Rebels on the Backlot (54 page)

Read Rebels on the Backlot Online

Authors: Sharon Waxman

BOOK: Rebels on the Backlot
10.39Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

170 “Everyone backed away from the movie”: De Luca, author interview.

170 stomped on the shreds: Confidential source, author interview.

171 “naked, humping butts …”: Tichenor, author interview.

171 “We put it in the movie, got the rating”:
Village Voice
, October 14, 1997.

171 He quietly showed the version to
Newsweek
critic David Ansen: Tichenor, author interview.

171 “gloriously alive”: David Ansen, “Get Inside His Head,”
Newsweek
, November 1, 1999.

172 “What can you say?”: Lynn Hirschberg, “His Way,”
New York Times
, December 19, 1999.

172 At the opening screening in Pasadena: Tichenor, author interview.

172 “this year’s fireworks event.” Janet Maslin, “An Actor Whose Talents Are the Sum of His Parts,”
New York Times
, October 8, 1997.

172 “Like Spielberg’s
Sugarland Express”:
David Ansen, “Born in the U.S.A.,”
Newsweek
, October 6, 1997.

172
“Boogie Nights
is a startling film”: Kenneth Turan, “Ford Had Wayne, Capra Had Stewart, Scorsese Has De Niro,”
Los Angeles Times
, October 17, 1997.

172 “triumph of substance over style”: Cineaste.

173 “I feel I should thank you …”: Mim Udovitch, “Light … Camera … hold it, hold it,”
Esquire
, October 1997.

174 I feel like I’ve been assaulted”:
www.tranquileye.com/historyofporn/boogie_nights.html

174 “I couldn’t justify it in practical terms”: De Luca, author interview.

174 “How do you feel about making a movie with frogs falling out of the sky?”: Sellar, author interview.

Chapter Seven

175 “I’m not interested in making the movie
with
you”: David Fincher, author interview.

176 who he derisively called Saucy Rossy: Fincher, author interview.

177 “Brad will have to cut his fee”: Laura Ziskin, author interview.

178 “He looked very young and yet…”: Fincher, author interview.

178 “I love it, but do you think it’s funny?” Edward Norton, author interview.

179 they had to pay him $2.5 million to woo him away: Fincher and Brian Swardstrom, author interviews.

179 “They had me over a barrel”: Norton, author interview.

179 “I ultimately said, ‘I’m not gonna be out of this film’”: Norton, author interview.

179 sent the script to a friend: Fincher and Cameron Crowe, author interviews.

181 Pitt and Norton also learned how to make soap: Norton, author interview.

181 “She was this tiny little pale thing”: Fincher, author interview.

182 “Her mother was just howling, she was rolling in the aisles”: Fincher, author interview.

182 “It had to be a woman …”: Fincher, author interview.

183 “At $50 million it was a good bet”: Ziskin, author interview.

184 “The more I talked to Charlie …” Spike Jonze, author interview.

185 “It was a scary thing …”: Jonze, author interview.

185 “There’s something so enigmatic about him”: Jonze, author interview.

185 Jonze … wooed Coppola in the oddest of ways: Ethan Smith, “Spike Jonze Unmasked,”
New York Magazine
, October 25, 1999.

185 “Francis said, ‘In 10 years we’ll all be working for him’”: Peter Kobel, “The Fun and Games of Living a Virtual Life,”
New York Times
, October 24, 1999.

186 In late 1997, on a gray day in Paris: Jonze, Landay, author interviews; John Malkovich interviews in
New York Times
, et al.

187 “I am ridiculous.” Kobel, “The Fun and Games of Living a Virtual Life.”

187 “I kind of felt like it was a lose-lose situation …” Jonze, author interview.

187 “in Hollywood that means yes”: Steve Golin, author interview.

188 “I was trying to figure out how to get out of it”: Michael Kuhn, author interview.

188 “It was a famous script …”: John Cusack, author interview.

189 “When I first met her I was really skeptical …” Jonze, author interview.

189 “We started pushing the character …” Jonze, author interview.

190 “I was so stubborn”: Claudia Eller, “Quirky
Being John Malkovich
May Have Last, Best Laugh,”
Los Angeles Times
, November 30, 1999.

190 The director called: Kuhn, author interview.

190 “I couldn’t think of any more excuses, so I said okay”: Kuhn, author interview.

190 “Golin’s penis is on the line in a big way”: Eller, “Quirky
Being John Malkovich
May Have Last, Best Laugh.”

190 “I was going to castrate him”: Kuhn, author interview.

190 “I don’t think anybody felt confident …” Tom Pollock, author interview.

191 “Tell Paul I’ll sweep the floors in his next movie”: John Lesher, author interview.

191 “I thought it had amazing energy …” David O. Russell, author interview.

192 “If you can get Cameron Crowe’s dick …”: Danny Bramson, author interview.

192 “I was in a position I will never ever be in again …”: Lynn Hirshberg, “His Way,”
New York Times
, December 19, 1999.

193 “I see Paul in all the characters …”: Mim Udovitch, “The Epic Obsessions of Paul Thomas Anderson,”
Rolling Stone
, February 3, 2000.

193 “I consider
Magnolia
a kind of beautiful accident …”: Hirschberg, “His Way.”

194 Apple and Tichenor had tears in their eyes: Dylan Tichenor, author interview.

194 “I thought it would be an important film”: Mike De Luca, author interview.

194 “I wanted to make something that was very intimate …” John Patterson, “Magnolia maniac; At the age of 30 and with just three films to his name, Paul Thomas Anderson has already been granted the heady power of the Final Cut,”
The Guardian (London)
, March 10, 2000.

195 “There are certain moments in your life when things are so fucked-up …”: David Konow, “PTA Meeting,”
Creative Screenwriting
7, no. 1 (January 2000).

196 “It was really foggy and the mountain road was covered in ice …”: Ibid.

196 “It was a completely crazy thing to be doing on a Thursday night …”: Sellar, author interview.

197 “New Line wanted to keep Paul in the fold”: Sellar, author interview.

197 “It was a big day for my little Paul”: Bumble Ward, author interview.

197 In the end the film cost $42 million: Sellar and Tichenor, author interview.

197 “I just went through the experience where the life-or-death thing …”: Interview in
That Moment
, making-of documentary on
Magnolia
DVD.

198 “A friend of mine was teaching a class on audio-recording …”: David Konow, “PTA Meeting.”

198 “I would just have to calm him down …”: Ibid.

198 “I want to intimidate her …”: Tichenor, author interview.

199 “David, I’m going to tell you something …”: Fincher, author interview.

200 “Arnon, I completely understand what you’re saying …”: Fincher, author interview.

200 “That $5 million is not going to come from Eastman Kodak …”: Fincher, author interview.

201 “This is crazy”: Bill Mechanic, author interview.

201 “I said if I couldn’t make the movie, I wouldn’t stay in the job …”: Mechanic, author interview.

202 “Dude—I have no sympathy for you …”: Fincher, author interview.

Chapter Eight

204 “You’ve gotta see what I’m up against …”: Lance Acord, author interview.

204 “There was a point early on where I worried for my job”: Acord, author interview.

204 “I thought Cameron Diaz was in this scene …”: Acord, author interview.

204 “I’m in this crazy movie,
Being John Malkovich …
”: Michael Kuhn, author interview.

205 “Nobody paid any attention, and we finished the movie”: Steve Golin, author interview.

205 “Hi, my name is Kevin Misher …”: Vince Landay, author interview.

206 “I think we all felt busted …”: Spike Jonze, author interview.

207 “He’s a screamer”: Golin, author interview.

207 “I think it’s about the need to escape yourself for fifteen minutes …”: Peter Kobel, “The Fun and Games of Living a Virtual Life,”
New York Times
, October 24, 1999.

207 “You open the door and where are you?”: K. K. Barrett, author interview.

208 “It may seem absurd to listen to that conversation …”: Barrett, author interview.

208 “If Terry Gilliam had made this, he’d have gone the opposite way …”: Acord, author interview.

209 “We’ve got enough frames just to do this quick shot”: Landay, author interview.

210 “When we shot it on Cameron’s close-up, we just let the camera roll …”: Jonze, author interview.

210 Finally Huber became available: Landay, author interview.

210 “it was just this miserable thing to watch”: Jonze, author interview.

211 “You feel like you’re on the brink of failure all the time …”: Jonze, author interview.

212 “If you make money on the movies, you keep your job”: Confidential source, author interview.

213 “It’s a mind-altering script, I thought it was unique …”: Lorenzo di Bonaventura, author interview.

214 “Desperation is not the word …”: di Bonaventura, author interview.

215 “This is one of the best presentations I’ve ever seen”: di Bonaventura, author interview.

217 The story “seemed like something I could go nuts with …”: David O. Russell, author interview.

217 Gerber replied, “We’re not afraid of this type ofthing”: Russell, author interview.

219 “It was fairly singular”: di Bonaventura, author interview.

219 the studio was pushing Russell: George Clooney, author interview.

219 “He never said anything to me about that at the time”: Russell, author interview.

220 “Although superficially our relationship was not complicated …”: Steven Soderbergh,
Getting Away With It
(London: Faber and Faber, 2000), 215.

221 an article he’d read in the
Utne Reader
Edward Zwick, author interview.

221 “I am the perfect person to write this …”: Laura Bickford, author interview.

222 “I’d have been an idiot not to make that deal …”: Bickford, author interview.

222 “I was giving up creative vision of that movie to Steven Soderbergh …”: Zwick, author interview.

224 “I had a totally different idea about the law enforcement side …”: Geoff Pevere, “Traffic: The Movie That Holly-Wouldn’t.”
Toronto Star
, December 29, 2000.

224 “The whole movie should feel as though we showed up …”: David Konow, “PTA Meeting.”
Creative Screenwriting
, no. 1 (January 2000).

225 It ripped the skin off his palms: Edward Norton, author interview.

225 Do the breasts have to have nipples?: Norton, author interview.

225 Norton and Pitt … getting the same injuries: Norton, author interview.

226 “There was something in it that kicked my head back …”: Michael Cieply, author interview.

226 “At the time there was a kind of hipness around the whole enterprise …”: Cieply, author interview.

Chapter Nina

228 “No, you’ve got to do it the Jewish way …”: David O. Russell, author interview.

228 Clooney letter to Russell: Courtesy George Clooney.

229 Russell answered the door with his video camera: Chris Nashawaty, “Three the Hard Way,”
Entertainment Weekly
, October 8, 1999.

229 “Isn’t he that guy who’s always squinting …”: Russell, author interview; Janet Grillo, author interview.

229 He would consider Clooney for the role: Russell and George Clooney, author interview.

229 “I want you to be very still in this role”: Clooney, author interview.

230 October letter from Clooney to Russell: Courtesy George Clooney.

230 “I keep sort of stealing things …”: Russell, author interview.

231 Hackman and Anderson clash on set of
The Royal Tenenbaums:
Confidential source, author interview.

232 “Difficult as he might have been, they got through it …”: Fred Specter, author interview.

232 “You people are all weird”: Greg Goodman, author interview.

232 “They were afraid of investing $40 million …”: Goodman, author interview.

233 “No one gave me a manual …”: Goodman, author interview.

233 “something wasn’t right …”: Claudia Puig, “Hollywood’s Brave New War,”
USA Today
, October 1, 1999.

233 “Every step of the way …”: Bruce Newman, “Cutting the Apron Strings, a Director Turns to War,”
New York Times
, September 12, 1999.

234 “If you make this movie it will be a nightmare …”: Clooney and confidential source, author interview.

234 “If you want to pull the plug on this movie, go ahead …”: Russell, Clooney, author interviews.

234 Clooney letter to Terry Semel: Courtesy George Clooney.

235 “If I can’t make movies like this, I don’t want this job”: Russell, author interview.

235 He never shook Jim Miller’s hand again: Russell, author interview.

235 “There was a distinct turn …”: Russell, author interview.

236 “I once finished at 4:30 in the morning …”: Iain Blair, “To
ER
Is Human; Clooney Has No Regrets About Hard Work of
Three Kings,” Chicago Tribune
, September 30, 1999.

236 “None of it was fun”: Goodman, author interview.

237 “David is a painter, not a technician …”: Goodman, author interview.

237 “You don’t talk to the actors …”: Goodman, Clooney, author interviews.

237 The crew was also impatient: Grillo, author interview.

238 “David’s always in the moment…”: Chris Nashawaty: “Three the Hard Way.”

238 Russell would be hysterical: Clooney, author interview.

238 “This is insane. What movie are we making?”: Goodman, author interview.

238 “Why can’t I just be loyal to my friend?”: Goodman, author interview.

238 “Clooney to the rescue …”: Jack Carter, “Clooney to the Rescue in Real-Life
ER
Drama,”
Globe
, December 22, 1998.

238 “You can’t do that …”: Clooney, author interview.

238 “It’s five hundred yards from where I was …”: Russell, author interview.

Other books

William Wyler by Gabriel Miller
Back to Life by Danielle Allen
The Islanders by Priest, Christopher
Lucky Billy by John Vernon
The Girls From Alcyone by Caffrey, Cary
Ghost Killer by Robin D. Owens
Daughter of Dusk by Blackburne, Livia
Winning by Jack Welch, Suzy Welch