Conversations with Tyler - Brian Koppelman on TV, Movies, and Appreciating Art
Episode Date: November 8, 2023Brian Koppelman is a writer, director, and producer known for his work on films like Rounders and Solitary Man, the hit TV show Billions, and his podcast The Moment, which explores pivotal moments in... creative careers. Tyler and Brian sat down to discuss why TV wasn't good for so long, whether he wants viewers to binge his shows, how he'd redesign movie theaters, why some smart people appreciate film and others don't, which Spielberg movie and Murakami book is under appreciated, a surprising fact about poker, whether Jalen Brunson is overrated or underrated, Manhattan food tips, who he'd want to go on a three-day retreat with, whether movies are too long, how happy people are in show business, his unmade dream projects, the next thing he'll learn about, and more. Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links, or watch the full video. Recorded August 22nd, 2023. Other ways to connect Follow us on X and Instagram Follow Tyler on X Follow Brian on X Join our Discord Email us: cowenconvos@mercatus.gmu.edu Learn more about Conversations with Tyler and other Mercatus Center podcasts here.
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Conversations with Tyler is produced by the Mercatus Center at George Mason University,
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Learn more at Mercadis.org.
For a full transcript of every conversation, enhanced with helpful links,
visit Conversationswithtyler.com.
Hello, everyone, and welcome back to Conversations with Tyler.
Today I'm chatting with Brian Copleman, who is a producer, director, and screenwriter.
He's the co-writer of the movie Oceans 13 and the movie Rounders,
the producer for films including The Illusionist and the Lucky Ones,
the director for films, including Solitary Man with Michael Douglas,
and the documentary, This is What They Want for ESPN,
and the co-creator, Showrunner,
an executive producer of Showtime's Billions,
and Super Pumped the Battle for Uber.
And his podcast is The Moment,
and my own daughter thinks this is one of the sagists
sources of the life advice out there. Brian, welcome. That's awesome to hear because, as you know,
my son, Sam, certainly has a high opinion of you and your work. And it's funny to me that you two
know one another really before you and I knew each other. And she knows you, I think, more as a
podcaster than as a movie and TV person. Awesome. That's great. I love people. People who interact with
me via podcast and who get on the wavelength that I'm on on the pod, I do feel.
very connected to and I understand why they're connected to me. So that's great. I have to meet her
sometime. These people like us more somehow, right? Isn't that strange? It is. But they do, do you feel
this way? I do think that someone who's listened to enough of the moment, enough episodes of the
moment, they do have a sense of the things that animate me. And the things that animate me are so
much a part of who I am that in a sense they do really know me or they know a part of me or they
know me when I'm trying to access the part of me that's most alive, the best of myself. And so
when I meet someone and they're a person who spent a lot of time engaged in that way,
it's not hard to find a way to connect. Do you feel that way too? Absolutely. And some of the
people who think they don't know me, in fact, they do know me. They just can't believe that's
it means to know me. Like, that's it. Yes. And, well, I think also, though, one, it's hard to
believe that somebody has not only the Catholicity of interest and knowledge that you have,
but the depth of interest and knowledge that you have. So when, I'm sure when someone meets you,
they're trying to understand how a human being has that entire range, you know.
Well, thank you. I have some very simple questions for you about the history of television to
start with. So I grew up in the 1970s, and I've long wondered, why was TV so bad for so long
before the so-called golden age? Maybe you could date that to the 90s or the autis, but why weren't
shows in the 70s and 80s better than they were? Or would you challenge that premise?
Well, you know, I also grew up in the 70s. I was born in 66. And I'm not sure that the hypothesis
that it was bad is correct. It certainly wasn't in general, as an art form, operating on the level
that cinema was operating on or the level that music in part was operating on during that time.
But if we look at, say, children's television, I could argue that Jim Henson and Sesame Street
for what it was and aimed at what it was aimed at
was as important as any television that's on today.
So I would say that Jim Henson moved the art form forward.
He figured out a use case for TV that hadn't really been done before,
and he created a way of thinking about the medium that was really different.
And then, look, Hill Street Blues shows up in the 80s,
and I think figures out how to use certain techniques of theater and cinema and novels
to tell these TV stories.
And like any other business, when that started to connect,
then people in the business started to become aware of what was possible.
So, yeah, it was a function of three channels to answer question.
Yeah, in the main, of course, TV was worse.
No doubt about it.
But there were high points.
and I think those high points pointed the way toward the high points that came later.
Like for me, NYPD Blue is the network show that's on fully on the level of any of these shows that came after.
And, you know, David Milch cuts his teeth on and Hill Street Blues.
There's a wonderful book by Brett Martin called Difficult Men that's about showrunners.
And it starts in a way with Bocco and Milch in that time period.
And it's a great look into how this idea of showrunners created modern television and, you know, HBO needing something, all these sort of business reasons underneath it.
But how people who came up through originally Hill Street were able to kind of go on and start this revolution.
And in your view, how good really was I Love Lucy?
Is it just a few memorable moments like vitamin a Vegemen or is it actually a show where it'd be good episode?
after good episode, like the Sopranos.
Well, you know, I was going to say, like, we could look at shows.
So obviously, she was an incredible physical performer and incredible comedian.
Her timing was amazing.
But also when you asked the question, I started thinking about the 50s and I started
thinking about directors like Sidney Lammett and people who became world-class directors
of cinema and who started by directing those live television presentations, right?
those plays and all that stuff on TV in the 50s.
And so, look, it was the dawning of an industry.
It was the dawning of this art form in a real way.
I Love Lucy has incredible moments.
I've certainly seen every single episode.
And I think probably not just because making this stuff is my job.
It was never ever a moment that it was my favorite show.
But I love westerns.
I grew up watching Westerns with my dad.
And Chuck Connor, the Rifleman,
it might not be a good show, but I think there are elements in that that are synchronous with
movies and have similar iconography, and maybe we're able to deliver that in a digestible way
that made you curious about what else was out there, like what that was inspired by or what that
was inspiring. So if we move to the current day, there are many quite good TV shows, but why aren't
there many more. What is the scarce factor? Is it directors? Is it money? Is it viewers caring? Is it
screenwriting? All of the above? How should I think about that as an economist? Well, art, as you know,
because you are such a dedicated consumer and thinker about great art. You care a lot about it.
You can hear a piece and it does something to you. And yes, like if we look at a music, if we look at
If we look at Bidges Brew, just for a second, and how it was received in its time and how people think of it now.
On the one hand, we could say, well, music can be reduced to just frequencies.
And so these frequencies, for whatever reason that we don't yet understand are pleasing to us.
And you may say, well, want us to come to Bitch's Brew with an understanding of Bop, hard bop, this whole thing.
Or I might say to you, I don't think so.
I think you could put that record on.
In fact, to somebody who doesn't come in expecting jazz to be something.
and they might be hit within in a way that suddenly it nails them,
which is to say that the effect that storytelling art has is in a sense,
because we don't understand why, it's magic.
And so when you ask why there's not more that's better,
it's like it always comes down, of course, as an economist, you might say,
well, how are we incentivizing people to make this stuff?
How are we drawing the best people into it?
And I do think on the whole, television is a writer's medium and that you need to incentivize and reward writers to be willing to turn themselves inside out to create amazing stuff.
But I might flip it and say, how much truly amazing stuff is there in any given art form at any given time you might take a snapshot of it.
And because so much stuff has to come together.
The writing has to be incredible.
first of all, the concept has to be one that nails the moment in time.
I mean, you know, the way Franzen was talking about the duty, you have to write the great American novel.
And it's one that takes in, in some way, processes the world that you're living in.
That could be a science fiction novel, right?
It could be a historical novel, but in some way it is hitting off the times in which you live.
So a great piece of television, whether it's Mad Men, whether it's the Larry Sanders show, whether it's NYPD Blue that I was talking about earlier, or if it's the Spranos, it needs to conceptually be something that the times want to engage with.
It needs to have a writer or writers with an incredibly clear sense of purpose, and they have to be
talented enough and ready to give what it takes.
And then the magical alchemy of their words, the camera, and that group of actors has to take flight.
And so you can hire really talented people, and sometimes it doesn't work.
And sometimes suddenly, almost morass.
miraculously, it really does work. This is why someone like David Milch, and that's another book I'd
recommend as Milch's book, which is one of the best, maybe the best book ever written about television,
the one that came out last year. When you think about a guy like that, it was able to write some of the
best episodes of Hill Street and then NYPD Blue and then create Deadwood. That does feel to me as
somebody who does this stuff, miraculous. Why has Israeli TV been so good in the last 10 years?
Yeah. Zrewgim, Shetisel, Prisoners of War. There's a lot more, actually.
There are great shows.
You know, I don't know that that's, I want to give you an answer, but what I really think is one thing I've learned, all right, if you, when your daughter says the stuff about that there are things that she hears me say, I would say one of the things that I really have felt the older I've gotten is just an incredible comfort in saying, I don't know.
Like, whatever that amalgam of things are that's created, the ground to be fertile enough and then the artist to be ready to make the work that they're making.
and to have it connect? I don't know. I haven't studied it. So I don't have a ready-made answer for you.
I think in a more global sense, we're pulling back from 30,000 feet. There was a moment when I thought
South Korean cinema was just incredible. It's been for a long time. And I remember watching
this series of eight or 10 or 12 movies. And I had a thought that it was a moment in time where the
the movies from South Korea without ever mentioning what it feels like to have North Korea
as your neighbor, as this bully, as this invasion of your psyche.
They would never say that.
The movies weren't about that at all.
Yet receiving those movies, I felt part of why they were so potent was that they were
suffused with that idea somewhere in the consciousness of the people making it.
And so it had that kind of effect because you felt this need for freedom.
You felt this sense of encroaching doom, this sense of wanting to define themselves, the people in the movies and the filmmakers.
And so perhaps something similar is going on anytime a certain area starts to produce work that's really good and important.
But I haven't given the Israeli stuff the same amount of thought that I gave that South Korean.
stuff a few years back. I just watched Old Boy on a large screen for the first time. Do you like that one?
Well, that's a great one. Yeah, for me, yeah, it's an incredible movie, the original. For me,
bad boy, sympathy for Lady Vengeance. Those are two that I think are great. But there are many,
many movies from 10 years ago that, and 12 years ago from Korea that are, I'll text you a list that are
just great. Mother is very good. Memories of a Murder is the earliest one I know.
I haven't seen that one.
I haven't seen that one.
Oh, you must watch that one.
No, I missed it.
I'll watch it for sure.
And when people watch TV shows, often these days they binge.
So they'll watch many episodes in a row.
I don't do that.
I like to watch something like one a week.
At the margin, do you want to have your viewers binging more or binging less?
What do you prefer?
How do you think about that tradeoff?
And do you binge?
I loved the experience of watching Mad Men week to week.
And I'm so glad that I got to watch it week to week.
It was almost like a holy day in our house.
Amy and I would start taping it,
so it would just get a little run up before you would start
because the Madman actually had commercials, oddly enough.
Even the later years, very few commercials,
and they would chunk it so that it was great.
So there's something about the anticipation
and then seeing something when it airs.
When Twitter was slightly different,
I really loved having a conversation on Twitter during a show that was,
you know, after a show that was meaningful.
You would watch the second to last episode of Madman, and then you could see what Sapanwal was saying on Twitter, and you could talk to him, and you could talk to Madzalor sites, and you could sort of engage in that way. And that was incredibly fun. But the crown is probably my favorite show, the bear and the crown. And I'd say both the bear and the crown, I binge, Amy and I binge those shows. And the experience this year of watching the bear.
was an extraordinary experience to binge it because I felt like I was immersed in Christopher
Storre's imagination in the way he saw the world.
And it was like reading a novel and the kind of novel, even a big novel that you read
in a weekend.
And that's what we did.
We watched on Saturday and Sunday.
And it was an incredible experience.
But I think to binge something like that, the show needs to be great.
And we also picked moments to stop.
We picked moments to stop and think about it and talk about it and then picked a moment to stop and wait till the next day.
I think both things are rewarding.
You know, I feel like the crown is built to binge and the way that it accretes really works in a binge model.
And I have a feeling that Mad Men, because there were so many quiet moments in Mad Men,
because Mad Men was about visual images and about symbolism, I think because his business was about
semiotics.
And so when you would be able to walk away and think about what you saw, it was really rewarding.
The crown is rewarding too in those ways, but I think they're built slightly differently.
David and I don't really think about it in making billions.
I think we just want the whole thing to add up to accrete, as I say, but also we do want you to be able to watch it in discrete.
Does combining food and television viewing, did that make American food worse?
Because Europeans don't do that so much.
Oh, yeah.
Eating at the kitchen table watching is absolutely, yes.
I love the question.
Well, yeah, you should eat your food, have a conversation with yourself or your family, depending on your situation, and then get ready and watch stuff.
On the other hand, if you've worked really hard all day and you just want to sit down and eat and watch something.
I mean, I feel like for certain things, I do think there's, I'll use the word read to read them.
You know, I do think that there's a wrong and a right way to read certain pieces of material.
On the other hand, it's entertainment.
And so if people want to be entertained while eating a burger and watching the thing, I think that's all right.
I think that people making stuff to a person, I would say, just to circle to your,
A question earlier, man, people making this stuff are trying really hard to make it as well as they can.
And the answer is never that they're not sort of working themselves to their greatest capacity,
given their level of exhaustion.
But I don't think then they require you to watch it under certain circumstances.
I think you want certain people watching it that way.
I would prefer that someone writing about the work is focused on it.
How do you feel about audiobooks?
Like, do you feel that somebody ought to run listening to one of your books is having an experience
similar to the experience of sitting down with a pen and underlining when they read it?
Or is it not at all similar to that?
If I was reading it, I would feel fine about it.
I don't like to listen to audiobooks.
But if my readers are listening, I think,
think that's great. But the people who read them, they're somehow weird and corny, and I feel it
ought to sound like me, and it doesn't. And I get that if it sounded like me, it might sell fewer copies,
but I don't care about that. If I were you, I would insist on doing it yourself. You don't do it yourself
now? You know, my last book, they said, oh, you know, you should do it yourself. Then they got the book.
They're like, well, we're going to have someone come in and do this. Again, it was probably an okay
commercial decision, but it sounds like a Martian.
Oh, I feel like it's really crucial.
I couldn't agree with you more.
I really want authors reading their own books, and I want to feel the intonation from the author,
and particularly someone whose voice is so familiar to people now from the podcast,
I feel like if I bought your book on audio, I'd want to hear you reading your book.
Well, we will see.
Is there a television purchase that you would be willing to recommend
to our listeners.
What you watch, why you think it's best?
No, because things change and the truth is your settings.
So many, I think there's such a high quality now in the televisions.
Where people get screwed up is in the settings.
Like, you've got to go in there.
You've got to read, go pull up like a cinematography magazine and just pull up what
cinematographers tell.
Ryan Johnson's talked about this online, the great director and writer.
Like I asked Ryan when I got the last TV I got, I wrote, I asked Ryan,
to just tell me what to set my television up to.
And I just set it up to exactly his specs so that now it looks great.
And is that online somewhere?
Oh, yeah, you can find it.
It's just turning off a bunch of the stuff that's set up for watching sports only.
And it really fixes it and returns it to looking like you want it to look or as close as it can.
Now, let's say we put you in charge completely and you get to redesign multiplex movie theaters.
You can't make them like the Hollywood Palace.
of the 20s, but within reason, what are the changes you would make to improve the movie
watching experience? This is not about making more money. It's about making the movie better.
What would you do? Well, you started like a good Dunst Engine Dragons dungeon master. You
started by taking away the first thing I would do, right? You made it more difficult.
I mean, the first thing I would do is make sure you could have a Zig Field-like screen.
Because that big screen is immersive and you're lost. And that and the sound
quality. I mean, I think this stuff's, I think it's basic. Like if Greta Gerwig or Chris Nolan are
there setting up their movie to look a certain way, whatever you need to do in the movie
theater to recreate the experience that they last had when they approved it, sound and picture,
sometimes you'll walk into a theater and it won't be bright enough. Like, it won't be to
enough candles, right? So that stuff drives us nuts.
Or they won't have it just, like, I would just want people to really care.
The projection is to care, the people setting the thing up, make sure that it's like lit properly,
make sure that all the speakers are working properly, make sure that the sound ratio is what the
filmmakers wanted.
Those are my modest sort of beginning things, right?
And then I do love seeing a movie on a giant screen, like seeing Mission Impossible,
even at the IMAX, a proper 70 millimeter IMAX was,
A phenomenal movie-going experience.
I mean, there was only 13, I think, proper IMAX 70-millimeter theaters in the country.
And it's, you know, there's one 10 blocks for me in New York City.
And it's a thrill to go to that theater to see a movie every time I go see a movie there.
For you as viewer, how crowded do you want the movie theater to be?
I'd like two-thirds to three-quarters full or totally empty, depending on the film,
Nothing in between.
What's your view?
My very favorite time to see a movie is the first screening of the day on a Saturday morning.
And probably my second favorite would be a really full screening on a Friday night where I have the seat that I like, which is dead center but the aisle.
I love an early morning seeing a film, like I remember seeing TRIA Life, that great Terrence Malick film at the old Lincoln Center theater.
You'd go downstairs, the independent cinema.
And I was a Saturday morning and I was alone.
And I felt like I was alone with Malik's vision.
That theater cared a lot.
The screens were small, but they cared a lot about the screens being accurate.
And I felt lost for three plus hours.
I was in a reality that I didn't normally live in and I didn't create.
And I was experiencing the world the way Terrence Malik saw the world.
And that is an experience that I wish everybody could have.
It rewards.
it just rewards you. It rewards your time and effort. So that's my favorite, first thing in the
morning on a Saturday morning. And when is it you prefer to see the movie alone? No companion,
no partner, just you. Which movies do I prefer to see that way? Yes. So sometimes a sad movie
I might prefer to see alone. Like what if the other person doesn't find it sad? It's a bit of a discord.
I love see, yeah, I would say I'm lucky in that Amy is a great movie going partner because
she's also a filmmaker and we we tend to if we don't receive them exactly the same way.
And David Levine, my creative partner, same thing.
But I love seeing movies alone.
I would say, and I love seeing a movie for the second time alone.
That's, I would, the answer is really when I, when I go see something for the second time,
like the master, PTA's movie The Master.
And then the other thing I love to do is.
Well, why is that better the second time?
Tell us that first.
So being alone the second time, because the first time you're swept up in the film.
You're swept up and everything, you're with somebody.
You're like, can you believe this moment?
Look at that shot of him going across the Saw Flats.
Oh, look at the look on Philip Semer Hoffman's face in this moment.
But you're kind of like in it together.
And then the next time when I'm alone, I think I'm able to be, I've seen it.
So it's not about just being swept away.
And it's not about being analytical, but it is about allowing myself
in a very private way to notice things
and then take my time noticing them
and thinking about them,
thinking about them as it's going.
I know what the story is.
I saw it the night before.
And so there's something about the solitude
of a second time.
It too Mamatambia and I remember seeing a second time.
And because I had a question in my head,
okay, how did he get to this?
You know, the voiceover is kind of reminiscent
of the way Melville would sometimes do voiceover.
or like in Bob La Fambore or something.
And so you're like, okay, what is this?
How did he decide that that's the approach he's taking?
Why?
How is this used so well?
Why does this movie both feel so intimate in first person and yet have this omniscience?
And like I had some questions.
And so the second time I could like alone kind of allow those questions to wash over me
and try to see if I came up with answers.
Why are so many movies today too long?
And yours are not?
I'm very happy to say.
But how'd that happen?
Well, I'll get to that, but I want to say one other thing.
The other thing I love is, like, I remember the first time I saw, she's got a habit.
And I didn't know who Spike Lee was.
Nor did I.
It blew me away.
Right.
So I was thinking about movies that really, like, changed me.
And that was a movie that changed me.
And I remember going to see it.
And in Boston, I was a sophomore in college, and went, oh, I didn't say in Boston because I went to Harvard.
I did not.
I went to Tufts.
So don't think I'm trying to be smart.
And subtly say that.
But the Harvard people say Cambridge, right?
That's the, yeah.
Well, sometimes they say, sometimes they say New England.
I went to a small.
But so I remember going to see it.
And all I wanted to do was bring people to it.
And I went back.
So I saw it, right?
And then when he reveals that it's him at the end, because you're watching it,
you don't know he's Mars Blackman, because it was so early in the thing.
He wasn't famous yet.
I remember the theater.
I saw it on everything.
And all the next, I went back.
I went three days in a row to see that movie.
And I brought groups of people.
And that is, I love that with all forms of art.
I love when you stumble upon something that has the thing about it that reminds you, like for me, I wasn't yet somebody who was doing this.
I wasn't a filmmaker.
I didn't know I could be a filmmaker.
I didn't know I could be a writer.
But there was something about the way Spike Lee used language and he used cinema that blew my mind.
And I had to share it with people.
And so that's the app.
It's, in a way, it's a very personal experience, but I wanted it to become communal.
and that's like the gift of the movies.
I wanted to, and I remember bringing groups of people both nights.
It's like I said I saw it Friday.
Then I saw it Saturday night.
I saw it Sunday matinee.
And sharing it like that, Tyler was, I felt, it was like, this is why there are movies, you know.
This is why this art form is so fantastic because, and I remember experiencing it with those people and loving it just as much all three times that I saw it.
And movies being too long.
What happened there?
Or are they not too long?
Well, my friends say they're too long.
I've never heard someone say,
oh, I want more movies that are two hours, 49 minutes.
I mean, is Citizen Kane too long?
No, but that's Citizen Kane, right?
Is Casablanca too long?
No, that's Casablanca.
Is the third man too long?
There are so many movies.
It's like the 13th best movie that came out this year,
and it's almost three hours, and those are too long.
I mean, it just depends on, like,
look, that's that thing where, for a long time,
people would slam an artist for making a double album.
And yeah, a lot of double albums, there's like a lot of fat.
But when I listen to the river and then I listen to what would have been the single album of the river,
the doubles better.
The doubles better.
I love certain of the songs on Be True is great and I wish that was on the bigger record.
But the bigger record's there for a reason.
So for me, look, I'm somebody who wants the artist.
Like I love Tarantino's movies and I want his movies to be long.
I'm happy to sit there and see the full exorcism of his, you know, him fully exercising his,
vision. I don't really think that the studios let people, most people make movies that are just too
long. I remember once, I don't know Wes Anderson. I don't know him, but I met him once. And I
love his movies, and I love that his movies are 90 minutes. And I asked him once, the one time I met him,
we were screening a film. He invited some people who happened to be in town, who he knew were film
people. And so I got to watch a movie with him. And afterwards, we were just talking about movies.
and I said, like, these movies of yours, there are 90 minutes.
And he said, yeah, I found that the things, I meant, the concepts I'm interested in don't
really support a journey that lasts longer than that.
And he's an incredibly disciplined filmmaker.
And so I was like, that makes total sense.
But can you imagine telling PTA?
Now, let's say Magnolia.
Perhaps some people find aspects of Magnolia to be really about a filmmaker working some stuff
out for the filmmaker's purposes.
But there are other people who find those parts of the movie incredibly satisfying.
And I think when somebody is a masterful artist like PTA, let's give them the room to do that.
But I'm also someone who doesn't like baseball games being shortened.
And I don't like pulling pitchers who are pitching a perfect game in the eighth because the pitch
count.
So I'm a bit of a romantic when it comes to this stuff.
So I'm indulgent of the wishes of both film.
filmmakers and pitchers. Speaking of Magnolia, what has happened to what you might call old school movie
stars? So this is 2023. There are major films with Harrison Ford at 80 and Tom Cruise at whatever age
in the lead roles. Good for them, almost for that. But why is there no next generation of very top
movie stars? Well, let's see if Margot Robbie is that. Why isn't she? She very well may be.
If you look at how she's built her career, it's very possible that she will be.
But who's the next Harrison Ford?
It's a big gap, right?
30 years and it's not clear who you would put in that same post?
Well, how old should, I'm not asking it rhetorically.
Like, in your mind, how old should that person be now?
Like, where on the continuum?
53.
And they've been doing it for 16 years and have at least three or four excellent movies under their belt.
Perhaps Bradley Cooper.
Let's see what happens with the Bernstein film, because perhaps Bradley Cooper is that person.
perhaps Matt Damon is that person.
I mean, it's a difficult question because you're really asking, I think, about what happened
to the movie industry.
And let's say also, let's adjust.
I'll do a little bit of, like, let's adjust.
So life expectancy and how long one can do this?
So is Tom Cruise at 60, Harrison Ford at 53?
And if so, is Tom Cruise that person?
I'd also, of course, there's the question of mystery and all that stuff, right?
Like, we didn't know anything about Jack or we knew funny things about Jack or Pacino.
Also, those.
guys are still doing it. Like, those people are still making movies and that's another, I mean,
Bogie died. The, you know, the generation before those guys just died, William Holden and Bogie,
like they died off and it kind of created room. But as you say, you still have Harrison, you know,
doing this stuff. I'm sure that you, as is the case with myself, you know, many very smart people
who just don't understand movies very well. Like if you showed them Tarkovsky's Solaris,
they'd be bored, no matter how big the screen.
If you had to explain in as few dimensions as possible,
what differentiates the really smart people who get movies
from the really smart people who do not get movies?
What's going on there?
Perhaps openness.
Perhaps the ability to not have to analyze in real time and to experience.
And perhaps it's a gateway thing.
I find Casablanca is a remarkable tool to solve this problem because Cain is slow.
And Cain, Citizen Cain is slow.
And Citizen Cain is very much a masterpiece with a capital M.
Casablanca sneaks up on you.
Casablanca is just fun.
Like, it's fun from moment one.
Like Citizen Cain is portentous, not pretentious, but portentous, right?
From the moment it starts.
understand you're supposed to take something very seriously. It's in everything that Wells does.
Casablanca is a delight. I have found that no one, I have never met anyone immune to Casablanca's
charms. And so it's a gateway into understanding what makes great cinema. Because if you get them,
now a lot of people are resistant to sitting down and turning it on or sitting down and watching it.
But if you get someone to watch 10 minutes at Casablanca and 10 minutes and you go, hey, all right, cool, you tried.
Let's go.
They're like, no, no, no, what happens?
And then you got them.
And so I do find it to be an incredible thing to kind of hook people.
I think all the president's men is another great example of a film that does that because right away,
you are in this mystery and it doesn't announce itself as like proper cinema, but it is proper
cinema.
And it deploys all the tools of proper cinema.
and it's another kind of gateway film, as is Raiders, the first one.
You know, and so I think that the answer is I, and then I guess, you know, I guess there's
some people who can stand in front of a painting, and it just doesn't move them.
And then maybe they think, oh, I don't like paintings.
And maybe they don't like Carvaggio, but maybe they like Jasper Johns.
But they don't know that they like Jasper Johns because they would never go look at Jasper
Johns.
Or, you know, they don't like Jasper Johns, but suddenly they, you know, they,
see something else that speaks to them.
I mean, poetry functions the same way, right, Tyler?
Like, why are people immune to poetry and other people?
It just speaks to them.
But I see a kind of clumped distribution when it comes to cinema and Americans.
Almost everyone I know quite likes Casablanca,
but they draw a line somewhere,
just as people will draw a line maybe with modern art or abstract art.
And they won't love Fellini or Bergman or whatever else you want to put on that list.
and who crosses that line and who doesn't.
Huh.
Oh, that's interesting.
Well, okay, is it like this, though?
Like, I don't understand atonal composition.
I don't enjoy atonal composition.
I understand what it is as an exercise, but as a listener, I'm not, I don't want to put in what I would have to put in to get out of it what some of my friends perhaps get out of it, right?
And so, like Bergman, I was once talking to an author who I admire a great deal, Mark Helperin.
And Mark Helperin who wrote a soldier of the Great War and Winterstale, not the political journalist, so they're different people, not Halperin, but Helperin.
And he talked about the cost, the emotional cost of reading novels after 50.
and that the way a novel can stir you up because the best novels are about death,
essentially whether they are or they aren't, they are, right?
And so the best movies, Bergman, is about death.
Bergman is about impermanence, right?
And so all the great works of art in some way or another are about impermanence.
And people often don't want to deal with impermanence.
And so you have to kind of decide how you're going to deal with that when engaging with art.
Because when art can affect you that deeply in a way that it makes you think about impermanence,
maybe you don't consider that a good time.
Maybe you can watch Michael Mann, a cinematic master, make heat because although there's death in it,
it's not really about death.
It's about consequences, and that's entirely different.
The other stuff's about impermanence, regardless of deserve, regardless of
of consequence. And so I think that that might, perhaps that gets to, in some way, gets to the answer to
that. Speaking of death, what's your favorite Hitchcock movie? It's fun. I was watching, I was watching
him talk yesterday about the use of staircase imagery in films. It's a very boring answer,
but North by Northwest. I watched it pretty recently and was just blown away by it. I would say the
coldness of Hitchcock and the sort of his style of directing performance, he's a master,
he's the greatest, but it's not my personal favorite, right? There's a difference between what we
understand and can fully appreciate and what we just love, and I'm not just someone in love
with his movies. Are Jerry Lewis movies funny? Sometimes. Yeah. Sometimes they are, I mean,
he is a human character. Obviously, he's a,
complicated figure, but I don't, I don't go back, I don't go back to his movies very often.
Why does comedy seem to stand the test of time less well than drama? So if I watch silent movies
that are supposed to be funny, there's some chaplain that quite speaks to me, but for the most part,
I just think this isn't funny. A lot of movies from the 1950s, to me, they're just flat out,
not funny, bringing a baby I enjoy, but very few early comedies. What's happening there? And they don't
cross borders as well either, as you know. Well, I think, you know, so a couple answers to that.
I mean, comedy clearly is of its time, because that applies to stand-up comedy, too. Like,
people our age, there's literally nothing in the world that seemed funnier than the first two Steve
Martin albums. And you could try those albums on some younger people. And they, because the world
took a lot of what he did, no part of what he did seems stunning or surprising now. But on the other hand, man,
maybe it's just about like truly great stuff is what lasts because thin man is still as entertaining
if I put on thin man I agree even after the thin man yeah right the first two yeah yeah watch the
first two those movies are so funny and and and endearing and charming and just amazing and maybe
It's just that they were great and the other stuff wasn't great.
But I've done the test, as I wonder if you have with, I've done the test with like,
because it's a long time now from when Eddie Murphy and Bill Murray were in their prime making
those movies back then.
Those movies, and it's 40, 50 years later, 40 years later, certainly, they still really
works.
Stripes is still very, very funny.
And trading places is still very funny.
And so I agree.
You know, those things can last.
But Thin Man, okay, that's another movie that I would say to people like.
If you think you don't like old movies, watch Thinman.
What's the Stephen Spielberg movie that you feel is quite deep in some underappreciated way if you had to pick one?
Yeah, I mean, I'm somebody who I don't join the people who condemn Spielberg for being a populist.
And I loved the movie about him that came out last year.
Strong agree.
He loved it.
Couldn't have loved it more.
His film as memoir.
I loved it.
And some people really didn't like it.
And I just have to say, I was my favorite movie of the year.
I mean, I just loved it so much.
Well, I think Close Encounters is a great movie.
You know, it's about alienation, right?
And I think it's a great film.
And E.T. is a great film.
And I think either of those serves as a pretty good.
I think Close Encounters is probably the one that's quite deep, even if on the surface, it doesn't seem that way.
which is the Morikami book that is especially deep and not sufficiently appreciated.
I'm glad you asked.
I saw that somebody wondered about Murakami.
I'm glad you asked the question.
For me, it's hard-boiled wonderland, but I love many.
That would have been my number two choice.
Ah, what's your number one choice?
Well, I think Kafka on the shore is like an astonishing.
So to me, Kafka on the shore is it works so well and it shouldn't work.
It doesn't, it encompasses the entire experience of life and love and war.
It just encompasses, it just encompasses so much.
And every page is entertaining.
The thing about Haruki Murakami to me and why I think he's the living writer that
captures my imagination the most is that he never forgets the reader.
He's completely consumed with the personal.
He's completely consumed with making these things live for himself and to be fully personal expressions of how he feels and sees the world.
Yet his incredible, magical, mysterious gift is that he makes every page entertaining for you the reader.
And I've read every single Murakami book more than once.
except I've held out two to read for when he's no longer producing books,
because I want to have two that I can read later, that I've never read.
But I find him a marvel, a miraculous marvel.
And I'll never forget reading Norwegian Wood for the first time
and just understanding that there was somebody out there working at the highest possible level
that you could work at as a writer.
What's your favorite book about poker and why? I know you've bought hundreds of them.
I have.
There's a little known book.
So the books about poker that are the nonfiction book, you know, A. Alvarez's book is perfect.
It's a perfect book.
I highly recommend it.
Anthony Holden's book is really entertaining Peter Olson's book about the World Series of Poker.
There are many, many great poker.
I'm leaving so many out.
There's a tiny little book called King of a Small World by Rick Bennett.
I don't even know if it's in print.
It's like 210 pages.
And it's about Maryland poker games.
And I've read that book 10 times.
It is a perfect encapsulation of a certain kind of poker life that existed a while back.
And I'm leaving books out and I'm sorry, but I do have one of the biggest poker book collections.
I've been collecting poker books for 35 years.
How was Maryland poker different?
Because I live in Virginia.
Well, back then they were at these, though, those games were at these like fire stations.
They had to be under fake charities.
And it's this whole kind of Byzantine set of rules that allowed these couple hustlers.
to live in it.
And it's, I never got to play in that scene.
And I'm glad because I would have been fleeced.
But this guy creates these incredible characters.
It's really, he really, this guy wrote a really special book.
Oh, but if I have to just mention the other writer who I think is the best writer in the world.
And he also dabbles in magic realism.
And he wrote for me, the best book ever about a person who's in the world of gambling.
And that is William Kennedy's Billy Phelan's greatest game.
Have you ever read that book?
No, never read it.
Tyler, it's as good as Kennedy to me is like, you know, another one of these people like,
Kennedy, I think should have won the Nobel.
I think that that all minicycle is a stunning achievement.
And I think that Billy Phelan's greatest game is his best book.
And it's about everything that's been about gambling since, I think, in some way,
this book is kind of like in the same way that David Moore is the big con is where every single con artist movie
came from Billy Fail's greatest game is like an er text of sorts and I highly recommend it.
What would be something you feel you've learned about the poker universe that a well-educated
American is likely to simply not understand or not know about it? That would be surprising and
non-obvious. Well, this is basic, but it's not obvious to most people, which is you probably
can't win. When you say probably, where does the probably come from? Why not just you can't win?
Well, like you may be one of those gifted freaks who can sit down and suddenly the math
makes sense and reading people make sense. But basically, if you don't study, basically,
if you don't study and think about poker at least a little bit every day, like I think about
poker every day. And I am not a world-class poker player. I'm somebody who I track my results
very closely. And I'm flat. Like by the end of the, I'm usually flat. And I play a lot of poker.
And being flat is a gigantic victory. Some years I win.
a little bit and some years I lose a little bit, but basically in competitive, difficult poker
games, I'm flat. I think about poker. At least I engage in some way with materials about how to
be better at poker every day. And that's where it's like chess. It's like required, I think.
And people, so in your home game, oh, okay, I can tell you, in your home game, that's your casual
Monday night game. If you have a rotating group of 12 people to make your nine or seven who show up,
what you don't know is that at least two of those people actually are taking it almost as
seriously as a job. That's the thing that most people don't know. What's your greatest weakness as a
poker player? I think you'll understand that I'd rather not say. Jalen Brunson,
overrated or underrated? Underrated. Let's go. He's probably.
properly rated now. That's what I think. He was underrated. It's one of the only times the Nix
got an asset below what should have been the market price for that asset. And I love him.
And I think he is, he over-delivered, which like has never happened, hasn't happened since
Bernard King probably for the Nix where someone just over-delivered. Shohayotani, though,
underrated. And are the NICs going to get Joel Embeddeed? The Coast theorem says they should,
right? So you think that he is going to force a trade? He is going to force a trade of some sort?
Well, this is August of 2023, but it seems to me at this time not impossible that Hardin leaves
Philly and Embed wants out and not that many teams can actually attract him and the Knicks are one of those.
Tell me if I'm wrong. I agree. Well, New York market, right? Yeah, but what pieces would we,
if he forces a trade, meaning if it's not when he's a free agent? As many draft picks as
the CBA will allow.
Yeah, but Darrell's going to want Brunson.
So it's, you can't do that.
And you can't do that.
And I would like, let me just say this.
And Darrell, if you're listening, he's my friend, I'm friends with Darrell, as I know
you know him too.
Darrell, if you're listening, I think it'd be a great idea.
Just take some draft picks and give us Joel Embed.
I think it solves all your problems.
What is it you really think of New Jersey anyway?
I loved Fred Armisen's version of David Patterson when he would just say New Jersey with
so much contempt.
My wife's from New Jersey.
So the one thing I will say is I'm from Long Island originally and she's from New Jersey
and I always figured no matter what I would marry someone where they would be able to use
as a kind of trump card on me.
Well, what do you know you're from Long Island, but at least she's from Jersey.
Let's say I'm in Manhattan and I'm looking for good food.
What is it you think that you might know that I do not being a northern Virginian, but ultimately
from New Jersey?
Well, David Chang is a Virginian.
And so he certainly figured it out.
I think you should look at the places he recommends in Virginia and just go to those places.
But I would say, yeah, a lifetime of being in this city and eating in this city.
I think I've developed relationships with chefs.
And so I might know where chefs are eating.
And that might give me some insight.
Also, like, just knowing where some younger people who aren't able to spend a lot of money
or finding great food is a valuable thing to know in the city because someone's always opening an
amazing spot.
And, you know, there are people here who really want to find out what that spot is before it becomes
impossible to get into.
And so you just kind of learn to have an instinct for that.
But also, where, like, the place that's not hip or cool is, I'd say I really do know that.
I know the place that, like, if you want to go to a great diner, go to Joe G's.
And don't worry about where the Internet is telling you.
to go. If you want to get a great steak a pov, just go to Lucian, which was really hip 20 years ago,
but isn't hip now. And so those kinds of things, which is like, I could take you to 25 uncool places,
places that are not hip and not cool, where we could just have something perfectly prepared and
delicious, and you would leave really happy, and there would be nothing about it that felt like
you were a part of a scene. And maybe that's something that only someone who lives here could put together.
And what's the part of town that is most ripe for further exploration in these directions?
Like I'm in the Upper West Side, it can be tough going, I feel.
There aren't that many good places.
I mean, what's wrong with you, people?
If I'm in the East Village, I'll do better.
But it's sort of everyone feels that way now.
And then I start thinking, well, there's some trick here.
This isn't going to last.
Well, the Upper West Side does now have New York's best restaurant in Tatiana.
But other than that, you're totally right.
The Upper West Side's been a wasteland.
for food.
But, you know, there's practical reasons because that's a neighborhood people move to to raise
kids and they're not going out to eat as much.
They're at home.
They're, it's just, you know, whereas the West Village, you know, or the Lower East Side
or like Midtown, like Midtown East, you know, or over in Korea town, there's just
so much great stuff that's kind of unexplored.
Let's say you could spend three days out of retreat and you get to choose two or three
other people who will show up and talk with.
you for those three days. Now, people in cinema, you can already do that, right? Maybe some other people,
too. Living people, who are the two or three people you would choose? Well, can these be friends of
mine, or you don't want them to be friends? No, you can already do your friends, right? So, no,
they can't be your friends. Because I can't say Seth Godin, even though I would say Seth Godin.
Oh, well, Haruki Murakami, that would be great. I would, even though I am not someone who has cats,
I would supply them if he wanted to be there. I will tell you, I would love. I would love,
to be able to talk to Donald Hoffman for a few days, because it would take a few days for him to be
able to find where I could understand him well enough that we could really communicate, but I would
want to take that time to really understand his theory about what reality is. Like, I feel that
would be an incredibly useful thing to be able to sit with him and get the building blocks so that I
could begin to understand where he is. And then I think you have to say Bob Dylan, because
if you were able to be in a spot where Dylan was, and if Bob, assuming for this game that Bob
was interested in sharing, not necessarily, you wouldn't have to share autobiographical details.
We could all assume that, like, you know, you, I've read all of, I know all the sort of things.
but if I assume that Dylan is perhaps the wisest person, he must be, the smartest person,
he's an accident of nature and is like, let's say, the smartest human walking around,
I would want to understand what it is that he understands, if there are a way he could explain that to me.
You have a career, Dylan has a career.
What do you think you can learn from his career?
I said this to Paul Schrader on the podcast, on my podcast once.
You know, it's a great, I don't know, Bob Dylan's ability.
Like, for instance, you know, he said that he wrote the Kennedy song.
He's like, on those, there was some interview that he gave where he's like, yeah, I wrote this song.
You know, he said something about like where in temporal, where in time he wrote it that was just not true because he didn't want to talk about the fact of when he'd actually come up with it, which was recently to comment about the world we were really living in.
Like, I think he told some story about writing it seven years ago or something like that.
I think he's great at taking pressure off himself throughout his career from any externality.
And I think the clue is what he said when he won that award, when he said, you know,
my father said to me that a man can debase himself so much that even his own family will turn his back on them,
but God never will.
And I tie that to the thing he wrote in the book of lyrics about that poem he wrote about Woody,
not song for Woody, but that poem he wrote about Woody,
When he talks about going to the hospital to visit Woody and Woody Guthrie for those who don't
I know you know, but just people don't know, when he goes to the hospital to visit Woody and
Woody let him clean his bedpans and stuff because Woody wanted to show Bob that no man
should be a hero to another man, that he was just a person.
And he produced this work because of what he was willing to do to himself to produce this work.
And I think there's something about that moment.
And Bob saying the thing about debasing himself and all the shit he made up in Chronicles,
that the lesson is that none of the externalities matter.
Yes, Bob wanted success, and it's always confusing with Bob because he's a multi-headed
hydrant, all that stuff.
But at core, he's this writer who always found a way to hear only his own voice and to have
the confidence and comfort to then serve and produce that voice only for those people
who were willing to try to hear it.
And I think as any kind of an artist that's almost impossible to do, you tell yourself you can, but it's very difficult to do it because there's all sorts of other considerations that come into play.
And it seems to me that only Dylan and Miles and like Chuck Berry were able and willing to do that.
Bruce had John Landau, but Bob really, you know, who he could bounce this stuff off to kind of make a third thing out of it.
Whereas it seems to me, I'm like REM did that for five years.
But Bob has done that for 60 years, right?
So it's crazy.
I mean, do you think that the read I have of Dylan and what he does is, does it line up with your read?
Absolutely.
Study the past is another career lesson from Dylan, I think.
And just keep on going.
Yes.
Be willing to reinvent yourself.
Choose your audiences wisely.
Yes.
The ones you care about.
Yes.
But be willing to reinvent yourself, not.
in the David, David Bow is a great artist too, but a different kind of artist.
Not, to me anyway, not reinvent yourself to fit the times, but be willing to reinvent yourself
because it's what your inner voice is telling you you need to do to stay an artist, right?
I think is what he's doing.
Yes.
Last few questions.
How happy are people in the movie business?
When the strikes over, thrilled.
But in general, as the people, is this longstanding cliche, someone wants to be a movie star,
be a director. At the end of that pot of gold, are people happier than average, less happy?
Vichiyan, and I interviewed him two weeks ago, he said he thinks the top chess players are really
happy. Would you say the same about your line of work? When engaged in the work. So, on set,
doing the work, that's the time that people are really, yes, taking flight. The rest of it,
I think for people at times can be hard because of a series of pressures and things.
There are some people who seem to be able to be happy, but I don't know that it draws happy people
to it.
I don't know that if you're happy, you feel like this is the form of expression that you need to
engage in.
But I do think in the making of something that you care about, I think that's where there's a lot
of joy.
At the meta level, what did you learn from your dad?
obviously very particular things, but viewed largely.
It's an enormous question, and he only died seven months ago, so it's a hard question.
It's obviously a question I've been thinking about the answer to a lot.
I would say there are the basic things of like loyalty, which I mean.
But I would suggest I thought a lot about my dad was somebody who never felt intimidated
to have any conversation with anybody.
And this idea that no one is better than anyone else was important to him, even if it might
not have seemed like that.
That is he had a really egalitarian idea about people's capacity and that you had to keep
your eyes open because greatness could show up at any given moment.
And that is something I've carried with me.
I think he probably wouldn't have expressed his curiosity in the way I expressed my curiosity,
but he had a similar kind of curiosity and appreciation for greatness.
And I think that I chase greatness in the same way that he did.
At the meta level, what did you learn from your mom?
How to love people with your whole heart and not hold back.
Is there an unrealized dream or project you have?
Again, current conditions aside, but that somehow the world won't let you make it.
I mean, yeah, we always wanted to make Billy Phelan's greatest game.
And it's set in Albany in like 1910.
And it's really very difficult kind of a thing.
Just if you could, and it has got magic realism in it.
But if you could somehow, I'll tell you, there are two things.
And the other thing is American tabloid, which is one of the greatest things ever written
about what's at the heart of a certain kind of America, James Elroy's American
tabloid.
Clearly to me is best the book that's going to live on.
of his. And I mean, Black Dahlia can too,
similarly confidential, but, but for me, American tabloid was this guy at the moment in his life
as an artist when he was kind of firing in all cylinders. But before what he did, before even to
himself, they became, tropes is the wrong word. I don't mean negatively, but he hadn't
fallen into a groove yet. Even the cold 6,000, even cold 6,000 is like almost like in
reaction to American tabloid, whereas American tabloid is, it's
own thing. And to me, what's at the heart of American tabloid could just be the most
staggering and crushing television series. And it's been very hard to try to do that. And that would
be an amazing thing to be able to do. I can see the problem with Albany 1910, but American
tabloid sounds commercially viable to me at some point. Yeah, people have owned it. And it's just
challenging to, it's just challenging to put together. Final question. What is the next thing
you will set your mind to learning about.
I want to take my knowledge of opera up a huge amount.
So opera would be one thing because I didn't like it until I was like 52 years old and I
really like it now, but only some and I don't understand why yet.
I don't know.
I have no idea why I put on one piece and I love it and I put on another and I don't dig it at
all and I'm kind of curious about that.
So that's like a simple little one.
And then the bigger one for me is related to physical fitness and working.
out. I've been working out a lot and I kind of want to see if I can return myself at 60 to like,
I'm 57 by 60 if I can somehow turn myself back to the basketball player I was at 30.
If you send me your Korean movie recommendations, I'll send you my opera.
Brian Koppelman, thank you very much. Thanks, Tyler. This is great.
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