No Meaner Place

July 14, 2010

“Go West young man, and grow up with the country.” – Horace Greeley

“Come West with Me” by Craig Bolotin

Based on the play “Abundance” by Beth Henley

What: Bess Stanford has lived a privileged life in the Boston of the late 1860s, but something is missing (as it was from the lives of most women of that era) – independence, free thought, self respect, freedom and adventure – and marrying the wealthy Mr. Farrington will not fill those gaps.

Who: Bess, her head filled with Emerson and Byron, her vision filled with pictures of mountains and Indians, her heart filled with dime store Western romance novels, and her hand grasping the personal ad of William Conklin Curtis of Burnt Forks, Wyoming Territory seeking a wife willing to “live a hard but prosperous life” and who must “have little fear of locust, inclement weather or the red man,” escapes out the window of her cloistered environment to the train station and a soon-to-be westward bound train leading her to a life with unlimited prospects and much hope. On this same train is another young woman, Emma, of considerably less means and circumstance who is also bound for Wyoming, having been convinced by her mother that a mail order marriage is her last hope and prospect given her advanced age, 25, and her beauty that can best be described as “handsome.” Emma, the “helpless” woman-type that Bess detests, gravitates toward Bess, wanting to share the romantic letters written by her prospective husband; Bess prefers the company of her photography books. They are not the only “mail-order” brides on the train.

Bride One: …You think they’re gonna want to have intimate relations right away?

Bride Two: I hope so. I’m not going all the way to Omaha to keep my virtue. I was doing that just fine in Cincinnati.

Bride Three: All I care about is that he’s got teeth. If he doesn’t have any teeth I’ll perish right then and there.

The girls wince at the thought of a toothless husband.

Bride Two: What about you, miss?

Bess: Me? I’d like to shoot a buffalo.

Bride Two: …Shoot a buffalo?

Bess: Yes, and photograph the Indians.

Laughter.

Bride One (mockingly) What are you going to do if one captures you?

Bess: Maybe I’ll marry him.

That quiets them.

Bride Three: Aren’t you concerned about your fiancé?

Bess: Yes, yes I am… My hope is that he’ll treat me as his equal, not as a maid or mother hen.

The girls are dumbfounded by her response. Bess leans closer.

Bess: Don’t you see? In fifty years people won’t only be writing about who we married or how many children we had, but what we thought and what we accomplished. (licks her rolling paper) This is the last frontier, ladies, and we are the chosen few. (holds out her cigarette) Cigarette anyone?

This, in short, is the proverbial modern woman and Emma has met neither its male nor female counterpart before. It is perplexing and somewhat frightening to her. Nevertheless, on the long voyage to the Wyoming Territory, they bond; a bond that becomes forged stronger upon the arrival at their destination where Bess discovers that her prospective mate, Will, is crushingly ordinary and Emma discovers that not only has her fiancé died, but that Jack, his feckless brother, has deceptively taken his place and is a womanizing scoundrel of limited opportunities.

Each woman endeavors to do her best, but Bess craves the spontaneity and sensuality present in Emma’s marriage and Emma craves the stability of Bess’s relationship. Tragedy strikes when, shortly after giving birth to Lizbeth, a beautiful baby girl, Emma is abducted by Indians.  Leaving Lizbeth in the care of Will and Bess, Jack begins a search for Emma throughout the Indian territory, sadly coming to the conclusion that she has been killed when her precious locket, a gift from Bess, is found in the rubble of an Indian village burned to the ground by the U.S. cavalry. Eventually returning, Bess leaves Will to help raise Lizbeth, discovering in Jack the adventurous soul she had always been seeking. Life blossoms for Bess as she discovers photography, and with Jack as her willing Sherpa they climb mountains for the perfect shot. Bess has finally gained all that she was seeking – love, independence, equality, and art. Except… the day arrives that all is upended when the Army informs them that Emma is not dead but has been rescued “against her will” from her Indian husband. Emaciated, tattooed, and almost unrecognizable she is brought home and nurtured by a conflicted Bess and Jack. Ridiculed by the townsfolk, alienated from her own daughter, and coming to a growing awareness of the true relationship between Bess and Jack, Emma rides back to her Indian family, pursued by Bess. Eventually finding Emma, Bess is unsuccessful in convincing her to return to Lizbeth, discovering that Emma has another child by her Indian husband.

Tragic circumstance intervenes in the form of the murderous U.S. Cavalry, determined to eradicate Emma’s tribe. In the process they kill Jack, shooting him when he tries to intervene, and Emma’s Indian husband as he tries to lead his family to their one hope of escape over a cliff into the roiling waters below. He is killed in the attempt at which point Emma, baby Adam in her arms, jumps into the dangerous waters below. Bess, abandoning reason, jumps after her and is able to save the child but loses sight of Emma.  Bess, now with a baby to care for, returns home to discover Lizbeth missing. Alone now, she will lead the nomadic existence of a freelance photographer, often working at traveling carnivals.

INT. Bess’s photography studio – night

A painted canvas backdrop of the Rocky Mountains. Circles are cut for the faces of the two Cowboys “chasing” two Indians on ponies.

The sign above reads: WILD WEST TINTYPES FIFTY CENTS THREE FOR A DOLLAR.

The room falls off into darkness where the box camera rests. Bess is framing a print with Adam, her back to the back-drop.

Bess: …When you get older, I’ll take you to shoot some real Buffalo… If there are any left.

Adam: Promise.

From off screen we hear a young girl’s voice.

Young Girl (O.S): One photograph, pleeease.

Man (O.S.): Your mother will be furious if we’re late.

Young Girl (O.S.): We won’t be. Swear it.

Bess: (without turning around) Welcome to the Wild West. Poke your heads through those holes and I’ll be right with you.

And just like that, fate rears its head, for the young girl is Lizabeth, traveling the circuit with her mother who now supports them lecturing audiences about her trials as an abducted squaw – embellishing, lying, doing whatever the audience desires in order to make her way in the world with her daughter.

No Meaner Place: In “Come West with Me,” loosely adapted from a play by Beth Henley entitled “Abundance,” Bolotin has found a center in the story of two women, each with entirely different aspirations, discovering what is necessary to survive on their own, something very different than that described in dime novels and formal education.  The weaker becomes the stronger and the ordinary is thrust into a life extraordinary.  The originally desired independence, equality, freedom and self respect have come at a mighty price. As in most things in life, be careful what you wish for, it may come true – even for those who don’t wish it.

Characters of enormous depth and growth blossom on the pages of this screenplay and it can only be because of timing or misfortune that this beautiful script was not made into a film.  We are all the worse for not being invited into the visual, spiritual and poetic world described within these pages.

Life Lessons for Writers: Quoth Lord Byron:I have always believed that all things depended upon Fortune, and nothing upon ourselves. Nothing truer was ever said about film development.

Conversation with the Writer:

Neely: I understand that this has been in development at various companies over the years and has come close to the precipice of production several times. More’s the pity for the public that it hasn’t reached the screen because it is lyrical in both word and vision.

Craig: It had very little development. I wrote it on spec and sold it. I was fortunate because I was always attached as the director and, for the most part, at the same studio for many years. Although the producers changed, the script didn’t change significantly. A lot of it had to do with me being attached as the director. Still, I was very lucky. Probably 95% of what you read was in the original script.

Neely: That’s really unusual.

Craig: It never happened again!

Neely: When we first talked, I sensed a conflict in your feelings for this piece because it was an adaptation, although a very loose one.  How loose an adaptation is it?

Craig: The only reason I was cautious about talking about this was because I believe, whether it be a novelist or a playwright, that the underlying material makes such a large contribution even if you’re using, like in this particular case, only two or three scenes and a half dozen lines of dialogue. Someone else came up with the idea of doing two women from opposite ends of the social spectrum who go out West and end up meeting two men who they don’t know. And they have this emotional and physical journey over many years where they finally end up together, although it ends differently than in the play. As a writer and a director, I think it’s important to give credit to the writer of the source material. I feel the same with original screenplays that are rewritten by someone else. It always drives me crazy to see that the name of the original writer is often left off the screenplay in favor of the person rewriting it. And it’s done all the time by major writers and writer/directors.

Neely: I hear what you’re saying, and not taking anything away from Beth Henley who came up with the original idea, but I always remember what was said by a gentleman that I met at a restaurant once when I made a disparaging remark about Andrew Lloyd Webber’s music. I enjoyed it but it was terribly derivative. And he looked up at me and said, “Honey, all music is derivative. Way back in history, there were a couple of original tunes and they’ve already been done (over and over).” So it’s really about how artistically and how well you work with that underlying material that matters; not, necessarily whether you came up with that underlying material.

Craig: I disagree with that, but let’s move on.

Neely: Well we’ll agree to somewhat disagree on that. I strongly believe that adaptation is, in itself, an art form and a very delicate one.

Craig: Well what do you think is harder to write: “Chinatown” from scratch or an adaptation of L.A. Confidential?” I would say “Chinatown” because he had to come up with the world and the characters; and the guy doing “L.A. Confidential” had a 400 page novel to pick and choose from. They’re both, however, great screenplays.

Neely: But I’m not talking about which is more difficult and I’m not comparing the two. What I am saying is that adaptation is an art form in itself. To some extent, the adaptor is hampered because that world was already created; he or she is further hampered because of a preconceived audience expectation when they already know the underlying material.

Craig: I would call it craft and not an art form.

Neely: I just fundamentally disagree with you.

Craig: Have you ever written an original screenplay?

Neely: No.

Craig: Have you ever done an adaptation?

Neely: Nope.

Craig: Okay.

Neely: But I have seen very good examples of both. I’m not saying that one is better than the other. I’m saying…

Craig: One is much more difficult to write. Creating something from a blank page is a lot harder than being “hampered” by a three hundred page novel full of potential scenes, characters and a plot – no matter how flawed.

Neely: Let’s get back to “Come West with Me.” How did you find the play and what inspired you to use this particular piece of material as your underlying thesis.

Craig: I saw the play and I’m a friend of Beth Henley’s. I thought that the kernel of the story was great and was showing us a world I had never seen portrayed accurately: women in the West, without guns a la Annie Oakley, or as prostitutes, saloon keepers, or mere appendages to their rancher husbands. I then started to read journals written by women. What a struggle it was for these women, these pioneers. They were living in sod huts with snakes dropping out of them; it would be 20 below zero, they had five kids, no medicine, no heat of course, no light other than candles; they would be grandmothers in their early forties and they’d often be dead by fifty.

The more I read these journals, the more interesting it became. One set of journals was called “Captivity Narratives” written by women who were captured by Native Americans and who, after returning, made money lecturing in the East about their abductions. This was something else I had never heard of. I wanted to tell the story of what it was honestly like for these women based on Beth’s play, her research and mine. Mail order brides, circa 1870, would answer an ad, get on a train, and be stuck with a total stranger in a sod hut in the middle of nowhere a week later. Amazing when you think about it. It does, I hope, also compare and contrast the idea of an arranged marriage versus romantic love. The latter, by the way, came very late in Western history.

Neely: One of the things I really appreciated was that you put women at the forefront of this. Women had been always been featured in the more realistic or grittier Western films. There was always a woman behind the man, whether it’s “Ole Yeller” or “Shane,” who is living a hardscrabble existence. There are lots of movies from the 30’s and 40’s that go a bit beyond the “good wife” in John Ford films. It’s a slight film but I’ve always liked “Rachel and the Stranger,” where Robert Mitchum comes and upsets the delicate balance between a cold widower and his new “mail order” bride (in the sense that he bought her as an indentured servant) who was expected to do manual labor as well as take care of home, hearth and his children – it may not have been great art, but it was a good story.

Craig: Even in “Shane,” which is a wonderful film, Jean Arthur lives in a beautiful ranch house with her water well right outside her front door. Her clothes were sparkling clean, they weren’t full of moth holes, etc. This isn’t the way it was.

Many of the pioneering women of the West were living in sod huts, where snakes lived as overhead roommates; they froze in the winter, broiled in the summer. The men would often leave for weeks to go hunting. The women suffered from depression. There was one story about a woman who went up on the roof to patch a hole and ended up freezing to death. It was a much harder life than portrayed in most films and novels; definitely worse than living at Fort Apache, or wherever Ford had his women living. But that’s not what Ford was interested in – it certainly wasn’t the woman’s pioneering spirit.

Neely: I agree. For the most part, women played a very subsidiary role in John Ford movies, which was unfortunate (because I really like John Ford movies). But “Come West with Me” is a much deeper, much more interesting, and to a certain extent, a much more realistic view of what a woman’s life was like. I especially liked that your main character, or at least the woman who started out to be your main character, Bess, fell into the classic trap of “When the legend becomes fact, print the legend.” Reading the Horace Greeley-type books and actually believing the press that she was reading. I loved the different approach, the different reasons why both women were heading West; it adds so much depth to the story, especially considering how it all turns out. I, too, felt the pull of the romantic literature that brought Bess, foolishly, out there. You also captured a very visual effect. This is where adaptation, a very good adaptation for film, comes into play; when you’re dealing with novels or plays, you have to see and feel the material visually. I actually felt the visual influence of photographer Edward Curtis. Who were your literary and visual arts influences in writing this piece?

Craig: I shot a lot of photographs and taught photography many years ago, but I wasn’t looking at Curtis’ photographs. There was a book of photographs I found, most of which were anonymous; photos of and by the women I was writing about. Women were doing a lot of photography in the West. The book, I believe, is called Women of the Old West and is a combination of journals and photos – the real photos of the real pioneers in and outside of their sod houses, working their patch of land. So my influence wasn’t Curtis, but many other photographs and paintings from this period. In England, of course, there was Julia Margaret Cameron in the 1860’s and 70’s.

Neely: Other than Bess’ admiration for her as a professional and independent woman, her photography isn’t really applicable as they were primarily portraits of the famous or staged allegorical and historical scenes.

Craig: Yes, that’s true. I stretched the truth a bit with Bess taking photos of Buffalo herds and Native Americans. But then, recently, I found a website that has a history of women photographers of the West with landscape photos in Yosemite and of the plains filled with Buffalo herds taken by women at this time.

Neely: Clearly you have a lot of literary influences just in writing, in general. Who are your favorite writers and why?

Craig: That’s another tough one because by naming some, I leave someone else out. It’s like your favorite song. I have dozens and dozens

Neely: Then just give me some examples of some authors who do influence you.

Craig: Tolstoy’s Anna Karenina and Joseph O’Neill’s Netherland.  One wrote a book 125 years ago and one two years ago. One is a vast portrait of Russian society; the other, a microscopic look at post 9/11 New York. Apples and Orangutans. Don Quixote, which I reread recently. I’m from Chicago so I like Saul Bellow’s Herzog and Seize the DayBlood Meridian is a great Western novel by Cormac McCarthy. There’s Nabokov’s Lolita. Madame Bovary…  James Agee, Paul Bowles, and Faulkner…

Neely: Take Nabokov, for example. What is it that draws you to Nabokov?

Craig: His pyrotechnical prose, wicked wit, the surgically precise portrait of American society circa 1955; and the funniest unreliable narrator of all times!

Neely: What about Tolstoy. You mentioned Anna Karenina.

Craig: The unforgettable characters. The enormous tapestry he weaves of Russia, the microscopic examination of lives and mores, of the Moscow aristocracy, gentlemen farmers and the peasants. The ruminations of the nature of life, faith, death, love. It’s an enormous, rich and complex novel. And of course, it’s one of the great love stories.

Neely: What are you reading right now?

Craig: Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel, and I’m reading a book on the Middle East called The Media Relations Department of Hezbollah Wishes You a Happy Birthday by Neil MacFarquhar. He was the New York Times correspondent in Cairo for 5-10 years. It’s one of the best books I’ve read on the Middle East.

Neely: Just as an aside, I highly recommend a book about the 9/11 terrorists called Perfect Soldiers by Terry McDermott.

Craig: I’ve read it; it’s very good. I did an adaptation of a novel called Terrorist by John Updike, so I spent a lot of time reading everything I could about terrorists/terrorism and the 9/11 terrorists. Perfect Soldiers is on my shelf.

Neely: I know that you have taught classes. Since you are both a writer and a director, I’d like to know what the focus of your course was.

Craig: In the three places I’ve taught, including The Sundance Middle East Screenwriting Lab in Jordan, two were on screenwriting and one was mentoring senior thesis short films. The students were graduate school writer/directors. I helped shape their scripts, come up with a visual plan, a visual arc to the story … all the way through the editing. The other classes were screenwriting classes.

Neely: Any so-called critical studies component to the screenwriting classes?

Craig: No. But the way I taught screenwriting was by comparing and contrasting different films. I would show the first 10 minutes of three different films in order to discuss “openings.” That was my way of teaching – I would show films along with xeroxing chapters here and there from various text books (note: with proper fees paid to the authors of said texts of course). I would look at the beginnings of films to try to determine, or rather let them determine, why, for example, some openings were better than others.

Neely: Can you give me an example of three films you would have used to illustrate that point for the openings?

Craig: I don’t want to say because with films I used, all of the directors are still working.

Neely: Maybe I was making an incorrect assumption, but were they good examples or bad examples? Why don’t you give me an example of what you would have considered a good example.

Craig: What I think is a great opening? “Jules and Jim” has a great opening. And I used it in reference to “Up” because the beginning of “Up” is terrific – that montage at the beginning. That wasn’t really a comparison but it was showing what you could do in live action versus animation and that there’s a precedent for pretty much everything in cinema, even though it’s only 120 years old.

The beginning of “Jules and Jim,” which is 40 years old, does the same kind of montage, but with real people very quickly covering a fairly long period of time, showing the relationships and the friendships –  it’s magical. The first 10 minutes of that film are breathtaking – the way Truffaut skips around in time and condenses the story; and by the end you know these characters so well.

Neely: Well it is a perfect movie.

Craig: I don’t know about that.

Neely: It was a perfect adaptation…

Craig: You’re right, it was an adaptation.

Neely: Great direction, great cinematography, outstanding choice of actors and acting; with the added attraction that the film still holds up today, which cannot be said of every movie that makes it onto somebody’s “Best” list.

Craig: Okay.

Neely: We had an incredibly intense discussion about film, sparked by my defense of “Gone with the Wind” as my favorite film (it’s actually tied with Marcel Carné’s “The Children of Paradise”). But, as favorite does not necessarily equal “best” movie ever made, I still reserve my right to my choice, in terms of favorite. What is your list of “bests?”

Craig: No. I have too many. Again it comes back to “what’s your favorite song?” – do you like the Beatles, or Bob Dylan, or Shostakovich? It’s pretty silly… If you want to talk about genres, or periods of time… I don’t have one film. It would be better to say, “What are the 10 best silent films? What are the best 10 screwball comedies pre WWII; post WWII? What are the best… you get the idea.

Neely: Instead of getting of the hook by saying “I can’t choose a best,” give me several that are iconic to you, for whatever reason.

Craig: (pause) Best neo-realist film – “Paisan;” best Japanese Samurai film, “The Seven Samurai;” best Westerns – “The Wild Bunch,” “Unforgiven,” Sergio Leone films. It’s silly in my opinion to have to choose a favorite film, or a favorite song, or a favorite painting.

Neely: That’s fine; just elaborate a little further. We won’t call this your definitive list.

Craig: … Best romantic comedy made in a foreign country in the 50’s – “Smiles of a Summer Night” by Bergman; best comedy of manners pre WWII – Renoir’s “Rules of the Game.” I mean it’s endless. “Force of Evil” by Abraham Polonsky is a favorite in its genre; “Rio Bravo” by Hawks is a Western I left out… You see, by making a list you’re automatically excluding. Best silent films –  “The Man with a Movie Camera” by Vertov; “Greed” by von Stroheim, “The Great Dictator” by Chaplin, “The General” by Keaton, “Gold Rush” by Chaplin, “The Crowd” by Vidor, “Sunrise” by Murnau. The best screwball comedies of the 30’s and 40’s, “His Girl Friday” (Hawks), “Twentieth Century” (Hawks), “The More the Merrier,” by Stevens, “The Awful Truth” (McCarey), so much by Preston Sturges.

Neely: Sturges only made about 6-8 films as writer/director before he fell apart. So it would be okay to include all of those.

Craig: Brahms wrote only four symphonies, but we still listen to all of them. We still watch most of Sturges. It’s quality, not quantity.

Neely: I’m not sure there have been too many people who have written and directed as well as Preston Sturges.

Craig: …Comedies: There’s also Lubitsch, McCarey, Cukor, Hawks, Wilder….

Neely: In terms of Sturges, it’s very much the same thing as Raymond Chandler and Dashiell Hammett. It’s not to say that one is better than the other; one clearly learned from the other, just as Sturges learned from Lubitsch.

Craig: I think that analogy applies more to Billy Wilder and not to Preston Sturges. I don’t think Preston Sturges was influenced by Lubitsch at all; he never talked about it. Billy Wilder, however, was influenced. I read somewhere that whenever Wilder was writing or directing a comedy scene, he would say, “How would Lubitsch do it?”

There is a great autobiography by Preston Sturges, one of my favorites because of the title. Do you know what it’s called? It’s called Between Flops. It’s really fun and very self-deprecating. That’s how he saw his career.

Neely: You’re right, I was confusing Sturges with Wilder, another of my all time favorites and someone who was almost without peer – given that English was his third language (after German and French). He captured the nuance of English and American culture perfectly.

Craig: Woody Allen is up there too. He had a great run of films, no matter what you think of the last 10 years, he still made “Annie Hall” and “Manhattan.”

Neely: I’m of the ilk that stops after “Annie Hall,” possibly after “Manhattan.”

Craig: You have many more restrictions – or should I say you’re more critical than I am. I think “Crimes and Misdemeanors” is a brilliant film and it was made long after “Manhattan.” “Hannah and her Sisters,” and many more. This exposes the problem of “best films,” once again. I think the most important film, the most important song, and your favorite book is impossible to categorize – I mean is your favorite book Gilgamesh, The Iliad, or Atonement?  You have to narrow it down. And I think film, because it has a short history, seems more amenable to categorization. But look, there’s Iranian cinema and Hungarian cinema and so on. We’re predisposed to films from our own culture, for starters.

Neely: You can only judge what you’ve seen, not what you haven’t seen, or read for that matter.

Craig: Even though I mentioned some books and some of those films, once again, I don’t like the idea of making lists. I think the whole idea of the “100 Best” is dangerous.

Neely: I think it is very clear how you feel about “best” lists. But I also remember a good friend many years ago remarking, “If you don’t have an opinion, you might as well be a carrot.”

Craig: I know I’ve probably just blown off great filmmakers and great writers because I didn’t sit here and try to narrow it down. What Paul Schrader wrote for Film Comment is the seminal article on the subject. He spent a lot of time ruminating about it, and he made a list that’s largely made up of what’s important in the history of cinema as opposed to what he personally likes. “Citizen Kane” is an obvious example but that doesn’t mean you can go watch “Citizen Kane” five times a week.

Neely: Actually I can’t watch “Citizen Kane” anymore.

Craig: My point is that all cinema after “Citizen Kane” was a reaction to it, so you have to reference that film because it changed filmmaking. So that obviously is why it’s on the list. There are so many great films and so many great contemporary filmmakers that I haven’t even mentioned.

Neely: What I found interesting about this article by Paul Schrader in Film Comment magazine (http://paulschrader.org/articles/pdf/2006-FilmComment_Schrader.pdf), is that even though he talks about “canon,” the “canon of film,” and what the criteria are for setting up a “canon,” in the end it’s still not thoroughly defined and it’s still just his opinion on what he considers to be the films that fulfill his “canon.”

Craig: I disagree. But of course, there’s always a subjective element; you can’t escape that. He’s following in the footsteps of Harold Bloom who came up with the canon for literature. I spoke recently to a Princeton literature professor, and she argued there is no canon. Evidently, this is a common point of view now in academia. The idea of a canon is passé.

Neely: The only difficulty that I saw with this particular article, because he is entitled to what he considers the films that fulfill his criteria for his canon, is that he didn’t elaborate enough on what his criteria were other than to say that the bar was very high.

Craig: I don’t think you’re giving him enough credit. Schrader briefly traced the history of aesthetic theory in this article. His point was that there has to be something more than the personal “I liked it,” or “that made me feel good.”

Neely: I definitely agree with that. Basically, what I thought he was saying was that there has to be something you can’t live without and that’s how you reach that bar.

Craig: Why don’t we go on because you’ve put a link to the article and people can read it and decide for themselves. It’s a good article – great food for thought. There is an aesthetic and he is trying to come up with five things. I can’t recall them all, but some of them were:  originality, beauty, symmetry… although you may not agree with his definitions. He also specifically talks about films that are not personal to him but are important to cinema. Everybody knows that films like “8½” and other similar films are sine qua non for most people. Again, you might not enjoy them but it doesn’t mean that they don’t belong. Then again you should also take a look at the lists created by the Cahiers du Cinema, as well as the “100” lists of the British Film Society and Sight and Sound.

Neely: Yes, everybody has a “100” list.

Craig: It comes down to whose list you’re looking at and that’s culturally determined, and so on. The AFI list is the least interesting because it’s only American films.

Neely: With the exception of “Lawrence of Arabia.”

Craig: How did they put that on there? Was it made by an American company? It’s an English director.

Neely: It’s an English director (David Lean) with interiors filmed in England with an English cast and a storied English writer (Robert Bolt); but with an American producer.

Craig: Sam Spiegel. That’s another great book to read, by the way, about film producing/making.

Neely: Yes, the great S.P. Eagle.

Craig: Spiegel is a wonderful character. It’s a very funny book by Natalia Fraser-Cavassoni (the title would take up a whole page of text). He was the Harvey Weinstein of his day; bigger than life.

Neely: Nick Murray’s documentary on the making of “The African Queen” goes into the history of Sam Spiegel.

Craig: Is it good?

Neely: Very good; very very good. It’s called “Embracing Chaos” and, unfortunately, in Paramount’s wisdom they chose not to release it and just put it as an “extra” on the finally released DVD of the beautiful restoration of “The African Queen.” It’s a wonderful documentary.

Craig: “Embracing Chaos” is a great title. That’s the best title ever – or at least tied with Preston Sturges’ autobiography.

Neely: We’ve covered so much. One thing I’d like to get to is the attitude toward film as an art form, primarily credited to the founding writers of “Les Cahiers du Cinema,” Jacques Rivette, François Truffaut, and Eric Rohmer. These guys were all writer/directors, auteurs in the purest sense of the word. But they should also be “credited” with weakening the writer’s influence in film by declaring Hitchcock, Hawks, Lang and Ford as true auteurs. Although Lang did write the scripts for his German films, like the others, he was a director only, once he emigrated to the U.S. It was a peculiar stance for Truffaut to take in that he and his other “New Wave” counterparts were writer/directors. I view their auteur theory as the disintegration of the power/position of the writer in film.

Craig: I don’t, because I think the writer had even less power in film before the demise of the studio system. Back then, writers would be chained to their desks in the “Writers’ Building” and there would be five guys working on a script at the same time. You used to have gag writers, and writers to come in to only work on the love story, etc. Sure, it still happens today, but it was worse back then, And also, most of the folks who rewrote never received credit – except maybe Ben Hecht; and by the way, all the writers, with a few exceptions, were men.

Regarding the “auteur theory,” I think it’s often misunderstood today. What Truffaut was talking about was either a theme or a visual style that could be attributed to one director over a variety of films. For instance with a Hitchcock film, you know it’s a Hitchcock film in the first five minutes; and not just because of the subject matter. That’s all the Cahiers du Cinema folks meant; it’s common sense. Or think of a Howard Hawks movie – he’d do a Western and then he’d do a gangster movie, whatever; but there’s a certain theme about men and brotherhood, etc. Pauline Kael and Andrew Sarris argued about this endlessly. I believe it was Andrew Sarris who actually coined the expression “auteur theory” – the filmmaker as the writer of his movie. There are obvious auteurs today. For instance the Coen Brothers; they write, direct, and even edit their films. Ingmar Bergman wrote his films, and of course, directed them. That’s the purest form, but, as I said, the Cahiers du Cinema version was misinterpreted. Sometimes the producer is the strongest person. Even Selznick put his stamp on a Hitchcock film (“Rebecca”).

I think what is more relevant today is the director’s possessory credit, which as a director and a writer I feel is ridiculous. A director may come on eight weeks before the shoot and he gets “a film by” credit! The possessory credit will never be overturned, but it should be. Film is a collaborative medium, not owned by one person (the director), with the exception of a handful of working filmmakers. But back to your question, as little respect as they get, I think writers are more respected today. When I first came here there were no screenwriting magazines. Now there are several, and they interview writers when a film comes out. This is all relatively recent. And television… I think we’re in a golden age – and writers are the Queens and Kings.

Neely: Switching back a bit, because this relates to the fate of “Come West with Me,” is there hope for the independent film or has the tentpole killed it?

Craig: I think what’s sad, more than the tentpole, is the lack of independent studios; the demise of distribution for independent films – the Miramaxes, the Warner Independents, the New Lines.

There are still people who are willing to invest in movies and independent movies still get made, but it’s harder and harder to get them distributed. That’s what’s scary. I’m not sure if I answered the question, but that to me is the bigger issue. The good news is that you can now make a film – shoot it high def on a camera that costs $3,000 and edit it on your computer. It’s wonderful. But often you can’t find anyone to distribute it. Recently, there have been several films made with substantial actors and actresses with significant budgets, 25-30 million dollars that are sitting on the shelf. Advertising costs are so high that the studios/distributors don’t want to risk it. And now they’re not even going to DVD. They just don’t get released anywhere. Sundance had 2,000 plus films submitted; some of those films were made for several hundred thousand dollars and others for several millions. But of those 2,000 films, 25 dramatic films got picked up for the festival – my numbers are probably slightly off, but they’re in the ballpark – and of those, something like six or eight narrative films get distributed. Eliminate the films that were made for two hundred thousand dollars, and there are still probably 1000 films costing several million dollars that never got distributed – that’s what’s worrisome. I think the tent-pole phenomenon has just made it harder for smaller films to find screens. Somebody said, and I don’t know if it’s accurate, that 5% of the movies are on 95% of the screens. So I guess the answer to your question is, I don’t think it’s ruined it because people will still continue to make great independent films and great studio films, by the way; it’s just that it’s going to be musical chairs to get your film distributed. Every year it seems like there are fewer chairs; and if you get one you can only sit in it for two weeks!

Neely: If you were still teaching, what would you say to your students to try to guide them through the quick sand of getting a passion project off the ground?

Craig: If you’re a writer/director, write something that can be made for very little money. Write something fresh and original that is your voice; and most importantly, a film that you want to see. Not what you think someone else would want to see. “The Squid and the Whale” is a great example. I think Baumbach made that movie for $1.8M or $2M. It was a very smart way of thinking about a first film. (Of course it still took him years to get it off the ground.) You definitely have to think about the budget. If you’re a screenwriter, the adage that you should write a movie you want to see, as opposed to writing what you think someone else wants to see, still holds.  When Tarantino wrote, he wrote the kind of movies, genre movies, he wanted to see. He just wanted to do it differently; but I’m sure that when “Reservoir Dogs” was going around he had a hard time. It’s a heist film but you don’t see the bank robbery. He wrote about the before and the after, but not the robbery itself.

Neely: What about new projects for Craig Bolotin? What are they or what might they be?

Craig: I just finished adapting a novel called Eight Months on Ghazzah Street by Hilary Mantel and I’m writing a spec script called “Cease Fire;”

Neely: I know you have somewhere you have to be so let me let you go, and thanks so much for your time and passion about movies. I so loved “Come West with Me.”

Please check out my latest blog on Studio System entitled “Wonderful TV Pilots Not Picked-up this Season”  (http://www.baselineintel.com/research-wrap?detail/C8/wonderful_tv_pilots_not_picked_up_this_season)

April 21, 2010

“If you obey all the rules, you miss all the fun.” – Katharine Hepburn

Filed under: Conversations With, Feature Films, Meyer, Produced, Producers — Tags: , , , — Neely Swanson @ 10:20 am

Preserving Our Cultural Heritage:

“The African Queen,” screenplay by James Agee and John Huston, directed by John Huston

“Embracing Chaos: The Making of ‘The African Queen,’” produced by Nicholas Meyer, directed by Eric Young.

What: Expanding on the mission of No Meaner Place, sometimes passion projects gestate for years but finally are born.  You may be attacked from different creative, legal and financial fronts, but sometimes…just sometimes, you succeed, even when you don’t get everything you wanted.  “The African Queen” has finally been restored to its full Technicolor glory and it was a long time coming.

No Meaner Place: “The African Queen,” first a book by C.S. Forester in 1935 and then a film by John Huston in 1951, is deservedly famous on a number of different levels – the script by the poet and genius of literary criticism, James Agee; the on-location Technicolor cinematography by Jack Cardiff of “Red Shoes” fame; the Academy Award-winning performance of a mature Humphrey Bogart; the pairing of Bogart and Katharine Hepburn for the first and only time; and the brilliance of John Huston’s direction as well as his infamous on-location adventures.

“The African Queen,” filmed in the Belgium Congo (now Zaire) and the part of British East Africa now known as Uganda, is the unlikely love story of spinster missionary Rose and gin-guzzling riverboat captain Charlie, forced to live together within the claustrophobic confines of the 30 foot scow lovingly dubbed “The African Queen” when Charlie rescues her from her mission in German East Africa after the Germans burn the village to the ground at the start of World War I.  Almost more remarkable than the film is the story of how it got made; and then how it got saved before the original print turned to dust.

“The African Queen” was reputedly the only film on AFI’s list of “The One Hundred Greatest American Films” that had never been released on DVD in the United States, let alone on Blu-Ray. Originally produced by Sam Spiegel and Romulus Films, a British entity comprised of the two Woolf brothers, John and James, and distributed by United Artists, the rights eventually fell to Paramount where they languished.  Embarking on a passionate crusade six years ago, Nicholas Meyer began a letter writing campaign aimed at getting Paramount to restore the film to its original glory and release it on DVD. This is the story of that crusade and the resultant documentary entitled “Embracing Chaos: The Making of ‘The African Queen’.”

Life Lessons: “I don’t try to guess what a million people will like, it’s hard enough to know what I like.” – John Huston

Conversation with Nicholas Meyer, producer of “Embracing Chaos: The Making of ‘The African Queen.’”

Neely: Nick, I have to say, prior to seeing the restored version of the film and the excellent documentary this past weekend at a special screening at USC, I had never been that much of a fan.  Now that I’ve seen it again, I can’t even imagine why I felt that way in the first place.  It’s really just two people in a boat – but what two people and what a boat! I don’t think that at any time do you realize that it’s just two people talking, arguing, connecting – and the sexual tension is so palpable. What is it that drew you to this film in the first place?

Nick: I think I fell in love with the film before I ever saw it, from listening to my father tell me about it.   His own infatuation was contagious and for reasons not too hard to fathom, I still associate his affection with it.   I know it occurred to me how pleased he’d be to learn the thing was so wonderfully brought back from the dead and that I played some part in its resurrection.  (Of course, he died in ‘88 and didn’t even realize what DVDs were, let alone that “AQ” wasn’t on one!)

Neely: Where did you see it the first time and what stayed in your mind after the first time you saw the film?

Nick: I can’t really remember. I’m betting that the first time I saw “The African Queen” was not in a theater but on television. Whereas I can remember “Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea,” “Oklahoma,” “Guys and Dolls,” “Around the World in 80 Days,” “Spartacus,” “Lawrence of Arabia” – I can tell you all of those and even “Casablanca” which I did see on a big screen the first time, but when you see something for the first time on TV it may be more problematic to remember.  When I asked Marty Scorsese in the documentary if he remembered when he first saw “The African Queen,” he had absolutely no hesitation: “Yes, it was at the Loew’s on 6th St. and 2nd Avenue…my father took me” (a father again) “and it was a full house and the audience loved it.” But I don’t have that. It’s the same thing with “The Wizard of Oz.” I first saw it on television and I can’t even remember if the television I first saw it on even had any color.

It’s interesting when you think of seeing movies on television or under less than ideal circumstances and what it is when you see them properly, projected on a big screen. My Dad said watching movies on television is like being kissed over the telephone.

Neely: My first experience with most classic films of the 30s, 40s and 50s, with the exception of “Gone with the Wind”, was on television and I don’t think you know the difference until the first time you see them on the big screen. If you loved it on TV you’re not going to lose that love when you see it at the movies, it’s only going to enhance the experience. I’d seen and laughed at “A Night at the Opera” many times on TV before I ever saw it in a theater, but when I saw it in a theater, I laughed til tears rolled down my cheeks.

Nick: This is the next point I was going to make. It’s true that you can discover them on a little black and white TV. They’re really so good that they exert a grip of iron on your imagination and never lets go – cut up, panned and scanned, with commercials slotted in…it just doesn’t matter.  But what a revelation seeing these movies properly projected and, if necessary, restored can be.

We’re calling these films “classics”, but growing up they were never in any categories for me – no highbrow distinctions. What did Mark Twain say? “A classic is a book that everyone knows, but no one has read.”  No one had to break it down and tell me I had to watch something because it was a classic. For me, it was much more self indulgent – it was “Where’s the popcorn?”

Neely: When did you become aware that “The African Queen” hadn’t been released on DVD?

Nick: It started as something much more elementary because for many years I didn’t even know what DVDs were. I had a VCR and thought that was enough and I wasn’t going to start another collection.  Then one year my brother-in-law, Roger Spottiswoode, gave me a machine for Christmas.  Someone, in years previous, had given me a DVD of “Fizcaraldo,” so finally I opened the disc and watched it and was so stunned by how different it was from VHS. And although I had no inclination to start a new collection, serendipitously I got a call from Lynn O’Leary at Paramount. She explained that she produced the DVDs at Paramount and wanted to know if I might consider being interviewed for the DVD of “Fatal Attraction.” This was the beginning of my education about these fascinating “extras” they put on the discs. I have no idea how “Extras” got started – maybe they just discovered they had lots of extra space to fill. I don’t know, but it got increasingly more interesting for me when I started doing these DVD commentaries on films, some of which I had worked on and some of which I hadn’t. There was no payment, but in exchange I would get DVDs; and that was how my collection was built. Soon I started making lists of DVDs I’d like for my collection.

Deviating just a bit, I’ve got an aside on the history of “extras.” I was interviewed for the DVD of “Star Trek II” and I told, without embellishment or self censorship, the story of how the screenplay came to be written (you can read about it in my book, A View from the Bridge: Memories of Star Trek and a Life in Hollywood).  But then I got a call from Lynn (O’Leary) saying that their lawyers had told her they couldn’t use any of my interview. The end result and outcome of my “banned” interview is that now there’s always a title card that says “the views and opinions expressed on this DVD are solely those of the person saying them and do not have anything to do with __________ (fill in the studio) or any of its affiliates…blah blah”.  And what that ingenious little rule did was open the flood gates of oral histories that were not puff pieces. While DVDs were enjoying their heyday, there was a tremendous amount of oral scholarship, for lack of a better phrase, that was incorporated into them.

Anyway, as I said, I started making lists of DVDs I wanted and of course those lists included “The African Queen.” I’m not sure how long it took me before I realized that there was no “African Queen” DVD. When you come down to it, my participation was prompted by nothing more complicated than me wanting to have a DVD of “The African Queen” for my collection. And the more time went by, the more obsessive I became and the more crown jewel-like aura the film gained.

Neely: Do you remember when you became aware that it wasn’t available?

Nick: I think it was sometime around 2003 or 2004 that my serious campaign began because this was about a 6 year process, start to finish. I asked Lynn why there wasn’t an “AQ” DVD and she replied “Good question.” So I started nudging her and she told me that she thought that Paramount was in the process of trying to come to an agreement with Romulus Films which controlled the negative to license it in order to do it; but they hadn’t quite gotten around to doing it and…  It didn’t preoccupy all of my time, but about every six weeks I’d wake up and go “Where are we with this thing, anyway?” And then I’d write Lynn a letter. One time Lynn showed me a piece of test footage that they had done where they were trying to get rid of the green screen phosphorescence behind Katharine Hepburn and the rapids – and that was very exciting. But then another year went by – I should have been chronicling this whole thing – and finally they had a deal but they had to get their hands on the negative. Then we found out that Romulus wouldn’t let us get our hands on the negative.

Neely: What do you think were the biggest issues – technical, licensing, legal, expense?

Nick: All of the above?  My entire affiliation with this thing was really ex-officio. I just worked with Lynn trying to figure out how to get this done. I never met with the people to whom Lynn reported; news would just trickle down. She was great at keeping me patient and encouraged me even when she was discouraged. And there were times when it just looked like it was never going to happen at all.

I think that the restoration itself was still less onerous than the legal and contractual labyrinth that had to be navigated. Ultimately, because Romulus refused to let the negative out of the UK, we had to become more inventive, crossing a technological boundary that had never before been breached that led to something pretty ingenious. We actually had to scan the negative and then email it on a secure server to Ron Smith at the Warner Brothers Motion Picture Imaging Facility on the Warner Brothers lot; and at the end of the day you can’t tell the difference.

Neely: I’m intrigued by the scanning process. How do you email a print?

Nick: Well you have to upload it onto something that has a hell of a lot of memory. Remember, I don’t think they emailed it all at once – they would have done it a reel at a time. I wasn’t there at the time, but you might want to interview Ron Smith about that. He’s very knowledgeable.

You have to understand that the actual restoration of the negative involved the restoration of three negatives because Technicolor is comprised of three pieces of film that run through the camera simultaneously. Those negatives were not in great shape so they had to be scanned, reel by reel. It was a 6 or 8 month process.  They’d finish a reel and then email it over and it would be looked at and Ron would say okay; and then on to the next reel. It was like Chinese water torture…drip…drip…drip. Then when it was time to go to work on the negative there were three aspects – one had to do with cleaning up the negative, taking off the scratches and the dirt and god knows what else from the images; the second part is lining it up with the other two negatives – something computers can do much more precisely now than originally.  For some movies this can be better or worse. For “The African Queen,” this was definitely better, the more detail revealed in a realistic (i.e., location-based) film, the better!  And finally, color correction (I’m putting sound off to one side). Ron Smith and those guys working on the Warner’s lot were very very fortunate because when Jack Cardiff, the cinematographer, was quite elderly he watched a print of “The African Queen” and he went scene by scene and described what the color was supposed to look like. Ron and his team had already started on color correcting the way they thought it should be when this tape of Cardiff was unearthed and they had to begin again, working from Cardiff’s notes.

We have great clips of Cardiff in the documentary that came from a documentary that had been made about him by Craig McCall, a filmmaker in the UK.  You could see what a charming and articulate guy he was. I always found it interesting how he downplays his contribution to “The African Queen” compared to “The Red Shoes” and “Black Narcissus” because he had brought only two lamps on location as supplementary lighting.  He calls it “a perfectly ordinary piece of photography”; but if you watch the movie, it’s anything but ordinary.

Neely: But why use Technicolor in Africa? Filming in Technicolor made this very unwieldy, (the camera rig weighed five hundred pounds!) what with the huge camera necessary for the 3 strips of film. Was there another process they could have used?

Nick: There was. As a matter of fact there was another color film that was shot in Africa before “The African Queen.” “King Solomon’s Mines” was shot in 2-strip color, which involved a much smaller, comparatively speaking, rig; but the color wasn’t as lush.

Despite all the difficulties in cleaning up the 3 strip negative, it’s a shame Cardiff did not live to see this fully aligned. I’ve often said that it’s not always great to see a film fully aligned. You take some older movies and line them up and suddenly you see that Judy Garland has acne in “The Wizard of Oz” when she sings “Over the Rainbow.” It’s in sepia but it’s still three pieces of film. They could have compensated for this on the restoration because the technology exists, developed for just such problems, but for some reason they didn’t.

Neely: How long did it take between the time they got the scanned print and the final restoration?

Nick: A long, long time because the elements that you could hold in your hands were not in good shape. The colors had faded, the film had shrunk, trying to align the film was almost impossible because of the shrinkage, so this went on month after month, frame by frame.  Have you seen the restoration segment that we posted on YouTube?

Neely: Yes I have; here’s the link to the 8 minute short produced by Eric Young:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HM0XcZZxhsg

Nick: Eric Young did that.  When we finally saw the restoration we thought we really ought to do a piece on the restoration, but by that time there was no more money and there was no space left on the disc. My recollection is that Eric did it for free. It was a total labor of love.  He just got his equipment and went in to interview these people who typically are not in front of a camera. And he asked, “How does this work? What does this do?” and then he designed some visuals to illustrate it.  It’s a terrific piece and really deserved to be on the DVD.

Neely: How much of the process were you involved in?

Nick: Not in the technical process, but I certainly immersed myself in what was going on.  During the restoration, it occurred to me that we should make a documentary to go along with this, something to put in context the extraordinary circumstances surrounding the creation of this masterpiece.

Neely: “Embracing Chaos: The Making of “The African Queen.” You produced it, Eric Young directed it; the interviews are excellent and the quality of the documentary is first rate. Finding the people who were still alive and able to talk about it must have been difficult.

Nick: Well that was an interesting proposition. Huston is dead, Bogie and Hepburn are dead, Lauren Bacall didn’t want to talk to us. The script supervisor, Angela Allen is still alive; also Guy Hamilton…

Neely: Didn’t he do the early James Bond films?

Nick: Yes. He was the first Assistant Director on the film. Several of the crew went on to directing careers themselves.  With so many people gone, we had to turn our weakness into our strength somehow and get interviews from other places that had already been done, then pull them together to make something new.  A lot of folks, including Hepburn, wrote memoirs about the experience, and screenwriter Peter Viertel (who came in towards the end), turned it into his best novel, White Hunter, Black Heart.

Neely: What did you learn about John Huston?  Much has been said and written of Huston’s penchant for “off road” adventure. How true do you think it was that he decided to shoot this film in Africa because he wanted to go big game hunting?

Nick: There’s a lot of evidence to suggest that it’s true, but it wasn’t big game hunting, it was shooting an elephant. Now whether he made the movie in order to shoot an elephant, which by the way, he never did, is somewhat debatable. But at one point in the documentary, his biographer, Lawrence Grobel, said “this is a man who refused to be bored.” Toward the end of movies, he’d get bored; he’d start thinking about the next film.  He’d leave things unfinished. I think that the fact he was in Africa prevented a lot of that from happening.

Neely: Well according to the documentary, he left every morning to go hunting.

Nick: Yes, but it was rumored that he couldn’t hit the broad side of a barn. He was a guy who was very preoccupied with sartorial matters. He was very obsessed with clothes and armaments, his gun collection- going to Purdy’s, the renowned London gun and rifle maker, etc., before leaving and buying the very best, something that was very important to him. He was an outdoorsman, that’s for sure; and he was a superb horseman. He had ridden in his youth with the Mexican cavalry; he was a boxer, the lightweight champion of California at one point. But I don’t think he was a marksman.

Neely: Which may account for his inability to shoot an elephant, using the broad side of a barn analogy. But perhaps something else was going on; perhaps he couldn’t bring himself to kill such a beautiful beast.

Nick: Viertel quotes Huston in his book, and Huston’s son Tony confirms in the documentary, that to kill an elephant is worse than a crime, it’s a sin.  Huston wanted to experience sin.

Neely: Many of the screenplays you’ve written have been book adaptations, including an adaptation of your own novel, The Seven Percent Solution. Had you ever read the Forester novel? What liberties did Agee and Huston take in order to bring it to the screen?

Nick: I had read the novel quite some time ago, but read it again when we were working on this. There were two things about the book that were significant. In the UK edition of the book, Rosie and Charlie drowned trying to sink the Königin Louise. The American publisher asked for a nicer ending, so Forster made them live and they get to shore, something like that – it felt very pasted on.  It’s like two pages where you can hear Forster saying – okay, this is what they want so here it is.

Neely: That’s in the book?

Nick: In the American edition of “The African Queen.”  The other change, in a way, is more interesting…a stylistic change, you might say, because it ultimately compelled a different ending for the film.

I don’t think anybody who went to Africa to shoot this movie really understood that it was a comedy.  Maybe on paper it wasn’t, but when you put Bogart and Katharine Hepburn together on this boat and had this interplay with them – which is all the movie is really about, two people on a boat talking – Huston must have looked at it and said to himself:  “I’m going to kill these people at the end? People are going to throw things at the screen.”

Neely: Do you think Agee based his ending on the English version of the book?

Nick: Well I don’t think Agee even wrote an ending. I mean he may have written some version of the ending but the biggest thing is not that Rosie and Charlie survive; Forster himself wrote a version of that, but that they succeed in sinking the Königin Louise. This was a major alteration, and I’m guessing here, but I think this was largely supplied by Peter Viertel. I think Huston left for Africa knowing that the script was not finished, that they were sort of in limbo about what they were going to do about it. And I think that it remained in limbo until Huston started watching what was going on between his stars. Viertel, who came to Africa to work on this with Huston, a relationship he chronicled in the previously mentioned White Hunter, Black Heart about a “fictional” director who wants to shoot an elephant while he’s filming in Africa (Eastwood made and starred in this film in 1990).

We talked about endings a bit in your class last week. What are the dynamics of drama as opposed to the dynamics of literature? In literature you don’t have to sink the ship, but in the movie, even though you want to preserve the theme, (if there is one), you want to have your cake and eat it too. The idea of sending someone on a mission and they don’t fulfill the mission?  In a book, perhaps, but not in a film.  You’ve got to find a way, no matter how convoluted it turns out to be, that they fulfill it. I think that’s what Huston and Viertel were figuring out. “We’re sending these people all the way down this river to blow up this ship, and they ain’t gonna blow up the ship?” Maybe they get into a storm and their boat sinks…that’s not only in the book, but it’s good stuff. So how, HOW are they going to make this happen?  Well, there’s this marvelous cut where you see the African Queen, sunk in the tempest, now floating back to the surface, upside down with these two torpedoes sticking out and the “Louisa” (as Charlie calls her), heading right for it.  It might have been completely fanciful, but I don’t think people complained too deeply about it.

Neely: So Paramount funded the documentary?  What did you do – present it in a pitch and they said they’d go for it?

Nick: Yeah, pretty much. The way I tried to sell it was to point out that this was the 60th anniversary restoration and DVD premiere of this famous never-seen-on-DVD movie. “Don’t you want to blow the trumpet and bang the drum on this?”  And they did!  Until it was all done and they decided that DVDs were now finished as a format; so they weren’t going to make it the kind of event that happened around the restoration of “The Red Shoes” 6 or 8 month earlier. They played “The Red Shoes” in New York in a theater – we were going to play “The African Queen” in theaters and then the plug just got pulled on it.

Neely: This seemed to have been a collaboration between Paramount and Warner Brothers restoration department. The UCLA film archive department is very actively involved in so many restorations, in conjunction with Martin Scorsese, but this doesn’t seem to be the case here.

Nick: I should point out that Paramount was the last of the studios to get into DVDs. They came very late to the party and finally they decided to make their own archives. This was fairly recent, maybe the past three or four years. They decided they wanted to have archives that rivaled Criterion.  A man named Chris Carey is in charge of that.  Ron Smith and his team work on the Warners lot but are Paramount employees. Before “The African Queen”, they restored “Star Trek II, The Wrath of Khan”, also for Paramount.  They’re doing “The Ten Commandments” now.

Neely: I see you rolling your eyes, but this was a Spectacle with a capital S.

Nick: You’re right…it is a spectacle; and this isn’t CGI. They actually did go to Egypt. In any case, they’re also doing this for Paramount.

Neely: What about marketing?  Other than a few isolated reviews of the remastered DVD, I haven’t seen any advertising announcing the release; with the exception of a short article you wrote that appeared on “The Wrap” – “The African Queen makes its restored debut at long last”.  Here they spent a fortune for the restoration and making this marvelous documentary and now there’s no money for the marketing. They’ve just sent everything into the wind – how is that possible?

Nick: Well…they allowed themselves to be pushed into a corner. As I understand it, Romulus Films wanted to unveil the restoration of “The African Queen” at the Cannes Film Festival in May. May, according to the DVD people with whom I have spoken, is the worst month to sell a DVD.

Neely: Who are these people?

Nick: …people who sell DVDs? So Paramount said they weren’t waiting for May; and plans were made for putting the film in theaters in America for a week and make a big fuss.  The Romulus people took issue with this, as in “you’re going to be stealing our thunder and we don’t want you to do that.” It’s not clear to me why Paramount had to knuckle under but they did. So instead, they held little screenings for 25 people at a time, journalists who had little else to do that afternoon; and thus they turned what should have been a major outing into a non-event.

Here was this movie, the only film on the AFI 100 that hadn’t been on DVD, a movie that was adored and someone at Paramount just pulled the plug saying they didn’t need to spend the money to make back the kind of money they thought DVDs, at this point, were capable of making.

Neely: But they were passing up an priceless opportunity to present themselves as a purveyor of taste and savior of some of our heritage – this would have been invaluable. This was an incredible chance for them to promote themselves with very little outlay.

Nick: You’d think.

Neely: The documentary is actually a great stand-alone piece.  So once again…that’s it???

Nick: We tried to get TCM interested in it. I wrote to Robert Osborne but I never heard back from him.

Neely: I just don’t understand any of this. There’s going to be a TCM Classic Film Festival as part of this year’s Los Angeles Film Festival and ironically the Huston family legacy is going to be honored.  How could it not occur to anyone at TCM that the 60th anniversary and restoration of “The African Queen” as well as the documentary was a perfect fit for a festival that was honoring the Huston family? What am I missing??

Nick: I didn’t know anything about that. I just don’t know. I don’t even think Brad Grey (CEO of Paramount Motion Picture Group) knows about this documentary.

Neely: Consider the historical context of Huston and Bogart. This was the third film on which Bogart and Huston worked together, and each was responsible for the other’s break out in the business as “The Maltese Falcon” was the first film Huston directed, having previously worked as a screenwriter on “Juarez,” “Dr. Ehrlich’s Magic Bullet” (one of my all time Eddie G favorites in which he plays the future Nobel Prize winning scientist Paul Ehrlich) and “High Sierra,” Bogie’s first true star turn, which was then followed by “The Maltese Falcon,” where he solidified his star status. Huston directed Bogie to his only Oscar; but he also directed Claire Trevor (in “Key Largo”), and both his father, Walter (in “Treasure of the Sierra Madre”) and daughter, Angelica (in “Prizzi’s Honor”) to Oscars.

There must be a way for this documentary to be presented as a stand alone film. Maybe on the festival circuit? Would either you or Eric have the time to do that?

Nick: I would definitely love to have it done that way, but I have no idea of how to go about it. I have never done anything like that in my life. Eric probably knows how to do that. We’re having lunch next week, so we’ll probably lick our wounds and talk about it.

Neely: Obviously there’s very little, if any, financial market for a short film, but it’s certainly one way to drum up some publicity for the film. It just seems that entry into some of the more prestigious festivals like Sundance and Telluride would be in Paramount’s best interest to support. As you say, people’s best interest is so subjective; they didn’t see the enhanced value to themselves. They could see the enhanced value of “extras” on a DVD, perhaps in financial terms as an inducement to buy the disc, but not the enhanced value to Paramount, the company, of a quality product.

Nick: I think I may have said this to you when you went to the screening at USC, but half the movies ever made no longer exist. This is about preserving our history, preserving our culture, or simply preserving things that are just so wonderful, memorable. What really makes me sad is that when you get up to a certain period of time, people are no longer in the movie business – they’re just in the money business. It used to be that movies were made for two reasons – to make movies, and to make money. Now we’re only interested in the money. So, from a corporate standpoint, these things might as well be cat food. And the idea that they are “old” they cannot therefore be good or wonderful or memorable or fun or sensational or fantastic. It’s a shame.

What was very interesting to me the night of that USC screening was the age of the people there. These were young people. For them, for whatever reason, the movie played like gangbusters. It’s not that people don’t like older movies, they just can’t be cajoled or corralled into seeing them. But if you get them there… I was talking to someone the other day who said she had never seen Charlie Chaplin; so I showed her one of his films and she sat there and was completely floored.  It was like discovering the Bach B minor Mass, (only played for laughs). It’s a part of our civilization – we did this, we achieved this, there were geniuses, and the work of geniuses should not be allowed to disappear. All great art has one thing in common – the “great” part. The idea that “The African Queen” should have vanished, as it was on the point of doing, is criminal.

Neely: I couldn’t agree with you more. Movies have been an extremely important part of my life since an early age.

Nick: They imprint us when we behold them young, like a duck with its mother.

Neely: What should be the next Paramount restoration project and will you be involved?

Nick: My partner in the documentary, Eric Young, has been working on Paramount to do other restorations. Have you seen that collection, “John Ford at Fox”? Well we’d like to do “Wilder at Paramount.” The problem is that Paramount sold part of its library to Universal so we’d have to license it back under conditions that would just be about this Box Set. As always, it’s complicated.

Neely: I’d love to see Paramount do a Mae West collection.

Nick: We’ll add Mae West to our hopper.  Did you know she was Wilder’s original choice for Norma Desmond in “Sunset Boulevard?” But she wanted to write her own dialogue and Wilder said no.   I always use this as a great example that sometimes you’re lucky not to get your first choice.

January 27, 2010

“Self-love is the instrument of our preservation.” Voltaire

Eight Pieces for Josette by Kasi Lemmons

What: Saul Ressnicoff, one of the world’s great concert pianists led a conflicted life, one that his neglected but devoted daughter Edie challenges herself to unravel after his sudden death on stage during an encore at Carnegie Hall.

Who: Saul’s final choice of music for his encore at what would turn out to be his very last concert was a birthday present for his daughter and archivist Edie, 30.  Lyrical and sad, Edie is transported by a piece that she is unfamiliar with; she is unable to ask Saul about it for he has a heart attack on stage and dies.  At his funeral Edie spies a mysterious, beautiful black woman who disappears almost as quickly as she is noticed.  Soon after, Edie and her mother Lillian are informed by the family attorneys of a codicil to Saul’s will; a provision that bequeaths a set of music entitled “Eight Pieces for Josette” to a young woman, Sunday Eubanks, in New Orleans. This is a composition heretofore unknown by Edie and both the discovery of the music and the mystery of the bequest upsets Edie’s world enormously; as her father’s archivist, the only role in his life he allowed her, she had been certain that she knew all of his work. Upon further investigation, Edie discovers an unfinished letter among her father’s possessions:

Dear Sunny, we’ve come to a dangerous place.  I must put an end to this self-indulgent, wretched charade before it’s too late.  It’s not fair to you.  It’s not fair to my daughter.  Let me explain…

She also finds a handwritten manuscript entitled “The Josette Variations,” one of which she recognizes as the encore he was playing at the concert; wedged within the manuscript is a telegram and faded photograph. The photo is of a theatrically beautiful woman with dramatically white skin; the telegram reads:

Thursday the thirtieth – the evening bells – I’ll be waiting – Josette.

Edie sets out on a path of discovery and against all advice, she takes off for New Orleans to find out why her father would will something so valuable to the mysterious Sunday (Sunny) Eubanks, a woman she finds singing in a jazz club. Edie is determined both to discover her father’s relationship with Sunny and to prevent her from gaining control of the music manuscript.

Sunny, the mystery woman at the funeral, is no pushover and lets Edie know in no uncertain terms that she will fight.  Edie sends Sunny the manuscript, but also, discovering that her father had paid the rent on Sunny’s jazz club, immediately stops payment.  Still, Sunny will not give up and, upon Edie’s return trip to New Orleans, Edie discovers that, contrary to her previous belief, Sunny was not her father’s mistress; Edie decides she must dig deeper, gradually bonding with Sunny in the search for her connection to Saul and the elusive Josette; a trip that eventually takes them both to Paris.

No Meaner Place: In this feature film script, Lemmons has found a perfect mix of romanticism, character growth, and atmosphere traveling from the stage of Carnegie Hall to a sophisticated flat in Manhattan; from the French Quarter (written pre-Katrina) in New Orleans to Montmartre in Paris with classical music and jazz as a background.  Although it is apparent all too soon what the relationship between the girls is, it is the path of discovery that both travel that widens the sphere of this story and the layers of hardness and hurt that are gradually peeled revealing hidden beauty.  Their biological relationship is less important than the truths both eventually uncover about and within themselves.  The journey is the message and it is a journey well worth taking.

From a studio standpoint, and this was a script “in development” at Searchlight (where it should have found a perfect home if they had ever put it into active development) after being in turnaround from Warner Brothers, this is a small movie, very much an independent in a shrinking independent world.  Though the “independent” movie is becoming increasingly rare and a tough sell at a large or even midsize studio, this story has the possibility of expanding from the art house niche as it is both a self discovery “romance” and buddy road pic.  Lamentably it is a marketer’s world and this will hinge on the poster, but within the several themes, a strong “poster” and message will emerge.  Further, despite the locations, this would not be an expensive film to make, as I’m sure Lemmons has already outlined in her many dealings with both studios.  Her experience as writer/director on “Eve’s Bayou” and “Talk to Me” show that she is highly skilled at economically produced, well developed character films.

Life Lessons for Writers:  There is no expiration date in the features world, just a need for enormous patience and determination.

Conversation with the Writer:

Neely: I fell in love with your storytelling with “Eve’s Bayou” and have to admit that I’m slightly intimidated because there’s already a lot out there on you.  You started as an actress and have some impressive credits.  Do you still take acting jobs or are you now permanently behind the camera?

Kasi: I’m pretty much permanently behind the camera.  I’d take an acting job if a friend offered it or I was directing something and I thought I was perfect for the role.

Neely: Is there anything you would have liked to have done…a role that you’d like to have played?

Kasi: I don’t think about that anymore.  I just don’t think about being in front of the camera.  But I still act – I act out all the roles I write, I just act them out inside myself when I’m writing.  It’s part of my writing process.  Acting was my first love.  Now I get that emotional release when I’m writing characters.  As a director, I’m passionate about actors.

Neely: I was immediately intrigued when I saw that you were born in St. Louis, had roots in Louisiana and then moved to Boston.  We spent 10 years in St. Louis after college (Washington University) and my husband’s best friend Fred grew up in St. Louis and his wife, my best friend, had roots in Louisiana.  African American, they lived through segregation and desegregation in both locations.  As a child in St. Louis you would still have been living at the tail end of that era and moving to Boston wouldn’t have been a lot better because they had all those South Boston busing riots in the 70s.  What do you remember of your childhood in all three places?

Kasi: I feel as if I grew up in a place that would be called St. Louis Tuskegee, Alabama because I spent an extended amount of time with my grandmother in Alabama.  In St. Louis I was surrounded by black society and was really unaware of race in any distinct manner. My mother was a psychologist, she got her Master’s at Washington University, and my father was a biology teacher. That all changed when I moved to Boston with my mother after my parents’ divorce.  I remember the first time racism was mentioned was when my mother, who was going to Harvard for a PhD, tried to get an apartment in Boston and felt that they were using unfair housing practices to keep us out. I was the only black girl in my elementary school and it’s there that I had my first encounter with racism.  I had to fight it everyday. Going from no experience with racism in the cloistered St. Louis society to racism in Boston was shocking.  I ended up loving Boston, though, because my mother was much happier and I went to an incredible high school, Commonwealth, and made lots of life-long friends. I still feel very close to Boston; maybe because I had to fight so hard.

Neely: You discovered acting at the Boston Children’s Theater after moving to Boston.  Did it lead to a professional acting career or did that come later?

Kasi: I discovered a love of performing and became myself there.  My first job came about because of the Boston Children’s Theater when an agency called the theater on behalf of a local TV show.  They were looking for someone to play the first child to integrate a classroom in a daytime courtroom drama called “You’ve Got a Right.”  It was my first experience auditioning and I got the role.

Neely: You started out at NYU/Tisch and transferred to UCLA where you majored in history.  Has that background in history informed your work? Any particular time period of history?

Kasi: I left Tisch for UCLA because I wasn’t yet done with academics.  I was interested in history, which continues to inform my work as a writer.  I studied the French Revolution.  I was fascinated by the bloodiness of it; the storming of the Bastille; the massacres, the aftermath.  It wasn’t tidy.  There were waves of execution; it was horrible and bloody and righteous.  I then went back to New York on a grant to study at the Alvin Ailey School.  It was fabulous; I danced all day.  Ailey had a big impact on me.  I gained a huge appreciation for the aesthetics.  I was moved by the aspect of the beauty and the fleeting nature of it – using the body to make art; it truly shaped my aesthetic view of the world.

I continued acting in commercials and little theater before going back to school in film at the New School for Social Research.  I went there with an interest in directing and cinematography.  I was interested in the image.  I wanted to make documentaries but my first film broke the rules because I used a fictional voice-over.  This was the first time where I saw myself as a filmmaker, and so did others.  The Black Filmmaker Foundation gave me a screening of my first film.  I believe it was part of a series of shorts, and significant members of the film community attended.  Spike Lee was there.  After that, Spike would always ask me, “When are you going to do your your feature?”

All this time I continued acting to support myself and I started to get more important roles in television and the theater.  I got my supporting role in “Silence of the Lambs” when I was attending film school.

Neely: At what point did you start viewing yourself as a writer?

Kasi: I guess after film school.  I was writing the whole time. I wrote plays based on personal experience and I would write scenes for my friends to do in acting class.  A turning point occurred when I auditioned for the Cosby show. Boldly, I asked him to look at the film I had made.  He wasn’t interested but he did say he was looking for writers.  I immediately said “I’m a writer!” He gave me a week to write a scene between a married couple – he doesn’t want a kid; she does and she doesn’t know how to tell him she’s pregnant. Excited, I returned to give him my scene and he had completely forgotten about it, he wasn’t even there and had to be tracked down.  He told me to give it to his associate Matt Robinson who read it and recommended me.  On the basis of that scene I was hired by Cosby to work on a screenplay for him with two other playwrights, P.J. Gibson and Lee Harkens.  It was an incredible educational experience and Bill Cosby became a true mentor to me.

Neely: Were you tempted to act in “Eve’s Bayou?”  Which role would it have been?

Kasi: I wrote “Eve’s Bayou” for myself.  It was actually a combination of short stories that I had written that kind of coalesced into a story that kept telling itself in my head, complete with flashes of lightning.  When I started writing it, I didn’t know whether it was a novel, a play or a screenplay.  When I realized it was a screenplay, I realized I was writing the role of Mozelle for myself, figuring one day when I was old enough and my dresses were getting a little tight I’d be ready and I’d find someone to make the film and I’d play Mozelle.

Neely: How did you get the money for “Eve’s Bayou” and how long did it take – what was the process? Can that same process work for “Josette?”

Kasi: I wrote it and then showed it to Vondie (note: Kasi is married to the actor Vondie Curtis Hall) who was so moved that he insisted that I show it to my acting agent, who in turn gave it to Frank Wuliger who became my writing agent.  Frank thought it was doable so we started looking for a director to attach to it.  Frank also found me work as a writer and I wrote whole scripts in between my various writing jobs.  Then on the morning of my birthday I woke and I realized that I needed to direct it because I had written a delicate piece of material and the best way to protect it was to do it myself.

Once I decided to direct it, Frank hooked me up with Cotty Chubb (of the insurance family).  Cotty encouraged me to direct a short film called “Dr. Hugo” to show what I was trying to do, which he and Frank personally co-financed.  “Dr. Hugo” was festivaled and is on the DVD of “Eve’s Bayou.”  In “Dr. Hugo,” Vondie played a sexy doctor who pays a house call.  While a child waits outside, the doctor seduces the patient, the child’s mother. It functioned sort of like a pilot for “Eve’s Bayou” and was integral in getting me the directing job.  People really responded.  In going for financing we sent around a package that included the short film and the “Eve’s Bayou” script.  Sam Jackson read the script and wanted to be that sexy doctor.  When Sam came on board, he was the ammunition to get Tri Mark to make the film.

Neely: I ask because it seems as if the environment has changed considerably in the case of independent features.  “Eve’s Bayou” successfully crossed over to all audiences and age groups because of its universal family function/dysfunction dynamic. “Eight Pieces for Josette” is almost mainstream compared to the quasi spiritual voodoo that rests at the soul of “Eve’s Bayou,” and yet I suspect that finding the financing and distribution for this beautiful film has been more difficult.

Kasi: It has been really difficult.  It would take the right combination of actresses.  So many have expressed a deep love for the script but I still can’t get it made.  I wanted Halle Berry to do it.  I could also imagine Thandie (Newton) and Nicole Kidman; or Halle and Naomi Watts; Halle and Julianne Moore.  It was a reflection on a different time. I thought it would be interesting to have two women who were paralyzed by not knowing their parents’ history.  Josette is set in the present, but circumstances cause the two leads to reflect on the generation before, the generation of their parents, which at the time I wrote it was the late sixties. A very romantic era in Paris.  As time went by, I realized it would have to be the seventies.  That’s cool too.  I always imagined the actresses in their thirties, so that would work.  But if I don’t get the film made soon, then they’re going to be reflecting back on the eighties. I suppose the eighties in Paris were romantic…but it’s not the same.  So I need to get it made soon.

Neely: I loved your view of Paris.  I so love Paris, its history, its warmth, its people (yes, I did say that), its language, its everything.  I’d kill to work there on location someday.  You know the character of Coco de Crécy in “Eight Pieces for Josette” triggered memories.  There was a star dancer/singer in one of the famous Parisian music halls in the 70s who was called the “new Josephine Baker” and it drove me crazy trying to remember who she was.  I did everything I could think of; finally I emailed a French cousin and she did the research (because she couldn’t remember either) and came up with the name.  It was Lisette Malidor.  She was from Martinique and she was discovered selling programs at the Casino de Paris by the famous French choreographer Roland Petit.  He created the show at the Casino de Paris where his wife Zizi Jeanmaire, a famous ballerina, was headlining and he put Lisette in the chorus.  Within a couple of years she replaced Zizi and was the toast of Paris, eventually headlining also at the Moulin Rouge and the Folies Bergère.  Performing nude bothered her at the beginning but she eventually came to understand this quote from Josephine Baker, “I wasn’t really naked. I simply didn’t have any clothes on.”

Kasi: I had never heard of her until you sent me the information!

Neely: One of the things I like best about your stories is the palpable atmosphere.  In “Eve’s Bayou” one could feel the thickness and humidity.  In “Eight Pieces for Josette” it starts out chilly in the rarified and sterile air of an aesthete Manhattan contrasted with raucous, disheveled and smoky New Orleans, the contrast of black and white, so to speak; and ending with the freer, warmer, environment of Paris where it still seems as if all things are possible and accepted.  How do you do that?!

Kasi: I don’t know.  I’m very familiar with the three places.  It’s intentionally a very romantic view of Paris.  I compare the story to opening a beautiful box of old jewelry. I’ve written about twenty scripts, some more atmospheric than the others, but all share the theme of “crossed boundaries.” I like to write about the grey areas of humanity; no one’s all good or bad – not completely heroic and not completely villainous; good people behaving badly.  I’ve written only one totally villainous character because I couldn’t find any redeeming qualities – Bull Connor.

I recently spent 6 weeks in Paris working on the screenplay for a project called “Strangers in Paris” under the auspices of a program called “Autumn Stories” that was co-sponsored and co-financed by the WGA, SASEM and the Ile de France Film Commission.  They select four established writers with screenplays that take place in Ile de France and put us up in an Abbey outside of Paris and help us research our subjects.  My family was able to join me for the last week of my stay.  Maybe I’ll be lucky enough to work on “Eight Pieces for Josette” under the same circumstances.

Neely: You also directed and did a rewrite of “Talk to Me.”  What kind of changes did you make to the original script, or rather, where in the process did you enter? How much of your rewrite appears on screen and how did the final writing credits read?

Kasi: I came on first as a writer but didn’t receive screen credit.  The script was already well framed and I loved the project.  My entrée into the project was strictly as a writer.

Neely: Your talent for casting is amazing.  “Eve’s Bayou” is a veritable who’s who of African American actors.  In “Talk to Me” you had the incomparable Don Cheadle, but you also cast one of my very favorite under the radar great actors – Chiwetal Ejiofor.  How did that directing assignment come about?

Kasi: After I came on board as a writer and fell in love with the project, I fought for that directing assignment.  I love Chiwetal.  Another actor had been chosen for that part but he fell out because of the deal and then the movie fell apart.  Months later when Don was still on board, Chiwetal was on a short list to play Dewey Hughes.  We got a great call from his agent saying that Chiwetal, who was in New York, was willing to meet us on his way back to London.

Neely: Interesting sense of direction.

Kasi: I know.  So he came in and Don read with him on the spur of the moment.  The chemistry was instantaneous and that was it.  He was our Dewey!

Neely: Did you know that you had three Kelley series regular alums in “Talk to Me” – Don Cheadle (“Picket Fences”), Vondie Curtis Hall (“Chicago Hope”) and Taraji P. Henson (“Boston Legal”)?

Kasi: I’d never thought of it before.  All three are amazing.

Neely: Do you still write plays?

Kasi: Not in a long time, but I have an idea I’d like to pursue. I have lots more ideas than time.

Neely: We already spoke of casting hopes for “Eight Pieces for Josette”, which leads to a related question – do you ever write characters with certain actors in mind?

Kasi: As a final note on the casting of “Josette,” when I get it made it will depend on who will be the right age at the time. It’s age-specific.  Fox Searchlight came close to making it but now it’s mine again.  I will make it.

Neely: When I googled you one of the sites that came up was “Who is Kasi Lemmons dating?”  You’ll be happy to hear that the only picture that popped up was your husband Vondie Curtis Hall.  Both you and Vondie have cast each other in small roles in the films you’ve written and directed.  Who is he going to play in “Eight Pieces for Josette?”

Kasi: I need to correct you on that because I’ve given Vondie significant roles in my previous films. I’m not sure he’s in this one.  Maybe at the beginning he was Buzz.  We’ll see.

Neely: You were out scouting locations last week for your new directing project.  What is it and how far along are you?

Kasi: It was for an HBO film on the Duke Lacrosse case.  I’m directing it.  We’re at the point of making up lists of potential casting choices.  Filming will start in April if everything goes according to plan.

Neely: I can’t wait to see it and hope that I won’t have to wait much longer for “Eight Pieces for Josette”.

January 12, 2010

“In those big floppy shoes and baggy pants, Bongo really should have assumed running for safety was a long shot.” – Shayne-Michael.com

Filed under: Conversations With, Feature Films — Tags: , , , — Neely Swanson @ 10:55 am

Bullsh*t by Ben Murray

What: “Gorgeous” Gordon Lippick was the hottest commodity on the bull riding rodeo circuit until he rode “Furious George,” the biggest meanest ugliest bull and crashed out of the money.  Years later Gorgeous is an alcoholic foul-mouthed rodeo clown bent on revenging himself on the long missing Furious.

Who: Once the handsomest, sexiest, most talented bull rider in the world, Gorgeous Gordon Lippick is now no more than a joke; a foul-mouthed, foul smelling, dirt poor falling-down drunk rodeo clown.  His rung on the ladder is so low it’s subterranean. Still haunted by nightmares of his humiliating downfall on Furious George, the bull with only one cloven hoof, when he crashed into a fence and slashed his leg, he dreams of nothing but finding the bull and killing it.  Still all attempts at locating the bull have failed.  Miserable sod that he is, Gordon thinks nothing of screwing everyone in sight in order to get the information he wants.

A kid comes up to him.

Kid: Hey mister! Mister Gorgeous!

Gorgeous: Fuck you want?

Kid: I got you what you asked for.

He hands him a six pack of Genessee.

Gorgeous: Oh. Good work. You find the other thing?

Kid: Yup.

Gorgeous: Up front? You kidding?

The kid shakes his head, “no.” Gorgeous roots around in his pockets, comes out with a Band-aid, some Tums, a dollar and a mint.  He hands it to the kid.

Kid: That’s it?

Gorgeous: Actually I need the Tums.

Kid: A dollar?

Gorgeous: What are you, buying a Lexus?  You’ll get it. What do you got?

Kid: I saw it – a round hoof with no dent in it. My friend Joey showed me.

Gorgeous: Are you completely certain?

The kid nods and Gorgeous laboriously rises, favoring one leg.  He takes a blue pill, swallows it with beer.

Kid: Why is you leg hurt?  Did a bull stab you with its horn?

Gorgeous: No, it shot me with a crossbow, douchebag. Now c’mon, show me.

False trail, this time it was a horse, follows false trail, next time a droopy cow, all the while Gorgeous finds new ways to piss off everyone.

INT. THE RODEO RING –NIGHT

Gorgeous lurches forward wasted.  As he gets to the center, a bull and rider erupt from the chute and charge toward him…The bull…charges for Gorgeous, who runs for his life.  He barely escapes as the bull runs out.  Gorgeous pants, feels something rising in his gut.  He staggers to a barrel and PUKES into it in one great heave.  He stands up, relieved, and then another clown stands – the one in the barrel.

Gorgeous does, however, have one fan – “Tupelo” Tom Cody, a young wannabe cowboy who, despite the abuse, believes that Gorgeous can help him get a spot on the circuit.  Soon he has another one when he passes out in a corral.

He moves to get up and she grabs him by the arm to help.

Bobbie Joe: Easy. Just thought you might want a little help.

Gorgeous: Yeah well I don’t. I don’t need help from…

Bobbie Joe: Bobbie Joe Slayton.

Gorgeous: From you or any other lesbian, Bobbie Joe Slayton.  In fact, I’m tired of people offering me things. Next person offers me something, I’m going to tear out their goddam liver, take a big bite, then wipe my ass with the rest of it, got it?

Bobbie Joe: I just thought you might want these.

Gorgeous: What?

He looks around, realizes he’s in the corral for the children’s pony rides – in just his skivvies.  Around him is a ring of shocked parents and toddlers.

Gorgeous: Oh.

Bobbie Joe wants to break the barrier and become the first female bull rider and she needs Gorgeous’ help to do this.  In return she will help him locate Furious.  Progress is made.

No Meaner Place: “Bullsh*t” was Murray’s thesis script at the USC School of Cinema in the MFA writing program for which he received distinction from his thesis professor, Howard Rodman, a well respected screenwriter most recently nominated for an Independent Spirit Award for “Savage Grace.”  Murray was one of my students in “The Entertainment Industry Seminar” in 2008. Following the end of the semester I was approached by several of the students to read their scripts and give them notes, which I did for everyone…everyone but Ben.  I had no notes to give him.  I loved this story from the first page to the last.  Everytime it looked like this profane adventure was going to go in a conventional direction along came a twist and off it went in a different direction.  Every time it seemed that redemption was around the corner, Murray stayed true to his character’s nature.  Gorgeous is, for all practical purposes, unredeemable but not bad.  Certainly he’s no “hooker with a heart of gold,” but neither is he The Devil, just a devil.  Bad things have happened and been done to him.

Never has profanity been used more creatively and the situations are filled with pratfalls and slapstick although veering toward the violent but to hilarious effect yielding a true cinematic vision.  He has created three dimensional, delightfully down and dirty characters that any actor would relish.  Will Ferrell was born to play this derelict.

Amazingly, there has been very little interest in the screenplay.  It has been optioned by a small production company, for which he is very grateful; but this is a large summer-scale movie and deserves studio backing, as well as interest from a first tier agency.

Life Lessons for Writers:  Sometimes when you’re right you have to wait until they figure it out; and with features it’s all about the waiting.

Conversation with the Writer:

Neely: As previously noted, Ben was one of my students at the USC School of Cinematic Arts, and like all of his classmates was required to write either a feature or a pilot as his Masters Thesis project.  “Bullsh*t” was that thesis, receiving distinction from Howard Rodman.  What everyone needs to know about Ben is that he’s actually quite mild mannered, extremely polite, and quite deferential (or at least that’s how he is to his professors…).  He even warned me about the profanity before I read the script (so obviously he knows the real me as much as I know the real him).  So, Ben… Where the hell did this come from?

Ben: Well, from two different places, I guess.  I covered some rodeo for a tiny newspaper in Colorado.  They wanted a different angle and I decided to write about the bulls and the breeders as a way into the cowboys.  These are very small regional rodeos with cowboys hoping to move up to the bigger leagues.  Three are maybe a dozen competitors with an audience that numbers in the hundreds.  When it came to writing my script, I wanted to stick to something that would stand out in this crappy rodeo circuit.  Originally it was going to be the story of a girl making it in rodeo but then because of my own profane tendencies the story of the clown came in and then took over.  ‘What would be an obsession for the clown to have?’ and it developed into the idea of the clown assassinating a bull.

Neely: Like most of the MFA students you had a career before going back to school.  Please describe your trajectory from college to grad school.

Ben: I majored in journalism at a school no one has heard of called St. Michaels in Vermont because I thought it was one way to satisfy my need to travel.  Immediately after school I boarded a plane and got out in the town of Sitka, Alaska for a job that had already been set up for me.  It was actually more of an internship than a job covering community news – city council, school boards, fishing competitions, and bear stalkings – reports of bears stalking people in the woods.  Sitka was on an island of 10 miles of dead end roads that was over-populated with bears.  After 6 months I flew to Boston to work for monster.com which was quite hip at the time.  It drove me crazy for a year where I wrote articles about jobs and interviews.  But then I read this piece about someone working in Antarctica and I had to go.  I fought hard to get any kind of a job there and I ended up as a janitor at McMurto Station for 6 months. I tried to put some of those experiences in the pilot that you read; but I’ve tabled it for now. Then I came back and floated between Boston and Alaska before getting the job in Colorado.  Eventually I ended up with a job in Europe, primarily England and Germany, where I covered the U.S. military.  It was an amazing job, covering the military overseas which included a stint covering combat in Iraq for 7 weeks.

Neely: What was your impetus for going back to grad school?

Ben: I was stationed in Bavaria.  It was very isolated, very German and very depressing and I decided that maybe I should go back to school.  As I had flirted with film in college, applying to film school was the only thing I really wanted to try so I sent one application only (to USC) with the idea that if it hits, I’ll give it a ride.

Neely: You are at the beginning of your career, the first “breaking in” part, as Phoef Sutton might have described it.  What have you been doing since graduation?  How are you keeping a food on the table?

Ben: My day job is writing articles about social issues for the social-action website of Participant Media.  They were producers on “Good Night and Good Luck,” “Syriana,” and “An Inconvenient Truth.”  It’s not scintillating work but it keeps a roof over my head.

Neely: What kind of meetings did you get out of “Bullsh*t?  Anybody get offended?

Ben: Actually they’ve been few and far between, mainly with managers who liked the script and wanted a general meeting.  I sent it out a lot.  Some responded that “it was a bit strong for their taste,” but no one came out and said they were offended.  I got a couple of follow-up meetings but so far no real nibbles for representation.

Neely: How were you able to get it out there?

Ben: The big hook was the USC script list.  USC sends the list all over town and I got a lot of requests from that as well as requests from my meetings at “First Pitch.”  Howard Rodman was a big supporter and handed it to Stuart Cornfeld at Red Hour Films, and that led to an informal meeting on the set of his latest pilot.

Neely: Well, even though it didn’t go anywhere with him, you never know.  Everything in Hollywood has a long gestation period. I understand it’s been optioned by Andrew Lauren who produced the “Squid and the Whale.”  Any idea where he plans on taking it?

Ben: They do smaller financing but they’d like to step up a bit with a bigger budget.  They’d like to attach some actors before going out for more money.  They want to put together an attractive package before going to the next phase.

Neely: What has the development process been like?  What about the notes?

Ben: The option was predicated on their original notes which were some pretty good character notes.  They wanted to flesh out the villain so he wasn’t just a “black hat” and develop Gorgeous’ side kick a bit more, give them more dimension.  They also wanted more of a rooting interest for Gorgeous; to get the audience on his side quicker, which is tricky because you don’t want to make him really likable.  Since then it’s been variations on those scenes.  They wanted to eliminate the Gorgeous love story (note: this arc was not mentioned in the above synopsis) which, while psychologically difficult for me did end up opening up the room to further develop the other characters.

Neely: What about the development process when you were writing the script for class?

Ben: There was a scene that I absolutely loved that I had to drop.  I still think about it, it was so vivid and I was desperate to make it work.  This cowboy, one of the secondary villains, had a hormone condition that gave him absolutely perfect breasts and I had a sequence where Gorgeous was trying to deal with the cowboy while he was pumping his breasts.  I loved the imagery but sadly it’s for a different film.  It was way too over the top and I didn’t discover that until I did a cold read in class.  It was clear it didn’t fit.

Neely: How much of you is in Gorgeous and would your friends agree?

Ben: The language is me, well at least among my friends where I use the F-bomb quite liberally.  I can’t lay claim to a being a decade-long alcoholic at the bottom, but after a few beers I definitely sound like Gorgeous.  I just chose to apply my most vulgar self to the fiction.

Neely: What else are you working on?  How are you mining that diverse background of yours?

Ben: I’m part of a new program at the USC film school called “First Team.”  They try to pair someone from each discipline – writer, director and producer – to come up with a script, a budget and a marketing plan.  Then the film school sends it out to select agents and production companies.  It was by application open to any alumni and they took 30 from each discipline.  My feature is another R-rated comedy and it’s due in a couple of weeks; so we’ll see.

Neely: As one who is not from around these here parts, how are you adjusting?  Do you get restless to go back into the wilderness?

Ben: Only just so well.  It’s complicated.  LA is a real challenge and I’d rather be out in the nowhere doing something interesting day-to-day.  Covering the military was the highlight for me.  Here I’m writing so much it’s an isolating experience.  I was happier when I was adventuring in someway; it generated better stories.  Like Antarctica: there I worked 10-hour shifts cleaning hallways and then, later, driving buses in 24-hour daylight to airports made out of floating sea ice. Awesome. Do I get restless to go back to the wilderness? I would leave for Antarctica tomorrow if someone offered it. Really. Or Siberia, maybe, or Afghanistan to cover the troops.  L.A. – I just try to good naturedly hate it here.

Neely: I wish you well and hope that someone reading this will be in a position to help you get a good agent and push you in the direction you want to go.

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