Friday, March 27, 2009

Kill Bill - Vol. 2

Kiddo takes up where she left off on her Hanso-sword revenge spree.

Kill Bill Vol. 2 is a modern spaghetti western, detours from Tarantino’s iconic dialogue-driven story telling and relies heavily on visuals.

DID YOU KNOW…

Bill’s “flute” is the same one David Carradine played in his 1970’s cult TV show, Kung-Fu. Welcome back.

Esteban, the Mexican Pimp, is played by Michael Parks – Parks also played Earl Monroe, Texas Ranger, in Kill Bill Vol. I. The character, Ranger Earl Monroe, is an encore performance – Tarantino fans will remember Ranger Earl Monroe in From Dusk Til Dawn.

What the? Did Esteban come out of nowhere? Tarantino created the Mexican cantina scene with Kiddo and Esteban in reference to Apocalypse Now – a trip deep up river, an unexpected, eccentric character living in the weeds that protagonist, Kiddo, meets along her journey.

Saturday, March 21, 2009

Apocalypse Now

1979’s Apocalypse Now – “the horror…the horror.” That sums up the production nightmare that plagued this iconic Vietnam War classic nominated for 8 Oscars.

Principal photography began in the Philippines in the spring of 1976 but didn’t wrap until the summer of 1977. Francis Ford Coppola nearly died, Martin Sheen had a heart attack, driving rain storms destroyed sets, payroll cash was stolen by locals, Marlon Brando showed up grossly overweight, Coppola couldn’t come up with an ending, and oh ya, the script ran about 1,000 pages at one point.

…DID YOU KNOW…

Producer Coppola wanted George Lucas to direct. Lucas was set to direct this movie after completing THX 138 (small world if you read below). However, Lucas went on to direct American Graffiti after THX 138 so the Apocalypse Now film production was delayed. But after American Graffiti Lucas got the green light on his little project called Star Wars – Lucas out, Coppola in.

Steve McQueen was first choice for Capt. Willard. Then Al Pacino. Then Harvey Keital. Film production began with Keital but Coppola wasn’t buying his interpretation of Capt. Willard. Martin Sheen in – one heart attack later this narrative role is a classic.

About the ending, Coppola struggled on this. Debate continues on exactly how many versions were considered. Marlon Brando didn’t help the cause when he showed up bloated – they had to shoot around his massive girth. Brando got paid a whopping $3.5M for about a month’s work.

Note the book “On Golden Brough” on Col. Kurtz’s nightstand near the end. This became the basis for the Apocalypse Now ending – guy heads up river, kills the king and assumes the throne.

Did that water buffalo slaughter seem real? It is.

Best Quote:

You’re an errand boy sent by grocery clerks to collect a bill.” Col. Kurtz

Thursday, March 12, 2009

From Here To Eternity

Ernest Borgnine, baby. Need I say more? Ernest “freak’n” Borgnine is movie magic and you damn well know it. 1953’s From Here to Eternity was nominated for 13 Oscars and took home 8, including best screenplay (Daniel Taradash), picture, director and supporting actor (Frank Sinatra)…all due to Ernest B’s work as Sergeant Fatso – genius.

DID YOU KNOW…

In a film starring Burt Lancaster, Donna Reed, Montgomery Clift, Deborah Kerr & Frank Sinatra, only Lancaster was first choice of the bunch for their respective roles.

Eli Wallach was first choice for the troubled “Maggio” role. Eli bowed out for a Broadway role and Maggio went to Sinatra…or maybe Eli didn’t want his ass kicked by the mob. Frankie needed good pub over cash and took (well begged) for the gig. Sinatra pulled in a cool $8K for his Oscar winning performance….enough to cover a slow night’s bar tab.

Best Goof:

So this WWII film takes place in Hawaii. I’m no meteorologist but if you watch the night-scenes, you’ll see heavy “breath” vapors. Now that’s just not right.

Saturday, March 7, 2009

Swingers

Vegas, Baby! 1995’s Swingers celebrates LA’s revival of the rat pack-inspired Cocktail Nation. Winner of a record 79 Oscars and ah…no not really. In fact, Sundance Film Festival rejected the early-cut of Swingers…well, a big Ef U, Redford.

Amazing, filmed on locations in LA and Vegas in only 20 days, Swingers was produced for $250K and sold to Miramax for $5M! Good work if you can get it.

Swingers is a great example of going against the grain on screenwriting format: Act I starts in LA, moves to Vegas and then back to LA. Typical format "advice" would be to avoid this kind of repetition and compress the action by starting in Vegas and then moving to LA.

This was an amazing resume film including soon-to-be-doughboys John Favreau & Vince Vaughn, Ron Livingston (Office Space), Heather Graham, and director Doug Liman.

DID YOU KNOW…

Several iconic Hollywood locations were filmed or featured. One of those landmarks, Capital Records Tower, has a blinking red light on the roof. That blinking light spells out “Hollywood” in Morse Code and has done so since opening in 1956.

Other LA landmarks include The Dresden Room, Three Clubs, The Derby, where Big Bad Voodoo Daddy played every Wednesday as a house band, Canters…and the list goes on. Most of the filming was done guerrilla-style on this indie film.

As for Las Vegas, they didn’t have a casino location locked up until halfway thru the 20-day shooting schedule. The Stardust, demolished in 2007, was used for the outside shots. The Freemont for the inside shots. The “suit” playing blackjack at the table with the two hotties in red – that’s John’s daddy; the older lady in purple – John’s granny. Non-union no doubt.

The ’64 Comet convertible – that’s John’s car. He sold it; it was later resold again on Ebay. Notice the license plate (THX 138). This number references George Lucas’s license plate in American Graffiti which referenced Lucas’s earlier film, THX 138. Did you get that? Now that’s a whole hell of a lotta referencing for an old film that nobody saw. Sorry Georgie...

That 360-camera view at the table – props to Reservoir Dogs. And the steady-cam thru The Derby’s backdoor and kitchen…Good Fellas.

The apartment – John’s old complex. They carved those cartoon-sized earthquake cracks into the wall. John’s former landlord got a sweet cameo – the take-out delivery guy…and look where he is now.

Best Quote:

“You’re so money and you don’t even know it.” Trent Walker

Monday, March 2, 2009

North By Northwest

North by Northwest (NBN) was the forth and final time Cary Grant teamed up with Director Alfred Hitchcock for this 1959 thriller.

NBN has been selected by the American Film Institute as one of the top 100 films of all time. Amazingly, with a screenplay written by Ernest Lehman, a cast including Cary Grant and Eva Marie Saint, and directed by Alfred Hitchcock, NBN was nominated for five Oscars and won, well ah, that would be none.

Some kooky facts behind this film…DID YOU KNOW…

James Stewart was the original choice for the lead role.

Cary Grant’s “mom” in NBN was only one year older than Cary Grant. WTF?

On set, Cary Grant charged would-be autograph seekers $0.15/signature. Greedy SOB or JackAss Greedy SOB?

The iconic crop duster scene included a whopping 8 minute setup of “nothingness” before the chase – MGM wasn’t thrilled.

Why does Alfred Hitchcock make a cameo-appearance in every film he directed? Back in the day, in England, Hitchcock couldn’t find enough extras – so he used himself out of necessity. It then became his “signature.” But because it was so distracting to audiences, he started putting these cameos near the beginning of his films - get it out of the way, pull the audience back into the plot. You’ll see Hitchcock getting a bus door slammed in his face in NBN.

Best Goof:

Watch the Mt. Rushmore Observatory gunshot scene again – about three seconds BEFORE Eva shots Cary, you’ll see a boy behind her cover his ears – the kid was tired of the take-after-take gunshot special effects noise.