The Big Picture - Doug Liman on ‘The Wall’ and Making Movies His Way | The Big Picture (Ep. 13)
Episode Date: May 15, 2017Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices...
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Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Doug Lyman, who has a new film called The Wall coming out soon. But first, I'm happy to be and very excited to be chatting with Alison Wilmore.
Alison is the film critic for BuzzFeed and also the co-host of, I can honestly say,
my favorite movies podcast, which is Film Spotting SVU.
Alison, that's a true story.
How are you doing today?
That's amazing.
I'm great.
Well, after hearing that, I'm really great.
Okay, I greased the wheels.
I greased the wheels. I greased the wheels. So Allison, like I said, I spoke to Doug and
he's had quite an interesting career. And, you know, given your experience, I was wondering if
you could kind of put him in context for us. What kind of filmmakers Doug Lyman and, you know,
what kind of movies does he make? Well, he's kind of all over the place. I think a filmmaker whose
work I've really enjoyed, but it's hard to say that he specializes
in one particular thing.
You know, the first thing I ever saw from him was Swingers,
which, you know, LA classic
that set Jon Favreau's career into motion.
But then he followed that up with Go,
which was that kind of rave movie
that he's done, Mr. and Mrs. Smith,
which is, you know, one of the great meta Hollywood movies
in terms of reading someone's relationship
into what's on the screen.
Has a newfound resonance now too, huh?
Seriously.
Yeah.
You know, I think he did,
one of my favorites of his is Edge of Tomorrow,
the Tom Cruise sci-fi movie,
which I think, you know,
had a lot of critics love it,
maybe more than actually turned out to see it. But it's a movie I think is tremendous.
Yeah. Now the wall. Yeah. So he's an interesting character to me because when we chatted,
he kept characterizing himself as an independent filmmaker working inside of a Hollywood system.
There's a lot of there's been a lot of reporting
around the style that he employs. The sort of why mania is what it's called, which is sort of
unpredictable. Is that the sort of thing that you events when you're watching his movies that you
can see that he is kind of playing with a different kind of deck, even though he's inside the Hollywood
system? Or does he still just seem sort of like a traditional Hollywood filmmaker to you?
Well, that's hard to say, because even when he was working in independent
film, he made movies that I think were pretty crowd pleasing. And I say that in a good way.
But, you know, I don't think he's someone who had such a distinctive sensibility that
had to kind of be snuck into Hollywood. I think he makes movies that are fun to watch.
You know, I don't think that he is necessarily someone that I would say is,
I don't know that I would be able to pick a movie as his without knowing.
But he is still someone who I think is very talented.
Yeah, that's an interesting point.
He doesn't have a particular Tarantino-esque style or anything like that,
where the dialogue is always just this way or he always shoots in just this fashion.
You know, with The Wall, it's kind of an interesting movie
because I agree that he tends to make these sort of funny, wry, but also intense kind of action movies.
The Wall is less so that.
It's a little bit more serious, but it does have kind of touches of that. I don't know. What did you make of that movie? And, you know, what do
you think of him doing something kind of that small, which is different for him? I went into
it without having a lot of expectations. And it's really it's what, like a three man show.
And one of those people is mostly a voice and kind of presence out of presence out in the wilderness.
I appreciated the experimentation behind it.
And also something that I think is not always something you see in his films,
which is there's a lot of doubt.
It's all downtime.
It's a lot of waiting and a lot of tension that builds up just from trying to decide when to actually act.
Yeah, it's like an inverted born identity, right?
Like it's very static.
It's a lot of conversation.
It is an interesting experiment.
I agree.
I was thinking about a lot with respect to movies about our recent wars.
And, you know, I was thinking of Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk as well, about sort of
a sideways entrance into a war movie.
How do you feel filmmakers are kind of grappling with, you know, the recent conflicts in Iraq, Afghanistan and what we're seeing on screen?
Well, it's definitely a lot more morally ambiguous.
And I think that you see that in all of them where you're like, you can't make a rah-rah movie about a present day conflict like that.
It just doesn't that just doesn't fit in any way.
You know, even something like American Sniper, which gets held up as like maybe a more conservative leaning, more black and white in terms of how, I was criticized for that in terms of how it's treated.
It still is a kind of, it portrays war as difficult and something that chips away at you.
And so many of these movies also focus on what it's like to go home, including, you know, Billy Lynn.
There's so much about how you leave war behind or don't that seems as much of the story as being there.
Yeah. What do you think that's a reflection of just the sort of complicated relationship that we have with war post 70s films of that nature? Yeah. And just also when you have
conflicts that never have a clean ending, I feel like the idea that you can come home and then
decide to go back, that it's just something that's always there. You know, there's a lot of that
sense in these movies, this idea that you don't have an end goal that you can necessarily ever accomplish
you're just there.
Yeah, that's something that is echoed a bit in The Wall even
where the disembodied voice that you talked about
sort of taunts Aaron Taylor Johnson's character at one point
about returning to the battlefield
and this notion of never being able to escape this cycle
it's an interesting thing.
So there's one more Doug Liman movie coming out later this year.
I don't know if you're familiar with it at all called American Made.
It is about a different kind of war essentially, like a drug war.
I'm curious if you've read anything about that.
I haven't, but it's got Tom Cruise in it, right?
It does.
Caleb Landry Jones. Yes. It's got quite a cast. that. I haven't, but it's got Tom Cruise in it, right? It does. Caleb Landry Jones.
Yes.
It's got quite a cast.
Yeah.
I don't know.
I think I liked the way Lyman worked with Tom Cruise.
And, you know, I think I'd be curious to see how that goes, especially in this kind of context.
Yeah, we're really looking forward to it.
Allison, thank you so much for joining me.
I really appreciate it.
And read Allison's work on BuzzFeed and listen to Film Spotting SVU, guys. Thanks, Allison, thank you so much for joining me. I really appreciate it. And read Allison's work on BuzzFeed and listen to FilmSpotting SVU, guys.
Thanks, Allison.
Thank you.
Okay, and now on to my interview with Doug Liman.
Doug, thanks for being here today.
Thanks for having me.
Doug, let's start here.
The wall is a little bit smaller than some of the movies you've made recently.
And it's a little bit of a smaller budget.
But it's arguably the most intense movie that you've ever made.
And I'm kind of curious where this came from, how it came to you, and why you decided to do it.
Well, I actually first read the script to The Wall a few years ago.
I was sent as a writing sample for you know a bigger project i was
developing and i love the script you know i said well what about this movie i can't even remember
the movie i was reading the script for as a reading sample to have this writer then go right
because i fell in love with with the the story of the wall wall. And again, it was a script you just couldn't put down.
It was a blacklisted script.
It was just the story of the screenwriter, Dwayne Worrell, who wrote it, who won a script
writing contest from Amazon.
And it's just an extraordinary piece of writing.
It was such a compelling story and an exciting take on war.
I hate to say it that way because war's such a horrible thing. But, you know, for my generation of filmmakers, I look back on sort
of the movies that were set during World War II and there's such simple heroism. And, you know,
the war movies that were sort of being made, the Oliver Stone type war movies, didn't necessarily have that sort of clarity of heroism that was present in so many World War II movies.
And what I saw in Dwayne's script was sort of a return back to the simple heroism of ordinary soldiers.
And I make movies about people.
And I make movies about people. And I make movies about people in extraordinary situations.
You know, that's a lot of times why you see me do these kind of bigger, more outrageous stories like Mr. and Mrs. Smith. You know, where I create a crazy outrageous situation of two assassins who don't know their spouse is an assassin.
Or Jason Bourne having amnesia.
You know, like I come up with these outlandish situations
because I'm interested in how people act under those conditions. And what I realized when I read
the script to the wall was that like, actually ordinary soldiers face these outrageous situations
every single day. Was, was Dwayne's script, um, purely invented or was it based on some
experience that he had heard about
or read about or anything like that? No, Dwayne's script was invented. I mean, it's obviously
drawn from a lot of, you know, from the headlines and real experiences and the villain of the movie,
the Iraqi sniper that Aaron Taylor Johnson and John cena are up against is based on real lore
of of this uh incredible iraqi sniper who had you know over a hundred kills killed over a hundred
americans named juba and we don't know if we killed juba we don't know if there was a juba
if juba was actually 10 people um that's part of dealing
with snipers is you you never see them we had an amazing military advisor uh nick irvine it's an
army ranger sniper and the reaper that's what he's known as he's known as the reaper and he really
like you know if you look at my phone you'll see photos of my, I have a small farm, my different animals, my goats and pigs and chickens.
You look on his phone and he's got photos of all the people he's killed.
Oh my gosh.
And Nick told us, you know, this sniper saying
from a place you will not see comes a sound you will not hear.
That's what happens when a sniper shoots you. I mean,
they're so far away. And by the time the sound gets to you, because the bullet travels faster
than the speed of sound, you're already dead. I mean, that could be the tagline for the movie
in a lot of ways. And you really do a good job in the film of giving us that experience of,
you know, you don't quite hear it until it's too late in certain cases.
Yeah, I love doing that.
I mean, I kind of, I grew up as a physics geek.
So I really, I'm glad you picked up on that.
I hadn't ever seen that before in a movie
where like the bullet hits first
and then you hear the sound about a second and a half later.
But that's, we actually put the sound
where it really belonged based on the distances
and it sounded too fake so i actually
moved it i didn't i moved it closer to to when the bullet impacts just uh so it would feel you
know in your gut it would feel more real but the reality is you've been dead for about two or three
seconds by the time the sound gets to you oh that's incredible i mean it is the first time
the first bullet strike hits.
It's completely disorienting.
You don't totally understand what's happened.
Did you want to take this on because, you know,
it's essentially a two-hander, John and Aaron,
and even though it's a war movie,
there's less complexity maybe in the storytelling
than there was, say, in Edge of Tomorrow,
which is, you know, this Matryoshka doll of storytelling? My movies sort of happen on a spectrum. They're reactions sometimes to
not just the material, but sort of where I am in my life. You know, when I did Mr. and Mrs. Smith,
it came right off of Born Identity. And when I read Simon Kimbrick's first draft of Mr. and Mrs. Smith,
what struck me was that I just created this franchise
that was going to celebrate this action hero, Jason Bourne,
and suddenly I'm reading this script that's sort of giving me a different perspective,
which is maybe it's easy to be an action hero and harder to maintain a marriage.
And I started thinking about James Bond, love.
And I thought, you know, if you think about it, that guy can't hold down a relationship, right?
It's a different woman every movie.
We're celebrating the wrong guy.
Like, it's actually pretty easy to be James Bond.
Like, we should be celebrating someone who maybe keeps a marriage fresh after seven years or
10 years. That's a way more impressive accomplishment. And that was sort of the
mindset that got me to do Mr. and Mrs. Smith. If I had never done, or an identity, I probably
wouldn't have done Mr. and Mrs. Smith. I wouldn't have had that personal connection to the material.
And in the same way, when I did Live, Die, Repeat or Edge of Tomorrow, part of what I loved about doing a war movie where the enemy was an alien was it was a return to sort of simpler World War II type movies.
You know, where the enemy's wearing a uniform.
They're on the other side of the border, you know,
there's a lot of moral clarity of who's good and who's bad.
Although I learned, you know, when I promoted Live, Die, Repeat in Japan,
because they were allied with the Germans,
that that moral clarity of who's good and who's bad, you know,
isn't fully an international concept,
because when I was in in a little off topic, but I was in Japan and I was going to talk
about on the press tour for Live, Die, Repeat.
I was like, hey, I when I talk about this movie, I talk about World War Two and it's
obvious who's bad.
And obviously, you know, I talk about Hitler and I'm like, you know, sort of there's no
moral ambiguity about the war.
And I was like, so, but I don't know, maybe, how do you guys feel about World War II in Japan?
Like, and I was like, like, what comes to mind when I say Adolf Hitler?
And they're like, nothing, not much.
Wow.
I'm like, okay, well, Adolf Hitler, good or bad?
And they're like, neither good nor bad.
So I'm like, all right, I'm going to have to not do that line of – I'm going to have to try a different way to promote the movie in Japan.
Yeah, just redefine it as like a robot alien that kills everybody.
But when I talk about moral clarity, you know,
and I looked at the wall and looked at what war looks like
really at ground level from a soldier's point of view.
And, you know, my movies very much are kind of first-person movies.
The difference between James Bond and my Jason Bourne franchise is that Jason Bourne kind of puts you in the car with him and puts you in his shoes.
And the amnesia really helped ground you into his experience. You know,
the wall sort of combines my interest in really putting you in the trenches, which is an expression
I used all the time promoting foreign identity. And now I literally am. So now I'm actually doing
a war movie. I'm putting you actually, it's not a figurative statement. It's a literal statement.
You're in the trenches with the soldiers.
And at the same time, there's no moral ambiguity when you're a soldier fighting.
Like there can be plenty of moral ambiguity if you're sitting on a college campus or if you're in New York City where I live.
You can debate the war all day long.
If you're a soldier out in the field, someone's trying to shoot you,
there's no more ambiguity about that. That person's the enemy and you better kill them before they kill you. And it's as simple as that. There's nothing else to be debated.
So I found in the wall so many of the elements that I had been interested in my whole career and been bringing to all these
different genres of movies that had aliens and time travel and assassins with amnesia. And it
was like, actually, you find these stories every day with American soldiers and probably soldiers
from other countries as well. But I had way more experience talking to American soldiers.
This is definitely one of your most grounded in reality movies in a while, but was it harder to make this one personal for you? My movies at the end of the day are always personal. There's a
piece of me in every movie. And in The Wall, the personal aspect of it, and it's hard to talk about,
it's hard to be like a Hollywood filmmaker and talk about the experiences of it and it's it's hard to talk about it's hard to be like a hollywood
filmmaker and talk about the experiences of soldiers and not kind of sound like an a-hole
like i have any idea what it's really like to be out there and and what these people go through
um so i just gotta qualify it that way um but it's the thing that's extraordinary about
aaron taylor johnson's experience and John Cena's experience, you know, their characters experience in the movie is like these guys are put through hell and they keep picking themselves up.
They keep getting knocked out and they keep picking themselves up.
And just just when you think like it's too much, they just they just pick themselves up again and they keep trying and they just keep trying.
And that to me, you know, has been my experience, certainly in Hollywood.
You know, there's a expression about, you know, that they sort of taught us in the brief time I was in film school before I dropped out,
that it's not about getting knocked down. You get knocked down a lot. It's about getting back up.
And that God knows when I was trying to start my career and get Swingers made,
how many rejections I got. And I just picked myself up and tried again and picked myself up
and tried again every step along the way, even swingers was done and we had timed the whole thing and part of how i got the deal done
was that we were going to get the film done in time to submit it to sundance and then we didn't
get into sundance and you're like all right it's done you're you know no one's ever going to see
this movie because that's sundance isn't going to take
you you're never going to sell it it'll never see the light of day and went through like two days of
total depression and then I like picked myself back up and I'm gonna figure out how to sell it
obviously I really sound like an a-hole to try to compare my experience selling an independent
movie to the experience of a soldier pinned down by an Iraqi sniper. But that aspect of
just picking yourself back up, there's a few things in life more personal to me than that.
Is that something that occurs to you when you're first reading the script? Or do you have to
really turn it over? And then once you start making the movie, you see how you're personally
bound to it. You don't sound like an a-hole, by the way.
I think that's totally reasonable to connect the resilience.
Yeah, it's just tough because these soldiers are,
and I've had the good fortune of meeting so many now.
It's extraordinary what they go through,
what we put our young men and women through, and that they do it, and they do it with such bravery and valor is extraordinary.
So I just – I don't want in any way, you know, try to compare anything in my life to that level of bravery and valor but the i do have the resilience uh maybe not
against physical violence but um i think that my my main quality that i bring to the film business
is resilience is that i i don't always get it right first in fact you know i'm sort of notorious
for maybe not getting it right, but I stick with it.
I don't quit, and I keep at it, and I keep editing, whatever it takes, until I get it right.
Let me ask you about that.
So obviously there have been stories written in the past about some of your methods,
and sometimes there's some unplanned elements on set, unpredictable elements.
This movie is very contained and very specific.
It's really like a tight knot did you also have
a little bit of unsettled planning before you started this one as well it seems like it would
be hard to pull that off in this case now on the wall i had to because of the budget constraints
and because the kind of movie it was uh i i had to sort of break the script apart before I started shooting,
which I did, you know, in the weeks before we started shooting.
So, you know, that wreaks havoc because people like everything to be set in stone.
But I got it set back in stone before the first day of shooting.
And then I don't want to spoil the movie for anyone,
but I went and reshot the ending six months after I shot the
movie and changed the ending radically. And it was one of those situations where it was such a
radical idea, but once I had it, I was like, oh my God, this is obviously how the film needs to end.
And I think that's what sometimes can infuriate the people i work with is once i hear a better idea it has to
be in the movie you know in the case of the wall i had done a friends and family screening and
we were pretty close to locking picture and uh her friend john freeman gill who actually has a
novel out right now called the gargoyle huntersters that's like getting rave, rave reviews.
But he's also just a good friend.
And he was at the, he's obviously creative and smart and was at the screening.
And he said to me, you know,
I think you should change the ending and do,
and I don't want to say what we did.
And I was like, oh my God, that is a great idea.
And I mentioned it to my producer, Dave Bardis,
and he was like, don't talk to John anymore.
He's like, we're not rocking the boat like that.
I mean, that's a constant refrain of my career
has been don't rock the boat.
Like, we're in good shape.
And I said, I know, we're in good shape.
This will make the movie great.
This is exactly what the
movie needs. So the funny thing is we did a screening of the movie two weeks ago and we
screened it for about 500 military members of the military. And they, the writer was up there with
me and somebody asked the question, he said that ending was extraordinary. How did you come up with
it? And I was like, he and i hadn't even talked
about it like i you know things were happening so fast i i wasn't that long ago i shot the new
ending and just put it on the movie yeah and what did he say so it was it was fun to see him uh
you know he just fessed up he was like it was news to him too i mean he was you know that's kind of how i work
that um uh you know swingers actually the film was set in stone everything except the ending
something about the ending wasn't right um and in that case about two weeks before we started
shooting the movie i i was determined to fix it johnavreau and I came up with this
you know a new way to end the film
which is how swingers end
so in that case we did it before we started shooting
but I've obviously had experiences
where I've made way more changes
than just you know one day of shooting at the end of it
you know I had on Live Die Repeat
we were trying to figure out the script
if you do like time travel
here's the thing do like time travel,
here's the thing about doing time travel is that any filmmaker or novelist who's ever done,
you know, a fictional piece about time travel will confirm that humans will never travel through time.
Right. The paradoxes are so great. I mean, they derail basically any attempt to try to tell a coherent story because it just doesn't make sense
so you know once you've done a time travel movie you're like okay humans are never going to travel
through time so that film we were having script problems in about a month before we started
shooting and emily blunt made a suggestion about you know maybe we could solve it this way and you
know so much pressure everyone's so tense because we start shooting in a month and the producers
are coming down on you and the studio is coming down on you.
And I snapped at her and I was like, that's not going to work. And Emily was like, easy. I've
never made a film like this before. And I fired right back. Well, I've never made a film like
this before either. And my producer was like sort of flabbergasted because it's like a $150 million
movie. And he's like, the director's just admitted he doesn't know what he's doing.
And Tom Cruise, who was amazing, said, that's why I'm so excited to make this movie with you.
Because you don't know how to make it yet.
And I'm excited to watch you figure out how to make this movie.
And I'm excited to see you problem solve and to see what solutions you come up with.
And I'm confident they're going to be original.
But I love that right now you don't have the answers. I'm not sure I would have figured out Live, Die, Repeat if Tom hadn't sort of given me
that confidence.
And that is really how I approach movies.
So you're right.
The wall isn't like anything I've ever done before.
But I had to figure it out.
And I didn't get the ending right until five months after we finished shooting the movie.
But here's the thing.
I have resilience.
I have persistence. I went back and changed it and made it work i i literally have a question
written down here about the ending because i don't want to oversell it but the ending is
quite good it's like one of the best movie endings i've seen in a long time i probably
have now oversold it but is that an important thing to you on every movie that because you do have a lot of
sort of like whiz bang hard snap exciting endings where the second you go to credits you get a
little bit of a chill um i just watched live dire pete last night it has a very similar feeling
um do you obsess over those things before you start the movie or is it is it common that it
will find itself throughout?
Has that happened on every experience, or are you often set?
Well, like, live, die, repeat, that wasn't the ending at all.
I mean, that one, we really were having trouble for how to end the movie.
And in fact, that's a manufactured ending in live, die, repeat.
What do you mean by that?
If you remember, it ends with Tom tom cruise laughing he's laughing at me like i'm i'm talking to him emily blunt's not even there and we were
struggling with how to end the movie and we just were playing around and we're like
and we just grabbed that and mocked i was like just used it as something to mock it up and be
like what if he laughed and she said that and then we went from that being like it actually
that actually works pretty well and then we thought well let's if we're going to do that
let's shoot it for real so we went back and had had emily blunt prompt tom and had him actually
perform to emily and we ended up using the original one where he was just laughing at me there was
something honest about that that you know we just couldn't get back to a little bit of verite that's
a great metaphor for maybe the whole process of making the movie it is the it's it's it's a pretty
good metaphor for my process where there's there's things I want to find. There's other filmmakers like Hitchcock who, you know,
they have the whole film mapped out before they start.
They know every shot, every moment, every, like, I want to find things.
I want to find moments.
Like, that's my favorite thing when you find a moment.
And find a moment that can never be replicated.
Like, literally, I mean, Tom Cruise is, you know,
he's a brilliant actor, giant movie star.
Whatever was happening in that moment with me
couldn't be replicated.
So with The Wall, when you decide to remake the ending there,
do you have to go back and ask for more money?
What is that experience like for you as a filmmaker
when you want to change something
and you know that there's a machine
that you have to respond to?
I have to say, I'd never made a film for Amazon before.
And I went to Ted Hope and Bob Burney,
who run the film division,
and said, I want to change the ending.
I know this is really bold and outrageous.
I recognize that this is not,
this is not how a studio would think of ending a film.
So I'll pay for it.
I want to go shoot it.
But I just recognize that this is going to be so far outside your comfort zone.
I'm going to pay for it and let me shoot it and put it on the movie and then we can talk about it.
But I have to go do this.
And Ted and Bob said, that is a way cooler ending
they said it may not be as commercial as the original ending but we think it's a better movie
and we want you to make the better movie even if it doesn't make as much money
so we'll pay for that is that considerably different from a different studio
experience? There's no studio in the world that would have said that to me. What else was different
about working with Amazon on this? You know, the thing about the team that was put together at
Amazon is they're filmmakers. Like Bob and Ted. I mean, they made movies before they went over to Amazon. Like they actually made the movies. And so the people
they've put in place really get the process of making movies. They're not executives.
And so, you know, for a giant corporation, it was a really friendly place to work.
The sort of joke of it all was,
you know, when you make an independent movie, you need to get some favors.
And it's a little harder to ask for favors when the largest corporation in the world is funding
your independent movie. And you're like, people are like, I got to do this for free. Why?
Yeah.
Because it's an independent movie. But Amazon's paying for it?
I mean, when I, we had sort of a kickoff meeting at Amazon to talk, you know,
before they sent us off to go make the movie a few weeks before we started shooting.
And I was in a conference room with about 50 people from Amazon.
I mean, just the legal department of Amazon, they had 10 people in the room.
And then I finished the meeting that was in their offices in Santa Monica.
And I went to our production office, which was in the Valley.
And I get to our production office and there's like seven of us there making the movie.
So there's like 50 people supervising seven.
And that's kind of was the experience.
But obviously, it's hard to talk about it for the film comes out about the ending,
but honestly,
no,
the fact that you could say the studio,
I want to change the ending to this.
And they say,
it's the movie might not make as much money,
but it's a better ending.
And we're going to support you.
That's novel.
It's extraordinary.
Like I,
I think there's a reason why they're Amazon's films are,
are,
you know,
for a startup film studio.
And for me, the whole thing of returning to independent films, like I never really left it.
Yeah.
Born Identity was made for Universal, which is my first studio film.
But, you know, people look at the style of that movie and they see all that shaky handheld camera work, you know, that sort of starts to define the franchise.
Like that camera work is shaky and
handheld because matt damon and i were stealing stuff on the weekends because the studio you know
was really kind of trying to corral us and tell us all the things we couldn't do
and i'd come from making independent movies where i'm like you sort of do it first and ask for
permission later or ask for forgiveness later yeah it was literally run and gun when you guys were doing it.
So, I mean, like so much of the stuff were, and it was,
and I'm used to running and gunning and stealing stuff.
I mean, swingers, we, you know, it was seen in a golf course.
We had to sneak onto the golf course to shoot.
And with the sort of manager of the golf course sort of skeptically looking
at me and one uh one of my
producers avram ludwig with our giant mountaineering backpacks because we had all our camera equipment
in it having to golf to a hole far away from where the clubhouse was and then we would set up and
shoot like i'm used to stealing stuff and you know when I got to Born Identity and suddenly I have a big studio and they
put this line producer on this guy, Pat Crawley, and it's my first time having like a line producer
like that. And all Pat would do all day long is tell me all the things we couldn't afford to do.
I'd be like, really glad we didn't have you on Swingers. I'm glad we couldn't afford you.
We didn't have any, we couldn't afford the person to tell us what we couldn't do so we just did everything and so i wasn't going to be stopped
so you know there's a lot of born identity that's just matt and i stealing stuff and shooting stuff
you know stuff the studios told me they're going to fire me if i shoot and we just go and steal
and shoot and but the end result is the camera's kind of handheld because that's what it took to
do it because i'm operating the camera and i'm doing the light i'm doing everything
that's always sort of stayed with me mr mrs smith there's a scene where a robot drops a bomb into
the basement that's something i wanted to shoot i shot that in post-production i rebuilt a piece
of the basement of my mom's barn in westchester. I got the people from iRobot to bring one of their war robots down for free.
And I shot it with that same friend, Avram,
the one who went on the golf course on swingers.
And, you know, originally it was a hand that threw the grenade down
and we shot a whole scene with a robot and put it in Mr. and Mrs. Smith.
And I just paid for it and did it myself.
And the whole opening of Live, Die, Repeat or Edge of Tomorrow's got
where Tom Cruise is doing those
news interviews. That's me filming Tom in the editing room. We were just mocking that up to
see what would the opening look like if I did that. And that's actually what's in the movie.
Has there been a moment where you've done that and it has been not helpful or it has hurt something?
Because obviously the ingenuity and the creativity and the willingness to kind of blow it up
seems like it's mostly helpful.
It improves the movies that you're working on.
Have you made a choice where you've been like,
let's blow this up and you haven't felt good about it?
No, but I've gotten very lucky that no one's gotten hurt
and no one's gotten arrested.
Even on the wall, as independent as it is,
when we're editing in New York City,
there's a sequence where I thought it'd be good if he grabbed a piece from one radio
and brought it to the other radio and thought, I want to mock that up.
And I asked, all the stuff was out here in L.A.,
and I asked them to ship everything to New York to the editing room.
And it was like February in New York, and suddenly it was a sunny day,
and I was like, let's run out to the playground.
And I dressed up my assistant editor in Aaron Taylor Johnson's work stuff
and literally went into the playground.
It was a warm day in February.
It was a weird winter in New York.
So the playground was actually pretty packed.
They were like, kids, get out of the way.
And I shot in the sand of the playground.
And, you know, it's illegal to be in a playground in New York without a kid.
And one of the producers on the film is English.
And I'm like, oh, she's applying for a green card.
I'm like, would she get arrested?
I'm like, I'm really pushing it here.
Like, we could all get like, you know, get some kind of sex crime.
I mean, we're in the playground with military stuff and a movie camera.
But, and it's in the movie and it came out great.
And it's, so I think, and I'm not doing it on purpose.
I mean, I really it's it's in the movie and the movie is better for it, you know, but I'm sure I'm getting some kind of thrill from breaking the law.
That's what I was going to ask you.
Does it do you get a creative jolt or like some sort of emotional jolt just from trying this stuff?
I think it ends up in the tension of the photography. I mean, I think part of the tension in Bourne Identity
and scenes like Garda Nord where it's totally stolen
when Jason Bourne goes in there
is the fact that we're genuinely worried we're going to get caught.
Because we are.
Both people who recognize Matt Damon are going to screw up the shot
or converging on us, and the police are converging on us
because we're in there with a movie camera.
So I do think in the case of the wall like how that photography worked out has a little more tension that it wouldn't have say if i had permission and could be there all day as opposed
to i'm nervously looking around there's no cops let's let's just do this get this done and get
out of here and that you know obviously the wall the whole movie has a is a very tense movie so i think
me being in some personal jeopardy myself while i'm shooting shows up on screen a little bit
yeah i can i can sense that are you excited now to be doing something bigger again or do you not
think of things that way there's rumors about a lot of different kind of ip franchises you might be doing well even when i do bigger i'm really
i'm always bringing the small stuff to it i mean i like to think about myself as making sort of
independent films within the studio system so even when i'm looking at the bigger projects they're
they're they're a little bit you know people bring me material, they're, they're, they're a little bit, you know,
people bring me material where they're like, we want you to sort of shake it up or change it or,
which is what independent films do so well. Uh, so I'm, I'm not often presented with something
where they're like, we want this to be like down the middle. Uh, and in fact fact a lot of times you know i'll propose an idea for a film or you know
within a movie i'll be like what if we do it this way and someone will say that doesn't seem doug
lyman enough well i thought of it it's my how can you say it's not me and they're like no because
we think of you you know really like shaking it up and doing something really unexpected that seems just too ordinary so
even i am looking at you know bigger things but they are they still have the same heart that the
wall has you know and it's putting that camera on my shoulder and just going out and shooting
it's just never that far from me no matter what i'm doing well let's wrap up with this one is
there a dream
movie that you've been wanting
to make that you have not been able to make?
Yeah, I have a project
about ordinary people going
into space that I've been working
on basically my entire
adult filmmaking
career in different
forms. I'm really
interested in when the future starts
like occasionally you have it you get in a tesla and you put it on autonomous drive and you're like
oh my god i'm in the jetsons like the future's here so we have little tastes of like the future
being here but nothing would really do that as us going into space.
And especially because I'm so interested in adventures that are available now.
I mean, it's part of what's so compelling for me about The Wall is that it's this extraordinary adventure story.
But you're not going to Middle Earth.
You're not in a galaxy far, far away.
Like, it's happening every day in the Middle East.
Like, it's, there's, you know, it's probably why, you know,
obviously when you look at these ads for the military, why, you know,
a lot of what they're promising is you can have this extraordinary adventure that will test your heroism and your bravery and your mettle and your resilience.
American soldiers face that every day.
As we sit here in this comfortable studio speaking, there's an American soldier somewhere fighting for his or her life
somewhere on this planet, you know. So it's that I'm really interested in
extraordinary adventures that are that any of us could go on. You don't have to be born,
you know, in another century or another planet. That is definitely what the wall is.
Doug, thank you very much for being here today.
I appreciate it.
Thank you.