of black in my windows and edit around the clock for days and days just to finish that short that no one was ever gonna see. But I was like, what was driving me? Why was I wasn't a good boyfriend. I wasn't a good I didn't go do anything. People would ask me out for dinner. I'd like no, I'm there's a film I'm watching at 730 and then I'm that I just didn't have time. I was so obsessed and on a track, you know that and I look back at those are kind of like the greatest years ever because I was just, it was some pure about just doing exactly what you wanted to do with your time. And when it when you're fully dedicated to something like cinema, which is so multifaceted for me that meant, you know, starting a film society, it was booking films, but it was watching films it was seeing every film was editing, was writing film, you know, you can really dedicate your life to this, if you see it just especially outside just your own thing. You know, it's a bigger, cinemas much bigger than all of us, you know. So there's a lot to contribute to, oh, it really can be a life to call ever it gives you, whatever it gives you back. You know? Like, what you what you put in, you know, it's kind of like sports. You know, you get back what you put in? And
Katie Cokinos 1:01:01 I don't know, I think cinema is so heartbreaking. Oh, yeah. That incredibly heartbreaking.
Richard Linklater 1:01:09 but So is sports. Like,
Katie Cokinos 1:01:13 yeah,
Richard Linklater 1:01:14 you know, it's like I was just saying things that the athlete or the artist devotes their life to I think they're, by definition heartbreaking. No. I mean, you talk to these people who have successful, you would look at and go, Oh, that's a successful career. And you get a little closer. And there's a lot of heartbreak there. Well, yeah. What's the point of this? How you categorize it? You know,
Alex Ferrari 1:01:37 what I mean? It's what both of you, I'm sure, I mean, I know, Rick, you you've gone, you've obviously had some highs, but you've also had lows. And even to this day, you're still hustling to get your movies made. And that's the thing that filmmakers and young filmmakers think that like, Oh, it's Rick Linklater, he's, he's this and that. And as I talked to more and more filmmakers that are accomplished filmmakers. I've just completely understand that like, No, man, I still them hustling for the money. I'm still trying to get my projects made. Like it's not like they just oh, well, you want you got nominated for an Oscar. Well, here's how many how many $20 million checks do you want? Like, it doesn't work that way.
Richard Linklater 1:02:17 Really? It's amazing. Yeah. people when they think like, Oh, you have trouble. I was like, Well, I'm having trouble getting this particular thing. Maybe, maybe, maybe it's, I don't know, not fitting into the marketplace. But yeah, it's it's, there's no easy path. Although I do think certain friends of mine are certain people I know. They seem. I think they're pretty made, you know, they get to do whatever they want. But I look at him and go well, they kind of earn that, you know, in a way I haven't. So I'm like, Okay, I'm not complaining. You know, you're on the roster. But yeah,
Alex Ferrari 1:02:56 look, look Scorsese, Scorsese still having trouble. I mean, Spielberg couldn't even get Lincoln financed. I mean, they still there is moments that, you know, they say, Oh, well,
Richard Linklater 1:03:06 he got it financed eventually, it's there. So fronted by the the initial fear that the world the world gives you. Like, didn't I remember when he took Schindler's List into universal? I guess it was, and the head of the studio, can't we just make a donation to some Holocaust thing. And that's the kind of thing Spielberg someone like Spielberg, you don't forget that. And that didn't mean it didn't happen. But it's that that initial the world gives you no matter what you say, it gives you a little stiff arm back,
Katie Cokinos 1:03:39 it would just
Richard Linklater 1:03:40 it meant or it's something but you know, you're not supposed to feel sorry for those people. You're not supposed to know. The world doesn't necessarily want to give you everything you want. You know,
Katie Cokinos 1:03:53 we'll leave even between Slacker coming out in 91 which I think this is 2021 Isn't this an anniversary? Is it 30?
Alex Ferrari 1:04:04 Yeah,
Richard Linklater 1:04:05 we're in but our Austin premier 30 year and our national will be Yeah, no. Yeah. Are this coming summer between
Katie Cokinos 1:04:16 between slacker. And then with my first film portrait of a girl is a young cat, which came out in 2000. I was I was hearing from independent, you know, distributors, and festivals, you know, will do you have any names attached to it? So this internet became indie would you know that it became commodified where you needed, you know, names to get it out there. So it's just this constant like flux of, you know, what can we sell, what can we sell?
Richard Linklater 1:04:54 That is the, the kind of the, the shadow side of what we were Kind of rhapsodizing about the Sundance era. Yeah, Andy is Renaissance. What went with that is commercial expectations. And this amped up industry, you know, minor league system with names attached for no money. Yeah. So, there there has always been that, you know, that there, there's kind of an inflation that ran through it all that kind of, you know, you could say, like, Miramax sort of ruined Miramax, and then like Fox Searchlight when they kind of landed on these formulas, and this is just pure business. But, you know, it was really kind of insidious. It's like how they made money. And they worked a formula. They would overspend. They over advertise overtake build up grosses. And then take their cut and then have it all stopped right at the point they're supposed to pay the filmmakers that you know, writing the point it was gonna achieve. They were taking their fee off the top. So I was like, wow, what, what did what a kind of business he awful formula that started working and then it wasn't, it wasn't enough to you know, slacker they gave us 100,000 advance it made 1.3 million at the box office. It was seen as successful. They made some money. It just it that was okay. It was in the sports term that you they were hitting singles and doubles. That's okay. But it became a much bigger thing. And everyone started sort of playing that game. So you know, you just got to deal with inflationary
Alex Ferrari 1:06:46 relation Eric tations. You know, and slacker, if slacker comes out today. It's it's drowned out do agree.
Richard Linklater 1:06:55 You know, part of me says, yes, you know, wouldn't get into the narrative competition at Sundance, it would definitely be a midnight or, or at best, you know, you think that But then I also go, Well, there's still room for that film that is so weirdly different. So find a path. So part of me the optimist in me has to believe that, you know, it would find a way. The way it did, then, you know, it was just a different film. It didn't have a story. There was so much it wasn't. But what what, but even it's a product of its time to you know, it's very much. I mean, in a way it spoke to a moment in time. Yeah, the agenda was cinematic. But it kind of not that it was a design of the film, but like anything that just kind of catches a zite guys through your pop culture way. That's just justice. And I think that's just been it's that's kind of the the upside of naive youth, like you don't know it. Right. You're, you're, you're surfing on some waves that are in the culture, that are youthful and different. And you know, so that's what music does. So well.
Alex Ferrari 1:08:20 Now, you guys worked on a project together, I dream too much, which was directed and written by by Katie. So Katie, can you tell us a little bit about that project? And then how did Rick get involved in that project?
Katie Cokinos 1:08:33 Yeah, um, I, let's see, I had done portrait of a girl as a young cat that came out in 2000. And then I grip
Alex Ferrari 1:08:42 right, by the way, great title. I mean, not as much as stuffing stuffing in the bikini title that we talked about earlier. I mean, not that good, but still good.
Katie Cokinos 1:08:50 Yeah, I do have to recommend to listeners out there that have a good title really helps you write every day. And something that you don't know what it is. Like, I really didn't know what a portrait of a girl is a young cat was while I wrote it. So something to write for. And the same with I dream too much. I didn't really know what that meant. So it really helped sitting down and creating these characters and creating a plot. To do I with I dream too much I really wanted to capture like I'd mentioned earlier that time, right after college. When you're done with college, and your life hasn't begun yet, and so you're you're you're moving away from one life, but but nothing's been created yet. So I always saw my character Dora is sort of in a ditch throughout the writing, just not not sure where where she was going. Her last name was what By the way, it also helps, because I thought about Orson Welles every time I sat down in good ways and bad ways. So yes, so she, she wants to travel, she wants to go to Brazil. She's just graduated and her mom wants her to go to law school, which that was me. graduating from college. My dad wanted me to go to law school. So it was a little personal. She door it takes off goes upstate New York, we shot in upstate New York over three weeks during one of the snowiest times ever February 2014. So I made my Dr. Zhivago movie too. And so yeah, she goes to live with her aunt Veera. And, and she, you know, through the story, she, by the end, she sort of decides what, definitely what she doesn't want to do, but maybe what you might want to do. And it I there were no, unlike portrait, which was very much influenced by Jacques de me. And Godard, like Viva savvy. I dream too much. I really didn't think about any other films. There weren't a lot of coming of age with female character films, I could really go to saw I looked at Jane Austen. So to a certain point, I realized I really wanted to write a story as if Jane Austen lived in 2014. So it very much draws upon the themes of the poor relation going to live with the wealthy relation, you know, it's a lot of walking with landscapes, and, and there's even a running thread throughout it, where she actually sort of daydreams that she's in a Jane Austen. He said, anyway, it was it was really fun it like I said, it's definitely like this love letter to that, that time in your life where things are open, you know, but there is there is a little bit of anxiety too.
Alex Ferrari 1:12:18 So and then Rick and Rick, you've never come out with me. You've never EP to film before you never executive producer from like that, or have you?
Richard Linklater 1:12:27 Some docs and things, but I don't think a narrative. Think I had no. So yeah. How
Alex Ferrari 1:12:34 did you get involved with the project?
Richard Linklater 1:12:35 Well, as I remember, Katie, like only a year or two before have a couple you had a different on the girl
Katie Cokinos 1:12:43 issues. Yeah, I'm sorry.
Richard Linklater 1:12:45 You were sort of going on that. And then you did a segue into this. Yeah. Okay. All your energy went there. So I thought, well, that's really interesting. And I just loved the script. I love what it is about, like, I love that territory. Obviously, I've done it from let's, you know, kind of a male point of view. Let's say I just think there's it's female, young female, that that thing is woefully underrepresented. So I thought, Oh, wow. And you're the one to do it. Because I know it was so alive with you. so personal. Yeah. You that law school, retention, and that parental and all that. I just thought it was beautiful. And I just loved your cats too. When you got eaten. Diane Ladd. They're just so perfect. I just thought you did a good job. So it was just fun to see you get that chance, you know, so I didn't really do anything. But I came and visited and I was there, you know?
Katie Cokinos 1:13:39 I mean? Yeah, having your your name attached, absolutely helped us navigate in
Richard Linklater 1:13:48 scale. And that's why I don't do it casually. You know, I wouldn't. Yeah, I only did it on something like truly believed. And it would it would Wow. Yeah. It's called with answer. You know, it wasn't.
Katie Cokinos 1:14:01 And, you know, Alex, when I was writing the script, early on, I kept thinking, Oh, Rick is really gonna like this story because it had a lot of, you know, a lot of ideas working out and, you know, talking and it had a, you know, I did have him in the back of my mind when I was, was writing it. And Diane was really fun to work with, I have to say when we first met her. In California, she lives out in Ohio. We had lunch, I was with my two producers, Jay and jack and we sit down for lunch and she all sudden starts telling me a story about working with Tennessee Williams and how she told and I told Tennessee, he needs to change this ending. And he did. And I thought oh my god. I nearly I knew Let me know like, why you know things coming up I like oh my god, she's telling Tennessee Williams out of right
Richard Linklater 1:15:10 into because if if she can get Tennessee Williams Zoo yeah what she can say yeah actors that are all that first meeting can you're setting a relationship town? You got to be careful.
Katie Cokinos 1:15:21 Oh my god was Yeah, that was very telling. I mean, you know, she had great. She had great stories about working, you know, Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore. You know, she told Scorsese that he needed another shot of Ellen Burstyn and in some sane and, you know, working with with them? You know, David Lynch on Wild at Heart and, you know, working on Chinatown, and yeah, she's so great to work with that. Yeah, that initial meeting, I mean, Tennessee Williams, not via Guana? Well, God,
Richard Linklater 1:16:03 I think what she's telling you, it's a good lesson is that writers, directors, you have a lot to learn and a lot to benefit from listening to the people who are physically manifesting your ideas via acting in your movie. I know. And I think a lot of them have run into younger directors who don't want to think oh, what I wrote a year ago is perfect. I don't want you messing up. And it's like, no, if you really want to know it's a collaboration, I think they're kind of telling them actually the best directors, listen, listen very closely to who they're working with in those those so much. that next level getting it to that. Yeah, that level comes from that collaboration. So she's just
Katie Cokinos 1:16:52 that is the best I mean, you know, if it's all in the script, why make the movie, you know, you have to have, you have to have that actor, the input, you have to take it to a whole nother level.
Alex Ferrari 1:17:03 And it's also the lightning that you're going to capture on set. Like there's that lightning in a bottle that you have to be prepared for.
Richard Linklater 1:17:11 Yeah, you gotta leave room for it. Yeah, you got it. It's your you're leaving, you know that 7% or that 10% or whatever. You know, I'm a big reverser. And I sometimes make actors nervous or going in that Oh, rehearsing. Is it going to be like acting exercises? Are they going to be laying down on the floor?
Alex Ferrari 1:17:31 Calling Lalala Lalalala
Richard Linklater 1:17:33 Lalalala said, Well, my rehearsals are actually my rewriting. I do it for me. I want to hear you say it. And I want to talk about it. I want to answer all your questions. I want to have new ideas, right? This is a process for me. I'm still discovering this movie. I don't I'm not 100% sure yet how I'm going to shoot it. You know, I'm not. I'm feeling my way through this.
Katie Cokinos 1:17:56 No, I think that's great. And I'm sort of did one of these as God is my witness. I will never make a movie where I don't get rehearsal, because I got no rehearsal time with my actors. And we were shooting five pages a day. And I just it it you know, I just would have loved just to have a few days just because I you know, I don't want to hear my writing back. I want them to and it was great. One time Danielle Brooks. You know, in a scene, she just came up to me. She's like, I just I don't get it. I don't buy it. It's you have to rewrite. It was like, great. So I had to rewrite this whole scene and it made it so much better. Yeah, that's, that's what I that's what I live for. Totally. Yeah, I
Richard Linklater 1:18:42 I try to do that weeks before production.
Katie Cokinos 1:18:46 Well, like I said, on my next film, I want a week of rehearsal.
Richard Linklater 1:18:55 Early on, someone told me it's like, for every week of rehearsal, you save a day of production. Yeah. That's a pretty rich formula. Because a day of production is expensive and a day of rehearsal cost very little, right? You get these bureaucrats who they just want to keep actors away until that necessary, you know, like, Oh, no, they're gonna come in and neat things for two three weeks. Like Yeah, hotel room. It's really expensive. Food, your budget? Yes. live here, and we're going to work and we're going to make a better movie.
Katie Cokinos 1:19:29 I'm so glad to hear you say this. I mean, I knew you. Yeah, I knew you. But I yeah, I don't
Richard Linklater 1:19:38 have the insecure director and I the my nightmare that I dream. Probably every six months I have this dream, where I'm honest, my own set, shooting and I'm meeting actors for the first time I owe them. I don't know who they are. And we're trying to worked together. And pretty soon I realized, Oh, I don't even know my own movie like, what's this trip? You know, I've just lost
Katie Cokinos 1:20:07 a half of you.
Richard Linklater 1:20:08 Yeah, watch it again recently, the new criterion beautiful,
Alex Ferrari 1:20:13 obviously, obviously.
Richard Linklater 1:20:15 But it is that kind of fear of just not being prepared. But for me, that's a comfortableness with the cast that I want them to be comfortable, and I want to be comfortable.
Katie Cokinos 1:20:28 So Rick, when you do get rehearsal, because I this, this film on my script I'm working on now is a is more of an ensemble, like a family ensemble piece. So when you do get rehearsal defined, you don't have to talk as much on the set to the actors. And being you don't have to, because they walk in, they're like, okay,
Richard Linklater 1:20:53 yeah, that scene we worked on. And ideally, if you can do it with you're in pre production, if you have the locations, you might have blocked it on the set before, right. So that's been in the morning, what crews waiting around figuring out, oh, let's then you walk through that door. I'm figuring out what the geography is. I've been in a position plenty where I'm in rehearsals, and I have to go to the set separately, but if you can get the actors there, yeah. And then kind of just feel, then they're that much more comfortable that they're like, oh, let's go so I'm a big, I'm a big rehearse on location.
Katie Cokinos 1:21:30 Yeah, the location Wow,
Richard Linklater 1:21:32 this whole other hang out with no, with no clock ticking, let's do it. Again, talk about that, and feel our way through, it's really process very organic, and it just makes everybody more relaxed, a little more confident.
Katie Cokinos 1:21:48 Yeah, that's the location changes everything to just like Antonia,
Richard Linklater 1:21:55 you have new ideas, you know, like, it's these words, you're hearing out loud for the first time via the person is gonna say it. And then these locations you found, let's say, in the last couple months, are replete. And you know, you're kind of putting those together. And that's really like, how you're going to shoot it how you're going to,
Katie Cokinos 1:22:12 yeah,
Richard Linklater 1:22:13 I like it just feeling your way through your own movie. And that's okay. And I wish people would respect that. You know, what they ask of directors is to answer questions, and I get it. You have to answer questions all day long. And as Truffaut says and Day for Night, sometimes I even have the right and I even but yeah, you know, they need and I learned early on to not be vague, because, you know, people don't want to hear that from the boss that Oh, I'm feeling my way through. Yeah. If you're managing a restaurant, like hey, like, Oh, we want people who are working for people they want answers they want so I learned early on, have those answers, but also have the right to change your mind you know, if you can be with them, locate the locations person asks you, hey, we're gonna do need to park the trucks here. You're gonna see there and you know, like, okay, we won't see out that window. So you can park there, you know, whatever.
Katie Cokinos 1:23:12 Yeah.
Richard Linklater 1:23:13 So the best of your ability answer their question, but then also say, in a few times in the production, you'll go out and hey, you know what I told you the other day, it's changed. don't respect it. Because you gave them 97 answers and three times change it? Well, who they really hate is the person who gave them zero answers. Yeah. Right. You know, you say, Hey, I'm gonna give you I'm process oriented things change. I'm looking for it to change a little. But if we were shooting today, we Yeah, you can park the trucks there in here. But yeah, so we plan on that, I will let you know the second that if when and if that changes. You gotta ficient but they have to you get you need everyone to buy into your process, you know, and there's a million it takes it took me a few films to get that by No, it was it's nothing but like, oh, here, you're working with a lot of professionals. Here's how we do it. Here's how we make a movie. It's like, well, that's not how I want to that's not going to make my movie. I'll accept, you know, the parameters of a schedule a budget, a call sheet, you know, overtime meal penalties. That's all bad enough. But don't tell me I can't rehearse because the actors are professionals and will come in and say their lot, you know, don't, don't tell me. Things like that, you know, I will then need to rehearse or whatever. So, guys,
Katie Cokinos 1:24:38 thank you. For night two is when that that guy comes up to him and is like, why aren't you doing a movie about pollution? And you Wait, why There's more sex, you know, you need more sex, more pollution, you know, pollution is something we need to deal with. And it's like, Yes, right. I mean, get those those questions will never go away, you know, on the set, why aren't you you know, and the Godfather is playing around the corner. And you know, it is it's like, like he says it's you get on a stage coach. Take off if you have no idea if you're going to make
Alex Ferrari 1:25:22 it and the bottom and the bottom. And the bottom line is everybody on set knows that they can make a better film than you. Everybody knows that they can make a better film.
Unknown Speaker 1:25:31 Certainly do your first like two or three films.
Alex Ferrari 1:25:34 Yeah. Afterwards, I hopefully have some sort of some sort of respect.
Unknown Speaker 1:25:39 I've enjoyed making it to elder statesman, you know, I the the upside of that is that, like those first three felt the natural thing and an employee situation is the emperor has no clothes, right? They have no idea what they're doing. They have no idea. They're totally faking it. Obviously, that was in my third film days. That was the vibe at the studio. Oh, this guy's a complete amateur. He has no idea what he's doing. And you know, he's doing it all wrong. And yeah, and I could be doing better. You know, that was all there that slowly started to get away. They might not like what I'm doing. But they couldn't say I didn't know what I was doing. Right. And I couldn't say because frankly, I didn't. There was a lot I didn't know. You leave yourself vulnerable. So at some point, I was happy to get there. Like, you can disagree or not like, but just don't tell me. I don't know what I'm doing. You know, right. I my joke is I when they ask some obvious question, like, Oh, yeah, I was like, Oh, this only seems like my first film.
Alex Ferrari 1:26:48 My 21st
Richard Linklater 1:26:52 might seem like my personal I didn't tell Shirley MacLaine that like, Well, do you have wardrobe? Like She challenged you? She challenges you know, yeah, you know what? in pre production like, surely, this isn't universal. What is an indie film? We don't have any money that it's not. We're eight weeks out. I don't have any started in the costume depart. We don't have, you know, I don't have EDID head coming over to costumes. Like don't, you know, there's the indie film, but just don't tell me I don't know what I'm doing. Because this is my, you know, 1314 or whatever, you know, so you just have to kind of give everybody, you know, their comfort zone or their assurance, oh, it's
Alex Ferrari 1:27:33 gonna be wasted, you know, cat as a director, there's so many skill sets that they don't tell you about, like the politics of a set. I like being the politics and, and human relationships. And just and it's a psychology of it all. Like, all they teach you is like, this is the lens that Kubrick used. Now, this is how Scorsese got that shot in Goodfellas. Yeah, here's the That's fantastic. That's, that's like, oh, but when you get on set, like that perfect example of Shirley MacLaine. Like when you when you run up against the wall, like, like, surely who, like worked with Hitchcock among a million other other people that you work with
Richard Linklater 1:28:08 everyone We've talked about
Alex Ferrari 1:28:09 this? Right, exactly. You just go? You, they don't teach you that. That's something you've learned on the job. Yeah.
Richard Linklater 1:28:17 I did that. Eight weeks before production. Thank God. So a hotel room in LA, you know, like, we got that done. So by the time we were on set, it's it's smooth. You know, everything's great. We're making the same movie. We had rehearsed. We had, you know, things were good, you know?
Katie Cokinos 1:28:35 Yeah. But she didn't have any respect for Vincent McNally. So I think you're in really good companies cared about was the color of the curtain.
Richard Linklater 1:28:48 Hal Ashby was, you know, I realized, Oh, yes, some people.
Katie Cokinos 1:28:52 Yeah, you're in good company.
Richard Linklater 1:28:53 Have good? Yeah.Wait,oh, for her cuz
Katie Cokinos 1:29:01 he was Wilder. Yeah,
Richard Linklater 1:29:04 he was like, Well, do you want this or this? I said, Well, I don't know. Surely Which one? Do you think you're there you go? I don't know. I said, You know, I said, I don't when they're conference, confronting me with something. My first thing I said, I don't know. I mean, everyone else in East Texas has said very carefully to what I say right after I say, I don't know. And I'm probably telling you what I think leaving the possibility that you might have an idea of your own that you want to bring in here and collaborate with, which is,
Alex Ferrari 1:29:37 which is scary for a certain generation of actors, like they just want to just like, tell us where to go. It happens. I've worked. I've worked with some actors like that to the older generation and very established and you work with them and they just, they have a way of doing things that they
Katie Cokinos 1:29:52 really want. daikon with Billy Wilder, like show exactly or am I thinking of Lubitsch were they Just exactly what they wanted. They would act it out.
Alex Ferrari 1:30:03 kind of imagine. I'd imagine Billy Wilder wasn't a very Lucy. No, no, I don't think, Billy.
Katie Cokinos 1:30:10 I'm thinking of Lubitsch, then that would just totally acted out. This is exactly what I want you to do and do it. It's like
Alex Ferrari 1:30:17 worse than a line reading. Yeah.
Katie Cokinos 1:30:21 For some actors, maybe that that works. See, I I have, I get as not shy as I am, I get really shy around actors. So that's, I need to work on that. That's my thing. I really, I mean, probably Eden and Diane. And Danielle would say that's not true. But
Alex Ferrari 1:30:40 yeah, they smell fear. They smell fear. They smell fear.
Katie Cokinos 1:30:44 Hmm. Yeah,
Richard Linklater 1:30:47 really like you. I thought you were given them a lot. I love the way you work with the actors and the vibe on your set. and stuff. But yeah, that is true. You said actors smell fear. But that's like, that's why I was always an acting class. And I was always kind of became an actor myself. Not that I ever wanted to be an actor. But I thought, Oh, I want to be able to relate, you know, at least, it's good to know enough to know how hard it is, oh, they're doing you know, so they so hard. So you have you come from a place of appreciation,
Alex Ferrari 1:31:23 empathy.
Richard Linklater 1:31:24 Acting is and, you know, empathy of how difficult it is. And you're just they sit, you're on their side? I know, there's a reason in sports. Most coaches, they always have played, they know. Yeah, and they know the situation you're in. So wouldn't it make sense for a director to have played the positions before or been in that game? You know, so it kind of makes sense. I tell students and be like, go go, go get in an acting class, get up in front of 20 people give a five minute or three minute log, show your ass of how you're not good, and live with it and get better and be embarrassed? And because that's what they're doing with for your camera. And they're, you know, you're asking a lot of people. Because actors, they can smell it, like, are you on my side? Or do I have to work around, you
Alex Ferrari 1:32:17 know, to protect myself to have to protect myself? Yeah,
Richard Linklater 1:32:20 you see, and it really calcifies careers. You see these actors who've, you know, they go through a long career and they they've been burned. You know, they believed in a director who told them to do something, they see the move, and that's stupid. Why do I look so dumb? Because I listened to that idiot telling me to, you know, and they don't like what they did. So they they're like, Okay, I'm not gonna work, what am I going to give, I only give so much of myself for all only, I'm not going to go outside. Don't tell me how to act, because I've already got all that. So you see, really good actors giving are not really finding any new notes in their careers. They're just being good over and over in the kind of the same way. But you know, the best actors, the ones who really push themselves, the ones we're still talking about, you know, though, we work with a first time director, and they're like, they're so confident actually, in their own abilities. They're like, telling, I mean, they know, the film's only going to be good if they're good. So they want to help you be good. They're not in opposition, you know, that lackey director who just you know, they really want to director to the best player would like the best coach. You know, that's the way you're gonna win.
Katie Cokinos 1:33:34 Right? Absolutely. What's heartbreaking, I just finished reading a biography on Clark Gable, and to hear his experience on the Misfits. And, you know, you get the set on time, he was ready to go. And everybody would just sort of trickle in, and it really killed him.
Richard Linklater 1:33:52 And there was Lake Maryland
Katie Cokinos 1:33:56 was late. I mean, he would just be like, What? What type of filmmaking is this? You know, and it's just, it's to end the book, you know, he's like, 60 years old, and this is you have to everything he's gone through. And it was, it was really interesting. I never, I never thought from that perspective, I guess, you know, an actor who was prepared, ready and was just getting, you know, it was just such an awful experience.
Richard Linklater 1:34:25 Well, actors, you do enough films, you're gonna have some really weird experiences based on for your work and within the circumstances they're in, right. I mean, it's like, Yeah, what's his quote, like a week or two before he died of a heart attack? He talked about misfits like marilyns that she likes to give that she gave me a heart. I thought she was gonna give me a heart attack. Well, she did maybe.
Alex Ferrari 1:34:50 So, so guys, this has been an amazing conversation. I have a few questions. I mean, I could, I could go on for another three hours, but um but I I'm gonna give you a few rapid, rapid fire questions that I asked all my guests. What advice would you give a filmmaker trying to break into the business today?
Richard Linklater 1:35:12 I would say don't focus on the business so much. Focus on your own. Getting good. You know, yeah, the business, the business will come. Yeah. Don't be too business to work. Don't be too business oriented. How about that? Think about just what you're doing and make it really good. And then the, or that? I don't know, is that dumb?
Alex Ferrari 1:35:33 No, no, that makes sense. Makes perfect sense
Richard Linklater 1:35:35 around when it does, but don't. You know, I see these grad students that are really worried about getting that first one. It's like, You're not even you're so far away from that. Perfect your own mechanism? How about before you're thinking about your career? Don't even think I would say don't think in career terms or business terms?
Katie Cokinos 1:35:53 Well, no, I mean, wasn't it Tarkovsky, who said, you know, this isn't a career was, yeah, this is calling. It's a calling. And if you look at it from I think perspective is very important. It's, it's, you know, it's it, you know, we don't need another director making action, you know, action hero, you know, whatever, movies, we need more personal visions. And I think that's what came out in that great book about Chinatown. You know, it was like, one of the last times that, you know, there was a personal vision that was brought to the screen. So that's my advice. And like, like we said earlier, short films, just keep figuring out what, what you want to say about? And, and, you know, if you don't have anything to say yet, then get a diary. Yeah. And write something, you know, to go to Africa and go on a safari like Hemingway or, you know, but put yourself out there, you know, feel. And so you'll have something I mean, for me for a long time, I just didn't have anything to say, you know, and that takes, you know, I did portrait, I wrote that when I was, I don't know, 30. And I didn't even really write it, it was just a bunch of loose scenes. And I, I was in the film, because I didn't even couldn't even tell somebody how to act and know what I was doing. So I do think we need to do a little nod to experimental filmmaking, like, truly, I don't know what I'm doing. So I'm gonna use the craft in that way. You know, I'm gonna, you know, maybe, and I shot over a year, you know, so yeah. It's
Richard Linklater 1:37:53 what I just thought of one thing, like, Don't even think of business, or career or anybody support until you've found your own voice. So you feel what you've and that can take a long time. Young people are born with more that than others. And that's a combination of your own, experience your own confidence, but you only get that confidence by doing you know, so again, you thinks it's all gonna be given to them, but you know, it's not, it's, you know, you're gonna have to find your own way, but save everybody some time. Amen, amen. Amen. Remember that I had a script I was trying to get done. I was like, I was like, Yeah, why would anyone Invest in me? I haven't done a, you know, I've done this one shitty, you know, like, yeah, you better just keep on your own path a little longer. You know, look, do something on your own again, before you think Put your foot out in the world and expect others to rally around you or your your film or your cause, you know, just do the do the personal work.
Katie Cokinos 1:39:04 So wonderful. Freedom. I mean, I remember when you wrote to Monte Hellman about what you wanted to do. And he almost he envied you. You know, he was like, I envy that, that you don't have any constraint. Yeah. And I remember Robert Altman saying the same thing when we brought him to Houston. You know, someone raised their hand, well, it's easy for you to get a movie made. What about me? And it's like, he's like, No, actually. It's not, you know, don't don't. Again, it's his perspective. You know, it's, it's, they know what I've done. You haven't done anything. And so is your oyster.
Richard Linklater 1:39:42 I know. He said, anyone in this room has a better chance of being financed in Hollywood than I do. Yeah. At that point.
Alex Ferrari 1:39:51 You're right.
Richard Linklater 1:39:53 That was the quote. Yeah. And it was like he was so right at that moment. At
Katie Cokinos 1:39:58 that moment. You just can't Any right? Really? I mean talk about boy that was that was so ahead of its time. Was it Tanner Ada? Yeah. Yeah. And and you're looking at you know, cinema God and and
Unknown Speaker 1:40:16 yeah. So why are him so much altman every passing year he get or I saw I hosted a screening of Brewster McCloud at the film side, we put it in the Texas film Hall of Fame last year. Yeah. Last Words Brewster McCloud. Yeah. And that film is so crazy and wonderful. And I just, you know, the respect for Altman, he he's perpetual
Katie Cokinos 1:40:42 and inners mind about him. He just felt like everything was just new and fresh. It's like, don't get
Richard Linklater 1:40:49 a jump a decade, where he's kicked out of Hollywood. Yeah. And he's making you know, five Jimmy Dean. Yeah, streamer. Watch secret honor again recently. That's really I mean, this guy was making films for 100 grand again. Yeah, nobody really stopped him. I just, I just admire that so much. Yeah, he's
Alex Ferrari 1:41:13 now. Now what is the lesson that took you the longest to learn whether in the film business or in life? You both You both look the exact same way? Like the answers, like the answers over here. So
Katie Cokinos 1:41:31 I want to be honest, I feel like I have a I mean, I just made my first. I mean, I dream too much as my first feature film. So I feel like I haven't even I barely stepped up to play, you know, as far as filmmaking, because portrait was, you know, a 60 minute film. So it was kind of not considered feature. But to ask the question again, what
Alex Ferrari 1:41:58 is it that what is the lesson that took you the longest to learn whether in the film business or in life in general,
Richard Linklater 1:42:12 you'll learn that lesson than
Katie Cokinos 1:42:15 I've never.
Alex Ferrari 1:42:17 For me, for me, it's always been, I always say the same thing, patience. That's for me, that's the lesson that I finally figured out, like, Okay, this, it's gonna take forever. Everything I want is going to take a while. Not as fast as I want it. That's my lesson. That's the one that I've learned.
Katie Cokinos 1:42:33 Yeah, is that thing, whatever you're doing, slow it down. You know, you know,
Richard Linklater 1:42:40 I was blessed in that area. I had some weird patients. That I mean, I was impatient internally, but I was patient externally, like, I always thought approach, I would always ask myself, well, where are you going to be a year from now? Or date? You know, I could sit there and build to the future. I keep them sitting down going like it 22 or 23. You know, like, oh, getting a camera and equipment. I was thinking like, Okay, well, good dog said it. Like, they don't let you make your first film to your 30. So I've got I got seven or eight years, I just kind of put the bar, I just have achievable goals. Like my goal was to do one feature film by the time I was 13. In fact, when I got there, I'd done to, you know, but it was like achievable goals that you can work really hard for and like, no, patience is definitely required. Don't get anywhere near film if you don't have the trait of deferred gratification.
Alex Ferrari 1:43:42 Yes. Very much, though. Well,
Richard Linklater 1:43:46 yeah, existant gratification. How about that not even deferred
Alex Ferrari 1:43:51 does not exist yet. Because you never, but I mean, to be a bit To be honest, Rick, I mean, you're you're you're like the king of the long play, as far as storytelling is concerned, from boyhood to the before trilogy. Like you definitely have delayed gratification.
Richard Linklater 1:44:07 Yeah, it turned out that way. But I didn't have that plan, of course. But I think that is a trait of being process oriented. Like I love every day that I'm making a movie so much. I really do. If I could just be I was quoted one time, saying, like, if I could just make movies and they never had to come out. I would be happy if I could just make them like the coming out part is the least that you
Katie Cokinos 1:44:31 think all filmmakers are what most filmmakers are like that.
Richard Linklater 1:44:36 I maybe, I don't know. Oh, really. It's, it's made for the marketplace. And it's
Katie Cokinos 1:44:47 always said like doing the Film Society we'd much rather show, you know, came running than one of one I don't work at all,
Richard Linklater 1:44:57 but rather talk about another film.
Katie Cokinos 1:44:58 Exactly. You know, as
Richard Linklater 1:45:04 Yeah, no, that's the downside of this modern era is so much personality of the people involved, you know, like directors in the old studio system. And, you know, it wasn't bait. No one knew what a director did. I grew up in an era, right? 60s 70s I didn't know who a director was. I mean, Hitchcock was the only one we knew. And I didn't know what he did. I just knew that guy was associated with those kind of scary movies or something.
Katie Cokinos 1:45:34 Well, I'm reading David Brown Lowe's book on the silent era parade passed by, and they really didn't know what a director was,
Alex Ferrari 1:45:45 they just sort of were making it up as they went along.
Richard Linklater 1:45:47 Yeah.
Katie Cokinos 1:45:49 Because it was such a craft, it still is a very crop oriented. Medium. And so. Yeah, um, is it the john cage, quote, everyone is in the best seat. I think that took me a long, long time, to realize isn't the bed seat. So I think it kind of, cuz I never wanted to be in bomont nature of creating art, or especially filmmaking is you you want to create a world, you know, that you latch on and you inhabit. So you're not really that happy where you are. But in order to create that, you have to sit down and be happy in the seat you're in. So I think that was something when that clicked in for me, I think I was finally able to create in, in film, because it's such take so long to make films, which I think is why I love people in the film business more than any other type of people, even the worst film people. And I remember in Austin, going to parties where there are a bunch of musicians, and no one wanted to talk. That's all we did was talk about what movies we saw talking about, you know,
Richard Linklater 1:47:26 yeah, films, the best atmosphere, because the people who are attracted to it, it's such an external, it's really intelligent, excited people about ideas and stories. You know, whether they read a magazine, I just love the innocence of like, Oh, I just read this great story. I think it makes a great movie. Yeah. And I'd like you like that. So like the odds of that magazine article, they read that they becoming a movie or like, point 0001. But it happens. And just that impulse, that beautiful impulse to like, fashion, this thing bigger and amazing. And to tell a story in film, and, you know, it attracts people who are optimistic, who believe, yeah, dream and want to be in this kind of parallel world. Yeah, like, every crew member, everybody there, they could be doing something else, you know, they could have taken their college degree or they could have, you know, but they're here because they love it. They love storytelling, they love being a part of this, you know, nomadic Gypsy, you know, cannot make a movie, that they just love that life and to be a part of the magic that is in the process. And you know, there's a certain confidence in the world that they want variety. They want different people coming in going, you know, I tell people, like, if you want a weekly check every two weeks and you want a two week vacation, you really, if you care about things like that you can't be in the film business. You have to Yeah, like the uncertainty the absolute lack of you know, anything that you can any
Alex Ferrari 1:49:09 security any security any, any,
Richard Linklater 1:49:12 any any day, the industry is going to take it away from me, you're going to go through personal ups and downs. Like Alex when he said like, oh, I've had highs and lows. Yeah, I think, but I never considered them lows. I considered them like, well, this is a this is where you find yourself. It's like, I wasn't like physically threatened or harmed. I was just like, Oh, this kind of sucks. But I would run into other filmmakers. And we'd look at each other and go, can you can you believe how bad it is? Like you can't get money for neither can I? And we're like, and then you go like, well, we got lucky by age. We lived through a generation where you could and then it turns around then it goes from being like the worst time to being the best time ever. And I think that's kind of where we are today. You know, like
Katie Cokinos 1:49:59 yeah, It's funny, I was watching Age of Innocence with my daughter.
Alex Ferrari 1:50:05 So beautiful Oh,
Richard Linklater 1:50:08 summer with my daughter. Like the 12th time I've seen that, but it was my greatest screening ever. That film skits more sublime and beautiful.
Katie Cokinos 1:50:18 Please, I always wanted to write a little short film about what Newland Archer does. After he turns away and doesn't go into the apartment. My daughter said, Oh, no, Mom, we want we need to do a series of madama lenskart. Pre coming to New York. I went to see her life in Europe.
Alex Ferrari 1:50:43 All that, you know, I'll see that
Katie Cokinos 1:50:44 for the first time. I was like, you know, well, of course. I think that's a great idea. But it's like that actually. Could that actually could be something. Yeah.
Alex Ferrari 1:50:55 Got a call Sony, Rick. Let's call Sony. Let's get this. Let's get this project going.
Richard Linklater 1:51:00 They're going into films all the time now. Like, aren't they Clarice? They're doing a Silence of the Lambs show. There. You go into these iconic movies, you grab a character out and you make a show about them. So there we go.
Katie Cokinos 1:51:13 Let's get because I mean, the count was awful. Like, yeah, know how bad please don't let her go back. You know, the Secretary. It's like, Why? What happened? What happened?
Alex Ferrari 1:51:29 Sorry, so guys,
Katie Cokinos 1:51:30 incomprehensible education Really? Was that you know,
Alex Ferrari 1:51:35 so Alright, so this is the last question. And it's arguably the toughest question of the entire conversation. Oh, three of your favorite films of all time. For everyone not watching Rick's eyes just busted out of his
Katie Cokinos 1:51:52 tree
Richard Linklater 1:51:53 wants to ask this question I produced a list of 250 Films 300 of these at any moment could be in my top two the top 10 and I was asked
Alex Ferrari 1:52:04 so this so in this moment, ending on the day and how I'm feeling so today today how you're feeling this moment in time three of your family
Katie Cokinos 1:52:12 narrowly down and say the films that we showed in films in whatever
Richard Linklater 1:52:19 genre pika I don't know. You know, what you
Alex Ferrari 1:52:24 It's a tough
Richard Linklater 1:52:26 tough tough one out
Katie Cokinos 1:52:32 here it is the film like right now that after we're done with this that we had, we have no problem just sitting down and watching Okay, I just sit down and watch it right now. Three of them.
Richard Linklater 1:52:44 Yeah, you could Yeah, like they say the one that you flipping through the channels it's on you watch it from
Alex Ferrari 1:52:51 the Romo throw. You throw away the remote movie, okay.
Richard Linklater 1:52:56 At this very moment, but it's place I'm seeing so many this summer with my daughter's like watching films again. So I won't say any of those because I just saw but some of the ones I would like to see right this second. Wow. Um, Katie, you can jump in here while I think I'm over. I'm overdue a berry lendon screening. Oh, I
Alex Ferrari 1:53:21 just saw that a year ago. That's Oh,
Richard Linklater 1:53:24 I'm ready to watch Barry Lyndon again. With in mind this thing I'm working on. I'm ready to watch. I just think of certain directors.
Katie Cokinos 1:53:36 I'm gonna think of more spiritual films since we did talk about that.
Alex Ferrari 1:53:42 Let me be very, very Linden is very spirit. Any Kubrick film every Kubrick film is spiritual to me as I watched as I go to the church of Kubrick.
Richard Linklater 1:53:51 You know, I'm kind of in a new york new york mode to relationship.
Alex Ferrari 1:53:57 Wow, New York. We
Richard Linklater 1:53:59 talked about it here. You know, like, creative people get together and just the possibility that making that work or that's
Katie Cokinos 1:54:09 so sad.
Richard Linklater 1:54:13 Yeah. So Joyce the musical. I don't know. It's a it pulls something off. That's
Alex Ferrari 1:54:18 rare. Very rare.
Katie Cokinos 1:54:21 Well, in honor of my dad, then got his hard hat right back here. Oh,
Alex Ferrari 1:54:27 that's beautiful.
Katie Cokinos 1:54:28 I have to say, Gigi. Oh,
Alex Ferrari 1:54:32 yeah.
Katie Cokinos 1:54:33 It's a coming of age film beautifully. It's it's a jewel. It's everything comes together. It's it's really just, I could I Perfect, perfect film. Every it hits all the right notes it you know, it's so I can watch that anytime. There's gg gg
Richard Linklater 1:55:00 I'm Gigi.
Katie Cokinos 1:55:01 And
Alex Ferrari 1:55:05 I don't want I don't want this to turn into a painful thing so we can move on if you'd like.
Katie Cokinos 1:55:09 Me and Alexander I really abala Bergman's film. I sort of I break for Fanny and Alexander. It's really so beautiful. And
Alex Ferrari 1:55:22 yeah, I mean, honestly, the one the one of my favorite Kubrick films, his Eyes Wide Shut, and it gets for me I absolutely love Eyes Wide Shut. Okay.
Katie Cokinos 1:55:32 Do we have to do another podcast where all we talked about his Eyes Wide Shut? Yes. love that movie. And to me it was Madame Bovary meets Lost Highway
Alex Ferrari 1:55:45 Oh, so it's
Richard Linklater 1:55:46 yeah remark shut it's amazing you know another film that I've I've come around on completely and I think a lot of people I mean, I I didn't dislike it the way others seem to but watching the great trilogy this summer. my godfather three is actually Ah, so much.
Alex Ferrari 1:56:10 It's so much is that the new cut the news? Is that the new cut Are you agreeing with
Katie Cokinos 1:56:15 no. Okay would have been killed. She would have not been allowed to live first off Eli Wallach comes in way too late in the film for him to be any sort of any don't make that film without Robert Duvall.
Richard Linklater 1:56:36 Sorry, they would have had the ball but they they worked it around now. It's It's It's completely underrated. It's it's really a mature middle A i don't know i totally
Alex Ferrari 1:56:52 look at the bottom line. The bottom line is when you have when you're comparing it to godfather one and two you really can't you can't
Richard Linklater 1:56:58 you can't win that fight like Eyes Wide Shut. How do you compare it to the body of work? You know, it was kind of misunderstood as they I think I found the three is ascending. That I just marked my work.
Katie Cokinos 1:57:08 You think Michael, who kills afraid is gonna allow K to live with all that she knows. No. I have to go with David Thompson on this. He she would be dead. Dead. Yeah, let's
Richard Linklater 1:57:26 he could do that.
Katie Cokinos 1:57:27 Yes, he could. Listen. The third one. Let's just do the one we love. Come on. Yeah.
Richard Linklater 1:57:37 Oh yeah. The Vinton Minnelli boy I bet that's really I almost hesitate to show that to people post like, in this year, it was always pushing the boundaries in the me to era how poorly they treat women or at least fit up of women.
Katie Cokinos 1:57:54 You can do like what Turner Classic Movies is doing. Which is is talking about it reframing it. Yeah, I mean, like they did that with the searchers.
Alex Ferrari 1:58:05 I mean, how does how does blazing set how does? Yeah, how does Blazing Saddles come out today? Like? Well, I mean, seriously,
Richard Linklater 1:58:13 I mean, some game running is so beautiful. I do love it. It's still a perennial top lists, cuz you know Frank, Dean Shirley. And I haven't seen it just lately. I want to show it to my I'm almost scared to show it to my daughters. They won't like it.
Alex Ferrari 1:58:35 Well, listen, listen, I love that this has been like film film geeks united I mean it's fantastic that there's been so much debate about cinema and it's almost it's just been wonderful. Like being a flat well I think everyone listening is like a fly on the wall on a just on like just some filmmakers who just saw a movie or sitting in a Denny's somewhere at midnight after watching a movie that just talking about cinema essentially
Katie Cokinos 1:59:00 how much fun we get I hop
Alex Ferrari 1:59:04 yeah I have Denny's whatever that what was that whatever was open at the time. Whatever's near the theater that Yeah, you just but it has been an absolute absolute pleasure. Where can I where Can everybody see I dream too much?
Katie Cokinos 1:59:17 Oh, right. Okay. Yeah.
Richard Linklater 1:59:20 I'm glad it's finally getting out there.
Katie Cokinos 1:59:23 Yeah.
Richard Linklater 1:59:25 its own path has
Unknown Speaker 1:59:27 my producers told me to and of course I don't know. So it's I definitely Amazon and like
Alex Ferrari 1:59:36 Hulu to ban and those.
Katie Cokinos 1:59:43 Yeah, and all the all of the usual like your TV
Alex Ferrari 1:59:50 And I will put a link in the in the show notes. But guys, I really appreciate you taking the time. This has been an absolute joy. Just geeking out with you guys about sin. All right. Wait, listen, listen. Let's call a spade. Let's call a spade a spade. We're cinephiles. I'm sorry. So, but it's been absolutely wonderful. But thank you so much for your time guys. I truly appreciate it.
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