Friday, August 7, 2009

Q&A: Taking Cheney/Rumsfeld to Task, Actor David Rasche Steps In the Loop

Interview by Brad Balfour

When actor David Rasche came into the room, I knew this was going to be a different kind of interview session just as In The Loop is a different kind of political comedy. The 65-year-old Rasche was supposed to be joined by director Armando Ianucci and fellow thesp Zach Woods to conduct an intimate roundtable with four of us--but because Rasche was early--or on time--for us, our conversation was transformed, much like the shambolic supposedly "secret" committee meeting organized by Rasche's character, the gung-ho American warmonger Linton Barwick (a cross between Dick Cheney and Don Rumsfeld) got transformed and provided a sort of pivotal moment to the film. In a similarly chaotic fashion, Rasche alone spoke with a couple of us before settling down with his fellow Loop-ers and provided some pivotal moments of his own.

Now distributed in the States, the British-produced film debuted at the 2009 Sundance Film Festival and, in New York City, at this year's Tribeca Film Festival. Based on--or rather, taking its cue from Ianucci's smart and snarky look at the inner workings of British politics The Thick of It (kind of like The Office for politicos)--In The Loop follows Cabinet minister Simon Foster (Tom Hollander) through a series slip-ups that gets him involved in the ever-twisting gyre of intrigue that's leads to getting a war started in the Middle East. Sounds familiar...

The film starred some of the series' regulars such as Peter Capaldi (reprising his foul-mouthed communication chief Malcolm Tucker) and American additions such as former Soprano James Gandolfini as a war-reticent General Miller. Within this context, bumbling assistants and loose-tongued associates screw up and screw each other to a dry, droll, parodic effect. The film certainly doesn't view previous British and American administrations as the pinnacle of political achievement.

In light of this summer's health care debate with the right stirring the pot, the film serves as a reminder that the politics of diversion, derision and destruction as expressed by the opposition party goes on. So when a film like In The Loop offers this refreshing and engaging alternative take on the inner workings of the political universe, it becomes a must-see to add perspective.

Though Ianucci (also the primary writer and producer) with Woods (who plays Chad, a very funny American adjunct) finally arrived, what was supposed to be more of a roundtable, turned into a unusual back-and-forth of banter.

Q: Was that just the roll of the dice that you ended up playing the bad guy, Linton Barwick?

DR:Well you know, they made it a little bit harder in this movie [from the television show]. But that's for Armando [to explain].

Q: How did you see it?

DR:I had a few rejoinders that were excised.

Q: You did it so well. You have this way of doing it so that you don’t come off as just mean.

DR:That sinister thing is there [though].

Q: Is that you or in the script? I can’t believe all the things that Armando threw in there.

DR:It’s terrific eh? Funny as hell. The timing was great; it's global politics. As a matter of fact, I had a friend, Mike Reiss, who was one of the producers of The Simpsons, who said that he thought there are arguably more funny lines in this movie than in any movie he can remember.

Q: But is it too complicated for Americans to get?

DR:I’ve been in tons of audiences like in Seattle [at the film festival]; there were 3,000 people, all Americans, and they just were howling with laughter.

Q: I saw it with critics and they didn’t laugh as much as I imagine an audience would. I was angry at them in a way but I thought it was astounding.

DR:Really? I’m surprised because I have not seen that audience. The only audiences I’ve seen, big or small, have [been with the public].

Q: You don’t even realize some of the lines are really funny until it hits you later; it's so deadpan, and you’re so perfectly deadpan.

DR:It’s really funny, I have to tell you, I’ve been involved in two international projects in the last little bit and it’s absolutely remarkable what we bring to it. Like I did this Brazilian film and people are all saying “Oh, we don’t like you because you did so and so and so and so,” and I said, “What are you talking about?” And the same thing with this; with the British press, the Americans were almost completely ignored and all they could see is the Brits, and now here you’re asking me [about my character]; we see the Americans. It’s funny, what we bring.

Q: Who were you a blend of?

DR:I was going for was a combination of John Bolton and Donald Rumsfeld and Karl Rove and Condoleezza Rice. All those imperious, belittling, condescending, right? Remember all those press conferences? It was like, "Do you really have to act like that? Do you really have to be so belittling and condescending?"

Q: You added the imperiousness brilliantly.

DR:I mean all of them, like David Addington [Cheney's legal counsel and chief of staff]--do you remember him?--they were all so unpleasant.

Q: Evil, evil people.

DR:No, but as unpleasant as a person [can be]. In the hearings, talking over you, not listening, belittling your point of view, remember Condoleezza Rice? “Uh Senator.” Relax, Condi. Anyway.

Q: I was at a Times Square New Year’s Eve with a press pass and John Bolton came to there. No one else had a problem talking to me, Regis, Chris Rock… But Bolton had a phalanx of security; you couldn’t even get 20 feet near him, and it was like, “What the fuck?” And he did not crack a smile the whole time.

DR:They’re so self-important. Same thing with Cheney; he’s doing something that no American politician in the history of the union has ever done, that is breaking the silence [after a new administration has taken over] and starts screaming about you know… And the reason is, “Oh well what’s happening is so important, and I’m so important, I just have to.” Well you know, Dick, I don’t know if you’re that important.

Q: It’s interesting seeing us filtered through a British cultural lens so that you see Americans in a whole different light.

DR:Oh yes you do. It’s a British film, from a British point of view. Don’t tell Armando I said that. But I think clearly it swung that way… I don’t think he knows it, maybe he does or not.

Q: The most disappointing thing for you about it was that you didn’t get to be in every scene with everybody else, because there are so many good people there.

DR:They had to cut a lot. I used to be but... You’ll have to ask Armando, and I don’t mean to misquote him, but I think he said that he got to the end of editing and knew stuff had to go so he cut his four favorite scenes and then all of a sudden the movie worked. I’m afraid I was in a couple of those scenes. His first cut was four hours.

Q: Did this film feel like it had almost theatrical quality?

DR:I never thought of that.

Q: Without all the locations, it would have been interesting to see it with everything else taken away, and on a stage. Because there’s such smart, snappy dialogue, it reminds me of a lot of those British playwrights, you know [like Alan Ayckbourn] or somebody like that--it does kind of have this beautifully fluid language…

DR:Well the story goes, as Armando will tell you, there was a special guy. No not Tony [Roche, one of the screenwriters]. I’m pretty sure is the guy was Ian Martin who provided, oh, additional dialogue. He specialized in swearing; you know all the crazy [British] swearing? I’m serious, they call this guy up; that was his specialty. When he would say “I’m going to rake your bone and I’m going to stab you in the heart” and all that stuff. “I will hound you to an assisted suicide,” I mean I don’t know which ones. “What are you in a Jane Austen novel?” and all that, a lot of that stuff--specifically that was what he was good at.

Q: Do you see a difference between British and American humor? Is there something that doesn’t translate well?

DR:Except for people like [play/film writer-director-producer] David Mamet, who I think is the exception that covers both bases--Armando is funny as hell but a lot of his humor is really verbal--it’s in the words, really it’s not that it’s a joke but it’s the combination of words. They’re a little more verbal than us, don’t you think? We’re more situations, sight gags, stuff like that. Well the nice thing about this too is there really aren’t any jokes. There are no like, jokes.

It’s behavior and situation. Although I don’t want to misquote Armando, but I think he said that when he went through the film while was editing and any line, no matter how good it was, if it sounded written, he cut it, because he wanted it to sound like you really were overhearing [them talking].

Q: You can’t lay it on the director, it’s all your fault. There are so many places where you are silent, so it’s all in your look, gesture, the walk forward, or walk over here, or look at this.

DR:Tell him about how wonderful that is.

Q: You got it down with just enough of the restraint--as everybody did in this film.

DR:I’ve been watching those [Bush administration] guys on television for eight years. I mean, just it's appalling, appalling, appalling behavior. And it’s obvious that now that we’ve had six months where we’ve learned you don’t have to do that. We have Joe Biden, we have Barack Obama, and I don’t see it. We have all the cabinet officers, you know, like Leon Panetta [current CIA Director], they’re not insulting.

Q: The Republicans seem like whiny children now...

DR:Absolutely. I think it was the fact that we ended up with the opposite of what they claimed. It seems to me that what we’re learning is that rather than strong men, they were very weak, and when 9/11 happened they all went [weird noise] and they started doing all this kind of extreme stuff because, unlike Roosevelt and those guys who said… "Hi."

They were really weak little boys and they did all kinds of bad things. It didn’t help anything, right? We’re finding out about all this eavesdropping, the effect of this was like, not much.

Q: To what degree do you think we’re living in a democracy?

DR:It’s pretty hard to say that we are anymore. It’s not that, it’s when we find out the influence of the banks and corporate America; we see now that when the banks can throw $25 billion in propaganda you can’t fight it. I was reading there’s a new organization that’s trying to counteract it, but it’s really hard. When they have everybody on TV, the only news stations, it’s like how can you fight it?

It's the same thing with the government; how can government regulators, when Goldman Sachs and all these people hire hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of the finest MBAs from Harvard, Princeton, and Yale to find out how to get around the laws, we don’t have the money to hire people who are smarter than them to keep them from screwing us.

Q: Did you need to read a lot of stuff?

DR:I told you already; I’ve been watching these bastards for eight years on television, shaking my head, thinking, “Oh my god. Despicable.”

Q: Whenever you see politicians they always seem so dry and boring.

DR:Well they all aren’t. Rumsfeld wasn’t; he was a performer, the ultimate performer, who really enjoyed getting up there in front of people. Which was part of his problem that he got carried away and was under the mistaken impression that everything that came out of his mouth was a gold nugget and in fact, I think that was not the case.

Q: I’ve heard of the analogy of politics to wrestling. When you watch wrestling on TV there’s so much tension and conflict but outside of that…

DR:That’s why President Obama, when he frames the argument of abortion as to let us respect each other’s opinions and then go from there, then the whole thing starts from a new spot. It doesn’t start from I hate you and you hate me.

Q: You grew up in Chicago right?

DR:Well I never really grew up; I "enlarged" in Chicago.

Q: Where are you from originally?

DR:It was a joke; you didn’t get it. I said I never really grew up but I enlarged. I was in Belleville, Illinois which is down-state but I spent a lot of time in Chicago.

Q: You’ve got roots on the Obama side, but there’s also classic Chicago politics.

DR:Not only that but Rumsfeld is from Chicago. Oh yeah. I know this personality type. My father was a little like that. Seriously. There’s this kind of stubborn, like that last line where he says “Well there were some pretty scary moments at some point right?” and I said “No there weren’t.” remember that? That could be my father, “No. No. No.”

Q: How would you describe or define patriotism at its core?

DR:The last refuge of scoundrels. Who said that?Jefferson or... I can’t remember. Benjamin Franklin? [Samuel Johnson: “Patriotism is the last refuge of a scoundrel”]

Thursday, August 6, 2009

Exclusive Q&A: Comic Tracy Morgan Empowers His Inner Guinea Pig To Join G-Force

Interview by Brad Balfour

From class clown to stand-up comedian and, finally, as a film and television star, Tracy Morgan has made his life and on-going bad boy adventures part of his stage persona. Weekly, he replicates this persona as his character--the whiney, clueless television star Tracy Jordan on 30 Rock. Whether doing his fictional sketch comedy series, TGS with Tracy Jordan or his animated analog, the secret agent Blaster--one of the G-Force guinea pigs--Morgan lends both a street credible smirk, a wink and nod to what he does so well. And now that 30 Rock has garnered 22 Emmy Award nominations this year (with the Award ceremony little more than a month away), Morgan is riding high.

A native New Yorker, Morgan rose from the projects to the stage, working his way up to the national comedy circuit while guesting on television and in films. After appearing onDef Comedy Jam, he became well known appearing on Martin as the Hustleman. Morgan then did an hour-long standup Comedy Central special and contributed a voice to Comedy Central's Crank Yankers. He also hosted the channel's showcase, Comic Groove, and was added to Entertainment Weekly's "It List" in 2002.

Once he joined NBC's Saturday Night Live, Morgan popularized two memorable characters--Safari Planet host Brian Fellow and space adventurer Astronaut Jones--as well as homeless romantic Woodrow and Dominican Lou. His impressions included Mike Tyson, The View's Star Jones, Della Reese, Busta Rhymes, Maya Angelou, and Samuel L. Jackson. He has also appeared as himself, both on "Weekend Update" and in backstage sketches where he grilled guest hosts with inappropriate questions.

Morgan segued from his seventh year on SNL to primetime as star of his short-lived series, The Tracy Morgan Show. Morgan also appeared in such films as Head of State (directed by and starring SNL alum Chris Rock) A Thin Line Between Love and Hate, Half Baked, 30 Years to Life, How High, and Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back.

As Blaster, Morgan gets to wag his cute little tail while flirting with a Penelope Cruz-voiced fellow agent. In G-Force, live action is mixed with finely rendered 3-D computer animation to tell the story of a team of biologically enhanced guinea pigs trained by maverick scientist Ben [Zach Galifianakis] to become secret agents for the US government. Unfortunately, besides being super-agents fighting a global criminal threat, they are fugitives, having had their program shut down by a human spy agency suspicious--and maybe jealous--of what these costly house pets can do. Still, Ben sends the squad to thwart power-mad billionaire Saber [Bill Nighy], who plans to transform the household appliances his company produces into a gigantic supercomputer [like a Decepticon] in order to take over the world. Not unlike some of Jerry Bruckheimer's other productions, it's sometimes hard to tell the flesh-and-blood characters from the computer-generated ones.

Morgan makes his first foray into an action film--albeit as a furry creature--while still keeping his street creds. In this exclusive interview, the 41-year-old Morgan reviews his role in this perfect-for-summer film and his life in general.

Q: They wanted you to be yourself.

TM: Hoyt [Yeatman Jr., the director] said, "Just be yourself and have fun with it," but we did what was on a page and then he would say, "Just have fun and be yourself." I didn't have to make a choice. I didn't have to do any dialect. I didn't have to do a London accent. They didn't want a Japanese dialect. They said, "Just do Tracy. People love your accent." He wanted me to bring in my voice.

Q: You have your urban experience, certain musical tastes and likes as well. Is that what you drew on? You added a little sexy.....

TM: Actually [Hoyt] wanted Blaster to be the ladies man, and, you know, I've had my experiences with women. I'm 40 years old, from New York City, and I'm hot. I'm Tracy Morgan, you know! I was married for 21 years. I have a son that's 23, so I should know a little something. He wanted me to bring that to the table.

So I asked him, "Was that okay for me to add my little two cents and all that stuff?" and he said, "That's what we want." So, that's what I brought. Tracy Morgan is not Blaster or Tracy Jordan; Blaster is in Tracy Morgan. A lot of people ask me, Wait a minute, let me tell you something. Tracy Morgan is not... Tracy Jordan's Tracy Morgan.

Q: With Tracy Jordan, your 30 Rock character, you draw on yourself to give that character life. He's like you, but not you?

TM: A lot of that stuff that you see on 30 Rock, is right from the headlines when it comes to me. I've experienced all of that stuff. I'm a standup comedian. You know, were crazy, crazy like the guys who wash the windows on The Empire State Building. You've got to be crazy to get up there and wash those windows.

So that's what we do. Most people are afraid to do public speaking. That's what we do for a living. Most people would die rather than get up and speak in front of somebody, or a bunch of people. They'd rather die than give the eulogy.

Q: Or be on the Empire State Building window-washing...

TM: [They'd rather be] washing than speaking in front of crowds. So, I love it.

Q: You have one of the best casts in the world. Do you get to spend time with each other beyond the show?

TM: When we're working, we don't hang out. Fortunately, we're all working. Everybody on the show. The show has done wonders for everybody. That's part of their careers. We're working in some capacity or another, so that's the down thing about success. You don't get to see your friends and family as much, because you're working,but when we around each other, we have a bunch of fun. Tina, Alec, Le Juday [Judah Friedlander], OJ, we're always singing and making each other laugh and then it ends up on the page and in the script.

Q: Is there any difference in working with former Saturday Night Live star Tina Fey as the series creator and head?

TM: Tina, she's down like four flat tires. That's Tina. She's the chief. Were goin' to battle with her, and she sets that example. She's our Tom Brady. If you read Bill Belicheck's book, he said Tom Brady was taking a nap, and that's when he knew they were going to win The Super Bowl. That's cool, baby!

Q: Alec Baldwin... what is he like?

TM: He's played all these straight roles, these dramatic parts, and sometimes people get a perception from that. But the fun part is about breaking the perception, and Alec is hilarious. I call him "AB." and I call Tina Fey, "Fey Fey." That's my "Fey Fey." She ain't goin' nowhere, that Tina Fey. I've watched her from the red carpet and everything.

B: It must be fun being in a groundbreaking show.

TM: We have ties with All In The Family. I look at Nick At Nite, and TV Land, and I look forward to the 30 Rock marathons on New Years' Eve just like the Honeymooners marathons.

Q: When you do 30 Rock as opposed to an animated film, how much of it is driven by the interplay?

TM: OK, we're both comedians. The only difference is, [that Tracy Jordan] has three hundred million dollars. He's an international movie star, I'm not, but we're both entertaining. Tracy Morgan is a very entertaining person but not because he's black. I don't want to be stereotyped. We're brothers, but he's just an entertainer in show business.

Q: You must get a kick out of doing a show like that where you're taking the piss out out of the hand that feeds you--meaning the network. That must be fun.

TM: You know, it isn't politically correct and we love it. I think "PC" is just killing comedy. That's why Bruno is having such a hard time with lawsuits. People nowadays do not have a sense of humor, and that's why I loved doing G-Force because for me, it brought out the kid in me.

We're adults a lot longer than we're children, if you think about it. We're kids a much shorter time than we are adults. When we become adults... People think being an adult is being serious. It's not having a sense of humor, or being entertained, and that's what this does. It's for the family...for everybody to enjoy.

Q: When did it dawn on you that you could get paid to be a kid?

TM: To get paid and be funny? Oh man, that was about 17 years ago. I said, "Wait a minute," because I was always the class clown and everything, and then when I got older and had a family--three kids and a wife--one day I was walking down the street and went into a comedy club [got on stage] and they gave me 10 dollars.

I started with 10 dollars and now I'm doing a Jerry Bruckheimer movie. So, I try to protect my sense of humor with everything I got in this world, 'cause I feel that's the only gift that God gave me to survive in this insane place. Growing up in the ghetto is really dangerous, and I think I survived because I made the gangstas laugh. They liked me because I was the funny guy in the block, so they said, "Don't hurt him! He's our entertainer." I just turned it into a business as I got older.

Q: Do you think comics understand pain more than most people?

TM: I think so. We understand rejection. Just to be in show business, period. People that make it in that next level, they're the ones that... You have to be able to deal with rejection. Most people never make it in show business 'cause they can't deal with rejection. If you can't deal with it on a regular level with women. Why do you think men become alcoholics and stuff? It eases the pain.

Q: A comic is really finding a way tell the story of [his/her] own life...

TM: In a comedic way while injecting your sense of humor.

Q: But it's pure you. You're really naked on that stage.

TM: I tell people all the time, if you want to understand me, you have to go watch my stand-up,and you have to listen. You can't just take the sex part and say,"Well, all he did was curse." No, [it's] the story of my life.

My mother was born and had five kids. My father came back from Vietnam, so that tore my family apart because he came back a junkie, and chose heroin over us. Then her first son was born with Cerebral Palsy. Then I was born. Then she had a daughter. So, I was born in-between cerebral palsy and the only girl.

I didn't really get that [snaps fingers]... She probably think I didn't need it, but I was a kid. I needed it. So, that was painful, and then my mother and my father broke up. That hurt me even more. I was supposed to ball up in a corner and die and disappear, but then I'm a survivor. I thought, "To survive. To just survive."

Then I got older and I said, "Fuck surviving. I want to live."

Q: That's the thing.

TM: Now that I'm living, they want to stop me. I yelled at this guy from BET because he said, "What do you think, some black people said that you were coonin' when you gave that speech at The Golden Globes?"

These are the same fucking people that said when I was a little kid, "You can grow up and be anything you want," and now that I've grown up and become successful, they say, "You're coonin," so, fuck them.... Don't listen to nobody.

Q: You're able to channel that, not necessarily by being angry, but through things like G-Force. It has these right, hip elements, so adults as well as kids walk out smiling. I love that.

TM: It's all family. At the end of the day, it's all family. That's all you got. Family. Pardon me for saying, but like Michael Jackson, all he needed was one friend who considered himself family. That's all Michael Jackson needed, was one person to say, "Let's go to the Yankees game." Two Yankees games would have cleared all that shit up.

Q: You're probably right.

TM: Two Knicks games would have cleared all the..."Order a hot dog, Mike." He never had anybody there to do that.

Q: He tried to stay a kid because he never had a chance to be one.

TM: I think he's The Curious Curse of Benjamin Button. He's the real fucking The Curious Case Of Benjamin Button. He grew young.

Q: You're the first person I think who's pointed that out.

TM: It's because [as] I told you, we are adults longer than children. Children understand. Children have fun. When you go to a nursery or kindergarten, you don't see racism there. that shit is a learned behavior.

They're just playing together. If they fight, it's over a toy. They ain't fightin' because of color. They don't care about that stuff. We become adults, and we learn that shit from the generation before us. So, you have to be careful.

You have to be careful on how you raise children. The young people that are going to see this... They don't care about corporate America. They're just going to see G-Force, man, and that's what I love about it, because it's so pure, and me and you, we are the kids in us.

Q: This picture is about a team. It's not about one color, not one race.

TM: You know, me and BET were talking about this. I think every kid in school should play a sport, a team sport. It teaches you camaraderie. Why do you think women are so fiercely competitive?

You have to learn camaraderie. Have you every been a part that was something bigger than you? G-Force is bigger than me or Nicolas Cage--it took all of us. I don't care who is a bigger star. It took all of us to do that movie. It took hundreds of people. One unit. Whenever I'm on a set, I always look around and I love the way the fucking machine runs. From the person holding up this, to the reporter. It's all a machine,and you gotta love the way it runs.

Q: People who work in film, it's like you're in alternative universe, you're in your own world.

TM: It's a community. I'm not a part of the black community. I've never been a part of the white community. I'm a part of show business community. Whether Liz Taylor knows me or not, I'm your neighbor. I can say Michael Jackson knew who I was. I never met him, but guarantee I probably made him laugh,and that right there, I made his kids laugh. I made every reporter in that room laugh. I made you laugh. I made every reporter do this, because it's laughter.

Q: Do you think it's partially about growing up in New York?

TM: Do you want to have a beautiful woman? Make her laugh, man.

Q: You know what your next direction will be: a self-help book to get the pretty women.

TM: That's part of it, but you've got to make 'em laugh. Women love a man with a great sense of humor rather than they love a hump. Rather than they love a big dick. They love a sense of humor. They're so emotional. They go through so much heavy shit every day, that if you can just make her laugh for a second, they'll love you forever. That was Blaster's flaw.

Q: Do you think that Blaster finally gets Juarez, the girl GP agent [voiced by Penelope Cruz]?

TM: Well, you'll find out in the sequel. That's what everybody wants to know.

Q: They are guinea pigs, so they could have had a threesome. Just speculating.

TM: No, they're not deviant like that. They might have had a threesome, but whose baby is it?

Q: That would be tough to figure out. Did you ever decide she was playing you to get Darwin [voiced by Rockwell], or was she playing him to get to you, or was she playing you both to get you to fight over her...

TM: She was playing me to get him, I believe, 'cause she's with me all the time and I'm always giving her my attention. Now, you know, in real life, if you give a woman attention she ignores you, but if you don't give women attention, they go crazy. They go, "What's wrong with me?" You better believe there's something wrong with you, because there ain't nothing wrong with me!

Q: There's that point where you've got to flip it so that after you've been putting her off, you've go after get her....

TM: You can't flip it, because they won't let you. Once the balance of power's been situated, then that's it. Women get creeped out once they know that you love them more than they love you, so you have to play hard-to-get too, but to get 'em... This is how you get 'em. I'm giving you my secrets now. I'm showing you how to use the force. Okay?

All you've got to do is look at her in a way that doesn't creep her out, but make her feel like she's the only one in the fuckin' room.

Q: It's the toughest thing to do--get the balance right where you let her know that that's true, but you don't want to let her know you're that desperate for her.

TM: You don't care. Roll your eyes at her. Make her feel like she's not worthy of you.

Q: So, do you think Blaster had it down or not?

TM: No, Blaster wants her too much, and I try to get through to her, but he won't listen to me.

Q: What would you have told Blaster?

TM: You've got to make her laugh. I don't know. I don't know what makes her laugh. Blaster just needs to be himself and stop begging. When you beg, you make people hate you. If I ever see a woman I like, I'll just walk up to her and say, "If God made anything better than you, he's keeping it for his MF self."

Q: That's what you should have told Blaster?

TM: That's too heavy. I wanted to keep it light, but just remember that line, and I guarantee she'll smile and once you get to a woman, see the way to a woman's heart is through her funny-bone. You make her smile, she'll love you forever.

The way to a man's heart is through his stomach. If you know how to cook, you've got him. See, I tell any woman, God gave you what you needed to get a man, but I'm gonna see if you can keep him. You've got to know how to cook if you want him to come home. If you make that lasagna with six different cheeses, then I'm comin' home.

Q: Did you get a chance to meet Penelope Cruz?

TM: I've never met her.

Q: What would you say to her if you did?

TM: The first thing I would say is,"How are you doing, Ms. Cruz? Hubba-Hubba." Nic Cage is cool, but Penelope. Come on, nothing makes a man feel better than a wo-man. He was the first act, but the real act is yet to come. Nic Cage is cool, but to me, he ain't got nothing on Penelope.

Q: When you do an animated film, you usually don't have that option. You only get together with everybody after the fact so it must have been fun to finally sit down with Nic Cage who plays the mole Speckles...

TM: [It was] the first time I ever met him and the first time I ever met Zach. It was the second time I met Jerry Bruckheimer. So, just to be there at the table with those guys was an honor, and then to have you guys laugh was an honor [as well].

Q: Having met Bruckheimer, did you have any sort of suggestions, besides saying, "I'm available?"

TM: Jerry does the picking and the choosing.

Q: Maybe you could get yourself a cameo on one of his TV shows.

TM: No, I've got 30 Rock. 30 Rock is good enough.

Q: It seems like you've done nearly everything, TV, movies, stand-up, voice overs.

TM: Everything except for directing and I haven't done Broadway which I want to do one day.

Q: What about singing?

TM: My father was a singer. I sing all the time. I sing every day. When I'm on the set, I sing.

Q: But you've never gone in that direction.

TM: No, no. That's my son. My youngest son is into music. I was more into sports and comedy.

Q: You've never pursued sports though.

TM: No but I was really good. I went to high school up here in the Bronx, De Witt Clinton. I was All-City halfback, and I was a All-City track runner.

Q: Would you like to create and direct an animated film?

TM: No, I think that stuff is too hard. I'll leave that for the animation department. Well, I plan on directing a short, maybe next summer.

Q: Would it be humorous or serious?

TM: It would be humorous. I want to show the world my humor. I've doing a lot of everybody else's humor my whole career. I've just been funny in it, but you ain't seen what I'm thinking.

If you want to understand me, then you have to see my stand-up,and what might stand out is the sex because you've got to understand, I've been doing this since I was little. You know where I come from in my neighborhood, everybody is promiscuous.

I come from where Mike Tyson came from. I come from right across the street from Jay-Z. I didn't have a pond in my backyard. I saw violence. I saw all that stuff in the "hood" growin' up, and a good thing I had a sense of humor, because that's what got me out of it.

Q: Do people stereotype you or have expectations of you because of that experience?

TM: Sure, sure. I got into it with BET on the phone. The first people that will really turn on you is black people. Sometimes your own kind.

Q: Isn't that funny?

TM: Yeah, that's the way it is. Jesus couldn't go back to Nazareth. They probably would have killed the man.

Q: I feel a bond, or complementary relationship with your experience and mine, because as a Jew, everybody seems to hate us.

TM: And our minds are open. They say that every Jewish person is supposed to love one black person in his life. I'm glad Lorne Michaels chose me.

Q: How difficult was it working in the framework of Saturday Night Live?

TM: First, it's "live" entertainment. It's on late night--working at 30 Rock is prime time and a single camera--[with Saturday Night Live] you have a audience right there, so you establish a relationship with them within the first 30 seconds. They let you know if they don't like you. It's like stand-up. It's live entertainment. There's nothing on TV like it... Saturday Night Live is the only thing that's "live" on television.

Q: Isn't that amazing to think about that?

TM: Come on man, it's like being shot out of a cannon.... every week.

Q: What was your weirdest "live," impromptu, improvised experience you've had in terms of doing standup, or other things?

TM: Saturday Night Live maybe, making something up and it working...saying something as Brian Fellows or as Woodrow and it absolutely working and you have millions of people that see it as opposed to doing a show. In stand-up you only have about 5000 people seeing it. You do something in Saturday Night Live, you have millions of people seeing it.

Q: It would be interesting to see you work with Zach.

TM: You know who was so funny? Eddie Murphy when he did Dreamgirls. That was profound. That was really a profound performance. My career person said, "You and Zach should do a movie together." I think we would have a ball.

Q: If you did action films, would you like to move on to do some serious action films?

TM: I'm doing an action film now--A Couple of Dicks with Bruce Willis [which is supposedly re-titled, A Couple of Cops--directed by Kevin Smith]. Me and Bruce are two Brooklyn detectives. We're filming that now in New York City. In the movie, I get shot and I kill a couple of people. Everything is Bruce Willis and Tracy Morgan. Or Tracy Morgan and Bruce Willis.

Q: Since you're the co-star, you don't die in it. It used to be that in such films, it was the black character that always got killed in the movie.

TM: Well, fortunately, I've never died in a movie.

Q: That's cool.

TM: I've never died in a movie or on a TV show. Never.

Q: You missed your chance to be melodramatic.

TM: Well, I cried in First Sunday when Loretta DeVine made me cry. So, I broke the fourth wall, but thank God, I've never died. Nobody said, "Well, you did in this scene."

Q: Mentioning the fourth wall, how far or crazy would you take it in making your own movie?

TM: I couldn't tell you. As far as creativity and art [go], I would love to do something where I have to get in touch with the pain and all that dark stuff. That's refreshing.

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Take a Trip Down the Amazon and Elsewhere Through 2009's Premiere Brazil Film Festival At MoMA This July

by Brad Balfour

[left: Rio FF Director Ilda Santiago]
Brazil occupies a special place in the popular imagination. Whether it's because of the exotic music, the colorful and kinetic fashions, or the enduring mystique of its sexually charged inhabitants, there's a fascination with South America's largest country that has surpassed its global political or economic power.

Now that Brazil is achieving an economic parity with such countries as India and China as well as having its long standing cultural presence, it becomes more and more valuable to get a sense of the country through its cinema. Over the last few years that has become easier and easier as several of its directors such as Walter Salles or Fernando Meirelles have become internationally recognized figures with award-winning films.

So even if you can't make it to Brazil, or afford a deep DVD collection, there are several events being held this summer that can critically enhance your knowledge of Brazil, its culture, and cinema--with one in particular, The Museum of Modern Art's Premiere Brazil series, already underway.

For the seventh time, MoMA's film division presents its annual overview of contemporary Brazilian film. With the help of the Rio de Janeiro International Film Festival Director Ilda Santiago, Premiere Brazil 2009 is organized by Film Department curator Jytte Jensen; this 19-day event introduces audiences to accomplished, original films from this unique country. Most of the films in Premiere Brazil will be introduced by their directors at the first screening. Running from July 16 through August 3, 2009, this year’s edition includes 19 features and three shorts.

Said Jensen about their efforts, "With this annual program we are interested in following filmmakers who continue to create works that bring Brazilian filmmaking to the international marketplace but also to create a forum for new original voices. We choose from the sidebar of the Rio International Film Festival named Premiere Brazil and also bring in films that are just finished, thus being able to present films which premiere here and then go on the Rio Festival later in the year."

"Our aim is the cover the various genres and trends in Brazil and show the diversity of filmmaking in this particular national cinema," added Jensen. "We do not, per se, look for a specific aesthetic but often a trend will emerge when we have selected the program--like this year's investigations in several of the films of how music and poetry has shaped what we have come to think of as the Brazilian spirit--and the pace and rhythm in the films being made."

As before, the fest includes documentaries of such striking quality that they sometimes overshadow the fiction features. Those docs include a few which address, as Jensen noted, the rich heritage of Brazilian music. Of the two world premieres among this year’s selection, Beyond Ipanema: Brazilian Waves in Global Music(2009), is a brilliant overview of the incursion of Brazilian music world wide by directors Guto Barra and Béco Dranoff. With dramatic archival footage and original interviews, this fast-paced doc tells in 89 minutes nearly all the history of Brazilian music since the 1940s.

Beyond that, the film describes how such music as samba, bosa nova and Tropicália became an international phenomena as well. By having such personalities as Brazilian legends Gilberto Gil, Bebel Gilberto, Os Mutantes, Milton Nascimento, and Caetano Veloso in the same film with contemporary music figures such as Devendra Banhart, David Byrne, M.I.A., and Thievery Corporation, it illustrates the link between the generations.

The other world premiere Moscou (Moscow)(2009), is directed by master documentarian Eduardo Coutinho--whose has seven other films being featured here as part of the first retrospective done for this series.

And to enhance the audio elements of the festival, this year’s exhibition is accompanied by a series of live Brazilian music performances in the Museum’s Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Sculpture Garden on Thursday nights in July (it began July 2 and continues through July 30).

Among the other docs, there is one other, Morrinho—Deus sabe de tudo mas não é X9 (Morrinho: God Knows Everything But Is Not a Snitch)--it had its first screening on Monday but will have another on July 30th--that has the potential to be another Born Into Brothels. Enhanced with the sort of hopefulness found in Slumdog Millionaire,this real life fable tells the tale of a group of slum kids living in what's known as the favela, who were staying out of trouble by creating their own alternate world. They created an huge, small-scale model of Rio’s favelas, on the side of a hill calling it Morrinho. Made of re-crafted bricks and inhabited by dozens of Lego figures, they played in it as if reenacting war games between the police and the gangs.

When director Fábio Gavião got wind of this he started a long odyssey that included 600 hours of video and eight years of time as the kids got discovered by the international art world and traveled with their project to major art expos including the 52nd Venice Biennale in 2007. The filmmakers--Gaviao, co-director Markao Oliviera and producer Sergio Bloch not only discovered new talent but demonstrated the healing effect film can have a community of kids.

After having met Gavião and Bloch at a wonderful press lunch in one of New York's best Brazilian restaurants, Plataforma Churrascaria (on West 49th St. between 8th and 9th Aves.), the two outlined their experience with discovering these kids and their construction.

Explained Bloch, "A friend of ours, Rodrigo, who teaches environmental studies to the kids from favela told us about it. The kids--basically two brothers who started it and about six friends who help them-- were missing class alot. When he asked why they were missing class, the other kids said, 'Oh, because they are playing in the Morrinho.'

One day they attended class and he said he'd like to see this Morrinho. So they took him to see it and [he was amazed]. He says to them 'Look, when you want to play there let me know and I will [give you credit]. What you do there is what I teach here--how to deal with space... You have to put plants to hold the land steady and you've learned architecture--how to build and design.' He was so fascinated he called Fabio who called me. We arrived that first day and starting shooting--and we never left."

No wonder. The Morrinho is a masterpiece of construction rich in colors and little Lego figurines so that it is not just a static representation but a miniature city where the kids creat little dramas and act them out. For the production team, this was not only an opportunity to document a fascinating organically generated creation in the favela--a positive development made in wolrd fraught with violence and poverty--but it was a chance to concretely help the community or at least, one small part of it.

Gavião recalled, "We have a big problem in Brazil, especially with so many poor people living there with no education or jobs; that's why a lot of young people get involved with drug dealers and violence. This project was a big opportunity for the community to change their reality. It happened in a way [as a simple outlet for the kids], but we saw could be much more than that."

With that realization, they not only dug into making the documentary, but set up an organization to help the kids as they went from favela to television appearances, art shows through the world and becoming tour guides to their miniature world. Added Bloch, "Right there, we thought we'd do a documentary for a few months and that's would be it, but as we got involved with them, as we realized what was there, what it meant and that it could become something bigger.

"We saw that by doing the documentary, we're not only making it for us, but for them. We saw a chance to make an exchange, and for to be a part of a world they had never been a part of before."

Seeing a film like this--one that encompasses so much more than just a clever story--explains why such filmmaking is important and why it is important that, by experiencing a place as different as Brazil and its favelas are, we experience something compelling about ourselves and our world.

For an extended version of this story go to: filmfestivaltraveler.com.

Friday, July 3, 2009

Q&A: Harold Ramis Goes from Ghostbusting To Getting Primitive Directing Year One

Feature Story by Brad Balfour

Before a small group of comedy-infused journos, veteran funnyman, director/writer Harold Ramis spent over an hour not just talking about his latest comedy, Year One but outlining his career and the history of modern funnymen as well. And with Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaur hitting theaters this summer, it seems there's lots of funny in the Pleistocene and beyond.

Year One follows a famous tradition of taking our mythology to task, peering way back to our caveman past and discovering that even then, geeks and nerds--ably played by Jack Black and Michael Cera--came under fire from the tribe, prompting derision and humor. Of course, Ramis, with comedic ambitions extending along the lines of Mel Brooks' History of The World, plumbs such sacred texts as the Bible for inspiration and source material. With the help of exec producer Judd Apatow, Ramis made a semi-gross out comedy that inveigles to explore a few serious ideas as well. It asks such questions like "who the hell came up with circumcision ANYHOW?"

This former Chicagoan started as a journalist, became joke editor at Playboy and then joined his hometown's legendary improv comedy troupe, Second City. He then went on to writing and perform in the first National Lampoon shows with original Saturday Night Live team members such as Dan Ackroyd, Bill Murray, John Belushi and Chevy Chase. The veteran writer/director then established himself in comedy first as one of the writers of National Lampoon's Animal House, then, as an actor as well as a writer of such hits as Stripes, Ghost Busters, and then debuted as a director with Caddyshack in 1980.

Q: How different is Year One from other films that you've done?

HR: What’s that saying? “Love the one you’re with?” [laughs] I live in hope, so my new work is always my favorite because I always hope it will teach me something I didn’t know before or I’ll have some experience I’ve never had before. If this were television and you had worked seven years doing the same show over and over, you pretty much know what to expect.

But every feature film is like a grand adventure and you go on it with new people every time; Jack Black and Michael Cera are amazing allies to have. I had Judd Apatow… not with me, but with me in spirit and certainly as an ally back in LA making sure…just covering everything for me. And just a wonderful cast, a great staff and people I’ve worked with behind the camera. It’s the nicest job I could imagine having and this film in particular, the journey itself.

I’ve made one other journey film, National Lampoon’s Vacation. It’s a lot of fun traveling with the whole crew; it’s like being in the circus. And the ideas in this film, as silly and broad as the movie is it’s the intellectual and philosophical underpinnings are so meaningful to me it gave me a chance to explore these ideas, at least in my own head. Whether they translated to the audience or not, I don’t know.

Q: What were those ideas?

HR: Very few young people are interested in religion. But as you get older, people return to the religion of their family or they start to think philosophically. There are very few 16-year-old Buddhists around; it takes a lot of living to even start asking the questions. You know when I was younger, like everyone else I was driven by my hunger, my greed, and my lust for money, power, sex, and fame. All the things that we’re conditioned to want and that we quite naturally want. Evolutionary biologists might say it’s all just a mask for needing to procreate; just to get girls.

I used to do an improv thing at Second City as a swami--a yoga master. One of the things was “why did you become a swami?” “I thought it was a good way to get girls.” So, those are the ambitions of young people I think and people who either achieve some of those goals or fail to achieve start to come to some realizations, starting around 40. It might be “I’m never gonna have that, so what does my life all mean?” or “Alright I’ve got that, now what? There’s gotta be something else.”

My rabbi, Irwin Kula, was at the screening last night. He once said to me in response to my film The Ice Harvest, “You can never get enough of what you don’t really need.” That applies to alcohol, drugs, sex, fame, money; it doesn’t get you what you thought it was gonna get you and then you get religion.

Q: So Modern man is not much more advanced than Cro-Magnon man?

HR: I don’t think so; I mean part of the premise of the movie was no matter how far back you went we would find that people were driven by the same needs and in a way had the same potential awareness. I’m convinced that there had to be a hunter-gatherer telling jokes; there had to be a hunter-gatherer thinking “there’s got to be more to life than this” or “I hate my life” or “Is this all there is? That’s all I’m gonna do the rest of my life is hunt and gather?”

Q: The nerds and geeks go far back.

HR: Oh yeah, no question [laughs].

Q: A lot of the humor revolves around anachronism. Was there ever a point where you had to decide how these characters where going to talk?

HR: From the very beginning I imagined, and I didn’t invent this, but the conceit of having main characters speak in a contemporary way, and the characters who are more of the time speak in a more classical way; I settled on that pretty early. The aristocracy of Sodom would speak in an inflated, Shakespearean tone; that the patriarchs Adam and Abraham would speak in a biblical tone; and that our guys would speak the way we speak, because they are not of that mindset or that social class. The examples are great and many: Mel Brooks' 2000-Year-Old Man classics.

Q: Or his The History of the World.

HR: I was much more a fan of The 2000-Year-Old Man. I memorized every word of it. My friends and I could quote all of it; And Monty Python, they did a great job on both Monty Python and The Holy Grail and Life of Brian. Woody Allen’s film Love and Death, where he plays a completely contemporary neurotic Jewish New Yorker in the middle of Napoleonic Russia.

Q: Where’d you get that wacky soundtrack instead of the expected Biblical music?

HR: Well we tried different things. We tried to go "epic" on the music like it was a [Cecil B.] DeMille film, one of those big Hollywood type scores and then we tried to create an ethnic world music score with ancient instruments. But we realized it wasn’t contemporary enough for our audience and needed a backbeat so we could overlay those ethnic elements. For the opening of the movie--the boar hunt--I steered our music composer Teddy Shapiro toward the Balinese monkey chant, so that’s under there. So, [we did] whatever worked just with a bit of an eastern flavor.

Q: You incorporate humor into the objects on set like some of the costumes.

HR: For me, really successful comedies work on three levels: the story works--which includes the characters and the behavior--the dialog works--people are saying funny things--and there’s physical business going on that’s fun to watch.

Part of the fun of this, moments like the discovery of the wheel is seeing the wheel for the first time. That’s an object very specific to this movie that I thought there was going to be a joke on that. It might be on the DVD but we cut it from the film, when Jack sees…”what’s the big round thing?” “That’s the wheel numbskull. It makes the cart go.” And Jack used to say “Wow! That’s the greatest invention since the vagina!”

We probably should have left it in but the NPAA was already a little like, “What?” I think it might be on the DVD. I don’t know why I thought oxen would be funny but taking a classic chase situation and having it on ox carts, I thought “Well they’re gonna get a laugh from this.” That’s very specific to the world of the film.

Q: Because you could jump from era to era and biblical story to biblical story, how did you figure out when to stop?

HR: That was sort of a big question raised by the studio and by every one of a thousand people who gave us script notes. Should we include the Exodus? It sounds crazy, but I said no, The Exodus is way too late. That’s around 1200 BC, whereas Abraham was around 2000 BC. Of course in the film, we leap from the Garden of Eden--if you were an Orthodox Jew theoretically you would say the Garden of Eden was 5769 years ago--coming up on 5770 or something like that. That’s what a fundamentalist might think. If you were an evolutionary biologist you might say hunter-gatherers were 10,000 years ago. Quibbling about time might seem silly given the leaps we make in the film.

We had a focus group after one of our screenings and someone in the test group said, “How could they meet Cain and Abel and then meet Abraham, who was a thousand years after them?” and I said, “Oh, you mean the real Cain and Abel. This is a totally different Cain and Abel.”

We’re in fantasyland anyway. Genesis starts off as mythology, not unlike other mythologies like Greek and Mesopotamian, probably heavily borrowed from Mesopotamian. Then it turns into legend--things that may have happened. As much is known about Abraham as Robin Hood, but it represents a history you can track.

Then it turns into literal history; you can start dating things in the real world. So I thought as long as we’re in the myth and legend period, I’m free to… I could have had the Tower of Babel. If we could have afforded to make the ziggurat higher in Sodom it would have been the Tower of Babel.

Q: Maybe to continue on to Year Two?

HR: Our joke was that the sequel would be called Year One 2 [laughs]. When I’m making a film I’ve never seriously thought about a sequel. It’s not like I need to explore…I wasn’t exploring bible stories because I think they’re funny, I was trying to explore Genesis in the context of some political and social ideas that I had and psychological ideas. In my mind, having dealt with those, I don’t need to do that again. If the public wanted to see more funny bible stuff, I suppose Sony would get someone else to do the Moses stuff.

Q: Did you research sections of Genesis?

HR: Oh yeah, absolutely. A lot of times I find my research is unintentional and unconscious. It’s more like the work I do is a synthesis of what I’ve already been reading as opposed to having an idea and needing to go back to find out what’s in literature. The big global ideas in the movie I’ve been thinking about for almost 10 years.

Q: A friend just had his son circumcised. The jokes about it are great, but when you think about it, where did that concept come from?

HR: That’s what I was thinking [laughs]. How did people react when Abraham, out of the blue, said, “I’m gonna cut off my foreskin and every other guys' in the village.”

If I had been standing there I would have done the same thing as Jack and Michael. I had the same dilemma, I have two sons and my wife was afraid to let the rabbi do it; she wanted the doctor to do it. But, she didn’t realize that moils, the official circumciser, that’s all they do. Chances are your pediatrician has done far fewer.

Q: Couples will look for a moyel to do it.

HR: While we were doing that scene I was telling the classic moyel joke. Here’s the moyel joke.

A guy’s walking down the street. He notices his watch is stopped. He sees a store on Madison Avenue and he notices it has clocks and watches in the window. He goes in and says, “I need a battery for this watch.” He says, “We don’t fix watches.”

The guy says, “You don’t fix watches? You got clocks and watches in the window--what do you do?” He says, “I’m a moyel.” The guy says, “Well, why do you have all the clocks and watches in the window?” He says, “What should I put in the window? [laughs]"

Q: What were your sources when you researched circumcision?

HR: Two things occurred to me when I was working on that. When we got to the eunuch, played by Kyle Gass, the second half of Tenacious D--or maybe the first half of Tenacious D--we’d already dealt with circumcision and I thought eunuchs have been around for a long time also and it struck me, "Where did that idea come from?"

As it's actually set up, people don’t laugh--Michael’s delivery is not intentionally a joke delivery--but I thought, for the first time in a movie someone’s going to say, “What’s up with all the genital mutilation?” Which is a real issue. In developing countries, female circumcision is still a huge issue. But, what is it? Is it some deep Freudian, psychological revulsion towards our own genitalia, some need to mutilate it or is it a pride thing? Or did Abraham just think it was going to look better.

Q: Not to deflect from the genitals or anything…

HR: Yeah right, it’s also partly a Judd Apatow movie, so... [laughs].

Q: When you have two actors like Jack Black and Michael Cera, who are such improv kind of guys, how much of what went on in front of the camera surprised you?

HR: I’m always surprised, sometimes not happily surprised. Improv is now part of the job. Virtually everyone who’s doing comedy today has been trained at one of the improv schools whether it’s Second City or Upright Citizens Brigade. Everyone has "played"--they all call it "playing." Even guys like David Pasquesi, who played the Prime Minister of Sodom in the huge turban. Pasquesi is a brilliant improviser and David Cross played with him at Upright Citizens. Paul Scheer--who’s actually June Raphel's boyfriend--was the happy volunteer slave [bricklayer], he’s a very well known Upright Citizens actor, so is Matt Besser, who played the irate Sodomite. Everyone’s done this and you know Jack has that training.

Michael’s actually--I wouldn’t say classically trained--been raised in television. I looked up his imdb thing, he was like nine years old when he did his first commercial and 11 when he did his first TV shows. But he fell in with all these improvisers and he’s so smart he can roll with anything. With Superbad I’m sure did a lot of improv. Jonah Hill improvises very easily and you know I worked with Seth Rogen and he improvises a lot.

It’s not so rigid anymore that you have stand-up and you have improv; most people are crossing over these days. When you write a script you do your best. At some point, the studio says, "Okay, let’s make the movie," though you’re not really finished with the script. It doesn’t mean your last idea is your best idea and there may even be places in the script where you go, “I’m not even sure this is going to work but we’ll find it, we’ll either fix it in writing or we’ll improvise around it.”

So, each day part of our job is to do the script as well as we can do it, write every idea we can think of. I have an executive producer, Rodney Rothman, sitting there. He’s also a guild writer, handing me slips of paper like, "What do you think of this?” and I’d show it to Jack and Michael--"Do you like any of this stuff." And then turn the actors loose and let them just do it.

Q: What makes a good comedy pairing?

HR: There are so many good kinds of teams. I think it’s like every good relationship we have with women: Two people who complete each other. You usually bond with someone who’s not just like you, they have what you don’t have and you have what they don’t have. Two great looking guys don’t usually bond. The great looking guy has a wingman who’s less cool but picks up the leavings from the cool guy. The sidekick has other skills. You know, Abbott and Costello--a straight man and a comic--if they were both comics then they’d be different style comics: one’s dry and one’s broad.

Obviously, with Jack and Michael, they’re a great physical pairing. When we showed people still photos of them in their wardrobe, they laughed; they just looked funny because they’re just cartoons. Jack’s a human cartoon. He’s very big; Jack will just mug, he’ll drop his pants, you don’t even have to ask. And Michael is so introverted and subtle and real and…awkward, and yet he’s not really an awkward person.

Q: Were the interactions on set a result of they're being so different?

HR: Jack is actually a much calmer and serene person than he appears on screen and Michael is a much looser and has more fun than he appears on screen. And they both are amazing musicians. I play the guitar and sing and our cameraman Alar Kivilo, is a brilliant guitarist. So we always had two guitars behind the monitors where we all sit so there were always people playing in different combinations. Jack and Michael both played and would sing in close harmony; they would even invent music and go freeform and invent music in close harmony.

Q: There are a couple of situations where Michael’s character gets into it with the animals--the snake and then with the cougar. You chose not to show how the hell he survived those things.

HR: Almost not a choice. They warn you when you’re going to be a film director, avoid the A, B and C--animals, boats and children--because you can’t control them. So of course we wrote a show with animals in every scene and things for the animals to do. I should have known.

When I did the film National Lampoon’s Vacation, there’s a scene where Chevy’s staggering around on a desert. I wanted him to fall down into the ground and have a guy come by on a camel. Chevy wondered if it was a hallucination or not. So we get a camel to come out from California, and I cue the camel and we’re rolling the camera and I shout, "Where’s the camel? Cut, cut cut. Where’s the camel?"

"The camel's is not comfortable walking on sand." [Laughs.]

"It’s a camel, what do you mean he’s not comfortable walking on sand???"

[Answers the trainer, ]"He’s from Burbanks."

So in this movie, I wanted Michael to be attacked by a cougar, we even had a scene where he was attacked by an eagle, which I had to cut out. When they’re up climbing up the mountain they said, "Look, an eagle, so majestic." Then it swoops down, clawing Michael in the face. We cut that out.

All right, so the cougar. I said, "Can you get me a cougar?" Yeah, a cougar. We got the cougar from Talledega Nights. This cougar worked with Will Ferrell. Even I haven’t worked with Will Ferrell, so it's gotta be a good cougar. I need the cougar to walk out on the tree limb, leap from the tree onto a stunt man, wrestle on the ground with the stunt man. Fine. Done.

So it’s the middle of the night; "How’s the cougar?"

"The cougar is fine."

Okay, could you bring out the cougar.

"He won’t go out on the tree limb."

"Why not?"

"Well it’s different from the way we rehearsed it."

"We rehearsed it with a backing so he would feel safer. He’s afraid he’s going to fall off the tree limb."

"He’s got claws, doesn’t he?"

"Well, yeah. He’s a little constipated."

"All right, just get him out there."

"Can he leap on the stunt man?"

"Well, he really can't leap to the ground from that height."

"Well what can he do?"

"He can leap onto a platform maybe six to seven feet."

"And then jump on the stuntman?"

"Well he won’t jump on the stunt man, he would jump near the stunt man."

This was a disaster, it was literally three in the morning and we were all standing there waiting for the cougar to come down. So we ended up with a CG cougar.

It was intended that there was some wrestling on the ground with a live animal, but it didn’t happen. Not everything in a movie is a choice. You know a lot of things in a film are a result of people doing the best they can under the circumstances.

There’s a scene in Cecil B. DeMille's Samson and Delilah which is as funny as anything filmed in a comedy. Samson is wrestling with a lion. It’s a story from the actual Bible. In the movie, the double for Victor Mature is maybe a foot shorter than Mature, wearing a completely different wig, and he’s clearly the animal trainer because he was dancing with the lion. Then it cuts back to Victor Mature with a stuffed lion, and it cuts back to the guy dancing; nothing matches. It goes on for maybe a solid minute.

In our movie, the CG lion jumps on it and we just got of it right away. The snake was another story. We tried so many different endings. In the out-takes we see Jack slamming the rubber version of the snake, a very expensive replica of the actual live snake. Michael was comfortable with that snake climbing it out, it’s an albino python. But once a snake has been fed--they eat once a month--something that size, so it was not a problem. But Jack was nervous, very nervous about the snake. So the final shot of the snake coiled around him is CG. They put the rubber snake around Michael, then the effects guys made it undulate a little.

Q: On a film like Year One, how do you decide how much time you’re going to spend on, say, Oliver Platt, or whoever it happens to be.

HR: It kind of relates to Ghost Busters in a way. Ernie Hudson was new to the comedy world, being the fourth ghost buster. He’s a serious actor, and a really good actor. He would have ideas and try to talk to Ivan Reitman and Ivan goes, "Yeah, yeah, yeah" and kind of put him off. And I could see how disappointed Ernie was. He says "I think Ivan doesn’t like me."

I said no, no, no. Ivan really likes you, but here’s how it works: Bill gets this much money, and is the headliner, Danny gets a little less than Bill, but he’s a second headline, and I get a lot less, but I’m like 3rd, because I actually wrote the script, and you’re 4th guy. So when there’s a really wide shot, we’re all in it and Ivan cares what we’re all doing. If the shot’s a little less wide, you’re out. If it’s a two shot, it’s not going to be me and Bill. It’s going to be Danny and Bill.

There are pecking orders; you can only spend a certain amount of time. I had day players, people who are in the movie to do a small scene or a couple of scenes for only a day or two--to them that’s their chance. It’s like they’re playing Hamlet all of a sudden. And they want to talk to you about their character. You can only go so far. There’s only so much time.

Oliver loves to talk about his character. He’s very serious about it and really thinks these things through. And it’s fun to talk to him, but it is a comedy. The Sex and the City producer Bernie Solence once said, "In comedy, you wear your character lightly, like a hat. You kind of put it on your head and do it."

So you don’t want to spend too much time over thinking these things. But you want to give each actor what he needs. Most of these comedy people you just put them up there and they go. In general most funny films are funny because they have great comic performances at the heart of them. So you recruit for that reason; someone who's going to make you laugh. Most of them, they know their place in the film. They know that the whole thing is not going to stop and revolve around their moments.

Q: With this cast, you have so many comedians in the background with parts; do you, as director, prefer to make films with lots of comedians around?

HR: In comedy, we audition all kinds of people. Sometimes you don’t know who is going to be funny and we trust our casting directors to bring in everyone who they think has a reasonable shot at making it work, so we audition tons of people.

I saw Andy Samberg last night and forgot he auditioned for the movie. Almost everyone on SNL came in auditioned for very small parts. They just wanted to join the party. But in the end, I didn’t hire them, not because they weren’t funny but because I thought, "What am I going to do with Andy Samberg on a set. There’s really not enough for him." If you had him, you would really want to turn it into something.

Q: You had Bill Hader and Paul Rudd for small but memorable parts.

HR: Yeah, Paul had a significant role to play. Embodying one of the central figures of Judaic-Christian mythology is a big job. And having cast David Cross as the first psychopath, sociopath, embodying that kind of insanity, I thought who embodies goodness for the audience? What comic actor is a paragon of virtue with ability, so Paul Rudd--yeah, he was happy to do it. We just had to pad his shoulders a little bit to make him a little more heroic.

Q: And when you kill somebody in a comedy...

HR: And brutally too. It always shocked me. In the Bible, there’s the six-day creation which goes by pretty quickly and then there’s a little dwell in the garden until they make the big mistake. Next story in the Bible is the murder. It’s like whoever wrote the Bible was thinking like a primetime programmer at NBC--murder at 8 o’clock, CSI, and then, "let’s kill somebody." It’s a great hook into the Old Testament.

Q: It sets you up for the rest of the book.

HR: That’s it, sure.

Q: You've got an arc?

HR: Well, every Shakespeare play begins with a murder. There’s a reason it’s on all our minds and has been a central story in literature forever. As a parent, I’m always concerned our kids grow up on action films and millions of rounds are fired. For some reason, bad guys are the worst shots in the world. They never hit anybody. But good guys are remarkably accurate.

I was watching the movie The Untouchables--the latter version of it--and there was a brilliant, big climactic moment, one of the henchman--one of Capone’s guys on the stairs in the train station--he gets shot in the head and the audience cheers.

You know, I’m such a liberal, I thought "Why are we..." and maybe it was the Buddha, but I’m sure the Dalai Lama was not cheering. We’re cheering the death of this person we don’t even know. Maybe he had a family, maybe they’re orphaned children now. Maybe he was doing this job but it was first day on the job, and he didn’t even know what he was doing. He thought his job was a bodyguard; maybe it’s the only thing he could do to feed his family.

I once thought of doing a James Bond parody movie, that’s starts with Bond, you know he always starts in mid-caper and he’s at a Russian nuclear facility--one of the Bond movie actually started that way. We don’t know why, but he steals the thing he’s supposed to, and breaks the machine he’s supposed to break. He has to escape and kills maybe about 25 people before he escapes onto the helicopter.

In my version instead of the movie going off with James Bond, the camera would pan back to the dead, the dying, the tears and the crying and their wives showing up to identify the bodies, amputations in the hospital and these guys living the rest of their lives with limbs missing or brain damage. We’re so conditioned to action in films, and my kids watch people shooting at each other, beating the crap out of each other, and no one gets hurt.

The hero gets up and in the next frame, if you hit a guard once really hard he will stay unconscious for as long as you need him to be unconscious. To actually beat someone to unconsciousness you have to club them repeatedly. Of course, there’s a situation where one blow can cause serious damage, but for the most part it’s hard to kill someone. So we thought, all right, we’re gong to make the killing of Abel painful, so people would know murder is not funny, it's painful.

Q: You have said that working on Year One was the best time you ever had...

HR: [That's true for] every film that I’ve actually written, you know it’s all in your head. You sit down and start writing something; I’ve started a film set on a fictional Caribbean island. It’s a fantasy that you’ll ever get to make it. I don’t know how it is for people who don’t work in comedy; in comedy, you look forward to the possibility of one) realizing the fantasy you put down on paper and, two) fleshing it out with the funniest, nicest people you can find.

Most, if not 99% of the screenplays that are written, don’t get produced. Those are unfulfilled fantasies, but when you write a fantasy, especially an epic fantasy, and responsible adults put up the money for it, it’s like, “Wow! I’m already ahead of the game here.”


Q: Maybe you don’t want to be tortured looking at your career, but when you do, are there things you would a) differently, b) think ‘my God I pulled it off or c) yeah, okay, I’ll go with that one. It’s something to get people excited about?

HR: Yeah, every movie. Someone once said that "Movies are not finished, they’re abandoned." You keep working on it until the studio just rips it from your hand and has to release it. Same with the script, same with every shooting day. You could keep going endlessly, looking for perfection. But as Rodney Dangerfield once said to me, "Harold, there’s no perfection in life."

And he was right, especially in art. In any art form, you’re trying to hit a moving target in space that has no shape or form till you give it form or shape. So literally, you do the best you can, it’s a completely in-the-moment experience. And then you see what you’ve done.

Someone once said, "Every movie is three movies, the movie you set out to make, the movie you think you’re making, and then the movie you find you’ve made." I’m so full of aphorisms.

Once you find out what movie you’ve made, then it’s immutable, it’s never going to change. Every time I see any of my film, I think, "Ah man, coulda’ shoulda’ done that better." I could re-cut the beginning of Club Paradise right now, it would be really cool. Unfortunately I made the movie in ’84. No one’s asking me to go back and fix it. But every movie, I call it "the cringe factor"--how many times when I watch my movie do I go, "Ugghh. I wish I had done that better. I wish I had a better idea." That’s across the board, all of them.

Then there are moments with every film I’ve worked on I go "Wow that’s so cool." And it’s not self-aggrandizing, it’s how good the actors were, or how nicely a moment worked out or nice piece of writing, maybe by someone else.

Q: If you had to remake of one of your movies, which one would you do?

HR: Would I remake? I would remake Club Paradise. I thought the story was cool, the setting was great, everything lined up, except I wrote it for Bill Murray and John Cleese and they were on board when I wrote it, and when it came time to do the movie, Murray said, "Man, it feels like I would be this guy in Meatballs, it would be this camp counselor for grownups."

And John Cleese didn’t want to leave. He had gotten agoraphobic--well, not really. But he didn’t want to leave home. He didn’t want to be in West Indies for three-four months, which is what the film required. Very painful.

So Robin Williams was happy to do it. Peter O’ Toole agreed and within 24 hours said, "Yeah, I’d love to do this." And that kind of flipped the polarity of the film. I wrote it for Bill, who is kind of low-key, and got Robin, who is completely explosive and off the wall. John Cleese is manic and out of control and Peter O’ Toole is all grace and control. So once the polarities shift, the script should have been re-written for them, but we didn’t. I kind of, shoe-horned Robin into a Bill Murray part, which was not comfortable for him. We get along great and we’re friends, but he felt kind of handcuffed by the part.

And O’Toole was elegant, but I was thinking of Fawlty Towers. My original conceit was to take John Cleese as the Basil Fawlty and make him the governor of an island and then they ran the island like they ran the hotel in Fawlty Towers.

I was imagining Murray as a White Rasta, you know the coolest white guy you’ve ever seen, living in, ex-patriot in Jamaica, living with the White Rastas and smoke a lot of ganja and living the good life. That was the idea and the story was about globalization. These people who had suffered under colonialism for 200 years, 00 years, now were being colonized by Levi Strauss, be put to work in Jean factories and their primary beaches were being turned into luxuries condos and hotels. That was what the movie was about. And some tourists got in the middle of the political struggle. Seemed like a great setting for a movie.

[Stylistically,] I was thinking of the English comedies of the '50s and '60s--like those from the Ealing Studios and Boulting Brothers and Man in a Cocked Hat--that kind of thing. And I thought, "Wow, putting the most American guy Bill Murray, against the most British guy we could all think of, John Cleese, I thought that would be really cool."

Q: You worked with Second City and the SNL people, now you’re now working with the Apatow crew. Are there different approaches by these groups of comedians?

HR: When I started in comedy there was a great schism. The old school and new school. The Old School was stand-ups who had been conditioned in Las Vegas and Hollywood, that sort of slick Vegas style and it was generational--the kind of people our parents laughed at. It could be very funny, old Jewish comedians like Myron Cohen. Rodney Dangerfield came out of that tradition, and modified it.

Lenny Bruce was the great rebel of the stand-up tradition. Lenny stood on a street corner as a teenager with Rodney Dangerfield and Joey Ross, who later turned up in television, Car 54 Where are You? That sort of thing.

Lenny invented what they called the sprits, which was kind of a angry hipster rap, fueled by lots of marijuana and a lot of cynicism and a lot of angry political feelings. So, that was the beginning of something new.

When I was 16 years old I went to a nightclub in Chicago and saw Lenny Bruce live. He was arrested his very next engagement in Chicago. Arrested and taken off the stage, it began the series of arrests and first amendment trials that ended his career and his life. He got so depressed and so serious about it that he finally overdosed.

Lenny was the beginning of something new and Mort Saul was taking a more acrid political approach to things, but the NEW new comedy had not yet emerged…

Second City was the birth of the new comedy that took satire, allowed for Lenny Bruce's liberal use of language and social attitude, put it on the stage and made it popular. That’s what [Saturday Night Live creator/[producer] Lorne Michaels brought to television; for Michaels, National Lampoon had a big part to play. Lampoon was much broader and cruel than Second City; it went national and Lorne Michaels just kind of cherry-picked from Second City and the various improv companies. That became the new comedy.

Saturday Night Live announced its arrival on television; Animal House was its first entry into films, Caddyshack was the second.

Our press junket for Caddyshack was such a disaster. Someone wrote, “If this is the new Hollywood, let’s have the old Hollywood back.” More than being the new Hollywood, we were the new comedy. I grew up on the Marx brothers and those old stand-ups and Judd grew up on the new comedy.

I’m totally neglecting the British tradition, which has always been great, there’s a stream there that has always been significant. So, I’ve lost touch with the Apatow generation. I knew they were out there, I knew they were talking about our stuff that they had grown up on it.

Judd and I finally meet, he said he and Seth Rogan stalked me at the Deauville Film Festival in France, but we were in the same hotel, they called me and asked for a drink. So, they came to my film, The Ice Harvest, and I went to there film, The 40-year-old Virgin, and had dinner and came out of it friends. Judd asked me to appear in Knocked Up as Seth’s father and that kind of cemented something for both of us.

I had already appeared with Jack in Orange County. Jake Kasdan, even though he was [director] Larry Kasdan's son, was form the Apatow school because he had directed Freaks and Geeks. That was the beginning, really Orange County was the beginning and then it was kind of cemented in their world in Knocked Up. Then I asked Judd to produce this movie with me as a desperate attempt to really connect with that whole generation. I knew it would be an important collaboration.

Q: One difference between the one generation and the other is the role that TV plays; what do you think would be a distinction?

HR: The big thing I’ve noticed about television is that I’m just old enough to have been raised by television. But TV when I was a kid was The Milton Berle Show and not everyone had a TV as opposed to now every person in a family having a television. Many families would come together to watch the few TVs there were.

But these guys were raised professionally by it in the sense that they honed their writing skills around a table like this with a bunch of writers; they’re very collaborative. To the same extent, this generation now does mass dating, a bunch of guys and a bunch of girls go out together and they’re constantly in touch, texting each other; there’s much more of a group thing in the generations after mine.

This belief in the table [is like this]: you have an idea and you put it out to the table, and everyone starts throwing ideas in as writers--that’s how Judd works. When he first came into this project, we already had a first draft of Year One. He said ‘I’ll bring three or four writers to the table we’ll let ‘em read the script, they’ll shoot you some ideas. I said fine, then invite some writers and we’ll sit down. I think 17 writers showed up, if only to look at me... "Yeah, that’s The Animal House guy." That was a lot of writers around a table. It’s what they do.

Q: Do you think that new comedy is getting grosser--it has a good quantity of fart jokes, pee jokes, poop jokes, vomit jokes.

HR: It’s more a function of target audience and demographics than--well it’s what the movie is for. The Proposal--which opened the same weekend we did--if you look at the tracking on it I bet there will be very little farting in the The Proposal. Let’s put it that way because their demographic is completely an older woman. And by older I mean older at 25. Sorry.

Broad comedy is made for young males, and this is not a pandering. I just dial up the adolescent part of the brain for that stuff. And I have sons, 19 and 14 who keep my focus right where it should be, on the really crude special humor.

Q: While you’re talking about old generations of comedy as well as television comedy, you directed some episodes of The Office; what you learned from that experience and working with its writers Lee Eisenberg and Gene Stupnitsky.

HR: That fact is that Gene graduated from University of Iowa and came to my office that summer to be an intern, he lived in the suburbs, my office is in highland park, he grew up in Deerfield. So he interned for me and then started watching my kids for me, you know, hanging in the house. He started watching my friends’ kids; he started calling himself the ‘manny’ instead of a nanny. An easy-going, smart, funny guy.

Adam started writing spec scripts; he wanted to be a writer. That’s why he sought me out. In the mean time we having dinner on Martha’s Vineyard, in Edgartown, and Lee Eisenberg waited on us, he had just finished college, film school. He was from Needham, Mass. And I said, "That’s a smart, funny, young fella" and he never presumed or asked for my email or office address, didn’t try to hand me a script.

But that following next season, I was shooting Bedazzled in LA, where we were gearing up and also I was producing a pilot for the WB, so Gene came to work on the pilot and Lee just independently called my office in LA and got on it as a PA on Bedazzled and we met in my office and started writing together and started sharing a house with some other young writers and started turning out specs. They wrote a good pilot that didn’t get produced, but got them work.

They got on The Office staff. So I knew them long before they got on The Office. I knew them through their whole development period and producer and Office creator, producer and co-creator, Greg Daniels knew my stuff, and they were trying to keep the cast happy by bringing in directors that were fun for them. I don’t know if Gene and Lee suggested me or if my name just popped up, but of course, going to work with them on that show was a lot of fun.

The whole experience as a director, someone offers you a job, there’s a tremendous weight that comes with directing features. Here, I was asked to direct a show that had already won the Emmy for best comedy. Steve Carell and the cast had already won the screen actors guild awards and the staff had won the writers guild episode. The camera men had shot every episode of the show, the writers of the show sit with the director, actually take you with the script, and Greg Daniels watches every shot you make, in a feed to his office.

So I thought, "This is not a job. I’m going to sit on a chair and watch these guys film an episode of The Office. There’s some false humility to that, I made some contributions to that in each stage but you can’t fail in this job, they wont let you fail.

Q: You, Gene, and Lee are collaborating again on the new Ghost Busters.

HR: Yeah, they’re working on it. They wrote a spec that Columbia, I think will be producing Bad Teacher.

Q: Ernie Hudson was at the NYC premiere for Year One. With so many rumors swirling around about the new Ghost Busters--whether or not you’re bringing a new generation--who’s on board, who's not...

HR: We would mentor some new guys.

Q: How does the video game fit into the whole Ghost Busters mythology.

HR: On June 17th, the video game was released.

Q: There's a robo call from Game Stop; Dan Aykroyd saying, "Your copy of Ghostbusters: the Video Game--is in stores now."

HR: There’s a blu-ray 25th anniversary of the movie and Mattel is releasing high-quality action figures that actually look like us. The old ones look like the cartoon characters. The people who designed the game, they grew up on the movie. They’re Ghost Buster geeks themselves, and they’ve never been a good Ghost Buster game and they thought it was time. And they wanted it to look and feel like the film.

So they came to us, and we all signed off. It seemed like they showed us illustrations and gave us a rough sense of what the plot of the game might be and we all said, "Why not? These guys know what they’re doing and it looks good."

We consulted it at every stage of the game, and as they developed it, they showed us the animatics, the actual moving pictures of how the game, and this script idea was refined and then refined until we had a shooting script and went in and recorded.

Q: How is your relationship with director /writer/producer Ivan Reitman? Are you doing anything else together?

HR: Good. Ivan was instrumental in making my career what it is. He produced Animal House. And when we co-wrote, he made me an actor, and put me in Stripes. He knew me as a stage actor and against the studio's opposition put me in it. I screen-tested for it. They said "No," and Ivan said, "Forget it. I’m doing it anyway." And then, of course, there's Ghost Busters. We had a lot of good collaborations. I have total respect of him.

Q: When the idea of a third Ghost Busters came up, were you relieved they weren’t going to remake the first one with a different cast and that they would go to you guys?

HR: There is no "they." We are "they." We are them. Us is they. Contractually, Columbia has never disputed that we’re their partners, the Ghost Busters. They can’t do anything without us and we can not do anything without them. It always required a unanimous vote of all the principals.

Q: Is that your next project?

HR: For me it’s not really a project. It’s been, well it’s not really a hobby, I had fun just laying out the story of the new one with Gene and Lee and they’re writing the script. I don’t have a next project, really. Things perculate, you know people offer me stuff all the time. I always wait for the next thing that really moves me in a big way, big enough to engage my interest for years. It’s going to take years. Whatever you do you know it’s going to take years.

Holiday Hosannas Through Movie Musicals


Okay... It's the 4th of July and the pressure's on-- Enjoy the holiday and the fireworks. Think of the country's cheer and join family and friends for a beer and a burger. Being the grump you are, all you really want is slip away into a theater and see something...

But what...? Rampaging Robots? Iraq War casualties in the making...? Well, there are other alternatives such as celebrating the summer holiday through joy and celebration of cinematic musicals.

On the heels (so to speak) of Lincoln Center’s 50th Anniversary, The Film Society of Lincoln Center celebrates this July 4th weekend with “All Singin’ All Dancin’ All Weekend!”-- a marathon of American musicals spanning six decades. From young sophisticates Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers inTop Hat (1935) to Prince dancing away with Apollonia inPurple Rain (1984), this song and dance fest offers lavish costumes, sets and elaborate performances on the big screen--where they are rarely seen-- from Friday, July 3rd through Sunday, July 5th at the Walter Reade Theater.

Of the five new 35mm prints specially made for this series three include such classics asThe King and I (1956) starring Yul Brynner which garnered him a Best Actor Oscar;Pal Joey (1957) with Frank Sinatra, Rita Hayworth and Kim Novak; and Carol Reed’s five-time Oscar winnerOliver! (1968). Tommy! (1975), Ken Russell’s cinematic fever dream of The Who’s incendiary rock opera; and cult classic The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975).

From the opening film, Gene Kelly'sSingin’ in the Rain (possibly the greatest musical ever) to hisOn The Town the series offer old-school classics to rock revisionist takes on the musical like Ken Russell'sTommy(another of the new prints) and Milos Forman's version of Hair.

Besides those two top-flight picks, there are some of my faves I hope to see, if not on this occasion, then hopefully next year. Blonde bombshells Marilyn Monroe and Jane Russell star in Howard Hawks' 1953 hitGentlemen Prefer Blondes. Astaire and Rogers are also in George Stevens’Swing Time (1936); then there's Carmen Miranda in Busby Berkeley’s The Gang’s All Here plus one of my all-time favorite movies, Bob Fosse’s masterpieceCabaret (1972).

[In addition to individual tickets, There are two different passes: a Day Pass (admitting one person to every screening on that day) or a Series Pass (admitting one person to five films in the series).]