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Quint finishes his interview with CURTIS HANSON in Part II here!!!

Alright, Harry here... Obviously you read the first part... You're here. So you do realize that we still have no Dirty Joke for you. In his place, I will attempt a dirty joke.... My sister and I.... eh... wait that's not a joke.... ummm, kinda uncomfortable right now... Uh.... Quint and the Fair Spanish Maiden were raising their 2 lovely daughters and a son in a chateau in eastern France.... hahahahahahahaha... oh sorrry.... You folks just don't get it.... I kill me (and they will too) On with the interview...

CLICK HERE FOR PART ONE!!!

Q: NOW ON TO THE MOVIE THAT MOST PEOPLE WILL KNOW YOU FROM, LA CONFIDENTIAL. THE CASTING IS NOTE PERFECT ON THAT MOVIE. I RECENTLY RENTED THE DVD AND SAW RUSSELL CROWE'S SCREEN TEST. HE JUST RADIATED TALENT AND SUPREME BADASSNESS. THAT WAS JUST FROM WATCHING IT ON MY TV. WHAT WAS IT LIKE TO ACTUALLY BE THERE, TO EXPERIENCE THAT FIRSTHAND.

CH: You know, the payoff for being lucky enough to have the commercial success with The Hand That Rocks the Cradle and in a different way the success of The River Wild was that I was then able for the first time to initiate a picture that was a personal project from the get go. Not only initiate it, but follow through with the making of it in the way that I wanted to and that gets right to what you're asking about, which was the casting.

The immediate reaction to the screenplay, after Brian (Helgeland) and I had it to where we were happy, was it centered along these three characters, these men, each of whom was given equal weight in the first 2/3s of the movie. The immediate reaction was, "Get rid of one or two of them so that a big star could play the remaining part." I didn't want to do that. Not only did I not want to do that by eliminating two of them, but my hope was to not have stars that were immediately known to the international moviegoing audience. I wanted to have actors who first of all were capable of playing the part, which was the most important thing, but secondly my dream was to have actors that the audiences could discover as they discovered the characters and discovered how they felt about them.

Enter Russell Crowe and Guy Pierce. Russell, when he flew over here to do that little screentest you're talking about, and it wasn't really... It wasn't intended to actually be a screentest, but what happened was he flew over so we could meet and talk and so forth, then we read a couple of scenes and we talked about it some more. Then I took one of them on tape, operating the camera myself so I could shoot it so it would have the energy of a movie, as opposed to a static reading when the actors come in and read on tape.

All of the energy and emotional truth that ultimately was in Russell's performance was visible in that test. Now, needless to say, it later became shaped and refined and subtlety added as Russell really worked on it, but it was undeniably there. I was then able to take that tape out to my producing partner's house, Arnon Milchan and Michael Nathanson, and show them the tape and say, "This is the guy that I like." As I said, it was unmistakable. I mean, they could say, "Well, what about a big name?" but that was all they could say. They couldn't say, "So and so would be better," because it was just so clear that Russell had it. I feel so lucky to have been able to capture Russell at that moment, a moment in time that was kind of magical for both of us. For me, it was the moment that I had the leverage to cast the picture the way I wanted to. For Russell it was that moment when he was for all intents and purposes unknown internationally which added excitement to his performance and the sense of discovery in the movie.

That's a moment that will never come again because Russell now is a true international star in a way that's almost a throwback... You know, I was down in South America not long ago, in Brazil, and seeing posters all around for Gladiator. It was reminiscent of the kind of international stardom that you remember seeing in those kind of counties with actors like Burt Lancastor and Kirk Douglas. It's been a long time since we've had an actor at that age like that, 'cause Russell's still a young guy.

Q: WELL, THE WAY THAT THE THREE LEADS PLAY OFF EACH OTHER IN THE FILM IS OUTSTANDING. YOU HAD A STRONG SCRIPT, BUT YOU ALSO HAD THE RIGHT PEOPLE TO DO THE SCRIPT JUSTICE.

CH: Yeah... The first thing was whether Russell and Guy could deliver the part and to me they both did in spades. Then you have Kevin (Spacey) whose acting ability is more of a known quantity, but this was the first time that Kevin was given the opportunity to play what would be considered a more romantic leading man. He had achieved his greatest commercial success playing these kind of oddball characters who were often the villains, like in Se7en or Usual Suspects. Here he was playing a hip, cool, romantic appearing guy.

The three of them were given equal weight and they're each up to shouldering that weight. That was the thing that was so gratifying to me as the director was the luxury of not having a weak link.

Q: I'VE HEARD THAT RUSSELL'S BEEN TALKING ABOUT WANTING TO REVISIT THE BUD WHITE CHARACTER IN A PREQUEL. IS THAT A POSSIBILITY?

CH: That was misreported when they said a prequel. When I heard that I said, "Well call me when he's young enough!" (laughs) Russell and I would love to work together again. He has talked about Bud White as a possible avenue towards that end. (LA Confidential author James)Ellroy and I and Brian would all like to work together again, but whether we'd want to go down that particular road remains to be seen. But I very much think about Russell and I think he's thinking about me when we're reading scripts and so forth.

Q: COOL. WELL, AT LEAST WE GOT THAT STRAIGHT NOW. LA CONFIDENTIAL HAS A VERY UNIQUE STYLE. YOU'VE MADE SOME POINTS ON DVD ABOUT MAKING SURE THE SETS AND LOCATIONS AND WARDROBE WERE ACCURATE TO THE PERIOD, BUT NOT OVERPOWERING TO THE FILM. WHAT STEPS DID YOU TAKE TO MAKE SURE THAT DIDN'T HAPPEN?

CH: Well... (pause). You know, LA Confidential was the result of my having wanted to for a long time deal with the Los Angeles of my childhood memories. If you really deal with memory and deal with the reality of it, as opposed to the nostalgia of it, it's just a certain style. Like right now. If you walk down the street and you look around you accept a lot of things and you're not just seeing the oddity of our day, but you're seeing the reality of our day.

With period movies, very often what happens is the accent is put on the oddities of the day and you're constantly reminded of "Oh look how funny they used to do that in 19-whatever. Look at the eccentric extreme they went to with the hair, clothes, cars, whatever." The end result of that very often in a period movie is it distances you from it and keeps you from getting emotionally involved with the characters. First and foremost what interests me is getting the audience involved with the characters.

So, as I mentioned on that DVD, I wanted to keep the set dressing and so forth in the background and the characters in the foreground, but not only in the background, but have them be things that would be accurate, but not demand the audience to focus on them. So, even down to the music, most of the songs I picked... I mean, all of the songs I picked were accurate to the period and most of them in fact were actually recorded in Los Angeles right at the time the story was set. Not only picking novelty songs of the period or whatever, but the music of people like Gary Mulligan and Chet Baker, Miles Davis! You know, there's a timeless quality to that. It's also sorta hip and cool today. I tried to do the same with the way the actors dressed and talked. There are things that were idioms of the period and accurate to the period, but it's not saying, "Hey look at me! Look at how much has changed since that period."

The exception of course being the character that Kim Bassinger plays because she's deliberately putting on artifice because that's what she sells. Her customers are buying the movie star glamour, the Veronica Lake thing.

It's funny, since then a lot of people have written about how LA Confidential had impact on the fashion world, the style world, by popularizing the mid-century look. The first thing that happened every morning was every extra who was in the picture was given a haircut to make them accurate to the look I wanted for the movie. Now, Russell Crowe the way he looks in that movie most of the time, he could just walk down the street and nobody would pay any attention to him because that look is popular.

Q: NEEDLESS TO SAY, LA CONFIDENTIAL BECAME A HUGE HIT WITH THE AUDIENCE AND THE CRITICS ALIKE. WHY DID YOU WAIT SO LONG BEFORE GOING ONTO YOUR NEXT PROJECT?

CH: You know, I didn't deliberately wait. I mean, I waited a while between The River Wild and LA Confidential. It's just I'm that way. It takes me a while to find the characters that I'm sufficiently emotionally invested in. What I realized, and it was quite deliberate, like I said earlier, I realized I had the opportunity to do something different. You have that leverage, if you're lucky enough to get it, you can either use it to raise your fee or you can use it to do something that they don't want you to do. LA Confidential was that project.

Now, because it was well received and so forth, people forget that it was a real struggle to get it made. There's a long history of movies both period and multi-character and also crime of that period that had failed at the box office. There was a real struggle to get that picture made. When it happily was received the way it was, I recognized that again I had a similar opportunity, much to my surprise. Again, I wanted to make sure I found a project that was worth using the leverage on. That took a little while. Happily I came upon Wonder Boys.

Q: DID YOU READ THE BOOK FIRST OR WERE THEY ACTUALLY DEVELOPING...

CH: Steve Kloves had already done a draft of his adaptation. He finished it for some little while, I'm not quite sure how long, and then it was sent to me. I had not read the book, I read Steve's script first and what knocked me out about it was the way in which this group of characters which were first of all presented in such an open hearted and accepting way. In most scripts that one reads, most movies, characters are drawn as being either good or bad and their actions are either good or bad. There's a judgmental attitude. Whereas in Wonder Boys, and it's true in Michael's novel as well, the characters are just approached as human beings with all their frailties and eccentricities intact. That appealed to me very much.

And then what I found was I loved the way in which all these characters are struggling to figure out what they're doing with their lives. As serious as their troubles were and as serious as their crisis' were to them, they kept making me laugh. I read the script and then I reread it again and I thought if I could capture that combination of serious issues and yet humor, you'd have the kind of movie that I would love to go see.

Q: DID YOU GO TO MICHAEL DOUGLAS OR DID HE COME TO YOU?

CH: I was told at the time I was sent the script that Michael was interested in it and was interested to know if I would be interested in it, so I read it with that knowledge. The big question in my mind was not could Michael play the part, but would he embrace the part in the way that I thought could result in an extraordinary opportunity and performance from him.

Very often actors, especially movie stars, when they play characters that are considered unappealing or unattractive for one reason or another, at the same time they play the characters, they distance themselves from it by exaggerating certain things. In effect they wink at the audience and say, "Look at me, I'm not really... homosexual, but I'm playing a gay character," or "I'm not really alcoholic, but I'm playing one," or "I'm not really this old, but I'm playing this old" or "I'm not really this simpleminded, but I'm playing it that way." Many times they do that very successfully, they win awards doing it, but to me it's false and it would have been completely false to the spirit of the screenplay, which as I say, there was a truthfulness about it and an acceptance of the characters, rather than a judgmental attitude towards them.

When I sat down with Michael, that was the big question in my mind. What I love so much about his performance in the movie is I feel there is a complete absence of movie star vanity there. So much so, it feels like a naked performance. What really excites me for Michael is not only the critical acclaim he got for the part, but also, ironically, the fact that gained weight and we dressed him like shit, photographed him in the most unflattering way imaginable, many people time and again say they think it's the most appealing he's ever been. I'm so happy for Michael that it worked that way because I think he really deserves it. By the way, I think they feel that way because I think there's this bonding with the emotional truth of the performance.

Q: YEAH, HE'S BEEN HAVING A HELLUVA YEAR WITH WONDER BOYS AND TRAFFIC. DID HE GET TWO SEPARATE GOLDEN GLOBE NODS? (HARRY NOTE: Notice the fine research skills of a seasoned AICN reporter with out the use of his computer! We pride ourselves)

CH: No. No. All these awards and nominations have all been Wonder Boys. What Traffic got, of course it's gotten it's own acclaim, but in terms of Michael, Catherine (Zeta Jones) was nominated for a Golden Globe for Traffic. That's where you're coming from.

Q: PARAMOUNT RERELEASED WONDER BOYS. DID YOU HAVE TO PUSH THEM OR DID THEY DO IT ON THEIR OWN?

CH: It was a little of both. There was a lot of discussion and disagreement and speculation about when to release the picture in the first place and how to sell it. A decision was made to release it in February and many thought it should have been released in the fall or the winter. Almost immediately when the movie came out to the great reviews it got, but the disappointing opening weekend numbers, everybody knew that a mistake had been made. Happily not only the reviews were great, but Paramount also liked the movie enough that they felt like they let us down, Scott Rudin, my producing partner and myself and everybody who made the movie.

Our reaction was, "Well... that's nice, but what are you going to do about it?" The thing that they did that has not gotten much attention because it probably doesn't mean that much to the laymen, but in fact the real story, the thing that's extraordinary, it's unusual for a studio to rerelease a movie. It's very unusual for any company or corporation to admit they made a mistake unless they have some sort of court order demanding that they do. (laughs) If there's a tire recall or whatever.

What Paramount did, they not only did that, but they took what to my knowledge is the unprecedented step of cancelling the video contract. You know, the video contract normally produces many millions of dollars six months to the day after the movie opens. Not only is it an extraordinary amount of money, but it's free money because the studio doesn't have to spend anything to get it in terms of marketing. Paramount broke that contract in order to bring the movie back on the big screen and I don't think that's ever happened before.

Q: YEAH, I KNOW THE MOVIE WAS SUPPOSED TO COME OUT RECENTLY ON VIDEO, DID THEY PUSH IT BACK AGAIN?

CH: Yeah, they did it a second time. Originally, the video was supposed to come out sixth months after February 10th, which would be what? February, March, April...

Q: AUGUST.

CH: August! Originally it was supposed to come out in August. They broke that contract and pushed it all the way back to January. Now they pushed it another month.

Q: I GUESS TO WAIT AND SEE THE OUTCOME OF THE GOLDEN GLOBES.

CH: Probably to wait and see what happens, yeah. But the move from January to February is not that significant. The big move was from August where they would have made all that money from the video, the DVD, the airlines, the hotels. It's a tremendous amount of money.

Q: SO, THEY'RE ON THE GOOD GUY LIST AGAIN.

CH: Yeah, for me because you work so hard on a movie... I mean, for two reasons. One, naturally, you want people to see it. That's tied up in box office numbers, but to me it's about people seeing it. Secondly, I'm a big screen person. I like to see movies in the theater with the audience. Especially when a movie's as beautifully shot to have Dante Spinotti as your production designer, it should be seen on the big screen. Scott and I were both very pleased at what they did.

Q: WHEN THE GOLDEN GLOBES WERE ANNOUNCED WHERE YOU SURPRISED OR DID YOU EXPECT THE ATTENTION.

CH: Yeah... I mean, we were hopeful. Let's say we were hopeful. The week before Michael had received Best Actor by the LA Film Critics and won numerous other critical prizes. We were hopeful. The reason one gets hopeful about this stuff is it's really gratifying to have ones work acknowledged and I was really excited for Michael in particular that he got that Best Actor win at the Film Critics and also the nomination for the Golden Globes. But in addition to that kind of satisfaction, those kinds of awards serve as tremendous word of mouth for me. When a picture is a bit unusual as Wonder Boys and some of the other nominated pictures are, that kind of word of mouth is really helpful because it goes out there to the general public and in a sense says to them, "Hey! This is a picture you should pay attention to." That's great when it happens.

With LA Confidential from the time it got it's Golden Globe nomination to the end the box office literally doubled. People forget about it now because the movie is fondly remembered, but it was a very tough sell on the market place because it didn't have an easy hook, it was different. The same is true not only of Wonder Boys, but also of most movies we really like. We like them because they're really different.

Q: WELL, IF IT MEANS ANYTHING I SAW LA CONFIDENTIAL THE FIRST WEEKEND.

CH: Well, it does! And hopefully you told a lot of your friends.

Q: OF COURSE. SO, WHAT ARE YOU WORKING ON NOW?

CH: I'm working on a couple of scripts, one with a writing partner and one by myself, reading things, but I don't know what's next. I'm not good at planning ahead. I get so involved with the one that I'm doing that what I then do is I look around and try and find characters that I love as much as I do the ones in Wonder Boys. To me it's the characters and my emotional involvement with them and one hopes the emotional involvement the audience will have with them that's the most exciting thing.

Q: WELL, I DON'T KNOW IF YOU READ THE SITE OR HAVE READ ANY OF MY INTERVIEWS, BUT I HAVE...

CH: The answer's yes to both.

Q: YES TO BOTH? COOL. THEN DO YOU KNOW WHAT THE NEXT QUESTION'S GONNA BE THEN? MY TRADEMARK QUESTION?

CH: Uh-oh. What is it?

Q: WHAT'S YOUR FAVORITE DIRTY JOKE?

CH: Jeez. I should have prepped for this... You know, Ain't it Cool News, just to side step for a second, it's great because they've been a big supporter of the movie and aside from that, I think it's a very healthy thing. It's another avenue for opinion. To reach out to people all over the country. For example, they were not only very early supporters of the movie, but they called a lot of attention to Bob Dylan's extraordinary song before most of the mainstream press did. The mainstream press happily caught up with him later and now he's got another Grammy nomination. Ain't It Cool News and other sites like that got it right away.

Q: YOU KNOW, IF YOU WANT AN EXTRA BIT OF TIME TO THINK ABOUT THAT DIRTY JOKE YOU COULD ALWAYS TALK ABOUT HOW YOU GOT BOB DYLAN ON THE SOUNDTRACK.

CH: They way it worked out was early on my music supervisor Carol Fenclon and I... um... if you put this in, I'd like you to use her name because so often these kind of people don't get the credit.

Q: DEFINITELY.

CH: But we hit on the idea of having a singer/songwriter provide the musical foundation of the movie because we felt that artist like Van Morrison, Leonard Cohen, John Lennon, etc. would have been the kind of artists that Grady Trip would have liked both because they came of age the same time he did creatively and also because they're poets and he's a serious writer. They deal with the same themes in their work that we were dealing with in the movie. The longing for human connection, sense of purpose and so forth.

As we put together our wishlist of artists, first and foremost was Bob Dylan, you know, quintessential wonder boy. We then put together our wishlists of songs from these artists and low and behold we were able to get them all. A great many of them before we started shooting. Some of them, like Neil Young's "Old Man", was the first time he's ever let it be in a movie. By getting them before shooting I was able to play them on the set and also shoot the scene to accompany the song. During the time we were shooting, Carol made overtures to Dylan's people that we would like to talk to him about writing an original song for the main title sequence.

As luck would have it, word came back that Bob was kind of a fan of LA Confidential. (laughs) So, when I came back from Pittsburgh he came by the editing room in Santa Monica one day and we showed him a couple of hours of rough cut footage. We talked about the themes of the movie and where Grady Trip is in his life creatively, emotionally and in his personal life as well and talked about how Pittsburgh in Wonder Boys is like a human character in the movie. Bob then went off on tour. He called me a couple times and talked a little more.

The fantasy was he would write a song that would not only speak to these feelings, but almost speak to them as though he was Grady Trip. A few weeks later a little package was delivered to the cutting room. Carol and I opened it up to find a CD inside and put it in the player and there was Bob Dylan singing about being afraid to make a mistake, a lot of water under the bridge, being in love with a woman who doesn't appeal to me and with his unique poetry bringing to life the themes of Grady and the movie.

After we played it a few times we realized that not only did it capture the movie, but it's also on its own a really cool Dylan song. The interesting thing is that CD that he sent us, which he recorded with the musicians he toured with and just layed down producing it himself, is unchanged. It's that exact version that's in the movie and on the CD. It's not overproduced the way that so many songs are. It's also not perfect. It's rough in a very appealing and truthful way.

Q: IT'S AWESOME THAT YOU GOT DYLAN! (LAUGHS)

CH: Yeah, what's also awesome about it on a personal note is I went to go see him in concert and he's now singing that song as his first encore.

Q: THAT'S GOTTA BE SUCH A TRIP.

CH: Yeah. You know, he's an artist that I've so admired for so long. As I said, he's the quintessential wonder boy. He's done what we all inspire to do. He's kept himself creatively vital over the decades by consistently challenging himself and his fans. That's what's so exciting about the song.

It's not only good for the movie, but it stands right in there with some of his best work. That very much is the theme of the movie. You can't turn back the clock and be what you used to be, but you can move on and be something different, but equally good.

Q: AWESOME. SO... THOUGHT OF THAT JOKE, YET?

CH: Ahhh. I've not. I've been talking. Let me call you back with it.

There you have it, squirts! Once again, I'll let ya' know when I receive Curtis's joke. Keep yer' eye on the horizon. I got a lot more interviews comin' acha, including a long chat I've done with one of the filmmakers who is helping to bring everybody's favorite non-muggle to life this year. Until then, maties, farewell and adieu.

-Quint

Click on me to give me those pillowtalk words you pansy fanboys! I crave your letters when I'm out at sea and the nights are long. I mean that.









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