The Big Picture - Female-Powered Comedy With ‘Rough Night’ Creators Lucia Aniello and Paul W. Downs | The Big Picture (Ep. 16)
Episode Date: June 16, 2017Ringer editor-in-chief Sean Fennessey and staff writer Lindsay Zoladz discuss the dearth of female filmmakers in the R-rated comedy space (2:00) before Sean chats with the ‘Rough Night’ writing an...d directing team of Lucia Aniello and Paul W. Downs about meeting at the UCB Theatre, developing ‘Broad City,’ and making a studio comedy starring big names like Scarlett Johansson, Kate McKinnon, and Zoë Kravitz (17:00). Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hello and welcome to The Big Picture, a Channel 33 Movies podcast. My name is Sean Fennessy. I'm the editor-in-chief of The Ringer. I'm very excited today for a couple of reasons.
One, I've got a great conversation coming with Lucia Agnello
and Paul W. Downs, the writer and director
and partners behind Rough Night, a new comedy.
Two, I've got Ringer staff writer Lindsay Zoladz,
who profiled Lucia, coming on to talk to me.
And three, as you may have heard,
we have a new theme song on this podcast.
That song is Orange Shirt by a band called Discovery, led by Rostam, who you may know from Vampire Weekend, who's a solo artist now. So I just want to say thanks to Rostam,
thanks to Beggar's Group for making that happen for us and hope you enjoyed it.
And now we're going to chat with Lindsay Zoletz.
Lindsay, thank you so much for joining me. Thank you for having me. So,
Lindsay, you spent some time with Lucia Agnello, and she has a pretty interesting backstory. Before she was a film director, she got her start as a comedy person. Can you tell me a little bit about
kind of where she came from? Yeah. So along with the
other co-creators of Broad City, Ilana Glazer, Abby Jacobson, and Paul Downs, who's a writer and
who is her partner. He also plays Trey on Anyway, so they all met at UCB, the Upright Citizens Brigade Theater in New York City,
which, you know, a lot of other comics, maybe like a generation before them, kind of came
through there.
Amy Poehler is one of the founders.
So there is a real tradition and a community of that they took improv classes there
and sketch classes about a decade ago now and they all met in various ways and Lucia was a performer
before she was ever really thinking of directing or and was was like writing and performing sketch
in a duo with Paul.
So when I talked to several people for the piece, they kind of pointed out that that's part of what makes her so good at directing comedy
is she's coming at it from a performer standpoint
rather than just purely thinking on cinematic terms,
which I do think you kind of, you know, I think that's a strength when
doing a movie like this or doing a show like Broad City that kind of, you know, she's asking
her actresses in particular to kind of go to some extremes that I think if she can kind of
ground it in showing them how it's done or kind of like riffing on an idea herself, which just seems like she did a lot on the set of this film.
I think that just creates a level of comfort on set that seemed like she really pulled off for this. Yeah, it's an interesting thing, right? Because a lot of times you hear actors say,
mostly off the record, that they don't like it when filmmakers do line readings for them or that
they tell them how to give the line. But in talking to Alana for your story, Alana told you
that she liked when Lucia essentially performed the moment to kind of show her to put herself in
it and to show her what she saw in the joke, in the line, in the reading. And I feel like there's a fine line between comedy and drama there where there's a
collaborative quality that Lucia comes back to over and over again.
Yeah. And I think the fact that she's still working with, you know, her friends,
Paul Downs is also in the movie and he's hilarious in it. Plays a very long scene
in an adult diaper and no pants, which is really the breakout moment.
Yeah. So I think that the fact that she's, at least in the past, has been working mostly with
friends and people she knows outside of a professional sphere, I don't think
they see that kind of relationship as overstepping at all. But, you know, a lot of what what the piece is about,
but also what she's going through right now is this transition from the more indie kind of like
DIY comedy scene. And, you know, even Broad City being on Comedy Central had kind of a
scrappy energy to it. Translating that voice to a giant studio comedy is no easy feat. And I think just
working with the star power that she is on this film, Scarlett Johansson, Demi Moore is in it.
You know, that's a whole different ballgame. So I think it was interesting to talk to her
in that moment of transition in her career and see how she's navigating it.
Yeah, she talked to you a little bit about some of her forebearers.
And it's notable that this is her first.
This is the first female directed studio comedy since 1998, which sounds insane to say out loud.
R-rated, actually.
R-rated, there you go.
Yes.
Which is interesting in and of itself, too. Yeah, the Pitch Perfect franchise, which Elizabeth Banks, I think she directed both of those, right?
Yes.
Those have been very lucrative, but it's all sort of been towards this has directed an R-rated film feels really ground to have kind of dispelled that myth for this
generation. So it really feels like time for not just one, but many more R-rated comedies directed
by women. But yeah, Lucia was, so the last, actually the last R-rated studio comedy directed by a woman was Half Baked uh which is
not about women at all but Tamara Davis um who also did CB4 and a bunch of other like music
videos and stuff like that in the 90s um she directed Half Baked in 1998 and then there has
been a total dry spell uh since. But Lucia pointed her out
as a really big influence on her and noted how those movies have a real edge to them.
And they're really funny and goofy and about stoners and stuff. But there is kind of an
inherent like social commentary running through. They're not
dumb movies. And I think that she aspires to make comedy just on a similar tone of that,
where it's a little bit smarter maybe than the people in the film.
Yeah. And you guys talked a little bit about that, right? Obviously, the movie is very silly.
You noted the adult diaper thing. There is a lot of gross out humor, I guess you could say. But there is this subtextual, sometimes purely textual discussion of police brutality and drug use and the police state and especially Alana Glazer's character is like very woke, for lack of a better word. And she kind of like subverts some of the notions of what it means to be an
activist and a feminist, you know, you and Lucia talked about that too, right?
Yeah. We,
I was impressed that she was very open to talking about sort of the,
the quote unquote internet controversies that,
that may or may not have like translated into the outside world in thinking
about this film, but there was a little bit of a backlash. I know when the trailer first came out that so the premise of the movie is basically a
bachelorette party gone awry and a male stripper accidentally ends up dead. And there were some
blog posts of people saying, you know, I'm going to boycott this film because it's not presenting sex work in a responsible way
and all this other stuff, which I see those concerns. But I also think, you know, if you're
going to pick apart like every single comedy that comes down the line, it's going to be hard
to find one that that does check all those boxes. And I do think personally, there's a lot worse things to boycott in the world
than the first R-rated comedy directed by a woman in 20 years.
So that's just my two cents.
But I was impressed that, you know,
I was very curious to talk to a filmmaker like her
in this age of kind of internet outrage
and where there's kind of a
reaction culture just from seeing the trailer which tells you you know not that much about
the movie as i think i know you've seen it so you would agree there's like a lot there's a lot that
i didn't get from the kind of traditional beats of the trailer.
Yeah, I don't want to necessarily overcomplicate what the movie's about,
but it is not strictly about the outrage blog posts that were written after people saw two and a half minutes.
Exactly. And I would be curious to read criticism if people have it of like after they've seen the whole film, but she was really open to talking about, you know,
what it's like to make a studio movie in this time when there's just so much
judgment and tweets and so many voices out there being critical of something
before you even put it out. And I did think she was,
she seemed really like not,
she was really like unflappable about it.
And I was impressed at how directly
she kind of wanted to engage in those conversations.
And she was really curious about what I thought of the movie
and if it was like over the line in certain ways.
But I do think just coming back to like the director
she was citing from the 90s who inspired her,
she also mentioned Amy Heckerling, who I've interviewed and profiled as well.
When I told her that, she wanted me to tell her every detail.
You had a lot of details about Amy in your piece.
Yeah, I told her that when I met Amy Heckerling,
she was wearing a bucket hat that she cut the top out of
so that her crazy hair could like spill at the top.
And Lucia was was very pleased by that detail.
And she also really admires Penelope Spheeris, who kind of came out of the punk underground doing like Decline of Western Civilization, those two documentaries, and then got to do Wayne's World in 1992. And, you know, that is not like,
that feels like a very 90s trajectory to me now.
Like, I think the fact that she has to look that far back
for these role models,
like working within the studio comedy system
of just like women that were making big movies,
but did have an edge to them
and weren't just weren't afraid to cross certain lines. You know, I think she's she's a throwback
to that time in a way for the purely practical reason of there just weren't other women making
these films in the past 20 years. Yeah, there's also something that she notes in your piece about
being obsessed with MTV, noting who the filmmakers were behind certain music videos.
One thing that's kind of lost as MTV has transitioned in the last 10 years or so into
a different kind of network, maybe the last 20 years or so, is you also lose this kind of on-ramp
to directing careers for a lot of people. And a lot of women came out of that experience, obviously.
And I wonder if that's also a factor in some women not quite getting the chance to do hard art comedy like this, or even just have you and I have talked many times,
and you've written a lot about the lack of opportunity for female filmmakers. And I wonder
if the erosion of some of that stuff has made it an issue too. Yeah. Well, I wonder, um,
if it's more, I think this was a larger conversation that I had talking to Lucia too.
If it's, I think those things that we once considered on ramps are now kind of like ends
in and of themselves. Cause I think you could say that you could have said the same thing about TV,
um, that you could have about music videos. And now, you know, I was I was very curious to know
why in 2017, did she still want to make the big studio comedy when it doesn't necessarily feel
like that's the be all and end all and that that's like the end goal anymore. And I think especially
for female comedians, like if you think of Tina Fey and Amy Poehler and how they're, you know, they had sisters come out last year, which was like fine and funny, but it felt like a small part of their stardom.
It didn't feel like the sort of like Will Ferrell vehicle that it's all kind of leading up to that.
It was it almost felt weird that they were doing that movie for some reason.
It felt like kind of a throwback to want to do that kind of a film.
So I think the cool thing about someone like Lucia
and the moment that she is coming into her talent
is that there are so many ways to get your story out there and you don't I think
it's amazing that she will have this movie under her belt and it's proving to studios that she can
handle a big budget film like this but you know she's when I was talking to her she said I
she would go back to tv and do something. She would do a web series again. I think filmmakers now are having this freedom
to determine what is the best format for telling a story.
And it's not always the big movie anymore.
It will be very interesting to see what she does next.
Lindsay, thank you for chatting with me about this today.
And please go read Lindsay's story on TheRinger.com.
Okay, thanks to Lindsay.
Before my conversation with Lucia Agnello and Paul W. Downs,
first a word from our sponsor.
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Lucia, Paul, thank you so much for being here.
Thanks for having us.
Thank you for having us.
So, guys, you made a film together, but you've done a lot of other things before that.
And I want people to kind of understand the origin, you know, where you came from, how you met, how you became partners creatively, spiritually, maybe, other ways.
A hundred percent spiritually, yeah.
Yeah.
First and foremost, spiritually.
I'd say so.
Oh.
So you met at UCB?
Yes, the church.
In New York.
The church of UCB.
The church.
The church of comedy, UCB.
Level one, yeah.
When was that? i don't remember the
year it was i think i want to say 2005 okay i think i want to say or six and were you guys
students at the school yes we were we were level one yeah we were level one grad students
yes doing our graduate degree in improv comedy and yeah and mix them ups and zip zap zops you
know wow was the idea to be comedy professionals or was it something you guys were doing as a lark?
No, I think we were both pretty serious about it independently.
And then we met and we're like, oh, okay, let's, we can do this together.
Truly was like grad school for me.
I mean, that's, I was like, oh, I'll be, I'll just do classes and do this.
I, when I first moved was like, oh, maybe I'll be a comedic actor because I had done sketch and improv in college
and then I was like no I'm I miss it so how do you guys figure out you're going to be comedy
partners I'm always interested to figure out like what arranged marriage yeah it was a slow burn
maybe polar put us together she said you two are you two are together that's no um we uh yeah we
well we met in a level one and then we were on an improv team together.
At the Magnet Theater.
Yes, at the Magnet Theater.
And I guess we started making videos.
Yeah, I mean, essentially what happened is we were both, you know, taking classes and doing improv.
And Paul got put on, like, teams a lot more frequently than I did.
And so I was like, hey, you know, I don't think that's
fulfilling for you. And, um, let's go and make some videos. Cause at the time that, you know,
people were starting to make videos, but it really was like the beginning of the bubble.
Um, and I had made some videos in college that were not actually even that comedic to be honest,
but, um, I, I felt that it was, it was the right time, the right place to be, to be honest but um I I felt that it was it was the right time the right place to be to be making
videos and so I and also we were spending so much time together at that point that we'd start to
just like have ideas for stuff we'd start making things and then all of a sudden you know even if
it was just like a thousand views it made so much more sense to make one video for a thousand views
than try to fill you know 100 seat theater 10 times so it just kind of made more sense on a
numbers you know scale and so we just started times. So it just kind of made more sense on a numbers, you know, scale.
And so we just started making more and more videos.
It was able to get us some representation,
which was so important to us at the time.
And, yeah, we just kind of went from there.
And that is also where you guys met Alana, right, from Broad City?
That's right.
And Abby.
And Abby as well.
I was in class with Abby separately from you.
And I also was, yeah.
Abby and I actually auditioned for our first Herald team together.
Oh, God, this story.
It is so funny because Abby and I somehow reminisce about it a lot.
Yeah, constantly.
And then Alana and Lucia will be like, oh, geez.
And then leave the room.
It's like as if they were anointed by God in this Herald audition they talk about.
Well, look, we were budding comedians. And we decided to get a drink before. If they were like anointed by God in this, this Herald audition, they talk about it. We were,
you know,
budding comedians and,
uh,
we decided to get a drink before we,
and it was like midday.
Tell us about the drink.
We had wine.
It was fine.
We went to a place on 21st street,
had a glass of wine audition,
and then did a scene together and both got a callback.
It was,
it was a big day for both of us.
That's a wild story.
You guys are crazy.
Yeah,
it was wild.
He's on our team.
Yeah.
So did you and Alana have a similar meet cute and soar into the Harold stars?
Well, Abby and Alana and I never got on Harold team. So we, I mean, we're actually in the same
boat, but you did have a meet cute. We did have a meet cute where we met at a party and we were
wearing the same outfits, but we, but Alana and Abby and I actually, you know, we became friends.
We actually worked at the same day job,
which was kind of like a group on kind of place,
which is what Deals is based on, on Broad City.
So we kind of had a little world outside of comedy,
but they were making the web series at the time.
And so we were kind of just like, you know, friends,
but, you know, collaborators at times.
And we just, you know,
it kind of just felt like we were two duos that were like running at the same pace kind of in terms of being like hyper dedicated to
it and really being passionate about it and wanting to just really figure out a way to be
professional comedians. And so. And being in love, you know. Well, yeah, sure. And so, yeah,
that's how we kind of all became friends. How exactly did you end up working specifically on
Broad City? Did Abbey and Alana ask? Were you end up working specifically on Broad City?
Did Abby and Alana ask?
Were you guys always sort of plotting something together?
So when they first came to LA to pitch the show, because they had done the web series
and Lucia had directed an episode or two.
And I was in an episode.
And, you know, we were living in New York at the time that that was going on.
We had moved to LA and then they came out to pitch the show.
And Alana actually crashed with us for a while. Maybe like a month or two. Like a month. She was our Dobby the house
elf, self-titled. And they sold the show and Lucia directed the pilot. That was kind of the first,
like, you know, the foray into our collaborating with them. I directed the pilot. And then when
it got picked up to series, they asked us both to write on the show and then we wrote paul's character trey not necessarily for paul but kind you know he
started like reading it at table reads and it just kind of made sense and then he ended up
getting it but it wasn't initially developed for him but then yeah so then we started working on
the show and we've been there every season since. For the past 25 years. 25 years.
Congratulations on your quarter century.
That's great.
Four seasons only.
That takes a long time.
So when you were in school, were you studying to be a filmmaker?
Was that your expectation?
Yeah, I was a film studies major.
Okay.
So it was a history and criticism more so than production.
So I didn't really have a ton of experience making stuff.
And at the time, I was like, oh, this is not really useful to me.
But now that I actually am making movies, I do find myself sometimes thinking about more pretentious things.
But it is still a comedy, so you kind of can't go overboard.
But I am very grateful for that.
Like education was definitely helpful and I dig it.
And, you know, sometimes when people are referencing things and I can say, I saw, I've dig it. And sometimes when people are referencing things,
I can say, yeah, I've seen it.
That makes me feel good.
What's the most pretentious name drop you have for Rough Night?
Oh, God.
Wow.
That's a great question.
I guess I would at times reference Busby Berkeley musicals
for that section where the girls were doing their dancing.
So I would sometimes refer to that.
That's a great one.
That's perfect.
Thank you.
And Paul, you were always going to be an actor.
Was the plan also to be a writer as well?
In high school and college, I did sketch and I did improv.
So yeah, I was writing.
I wish I had realized that earlier and in school just wrote screenplays
and did that more seriously because I always planned to do it.
But in school, I kind of had more fun.
Good for you.
I was like, I'll get to it.
When you guys are writing,
tell me about that process being
you're together and you're together.
So is that exciting?
Is it easy to collaborate?
Is it difficult?
Well, first of all, it's fully nude.
So in that way, it's different than I think a lot of people do.
It's the most honest way to do it.
Truly vulnerable.
Actually, sometimes it's in the complete darkness.
We do often brainstorm in complete darkness.
Because that way you're not looking at the other person's face or you're not distracted by eye rolling.
Or any other stimulus, really.
Or also you're not distracted by phones.
The perils of having beautiful partners.
We did a couple times when we had deadlines for certain things do that, and it was really useful.
Yeah, I highly recommend word vomiting to each other in the dark.
It really actually helps.
Things do come from that.
You're forced to visualize things in a way that you might not necessarily if you're looking at a plant that that you're like oh i have to water that it's dying you know you don't get easily distracted
but we were asked to do a take on a franchise and we had like two days to do it and so we had to
basically come up with a movie in two days obviously it would change if we got the job but
we were like yikes how the hell are we going to do this okay let's just turn off the lights yeah
we just sat in the dark for two days and it worked so that was good um yeah but beyond that our process is generally that we outline
everything together and so and you know sometimes we'll have some pieces of dialogue and sometimes
we'll improvise as the characters to kind of bring that dialogue you know about but um then what we
do is we each go off and write the exact same scene. And then we switch.
I read his, he reads mine.
We highlight our favorite parts of the other person's script.
And then one of us combines the scene.
But weirdly, usually like, you know, one of us,
well, first of all, we usually have like the same jokes.
And then-
For better or worse, yeah.
Yeah, for better or worse.
And then we're like-
Someone's like, great, that must be a good joke
if we both wrote it.
Or is it a hack joke because it's too obvious?
Or yeah, is it just Someone's like, great, that must be a good joke if we both wrote it. Or is it a hack joke because it's too obvious? Or, yeah, is it just in our vocabulary?
Yeah.
And then, but, you know, that way, once you combine it, it really feels like you have a third draft and not a second draft.
So that's a really extremely collaborative process.
Yes.
Uncommonly so.
Well, we used to write more, like, linearly.
We'd sit next to each other and, like, you know, argue over a line.
And it just became.
It was slow and not helpful. And the thing that's fun is because we get to surprise the other
person, I get to try and make Lucia laugh and she gets to try and make me laugh. And so I'm writing
for my favorite audience, you know, the smartest audience. Wow. Thanks. Yeah. And in doing that,
it does make you, I'm like, oh, well, sometimes I write things that are just for her.
But oftentimes those are the best jokes.
Things that I'm like, oh, this is just for her.
This is just a surprise.
This is a Easter egg for Lucia that we'll never see the light of day because it's only like a thing that we'll get.
And oftentimes because of the specificity where we've found those things are really, people respond to that. It also forces you to just write the draft quickly
because you know that the other person's writing it
and you can't seem like a slacker.
So it's kind of like time chess.
You have to just get it out
and you can't overthink it.
And it forces you to just be a little bit sharper, I think.
Yeah.
I mean, in a way,
it's like we get a third draft in our first
because we've both written something,
but we get to just vomit it out
and we both know it's like, ah, the other person will pick up
the slack and who cares. You're not as
precious about it. Is that
true for Broad City and for the web series
stuff and also for the movies? How we write? Yeah.
Yes, that's how we write everything.
How we write our episodes are Broad City. That's how we write everything.
And it's faster than just
sitting next to each other. And we've been trying
to tell people to do this and I believe
not one person has adapted our process.
We are always asking other,
uh,
comedy duos or partners what they do.
And no one's ever done this.
And then when we're like,
well,
we have a good way.
People are like,
that sounds like it's too much work.
And no one has ever said this to me before.
You guys seem like aliens.
Yeah.
Um,
so how,
what is the difference then between writing for Broad City and writing a feature?
Page length.
A feature is about 100 pages.
Was it truly similar, though?
I mean, the tone, obviously, of the movie recalls Broad City in some ways.
In some ways.
Yeah.
And a lot of our favorite episodes of Broad City have a lot of story.
They have plot. And so that is something that in a movie you do want to have turns lot of story. They have plot.
And so that is something that in a movie you do want to have turns
and you do want to have plot that you don't always need for television.
And a lot of times today television doesn't have it.
I think in drama it happens a lot more.
I think we often, in the movie,
we did our best to really have things pay off and climax
in a really big way in the third act,
which was, I guess I'd say, just something we've never really spent a lot of time doing before,
making sure that all the stories kind of come together at the end,
things that kind of seemed like one-liners that maybe was a joke,
but you didn't really see what the point was.
Now all of a sudden it really makes sense.
And so we really tried to make the story have that kind of snowball effect
where by the end everything kind of snowball effect where by
the end, everything kind of fits together and holy shit, wow, what an amazing movie.
Yes. And I think the other thing we've learned is that writing a movie, the biggest difference is
because you're watching it with a bunch of people, you do need those big pants down moments because
it's so much more fun to watch a comedy, especially with a group of people. You know,
when you're at home watching TV, and I've've said this before but i don't really laugh out loud often you know i like smile
to myself wistfully and hug yourself touch the screen and yeah i hug myself but uh when you're
on a movie and other people are laughing you just want to get in on it and it's it's more like it's
just really it's a theatrical experience yeah i was gonna say a theatrical experience but yeah
spiritual theater can be again back to church u to church, UCB. It's physical
though, too, right? You hear somebody responding and your
body sort of responds to it. That's the thing. You should say
your thing. Oh, God. Yeah, I know. I'm sorry.
I'm pimping you into this. She was saying it's the
physical expression of pleasure, which is a
lot like... There's a
awkward theme happening. A certain kind of pornography
has more
external expressions of it
more so than drama,
where drama, somebody could be stoked
and sitting there the whole time.
They're like, I liked that.
I had pleasure from that.
But you don't really see that pleasure.
But from comedy,
you actually see somebody writhing about in a way.
Did you like it?
You're like, oh, I saw what you were doing.
No, somebody liked it.
Was that good for you?
You get what I'm saying.
Was that good for you?
Yeah, that was good.
Okay, great.
Money shots. I do know what you mean about TV.
So you guys should see Rough Night if you want money shots.
I tell you what.
That's exactly right.
If you want to have a laughter orgasm, yeah, come and see Rough Night in the theater.
Yeah.
I do understand what you mean, though, by TV, which is when you're amused by something,
you just seem amused and you don't have that physical reaction.
But so when you guys are trying to write these pants-down moments, as you say, is it hard?
Is it hard to do like a comedy set piece?
The construction of it is a little bit different.
And I think that that's something that we knew that, you know, like you have to be able to have somebody who, you know, is a very well read MBA having person has to have the same response to a big physical joke as somebody who doesn't speak
English very well or or whatever and so you want to be able to say like well what's the most
universal thing and oftentimes it is physical humor but you don't want it just to be a movie
of people falling down and hurting themselves so it is like a balance of being like well this
everybody does react to this everybody does enjoy this but how do you make it how do you craft it
in a way that is important to the story?
And the fun thing we've been able to do with testing the movie and showing it to, you know, 400, 500 seat theaters is see the things that everyone does respond to.
And sometimes it's actually really small things like Zoe Kravitz has a joke about Zillow.
It's a good joke.
And it always does well.
And it's like we did not expect that joke to do so well we
were like oh this is kind of like it's like a niche joke it's like are you looking for a house
you might know what zillow is but everybody seems to respond to her timing and it's performance
and of course and then it's also character based like her character is the kind of person who would
have judgment over somebody else's zillow listing. And I think we've established, you established that enough so that like you already are like,
oh, that's so Blair.
And the other, I think the other big thing is when we were writing it, even though initially
we didn't know it was going to be a big studio movie, we didn't know that we might have room
to do things that in TV, it moves so quickly and the budget is such that you don't get
to do a car crash or an explosion.
You don't get to do the bigger stuff that you can in movies.
And so that was also
kind of exciting. It did open
up the sort of
scope of what we were able to do.
Was the script just written on spec
just to show people what you
could do essentially or did you hope that it would become
something? We were pretty committed to making
it happen. We weren't sure what the scale scale was we were like maybe we'll kickstart
it maybe we'll make it a small indie thing but that was kind of why parts of it or a fair amount
of it is in houses because we figured that we could figure out a way to seduce somebody into
letting us use their house even if we did an iphone though we were like we are going to try and do
this because you know we write for women a lot and we were like oh this is a really funny thing
for a group of funny women and we know a lot of them to do.
And so I think we really hoped that we would find a way.
We didn't know it was going to be something that a lot of people would be interested in
making.
So credit to my producer.
He noticed, though, that he was like, a lot of this movie takes place in a house.
I feel like this is a screenwriting trick to get this script sold because studios know.
You know, it wasn't to sell it.
It was really so we could make it.
Yes.
So we could manage it if we had to kickstart it and do it in the summer with just friends
of ours, you know?
Was there any part of you that wanted to change it after it's sold to a studio?
We did change it a little bit.
Yeah.
Some of them were like, okay, make that car explode.
We were like, we can do it.
We can do it.
Actually, one thing that we cut that we never put back in because it was very expensive still,
was they're walking around Miami and they're having fun and they're taking selfies and they're drunk.
And we were going to have Jillian Bell's character get on a motorcycle and pretend to be on a motorcycle
and get off and knock down a row of motorcycles and just like destroy all these Ducatis in Miami.
And the studio was like, do you need to?
And we're like, no, we don't need to.
We don't need to.
It's like a Pee Wee Herman homage.
Yeah.
Exactly.
Exactly.
Okay. We don't need to. We don't need to. It's like a Pee Wee Herman homage. Yeah, exactly. Okay, so the script hits the blacklist and people want to buy it?
It was already purchased.
We sold it before the blacklist.
What is it like to be in a bidding war, clamored after?
Was that exciting?
Or is that just trumped up Deadline.com stuff?
Don't say that word.
No, it was a really fun night.
It was crazy because we did not know it would happen that way,
but it was sort of like we got a call that was like,
here's all these offers, here's all these things,
you need to decide now what you're going to do.
And we were like, what?
We were sent out on a Thursday and we sold it Friday.
Wow.
And they were essentially a lot of places imposed.
This is DL info, but a lot of places imposed.
Just definitely say it on a public forum.
So I'm going to say it. Don't, 3, 2, 1. Don't release this, 3L info, but a lot of places... So definitely say it on a public forum. So I'm going to say it.
Don't, 3, 2, 1. Don't release this.
3, 2, 1. A lot of
places impose a deadline. They're like, you have
one hour to decide.
So it's kind of insane. It was like we have
your child. We were about to go to dinner
and we were like, we literally had
to, we weren't, we were like, we're really hungry. We have
to eat, but we're doing all these phone calls. Anyway.
3, 2, 1, back. Hey, we're really hungry. We have to eat. But we're doing all these phone calls. Anyway. Three, two, one, back.
Hey.
Thank you so much.
Great save.
So it was exciting.
It was.
And it was successful.
It was cool.
And so right away, we're like, this is the next thing we're going to do.
We're going to dive right into this.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So how does the cast come together?
It's a genuinely amazing group of comedians and a man as well.
Thank you.
Thank you so much.
He agrees.
I agree.
I am a man.
We are in love with our cast.
They are so great.
So dope.
And, you know, we work on a show that exploits the natural chemistry between two real life best friends.
And so we got spoiled in that way that we like feel like, oh, oh well we can write for the for groups of friends
and it feels authentic but we've had the crutch of writing for two women who really are best
friends so we were of course like oh my god we it's so important to us that the their friendship
feels authentic and it feels real and you feel like these would really be friends and so we were
you know of course nervous putting together the cast that like would these people really get along?
Would they read real on screen?
But they really genuinely gelled and bonded so quickly in such an incredible way that it was just like, oh, let's just turn on the camera, man.
Like they made our job so much easier just because they genuinely just did like each other so much.
And they had so much fun together.
So much fun.
And so it was really like heaven sent,
if you believe in heaven.
That's for another podcast to determine.
Did you do any like tricks to have them bond?
Did you all get wasted one night?
Yeah, we did a spin the bottle day one.
Spin the bottle.
Nice, that's effective.
Went really well.
For you.
Yeah, for me.
No, actually what we did is we did like a us only read um at a
hotel in new york and it was so blistering hot out it was one of the hottest days of the year
it was like 100 degrees and the air conditioning in this we were like on the top floor and so the
room had baked and the air conditioning went out and so everyone was like drenched but we were like
this is a beautiful hotel room and it is disgusting.
It stinks.
We are all taking off clothes.
So it was actually just like melting together.
Our brains were smushed.
And we were all together.
It was like a sopping scene.
And we were like, oh, we can stay here as late as we want.
We can have dinner.
And we were like, not, bye.
After the read, we were like, we'll hang out for 10 more minutes.
But then we have to go.
That's sort of suitable for some of the tone and the panic and the distress in the movie.
Get me out of here!
Was it scary once filming started?
I mean, did you guys feel ready, being a big studio comedy, having a budget?
Was it different significantly from Broad City?
It was not.
In many ways, it was not different from Broad City or from Time Traveling Bong or Web Series
or anything we'd ever done in some ways.
Like honestly, when it came down to it,
we had about the same amount of time per scene
for page count as anything,
which was kind of shocking.
But I think it was because, you know,
with five women, that's a lot of coverage.
You don't want to just get singles.
You don't want to just do wides.
Like you want to get a variation of coverage. So like, especially because women, that's a lot of coverage. You don't want to just get singles. You don't want to just do wides. Like, you want to get a variation of coverage.
So, like, especially because you're just in a house
that it feels like it's dynamic no matter where you are.
And so, like, you know, that kind of coverage
really does take a lot of time.
So, you know, it was quick.
And, you know, sometimes we had a little bit more time.
Sometimes we had less.
We had, you know, but on the other side,
like, the flip side
everybody in the cast was so good that if i really had only gotten one taken i did get more than that
i still would have been able to cut this movie so it really was like after the first take was like
okay great now let's have fun because you guys nailed it there's um there's movie stars in this
movie uh is that at all different for you guys,
to be working with a higher wattage person?
I know it's different, but did it feel different?
Well, I think we're really spoiled
that we get to work with such talented comedians
all the time on Broad City.
Not only Abby and Alana,
but also the guest stars we're able to have.
We've been very, very fortunate.
And then we work with someone like Scarlett Johansson,
who's not only super funny,
I mean, she is so funny and so good and improvises.
I feel like people get when they watch SNL.
Yeah.
If you've seen her, she's done it five times now.
You know she can do it.
She gets the joke.
She's funny.
But to be in the presence of somebody like that who can act dramatically like that and who is such an incredibly gifted actor was unbelievable.
The range is like mind blowing.
And you get it.
You're like, oh, movie star.
I understand what I get that.
I get what a movie star is.
Jillian, we've had a comedy crush on for years.
We've written other things with her in mind.
And to see her do those vulnerable moments, she is so she has so much heart and is so
good.
She's such a good actor.
Honestly, they're like they're all movie stars. They are. That's the thing. We have five movie stars. They is so, she has so much heart and is so good. She's such a good actor. Honestly, they're like, they're all movie stars.
They are. That's the thing. We have five movie stars. They're so incredible.
Also, you got Demi Moore, Ty Burrell, we got them all.
I mean, you have Kate McKinnon.
I don't know if I was supposed to say Demi Moore, but her and Ty Burrell are secret weapons
in the movie.
Aren't they so great?
Secret weapons is exactly what they are.
And really down to clown.
It seemed like it.
Yeah. And everything that happens with
those two and zoe is uh among the funniest stuff in the movie yeah i don't want to spoil it for
people but there is some physical experiences that happen that's exactly right well said i tell you
what everyone was really game it was truly collaborative yeah what about the chemistry
between you two guys on set like fighting, screaming, yelling, clawing.
I mean, do you have a different way of communicating?
Is there a lot of like just eye contact that clarifies what I need you to do?
We have a shorthand that's like, you know, we can do.
That was a quick eye, what was it, eye bulge.
I do an eye bulge to be like, stop, you know.
Yes, I know what that means.
Or just, it's a kind of like also like, watch out.
You know, that's like a yeah
but there's a there's plenty of uh shorthand we have yeah which I could never tell you about
just kidding just kidding maybe off mic I mean that's the thing yeah off mic three two one um
when you guys are working together as writers on set is it is it much easier for you to kind
of communicate specifically what you want do you do you get very in there with, say, an actor who's not always in comedies and say,
it needs to be like this, or do you let people run free?
How does that work?
Well, they're usually so honed in on the character that they are making choices that are within the lane of what we need.
So I haven't, at least in this movie, I didn't really need to steer anybody in a vastly different direction that they were already in.
And every once in a while, we would have very specific interpretations of stuff.
But it was never like, here's a line read.
It was still like, throw it away a little or whatever.
I'm comfortable with one.
So Lucia, when I'm acting, can give me a line read.
Yes, I will give him a line read.
But as a writer slash producer on set, I'm just there to pitch a joke or two.
I mean, really, Lucia is the one who is directing the movie, so I have the easy job.
I just get to sit around and say, what about this fart joke?
And she gets to say, no.
So I'm there for support.
Got it.
Yeah.
Here's a very specific question.
I love it.
Why is Kate McKinnon's character Australian?
Great question. I love it. Why is Kate McKinnon's character Australian? Great question. Kate
plays a character named Pippa, who is
loosely based on our real friend Pippa, who's an
Australian genius.
I see. Pippa Lord. An homage.
We wanted to have a friend from study abroad.
We wanted to bring that element in.
Kate's character is much different. She
really helped develop the character, and it became
kind of this almost
Stevie Nicks-like free spirit,
which is not like our friend.
And then Kate, we've known for a long time.
We knew we wanted to work with and were basically like,
please be in the movie in any way.
And she was like, well, I really want to be the Australian character.
And we were like half at it, you know?
Because she does a few of those on SNL and they're very funny.
They're very different.
Yeah, and we've also, but she was also,
and so were we also very mindful
of not making her a different,
like she was in a different movie.
She's still, I believe you saw the movie,
you tell the audience.
She's still like a grounded, fully formed person,
and I think, to me,
the most grounded I've ever really seen her,
and she has some serious moments, too.
I mean, comedy that we like to watch the most is the stuff that is super grounded and super
real, especially in terms of character and point of view, but also has really big, hands-down
moments.
There's even some subtle, sometimes not so subtle, political humor in the movie around
– here we go.
Yes.
I assume that was always there.
There's a Hillary Clinton haircut
in some ways in the movie.
Obviously, you guys have some experience
with Hillary in that.
I cut her hair once.
Oh, God.
Just kidding.
Can you tell me about that?
Sure.
I mean, I think that's also just something
that we naturally gravitate towards.
And I mean, Alana's character
is very politically charged.
And, you know, it's somewhat interesting that this movie was written in an Obama era and is released in a Trump era and that we didn't really have to adapt it too much.
I think we were kind of already living ourselves and we were experiencing a climate that was already feeling
pretty divided. And so I think that is reflected in the movie.
And, you know, for those people who haven't seen the movie, Scarlett Johansson's character
plays a woman running for state Senate. She was kind of a party girl in college, but she
really wants to make a difference. So she's kind of cleaned up her act and she's, you
know, become a little bit more
straight laced as she tries to run for office and do the things that she thinks are the right things
to do. But what was interesting was we had a lot more history about her campaign and about
her desire to help the people of her community and why she wanted to do that. But kind of weirdly,
in November, when we were editing the movie, it was like, oh, we don't need a lot of exposition.
We don't need to tell people why it's important for a woman to run for office
or what it might mean to her. People got it.
You know, regardless of who you voted for,
you were like, I get it. There's a woman running for
office and she cares a lot. People get it, you know.
So, in a good way, we were able
to cut out a lot of that. So, thank goodness
for Donald Trump.
I was going to say, any regrets about the
opportunity to maybe reiterate that fact?
I mean, we wanted the movie
to also exist beyond the Trump era.
So there were even a couple
literal Trump references
that we were like,
we don't need to do Trump references
because they do actually,
in a way, date the movie.
So no, I don't think we have regrets.
No, and I think that the characters
would exist now in the same way,
no matter what. And hopefully in 10 or 20 years, we we have regret. No, and I think that the characters would exist now in the same way no matter what.
And hopefully in 10 or 20 years, we still have those people who, I mean, care about their communities or whatever.
And I think, you know, there's a lot of – there's a fair amount of commentary on police brutality.
But it's not anti-police.
It's anti-police brutality, which to me is very different.
And that's also something that I think is pretty evergreen.
Yeah.
So, you know, the movie is about a bachelor and a bachelorette party, primarily a bachelorette party.
But, Paul, you're a member of a very amusing bachelor party as well.
Was a lot of this born of experiences at these parties?
You know, mine was.
We've never killed a person, Lucia and I.
Really?
No, no.
We're peaceful.
This has been a huge disappointment.
Peaceful people.
But I have a buddy, Greg, who is kind of a foodie and was like, we can go to Vegas and spend 800 bucks on booze at a bar or go to a club, or you guys can buy me a dinner at
French Laundry.
And so we did that.
And so I kind of had this bachelor party.
I mean, obviously we blew it out and it's much more extreme and it's more absurd than
what I experienced, but it's loosely based
on a friend of mine and what
he had for his bachelor party. Yeah, the wine tasting
is, that's a very resonant,
I've been there for that. Yeah.
Oh, in fact. Did you like it?
It was fine. Okay. I didn't,
I don't need the other extreme, but
it was a little too mild.
Okay. Well, my experience wasn't as mild.
There was also other things.
What else?
Nothing else.
Okay, moving on.
Three, two, one.
Oh, our editor also went to a wine tasting bachelor party during the making of the movie.
He's like, I'm doing this this weekend.
Weirdly, it was in Mexico.
Yes.
He's like, I'm going to Mexico for a bachelor party.
I was like, wow, it sounds wild.
He's like, it's a wine tasting.
I was like, yeah.
Truth is stranger than fiction.
He sent us photos of himself drinking some Lambrusco, which is
a reference for the movie. So go see the movie.
Come back. Unpause. Listen to the rest of the
podcast. Boom. All the jokes will work.
Listen twice. See it twice. I tell you what, this is
really grease in the runway. So
one last thing. You're a female filmmaker.
Everybody's always like,
have more female filmmakers on this show. Talk to more
female filmmakers. Cool. Hey. Finally.
You did it. I did it. it's there you did it i did
it i did it i mean you did it obviously and so but that's being said i suspect you're going to be
asked these questions a lot you know a lot of people are going to be comparing this movie i
think to a lot of male-centric movies of its kind um you know how do you respond to being like it's
like the hangover meets this thing you know yeah i mean it certainly wasn't based on anything to us
it was just like this.
We try to just be like,
these are based on kind of people we know
or experiences we've had.
So to us, it's just like, we're not like,
we're just doing the girl version.
To us, it's like, this is born out of our experience
in our lives.
So, you know, if somebody's like,
oh, it's a rip off of this or that,
it's like, it's really not.
And I think that it's so easy to just say those things
and not like see the movie
and decide how you feel about it.
But not there aren't a lot of R-rated comedies about women.
There aren't a lot of R-rated comedies made by women.
And so for me, I'm just like excited that people get to see like, hey, here's a point of view of a woman of a hard R comedy that stars the people who are like some of the funniest people in the world, male or female.
And so, you know, like that in and of itself, like sad that that hasn't happened a lot.
Great that it is happening now.
And I hope people go and see it.
And I don't know.
I don't really.
What was the question exactly?
It wasn't really a question.
It was sort of ill handled.
No, it was not.
No, it was not.
No, I think I'm more interested in sort of like the burden that is placed upon somebody in your position.
You know, you're expected to sort of respond to, to sort of clarify the state of comedy for some reason.
A similar thing that happened, say, when Bridesmaids came out.
Sure.
And there was a lot of expectation around the stars and the writer of those movies.
Yeah.
But you were more elegant than the question that I asked, so.
Well, I'm wearing a bald ball gown, so, you know, I better be elegant.
But yeah, I think you're right.
It is weird how things are compared to the male version, whereas I don't think we would compare two movies that star men to each other necessarily if they were comedies.
It's like, yeah, they're both comedies.
You're never like, hey, Will Ferrell, Adam Sandler has a movie coming out. How do you feel about that?
Exactly.
And that's partly because there aren't enough, and there aren't enough stories either about or by women.
And there's even less both about and by women.
And even fewer comedies at that rate.
Yeah, that's the thing.
And comedies, it is a male-dominated area.
And I say that not as a woman.
So, you know, it's a really interesting thing that, yeah,
I feel for,
because to me,
the women in this movie are some of the funniest people on the planet,
male or female.
I mean,
there is nobody funnier than the women in our movie to me.
Um,
and I love a lot of male comedians and I try to be like them and hope that I
have careers like male comedians or female comedians.
But,
um,
but it's so crazy to me that women have a steeper mountain to climb
and that to find Kate McKinnon or Gillian Belfine
is a harder thing for some people, male or female.
Because that's true of men.
I'm not saying men don't think women are funny.
Women often are like, ah, I'm not that into female cast.
And that's crazy to me because, I don't know,
I can't not watch Ilana or Gillian or even Scarlett in this movie and not be like, God damn, they're so good.
They're so funny.
Conversely, you have thrived in largely female casts.
Is that just happenstance?
Is that just easier for you somehow?
I think it is happenstance.
I mean, this movie we wrote because I find women funny.
And we wrote because it was based on both friendships that Lucia and I have from our past where we're, because in essence, the movie is about, especially when you put your career first and you work a lot and you work hard, we often find ourselves feeling guilty and being like, oh, you know, I didn't make that thing because I was shooting late and I didn't want to go the next day.
And it's like, that sucks, you know? And so in the end, the movie really is about people from your past who aren't necessarily
around you every day and making sure that you take time to appreciate or prioritize
your friends.
But I don't know why it's happened.
I think you just genuinely enjoy collaborating with women.
I do.
And men, but like...
I mean, my writing partner is a woman.
So that's one reason. And your other two writing partners usually are women. I do. And men, men, but like. I mean, my writing partner is a woman. So that was, that's one reason.
And your other two writing partners usually are women.
Exactly.
I mean, Broad City is Broad City.
And then with this movie, I think it's because we were like, oh, it's, it's more fun for
me to write for the women in our movie.
You know?
What are you guys going to do next that's going to lead to you ignoring your friends?
Great question.
We are working on, we're working on some stuff. Ignoring our friends is sad. No, we're working on like another movie that again, we're working on our friends yeah no we're working on like
another movie that again we're writing on spec just because i think we feel very comfortable
keeping stuff as close to us ourselves as possible until we are needing money to make it i think
we're also not necessarily like beholden to one platform i think we're like hey let's make another
web series or a tv show or a small TV show
or a network thing.
I think it's based on whatever naturally is exciting to us.
It's like, let's just figure out the best way to release this.
So I don't know.
I mean, you know, Paul's going to be in a superhero movie.
We don't know which one yet.
Yes, very excited about it.
Congratulations.
Thank you so much.
Very excited.
On the non-information.
I mean, I feel like people on Twitter are demanding it.
So, you know, not necessarily Paul Downs, but Trey from Broad City should play.
I do hear a lot.
So we got to figure that out.
So if you're out there writing one, casting one.
I'm tech avail.
And we're working on stuff with some of the women in our movie as well.
And if it was more further down the road, we would let you know.
But I feel like it might be premature. This was more than enough the road we would let you know but I feel like
it might be premature
that this was more than enough
okay
and the fourth season
of Broad City
comes out in August
August 19th I think
how exciting
we're excited
Lucia, Paul
thank you for coming
thanks for having us
thanks guys Thank you.