The Big Picture - Making the Melissa McCarthy Machine, With Ben Falcone | The Big Picture (Ep. 64)
Episode Date: May 14, 2018Ringer editor-in-chief Sean Fennessey chats with comedic filmmaker Ben Falcone about ‘Life of the Party’—his new movie starring his wife, Melissa McCarthy—and what it’s like to creatively co...llaborate with his life partner. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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She gets very active and like, could it be funny if I tried this?
And I'm always like, why not? Let's give it a shot.
I go story first. As long as we get that, I know we've got something.
Sometimes I call it the let's make sense version.
Guys, we're making sense. Great. Everyone seems real.
And then we'll get the fun version.
I'm Sean Fennessy, editor-in-chief of The Ringer,
and this is The Big Picture,
a conversation show with the most interesting filmmakers in the world.
Today's guest is a man who has a partnership with one of the only sure things in Hollywood.
It's Ben Falcone, the creative co-conspirator and husband of Melissa McCarthy,
a movie star who's managed to stay relevant despite an increasingly hectic and diffuse media landscape.
Falcone and McCarthy's new movie, the college campus comedy Life of the Party, is their third collaboration as a writer-director duo. They've been collaborating
for decades, first as members of the Groundlings in Chicago, and then in TV shows like Gilmore
Girls and movies like Bridesmaids. You may recognize Falcone as the withholding air
marshal who falls for Melissa McCarthy's character in that movie. Falcone has directed two previous
movies starring McCarthy, Tammy, and The Boss, and this one has the same hallmarks.
High concept setup, slapstick, a quietly stellar cast, and a star who's up for anything.
I talked to Falcone about building these stories from the ground up,
working so closely with your life partner,
and what it's like to create in the time of superhero movies.
Here's Ben Falcone today.
Ben, thank you for coming in.
Oh, thanks for having me.
Ben, this is your third film with your wife,
and it's your third film as a director.
That's right.
These are all true facts.
How are you feeling about it? It's called Life of the Party.
I'm feeling great about it.
I really love this movie.
You know, I love them all for different reasons,
but it's so hopeful.
Melissa's so great in it and so funny.
And then all these young women
who are just really great actors
and really great people.
We kind of became a little family out there.
And to get to see them, you know,
all again doing the press tour
and to get to watch the movie play
and like how well they all do.
You can't help but feel proud for all the performers and everything.
So I'm really excited about this one.
I think and hope people really like it.
I'm interested to hear about your journey as a filmmaker specifically.
I think a lot of people first saw you in Bridesmaids.
You worked with the Groundlings.
You were an actor.
Yep.
How did you become a director?
How did this all start happening about four or five years ago?
Well, like many first-time directors, I came in as a writer-director because Melissa and I wrote Tammy together through the scheduling things and just people who couldn't do it, didn't want to do it.
We couldn't find the right director at the right time.
And so we sort of went to the head of the studio, Toby Emmerich, and we said, well, what if we did that?
We can't seem to find anybody.
What if we stepped up and tried it?
And he said, let me sleep on it.
Ominous.
Which is – and he's such a nice guy.
And normally that would be like a bad sign.
You're like, oh, boy, he's got to sleep on it.
But for Toby, he's just one of those people.
He likes to actually put things through his little filter and he thinks about things before he makes a decision. And sure enough, four days later or something, he calls and he says, you know what?
I think you guys should do it because we were going to do it together.
And then due to Melissa's schedule, there was no way she could be there for all the pre-production and all the post.
She was literally going to be shooting another film. So I ended up doing it. So I kind of fell into it that way.
Were you aspiring to be a filmmaker like 20 years ago? Is it something you had considered?
You know, 20 years ago, I would say I was just looking to do some acting. I mean, really,
I was just looking to make a living in any way that I possibly could. I've been waiting tables
a lot and all those things. So I just really wanted to make a living in any way that I possibly could. I've been waiting tables a lot and all those things.
So I just really wanted to make a living.
But I am a humongous movie buff, a movie nerd.
I've watched lots of old movies, all these things.
And of course, as a writer, you're at least learning that side of it as well.
So it's something that I never had put on my, you know, I never introduced myself to people.
I'm a director.
Hello. I'm an aspiring director ever. But then when the opportunity sort of presented itself,
just did it. Was it daunting before starting Tammy? Yeah, because I knew how much I didn't know. I
mean, I'm, I'm, uh, smart enough to know how dumb I am, you know? So it was, uh, what I did was I,
and New Line was a good studio to be with because they're they're good at that they they sent sent me with this guy um Rob Cowan who
has produced literally you know it feels like millions of movies and he's a nice man and then
this other guy Chris Henchey um who's just one of the funniest producers you could find so they're
and they're both really nice people so and then they surrounded me with this really great crew.
So I, I was unable to mess things up too badly.
And, you know, but as you go through,
you sort of start to find your own voice a little more.
And, you know, cause first I was just like,
well, what should we do?
And how do, you know, I knew coverage
and the basics of course.
And I had some ideas and I And the one thing I do think I know how to do is talk to actors,
having been one for a long time. So those are sort of big things to know how to do. But
I basically surrounded myself with these really smart people and this great crew to,
so that I would, I just didn't want to mess anything up for Melissa, you know, first of all.
And then obviously they were spending, Tammy was a $20 million movie and it ended up turning
out well for them, but like, I didn't want to, you know, waste all their money and, you
know, all those things.
So I, it was an interesting first attempt at something.
And, you know, as I, as I've been doing it, I've gotten more and more confident in terms
of learning more and certainly learning more about camera and all those things. But one thing I will always remember is that I'm still wrong lots of times and to
try to have smart people around me who can tell me when I'm wrong and why and try to fix things
that I might be messing up. Okay. I was going to say, even though it's your third film, you're not
stepping onto the set like General MacArthur and directing traffic that way.
No, that's not my style.
It's not who I am.
I'm more of like a writer, comedian, actor guy who hopefully is, you know, Melissa is like sort of the more fun, loud, coming into a room and like everyone says, oh, look, she's here.
Hooray.
And I'm more like the
steady you know soft-spoken and I'll be like okay guys are we ready to go should we start and you
know I'll tell dumb jokes and stuff but it's um I certainly can't imagine coming onto a set and
being like we have to everyone yeah well there's this vision of the director as a tyrant you know
it's nice that you're not that I'm very interested in how you guys decide what kind of movie to make and then how you go about writing it. So
this one in particular, you know, you directed it, but you both wrote it together, correct?
Correct. That's correct.
And so what is that process like? Melissa's very busy. I'm sure you're very busy.
Are you in a room together with two typewriters out? Are you just riffing?
Old timey typewriters. That's actually kind of a dream scenario. This movie in particular, it was the holidays and Melissa's mom was in town and she was wearing a pretty festive sweater that looked pretty Midwestern and fun.
And Sandy, Melissa's mom, is the sweetest woman you'll ever meet.
And I literally just kind of flashed across my brain of like, what would that be like if, you know, Melissa's mom in her forties had been
in college with Melissa in her twenties. And I was like, oh, that could be, but if Melissa was
the mom, she could play that. That could be like a movie, like, you know, just really quick. And
I pitched it to Melissa and she liked it. So I kind of had some ideas and I sort of went off and
I, I sort of, I like to outline. And so what I did was I sort of got together just an outline of just general beats and then brought in Melissa
and we wrote it together of, you know, just that sort of feeling of like, well,
she's the main character. So it's really helpful to me to have her just say her own lines, you know,
you know, cause she literally sort of acts them out. So we sit together in this room
in our office and, you know, she makes me laugh for two or three hours.
We usually go about two or three hours at a time when it's possible.
I remember one time for Tammy we had a bunch of rewrites and we did really long days.
But in general I feel like it's amazing how quickly you can write a script if you have an idea of what you're doing in terms of having an outline, having a structure.
You could have a script written in a month if you
work three focused hours a day. Especially to have a scene partner there so you can like actualize
what you're writing in real time. That must be really fun. It's really fun. And I, you know,
I waste a lot of time laughing and all that stuff. But it's, that's how we do it. If she's traveling,
I'll maybe take a pass at the script based on some studio notes or something. It's pretty
free flowing, but what the best way that we like to write is sitting in a room together. It's a chance to get to spend time
together, which we also enjoy. So that's really what we do. And it, it takes a lot less time
when it's going well than people might think when it takes a lot of time is when you're stuck.
And Melissa and I usually are smart enough to be like, okay, well, we're stuck here. Let's
not just smash our heads against a wall. Let's try well, we're stuck here. Let's not just smash our heads against
a wall. Let's try to bring in some additional opinions. Let's try to figure out solutions.
And we'll come back, you know, first thing in tomorrow and, you know, see if we can unstuck.
You guys are really collaborative, it sounds like.
Yeah, for sure. For sure. That's how we met, you know, with the Groundlings writing stupid
sketches together. And, you know, she's these over-caffeinated, you know, ladies who are failing with guys.
And I'm like a weird inmate talking to someone.
One thing I was wondering about when I was watching the movie, as in almost all of Melissa's
movies, there's great comic set pieces and a lot of physical humor. I'm interested specifically,
like there's a classroom scene in this movie
that's really, really funny.
And Melissa's really funny in it.
The sweating.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And are you guys mapping that out strategically
when you're writing the script?
Or are you just like,
do you just write down,
Melissa is funny here?
We map that out super strategically.
That in particular is one that I can remember laughing a lot
because she was just pitching different stuff that made me laugh hard.
But that was one where we got a note from the studio,
which is some people don't like these notes,
but actually it's my favorite note to get,
which is, can we have a set piece in the second act?
Because I always think, well, can't we?
Why not?
Maybe if they're feeling like we need one,
and they're not telling us what it needs to be or anything. And so I remember being like, well, what could
it be Mooch? And she goes, well, I don't know. Let's ask Henchy. And so I said, you know, she
does need to go back to the classroom. Um, we, I feel like we need to be back in that space a
little bit more. Um, and she, and she, she needs to do well in class or she needs to have an arc where she
is struggling and then succeeds. And then she goes, people hate public speaking.
And I was like, oh, that's pretty fun. That's like a good idea. And then I took it to Melissa
and I said, he says, people hate public speaking. And she goes, oh, I'll sweat.
And that was, I was like, oh, okay. So we went away and, you know, we, that was where I
laughed really hard. And we wrote a scene where she sweat and it's very, very meticulously mapped
out. Actually one of the more technical scenes we've ever shot. I mean, if you can imagine
trying to match the amount of sweat you have, you know, you've got cameras, cameras have to
move positions to get different angles, but now she's, we had four phases of sweat. It was like people were, it was like a military operation. Like we're in phase two. Like in
Tammy Westmore, her makeup artist and Linda Flowers, her hair and Donnie, who does her
wardrobe comes in and they're, they're all like, you know, they've got, there's hair dryers and
there's Vaseline for her face and they're messing up her hair. And I mean, you know, the Kleenex as
well had to match. And so it's like, it was a really,
our script supervisor, Sheila, was just like,
oh my, you're killing me, Falcone.
It's crazy.
It is like an action set piece though.
It really is.
All those phases.
Yeah, yeah.
What do you guys want to accomplish
when you're setting out to make movies?
Is it just like, let's make a funny, entertaining movie
the way that we like to?
Or do you say, well, now we've made Tammy
or we've made the boss.
Now we want to try to do a story that is like this? I don't know that I'm, to this point anyway,
analytical enough or a talented enough writer to say, I want this story to be like this because
I want it to be different than this. And maybe that's something that you do more along the lines
of your 10th movie. But, you know, Tammy was just
a story that I had kicking around in my head and Melissa liked it. And, you know, we wrote it
together. The Boss was a story that Melissa and Steve Mallory, our co-writer on that one, had
kicking around in their heads. And then I came in and tried to just help them write that one.
And that was based on a character at the Groundlings. And then this one was just,
like I said, I mean, literally Sandy McCarthy standing there in a kind of a Midwestern sweater. And I'm like, huh, what would that be like? And the one thing about this movie that we were
interested in and the story lended itself to was we, we love the idea of doing a PG-13 movie
because everybody's like, you know, particularly during the Boss, which, yes, she's very, it's R-rated, but we don't show anybody's parts or anything.
It's just language around children.
But, like, show me an R-rated movie that does not feature a man's penis.
It's very rare, you know, and we've never done you know that sort of stuff so there's but then but then we get
the repeated questions like what's it like being married to the raunchiest woman in the world and
i'm like she's completely approved yes she swore around children which you know can definitely get
surprised out of people um so we were interested in this one uh to make a pg-13 movie that was just
sweet all the way that where the character, because in Tammy
and in The Boss, I mean, I guess I'm analytical in this way, which was in terms of her character,
Tammy and The Boss, they were both pretty in-your-face characters, right? And they're
something that Melissa does so well, where she, get after somebody, but then be lovable
later. And we were just like, well, what would it be like if we had a character who was just
completely, hopefully, you know, likable and has a bunch of external stuff thrust on her and she
has to, you know, win the day or whatever. So that was an interesting thing to us, the sort of PG-13
element and the idea that she is this sweetheart
of a character who gets a bunch of bad stuff happens to her. And then in her quest to like
improve her life and do better, she's sort of mildly drives her daughter crazy for the first
little bit of the movie until they connect in a different way. And then her daughter gets to know
her as, you know, not just her mom, but as like a lady who deserves to be happy, you know? So is it,
I don't know if that answers the question exactly, but you know, that I don't know that we ever sit
and go, you know what we should do? We should do a movie based on the military or, you know,
anything like that. It's more like we just think of a story. And then if there's elements that we
really are happy with, we try to push those. No, but that's so interesting to say it's time to make a PG-13 movie
because that will show a different side or we'll be able to try to do different things.
It's a new constraint, actually, that could create a better story.
Yeah.
And I'm interested what it's like, especially since you've been so close to Melissa
through her rise to this incredible fame.
Do you guys feel like you have to manage everything that you've been able to build together
or does it still feel natural for you to do it it's very natural for us to work together but you know
when we're doing press or something you don't want to say anything stupid um just in general
and and that should be all of us right like you don't want to say anything that because i'll do
dumb bits all day and then i'll say something and i'll be like oh was that offensive for someone or
you know what i mean certainly if you're in a public setting, you don't want to do that.
But in terms of like – I think as far as it goes with Melissa and I, if we believe in it, if it feels like a good story to tell and then we test our movies, you know, in the Paul Feig, Judd, Apatow, you know, world of how they do it. And there were
people doing it before them that we go and we screen the movie and we, we put it out there,
you know, and show your two hour cut to people. And guess what? It's five minutes shorter,
pretty fast. You know, whereas in a cutting room, you're looking at it going like,
we can't lose anything. It's all so precious. And then, you know, you tell four jokes and no
one's laughs and you're there. Those jokes are gone. Have you gotten less precious having gone through that process a few
times now? For sure. Yeah. Yeah. You talked a little bit about all of the funny women in the
movie. It's a pretty, I feel like it's almost an under, uh, under marketed, incredible comic cast,
you know, it's Maya Rudolph and Gillian Jacobs and Matt Walsh and Julie Bowen and Chris Parnell.
And you've got all these people.
How do you figure out who to put in these movies?
Are you writing roles specifically for people too?
Well, Melissa and I have been fortunate enough to run across a lot of these people before.
We've known Maya forever.
Unabashedly, we wrote the part of Christine for Maya.
We thought she would do so well with it.
Parnell, we know
from the Groundlings too, from back in the day, he's just a sweet guy. And we're like, oh my God,
who can we think of that could just, you know, be sweet and say puns? Yeah, there's a lot of good
pun work in the movie. Walsh, Melissa worked with him in Ghostbusters and had such a good time. And
it's almost like once you get a few fun people to come,
you know,
more people go,
Oh,
that's a,
seems like a fun group.
You know,
it had that feeling of like,
if this person signed on and this person signed on,
and then all of a sudden you weirdly have an all-star comedy cast.
Yeah.
And it's not,
it also is,
I think a lot of people think of it as like,
this will be a Melissa McCarthy movie,
but there's a lot of powerhouse surrounding it.
Well,
and there's a lot of room there surrounding it well and there's a lot of room
there for you know you know gillian and jesse ennis and molly and adria and all these guys
debbie ryan came in and did such a great job so you that they there's definitely space and i tried
to create one one thing that i really try to do with every single scene is i try to create
an opportunity for every actor to land something,
whether it's a moment, dramatic moment, certainly in a comedy, a joke.
I have writers on the set who are constantly handing me Post-its
with ideas of lines that different characters can say.
Melissa and I work so hard on the script, and then we do it.
Our actors are so
ready and so great, just luckily in our history, that you have it in two or three takes. So now
you have time, you know, before you have to move the cameras again. And that's when the writers
will come up to me. I'll have ideas of like, oh, it was fun when you did that or something physical,
maybe that, you know, Melissa and Maya are doing. You've got these people that just start saying
stuff. They're doing the writer's
jobs for them because they're just
improvising hilarious stuff.
Has there ever been a time where you've been working on a scene
and it's not working and you feel like
you have to blow it up and it changes the movie?
Yes. I
describe when I feel like I'm
getting something that's really fun.
I feel like
I have a warm blanket over me. And I feel
like the rest of the day is just like fun because you're like, oh, Melissa was so funny here. Walsh
was so funny. Debbie Ryan did something great. Oh, you know, name the person. I get that feeling
of just a warm, fuzzy feeling. And I'm like, the rest of the day is gravy, guys. And people will
say, it's not gravy. We really need to get the rest of the day. I'm like, who cares? We really got some. But in every movie, there have been scenes
that eventually got cut because they weren't working. I always am trying and trying and trying
to fix them as best you can. So what are you guys thinking about the most when you're
both writing and making the movies? Is it because of your background and the groundlings?
Is it what's going to make people laugh?
What's going to make audiences happy?
Or is it we're trying to tell a very particular kind of story?
What's the most meaningful for you guys?
Well, I'm a story fanatic, you know, because one thing I do know is that if you have a really funny scene where
two people are just sitting talking about nothing that's important to the characters,
you're going to start trimming that scene a lot. And eventually it'll probably not be in the movie.
And in our movie so far, they've really featured Melissa a lot. So I'm usually thinking like,
well, how's her character doing? So I have to track all of that. But then at the end of the day, my warm, fuzzy blanket is feeling like I've gotten good performances and I've gotten some comedy.
So that's what I'm mostly concerned about.
And Melissa, she's kind of on double duty, right?
So she's a producer.
She's very, very active in what we're doing every second, pretty much, you know,
co-directing as, as much as it's possible. But, you know, but what's good is she's able to,
I think, you know, I like to think that she's able to step back and just really focus on what
she's up to a little bit more because she trusts what we're doing, you know, behind the camera.
She gets very active and like, could it be funny if I tried this? And I'm always like,
why not? Let's give it a shot. Or we try to shape it together and bring in all our people. But
I go story first. As long as we get that, I know we've got something, something, you know,
I, I, sometimes I call it the let's make sense version. Guys, we're making sense. Great. Everyone
seems real. Now let's add the, you know, the comedy and the, I'll try to get the make sense version
and then we'll get the fun version. You and Melissa have obviously been working
together for a long time. You obviously have professional chemistry along with your personal
life, but what you're doing now is much more high stakes. It's way more money on the line.
Yeah. Is it possible that you annoy one another, piss each other off with more frequency because
there's more going on here.
Essentially, what is it like to be working so closely with your partner in a high-stakes environment?
I love working with Melissa.
You know, the high-stakes environment can make everybody a little more, you know, we're, as we record this, I believe we're exactly a week from our opening.
Truly.
So you can imagine I'm getting lots of emails and like, oh, this looks
cool. Are we worried about this? You know, all those things that you go through. But I don't
really, the stakes haven't affected Melissa and I in any particular way. It's just, you know,
I'm sure I annoy her from time to time as wonderful as I am. You seem like a lovely guy. Why, thank
you. But I don't think it has so much to do with what we're up to. I think the're tired or it's like get out of
hollywood you two yeah move to idaho there are arcs you know yeah or and then it's like oh you're
like hey i'm making my comeback or whatever all that stuff that people go through right
we sort of see every opportunity and and we see the high stakes as a as a chance to work your
hardest um which we do and you and see where the chips fall.
The trickier thing I would actually argue is travel. That's one of the harder things. It's
like if somebody is like, oh, I'm gone for nine days and we've got kids and we never want to leave
our kids for two hours. We're like, we would just be in their backpacks with them at school if we could. So that I think is actually a trickier road to get through than the high stakes, you know,
Hollywood game. One of the things that's interesting to me about you guys is you have this
old school partnership with a studio where you make your movies with one place for the most part.
Yep. And there are theatrical releases and you're trying to get people out.
Your box office matters.
But we're obviously in this moment where everything is kind of everywhere.
Platforms are different.
Yes.
Have you considered trying to do something
that isn't in that traditional way?
Or if you like doing it the way that you do,
what is it that you like about it?
I haven't.
Why monkey around with stuff if it feels good?
You know, like I think there are many opinions
and, you know, I like that New Line is small
and you can get their thoughts pretty quickly.
And if something's, you know, that old,
I guess I'm, you know what it is,
I'm just too Midwestern.
I'm just like, oh, it's not broken.
It's fine.
That's what we do.
It's like, well, there's a million things you could do.
Well, yeah, but that's what we do. Right, right. Well, if it's not broken, then it's not broken. I feel like it's
broken for a lot of people, which is maybe why some of those things have started to change in
the industry over the last 10 years. Well, and you know, there are people, like I do know,
I have good friends who are filmmakers and, you know, they're like, I'm going to Netflix.
I'm tired of playing the game, you know, that kind of stuff. And you're like, all right,
that's, I get that, you know, like, that kind of stuff and you're like alright I get that
you know
that makes sense too
you know because it's tricky
out there right
there's a lot of
superhero movies
mostly
and they appeal to
I take my kids to them
they like them
I like them
they're good
they're good movies
we like them too
yeah you know
so it's like
but then
it's becoming a trickier
environment for comedy to thrive in particular right now.
But I also like to think that things are cyclical and horror movies seem like they're doing well.
And I'm like, I get too terrified to even mess with a horror movie that would be on TBS.
So no Melissa McCarthy horror movie coming soon.
Well, not for me.
Okay.
I'd be like, oh my God, I'm so terrified to go to work.
I'm hopeful that comedies make a big, you know, comeback because I think they are really important.
And I do think it's, you know, again,
maybe I'm just this old Midwestern man
in a 44-year-old guy's body.
But like, I just do think it's important
for people to come together and laugh together.
I think there's something really good about that.
You know, watching a comedy just on your laptop,
I don't know, it's fine.
And that's totally, people watch these great TV shows
at home and stuff.
But I think there's something so great
about that shared experience
where you feel like you literally got
a couple more weeks or a month of life
because you laugh so hard.
What was your platonic ideal movie going comedy experience well i loved planes trains and automobiles that
was great i mean i just was like oh my god this is such a good movie the performances are so strong
and i'm laughing all over the place my My dad, apparently during, um, there's a theater
called the Varsity Theater in, uh, Carbondale, Illinois. And he was watching whatever, one of
those movies, like a shot in the dark or something with Peter Sellers. And he laughed so hard that
he was asked to leave the theater. He has a big laugh and they literally asked him to take off.
And I'm like, and I know he's got a big laugh, but I'm like, it's a comedy.
Like the response that they're hoping for was elicited.
I just imagine like whoever that filmmaker might be.
I can't think of the director off the top of my head.
But like that person.
Is it Blake Edwards?
I think it is Blake Edwards.
Yeah, Blake Edwards, of course.
And I can just imagine Blake Edwards being like, what?
They're kicking a guy out of the theater because he laughed too hard at what I tried so hard to make funny.
Can I tell you a true story though?
Sure.
I saw your movie a few days ago and I was seated behind someone or in front of someone who was
laughing too loud for me. And so I moved my seat. So I didn't leave. I stayed, but I did move
because they were so loud. Now, whether that's about that person or about how effective your movie is,
is not for me to say.
But I think it's actually because a lot of our experiences now,
when we're watching things, are quiet.
They're not this group setting that we're talking about,
this experience that we like to have.
Now, I was never going to leave.
I would never leave a movie for someone laughing.
But it was interesting to me because I was like,
oh my God, this person is really laughing loud.
I'm missing the lines. I want to know who exactly that person is. I want
to take him out to dinner. Congratulations. Ben, I like to end every episode by asking filmmakers
what's the last great thing they've seen. What is the last great thing that you've seen?
Last great thing. You know, I really liked that movie Game Night.
Yeah, I was going to bring it up when you were talking about comedies because I feel like with
Game Night and Blockers and your movie, there's a good little run now of studio comedies.
What did you like about Game Night?
I thought it looked really cool.
I thought it looked, you know,
sometimes comedies can look a little bit like a comedy.
They gloss them up and brighten them up a little bit.
So it looked like, I thought it looked good.
I thought all the performances were super solid.
I thought the filmmaking itself was really clever.
It's got style.
It had style.
And that's really hard to do because, you know,
especially if people are improvising and stuff,
a lot of times you're like, okay, we'll do one little shot.
We're going to move the camera and then let's put them down
and let's cross shoot and we got it.
You know, so I thought there was a lot of style
that they put towards it.
And I thought the writing was really clever.
And I just, I thought all the performance,
you know, even when things got a little more,
you know, heightened or whatever,
I just bought the performance.
It was so well done.
And the theater I was in was really,
you know, sort of raucous for it.
So I was too.
And I just, I thought those directors,
which is two gentlemen,
I can't remember their names,
Daly and-
Goldstein, is it?
Something like that.
Yeah, you know all these, I should know all these names.
This is my job, it's okay.
I should do better.
But I thought they did a great job of kind of putting it all together,
and I thought, well done.
Ben, well done on Life of the Party.
Thanks for doing the show.
Oh, thanks a lot. I appreciate it.
Thanks for listening to this week's episode of The Big Picture.
And check back here on Friday when I'll be doing a special Deadpool 2 episode in an effort to understand one of the biggest and most unlikely movie phenomenons of this century.
I'll see you then.