The Big Picture - 'The Oath’ and Ike Barinholtz’s Response to the Chaotic News Cycle | The Big Picture (Ep. 88)
Episode Date: October 12, 2018Ringer editor-in-chief Sean Fennessey speaks with comedic talent Ike Barinholtz about his directorial debut, ‘The Oath,’ and how it’s a direct response to the breakneck speed of the news cycle s...ince the election. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hey everyone, it's Liz Kelley and I want to tell you about the second annual Ringer NBA Palooza we have going on next week on Tuesday, October 16th.
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Featuring live podcasts, special guests, Ringer original shorts, and culminating in a Sixers Celtics watch party.
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And don't forget to check out our brand new NBA Palooza merch on TheRinger.com slash shop.
Look, it's impossible to prognosticate anything now.
If you told me that you are 100% positive next week Donald Trump is going to leave the White House, I'd be like, okay, he might.
If you told me Donald Trump is going to be king for life, I'd be like, okay, he might.
I just don't know anymore. So the news cycle really kind of inspired us at a certain point. We're just like, oh my God, let's hurry. Let's get this thing out because
it just, it seems like a very of the moment.
I'm Sean Fennessy, editor-in-chief of The Ringer, and this is The Big Picture,
a conversation show with some of the biggest comic actors slash filmmakers in the world.
Today, Ike Barinholtz is on the show.
You know Ike.
He's the rambunctious comedy actor from The Mindy Project and Neighbors and this year's Blockers.
He's a comic sidekick genius type.
So why is Ike on the show?
Well, he's written, directed, and stars in a movie of his own.
And it's not what you might expect. It's called The, directed, and stars in a movie of his own. And it's not
what you might expect. It's called The Oath, and the setup is sneakily simple. A family gathers
over Thanksgiving and debates the complicated state of our country's politics while slowly
descending into madness. The Oath is truly a black comedy, as dark and paranoid as it is funny,
and Barinholtz has wisely enlisted an incredible cast to work with him, including Tiffany Haddish,
John Cho, and Carrie Brownstein. I spoke to Ike about making his first film, balancing the craziness
of our daily news cycle with a movie about that cycle, and the state of movie comedy.
Here's Ike Barinholtz.
Ike, what are you doing on this show?
Are you a director now?
I'm a director now.
You can tell by my culottes and my crop and my director's hat.
I've worn the gear.
You brought a chair in here with you that says director.
I bring my own director's chair everywhere I go.
That's one of my Hollywood tips. Ike's Hollywood tips.
You know I have a podcast
called Ike's Hollywood tips.
Nice.
One of my favorites.
That was our third pod
we talked all about.
The title of the pod
was The Chair.
And yeah,
I stick by it.
And you know other actors
make fun of me on set
and stuff when I do it,
but I don't care
and I'll fire them.
So you're actually a director.
I actually did direct.
I made a film.
It's called The Oath.
I love this movie. How did this movie happen? I didn't even know it was coming until I saw fire them. So you're actually a director. I actually did direct. I made a film. It's called The Oath. I love this movie.
How did this movie happen?
I didn't even know it was coming
until I saw a trailer.
Yeah, we kind of snuck it in there a little bit.
The whole thing kind of started
a couple of Novembers ago.
Okay.
I think we all know something
that happened around that time
that was a little earth shattering.
Thanksgiving?
Thanksgiving every year.
No, it was at the Thanksgiving
right after Trump won.
And there was a general malaise, I think, most people were feeling after dinner, we were discussing the state of the union.
And there was alcohol involved.
But we started arguing.
And, you know, it was getting slightly heated.
And, you know, the crazy thing is that we were all on the same side.
You know, we all, you know, enthusiastically.
It was really my mom, my brother, and I that were having this argument.
And we all, you know, voted for Hillary Clinton.
And the argument was kind of that thing of like my brother, you know, preferred Bernie, I think, even though he campaigned for Hillary and went to Indiana and Ohio to campaign for her. But he was saying, you know, listen, you know, she was flawed and maybe Bernie would have won, that whole thing.
And I was, you know, saying, no, it's bullshit.
And it was in – something's going on and it's not right.
My mom was kind of taking the approach of like, you know, the Democrats have just forgotten about the Midwest.
It's ridiculous.
You know, I come from Ohio.
It's a Democratic stronghold.
And so we were getting in this fight.
I just thought, Jesus, man, we're all on the same side.
What is happening to other family tables around the country now? Let me ask you something. Is your family the
kind of family that will talk politics at the dinner table or was the extraordinary nature
of that last election kind of bringing something new to the surface? We, you know, if we're like
a large table, I think we'll try to, you know, use decorum. But yes, we definitely are all,
you know, my parents loved politics when I was growing up.
My dad was marginally involved with some local Chicago Democratic politicians.
And so we always were passionate about it and we discussed it a lot and had some strong feelings about Barack Obama, all positive.
I mean not all positive.
I think he was flawed.
But we used to play basketball together in Chicago back in the early 2000s, late 90s and stuff. And he was a Chicago guy.
And he came from the Abner Mikva School of Chicago politics, which my dad really abides by.
So we were always passionate. And I think after Trump, it was this just horrible realization of like, wow, it can really go very badly the other way.
And so I just knew that this discussion, this argument was happening all across the country and in a lot more severe levels.
And so I knew that right away that location, that week of Thanksgiving where everything is kind of bubbling and everyone is in town and you're excited to see each other.
But there's still like all the years of stress that have built up
and stuff. If the backdrop of that was this, something big is happening politically. And then
kind of the other component of it was I'm a big fan of dystopia. Like I love like Children of Men
is one of my all time favorite movies. Me too. It's just like a perfect film. Yep. And I'm always
like intrigued by like the mythology.
How did they get there, right?
How did they end up at this place?
I never really gave a shit about Donald Trump.
I mean, I don't know about you.
I mean, I always thought he was just like a clowny, loser-y type celebrity, like a Batman villain.
Of course.
Like a classic Batman.
Yep.
That guy on The Apprentice.
He's annoying.
The guy on The Apprentice, which I didn't even watch and stuff.
But as he started entering, you know, the political landscape more and becoming a thing,
I really became kind of obsessed with him and started reading more about what a – just a bad guy.
He's just not a good guy and he's very inspired by Roy Cohn.
And I was always taken with his obsession on loyalty.
The similarities between him and Joe McCarthy are pretty great to me.
I think Joe McCarthy was probably smarter.
But Trump drank less, I guess.
I don't know.
But the concept of loyalty and people demanding loyalty and what – how people respond to that is fascinating to me.
So I started toying with this idea of if the government introduces some kind of policy that's not mandatory.
They're not going to put a gun to your head and make you sign it,
but they're going to give you some benefits if you do sign it.
And all it's just a simple statement saying,
I, you know, pledge my loyalty to the United States and the president
and would never do anything considered subversive.
That's basically the gist of the actual oath.
And if you do sign it, you get, you know, a tax cut
and, you know, some health care benefits and stuff.
So right away,
I started toying with this concept of this big sweeping government semi-mandated oath and how
that would polarize people when they're already polarized. And just kind of slowly those two just
kind of – that was the thing I needed. I had the container, the week of Thanksgiving at the house,
and I needed this concept of loyalty and mandating this oath.
So those two things just kind of merged, and I wrote it very quickly.
Were you thinking, I want to make a film?
It's time for me to be a writer-director?
Yeah, you know, for a few years now, you know, I started directing some episodes of The Mindy
Project, and I really loved it.
And, you know, it's very different directing an episode of television.
It's, you know, 10 days tops,
you know, with prep.
The look is defined.
The look is defined.
You're going in.
You're kind of being
told what to do.
You have a chance
to show a little bit
of individuality,
but at the same time,
it's a well,
presumably a well-oiled
machine that you're
just a cog in right now.
Right.
So, but I love directing
and I've been writing
for a long time
and I've been writing
mostly with my writing
partner, a guy named
Dave Stassin.
And, but I knew I did want to make a small movie, a personal movie.
And I had a couple ideas that were kind of trickling in.
But right after that Thanksgiving dinner, I was like, oh, we got to do a movie about Thanksgiving.
Got to do something about Thanksgiving in crazy political times.
And so I knew I was going to write it.
I knew that it was going to be a small movie.
It wasn't going to be something that I bring around to a bunch of studios and stuff. And I knew that if I could
find someone to give me money to make it, presumably I would have control of it. And it
could be just the first thing I've ever put forward that's completely my voice. Because
any movie you see that I've worked on has a million people working on it. The same thing
with TV show. It's really hard to, you have to really make a film, I think, or be like Vince Gilligan and get a series
out that really shows your point of view. So I knew I was going to do that. And as I was writing
it and developing it, concepts that I was introducing in the movie started happening
in real life. Like Trump pin-co me down and was like, are you loyal to me? Are you loyal?
I don't know if you remember early on, it's still one of the craziest things I've ever seen was it
was like a cabinet meeting and they all went around the room being like, I will work for you,
Mr. President, and I will serve you proudly. And it was like, where the fuck, what's going on?
So it was this weird instance of life copying art that was already copying life. So it was crazy as
it was throughout the writing
process, things and the shooting process and editing. It just, things kept echoing what we
were saying. Before we talk more about the idea of making this thing, which I'm very interested in
how you did it and why you did it the way that you did, but most people know you as Ike from
Neighbors or from Mindy or Blockers. Eastbound and Down. Eastbound and Down. This is a really
funny guy. Yeah. Your career is presumably growing. Blockers was Eastbound and Down. Eastbound and Down. This is a really funny guy. Yeah.
Your career is presumably growing.
Blockers are the hit.
That's great.
Yeah.
But this is a highly politicized thing that you're doing.
And as you say, it's from your point of view.
There's some risk that comes with saying, this is what I believe. And here's my somewhat satirical but eerily accurate portrayal of the dystopian
American experience
right now
are you worried
that some people
who probably loved you
in those movies
or those TV shows
are like fuck this guy
oh I think that ship
sailed a long time ago
first of all
I've been tweeting about
you know
my political beliefs
for a long time
and like the rest
of the country
politics was
a thing that we thought
about once in a while
and didn't really think
about how it influenced
our day to day-day life.
But I could show you a couple thousand tweets where I'm calling Trump a fucking idiot and
this is crazy and these people are monsters.
So I wasn't, you know, worried about that.
What I always kind of just, you know, think of if someone says to you, you know, you're
going to lose fans over saying what you think is right.
I mean, you know, what's more important? you're going to lose fans over saying what you think is right.
What's more important?
At the end of the day, I think anyone who might see this movie who already hates me is not going to see this movie, if that makes sense.
Sure.
So I just – but I knew that it was going to be like a risky movie,
especially for – not just for the audience, but for producers.
Like who am I going to find to make this thing?
So who'd you find?
I found the best guys.
I found QC Entertainment, who produced Get Out and a bunch of other, Black Klansman,
a bunch of great stuff.
And so I wrote it and, you know, my reps or whatever made a list of prospective producers and stuff.
But for some reason, I had my eye on QC just because I kind of – I loved Get Out so much and I loved kind of their take on films.
They want some social relevance.
This is like Sean McKittrick.
Sean McKittrick and Ray Mansfield and Ted Ham.
They run QC.
And they were by far the ones who felt the strongest about it and were like, can you make this for this amount of money?
Great.
Let's do it.
And they got behind it from day one.
And they are like the guys, man.
They're like actually making movies
and they're actually making movies about stuff.
So really thanks to them.
So as far as making the movie goes,
it seems like there's something smart that you've done here,
which is you're working with a lot of people that you know,
including family.
You're working with a company that knows what this is.
And it's only like two or three settings.
So it's that old trick or three settings. Yeah.
So it's that old trick of like write a movie in a house.
Yes.
And then you don't have to go to 10 locations.
There you go.
And, but you have to make it not feel claustrophobic.
Exactly.
And basic.
Yeah.
So did you know that you, did you have to start at that place or did it evolve over
time?
Since this sounds like the story evolved a little bit over time.
The story evolved a little bit, but we always knew it was going to be primarily one, you
know, main location with
a couple chances of
escape. I've seen a lot of bad indies that
all take place in one house. I was kind of like, alright, I get it.
You got a cabin and you shot a movie.
But we kind of hope
that the subject matter and this kind of
concept of
the government is making
people crazy was big enough to
make the movie feel bigger.
So even though it is contained, it does feel like the world's ending a little bit.
And in terms of the actual physical look of the movie, that was something I was very conscious
of because we get eye-bored very fast.
And the nature of the movie, the movie starts off, the first half of the movie is, you know, you get the feeling like you're just watching like a family, you know, dark comedy about politics and the holidays.
And then the movie really kind of takes this turn where the external evil forces or you can call them evil or good depending on where you lie.
I don't think anybody's takeaway is going to be that they're good.
Yeah, right. But they show up and the movie starts to take this darker, more violent tone.
And so to kind of match the look to the story, as the movie progresses, the frames are getting tighter and tighter.
And the colors are getting a little deeper and darker. And you really do kind of, I feel like, if you took a still photo from minute 34 of the movie and minute 91 of the movie, it looks totally different.
And again, that was a challenge too of maintaining a cohesive structure to it.
But it was something that we knew that if we did it the wrong way, it would be looked upon as kind of boring
or just claustrophobic.
And we really tried to make it not just visually appealing, but also just tonally and story-wise
too.
I'm interested in you as a news consumer though, because that's a huge part of this story.
And it sounds like, as you say, you're on Twitter, you're sharing your opinions all
the time.
You presumably are at least somewhat consumed by the day's news all the time. The
character that you play is overwhelmingly consumed by this stuff too much. And I know this person
that you're portraying to some extent. Yeah. And there's something about that person that I
identify with and there's something about it that repulses me. And I'm wondering about like how you
reconciled
that feeling of, I should be paying attention to this versus why is this running my life?
Yeah. Yeah. I'm, I'm, I think I'm just now starting to find the balance a little bit.
But it's unquestionable that for, you know, almost two years, three years between 2015 and 2018,
I was completely consumed.
I think a lot of people were.
Again, circumstances are just so crazy
and the stakes are so high.
And crazy shit is happening.
You know what I mean?
Probably today.
When we're done recording this pod,
we're going to find out that
he's going to pardon OJ for a crime
he wasn't even fucking convicted of.
I don't even know
that would be newsworthy yeah overload is true you can get very overloaded and it's very bad
and when i sat down to write the movie i consciously had the news on all day and that's
the worst thing you can do i think the real problem i have with it is it started kind of like
affecting my personal life um not just my mood Like when you wake up and the first thing you do is check and you see that Trump has tweeted something fucking insane,
you get mad right away at like 6.30 a.m. It's not good.
And definitely was affecting like my relationships with, you know, my family and stuff.
You know, I'm a dad. You got to be present.
You can't let a news story that you have no direct effect on right now.
There's nothing you can do about it.
You can't let that just constantly be on your mind and stuff. So I knew that Chris, the character I play,
was going to be endowed with this horrible quality, right? What I wanted to do with Chris
is I didn't set out to make a movie that is for both sides. Because at the end of the day,
I don't think it's really even sides anymore you know what i mean it's like
here's what i think is is happening and basically i i wanted to show everyone warts and all okay
yeah there's something interesting about being self-critical while also being aware of the fact
that there there is a true north it's okay to say like there's a way to do things and be in the
world even though the people who are on the side that you're theoretically on are just like unbearable, as you say.
They're unbearable and they're never going to, every argument's in bad faith and they
acknowledge that they don't care about facts as much.
And I'm not worried about them because they're already, they're not coming back.
And so I just wanted to show a story about the rest of the people who I think are on all sides of this political spectrum, right?
I'm not talking about like there's a lot of conservatives that I know and respect who think this is insane what's going on.
So I wanted to make sure that it didn't come off like a partisan porno.
Were there movies that you watched or were citing when you were working on it or when you were putting the cast together that you said, this isn't, this isn't inspiration for this, or this is the kind
of tone I'm searching for. Yeah. I definitely, Children of Men really honestly did kind of,
I just remember that day having it on, just thinking like, fuck, this is a good, this is just
such a good starting off point that movie. And I want to just go back. I want to go back a little
more. So definitely Children of Men. Not one of the funniest movies I've ever seen.
Well, it depends.
No, no, there's not one funny moment.
I'm trying to think.
There's literally not one funny moment in that whole movie.
Oh, no, Michael Caine farts.
Oh, yeah, that's good.
That's kind of funny.
I mean, it's not like the greatest joke, but it's pretty good.
What did you like about that movie, though?
Just that you love that setting and the way that that story is told?
Just the desperation of the people there,
just trying to hold on to some semblance of the world that's so decayed.
You know, I remember a long time ago seeing a movie called Mrs. Miniver.
Oh, sure.
It's a famous movie from 19, oh gosh, 46.
46, something like that, yeah.
It's Greer Garson.
And I definitely always think about that movie as almost like two different movies that are weaved together very well. And the first one is kind of like life in this pastoral English countryside. And oh my gosh, and the new bike shop opened. And then like it turns crazy, like this Nazi shows up and she hides him and they fight, they kill him. So that was another one that was kind of in my head a little bit. I love Robert Altman. I love MASH. I love something about the antic style of MASH.
And like one of my favorite jokes,
and it's not even a joke,
it's just this funny moment in MASH when Hot Lips is touring
the surgery tent
and the surgeons are working
and they're just covered in blood.
She goes, how's it going over here?
And the guy goes, are you kidding?
And I just think that kind of
finding those funny true moments
in times of crisis and blood and violence, if you do them the right way, it can be really enjoyable for the moviegoer.
As I said, I think this movie is very good, but did you know how hard it would be to hit that tone?
Because it's like the narrowest tightrope to walk on.
Yeah, it's a tough one.
It's a tough one it's a tough one and we see moments of that
in in in movies we like um in uh manchester by the sea after that like horrible scene with fire
like i don't remember they can't get the ambulance door closed i remember like i had fucking tears
draining my face and i laughed so i i think it's easier to do in moments and the challenge was can
we make a 90 minute movie where especially in the the last 45 minutes, we're asking people to go from like, holy shit to, you know, there were, there
were a couple scenes that were a little more challenging, but I, I, I just think, you know,
in editing, we were, my editor is a guy named Jack Price, who's just amazing. And when he showed me
his assembly, the thing we were worried about going in was would the tone work?
And after seeing just the assembly,
we were like, I think it worked.
When you're working on a tone like this,
are you explaining to the actors beforehand
this is how it's going to be?
Is it in the moment you have to feel it out
and figure out like bigger here, quieter here?
I mean, maybe some of the minutia
and the small moments, yeah.
I could not have gotten luckier.
You got a crazy good cast.
Crazy good cast.
And they all kind of from Jump Street just got what the movie was.
And I spoke to all of them before we started and told them what I was going for and how we are trying to strike this balance between dark and funny and scary and sad.
And they all are just A students and just kind of nailed it.
But I mean,
there's always just like
small adjustments in the moment.
But I was just so blown away
by what they all brought.
It made my job a lot easier.
Let's talk about them
a little bit.
So, you know,
I think the folks
who play your parents
are wonderful.
Your real life brother
plays your brother in the film.
He's wonderful.
Meredith Hagner is hilarious.
Tiffany Haddish, of course,
plays your wife.
She's now very famous. Very famous. I don't know if she was as famous when you guys were making this she
was not so that's a great break for you no no no sorry she was famous when we were making this
she was not famous when i wrote it for her oh interesting i had seen her for like moments
actually we were in a movie together called meet the spartans oh yeah i know that movie yeah
that's like a parody kind of yeah i think i I think I played a – it's the classic scene where Dane Cook is a contestant on American Idol and gets thrown into the pit of hell.
That classic.
That classic scene.
I think it was just included in the AFIs.
I'm just kidding.
Those guys are great.
I saw her – the first time I really saw her and she took me was in Keanu.
I thought she was so – first of all, I love that movie.
And I thought she was so great in it and so real and so tough. And I think that's the word that I always just come back to her is just
authentic, man. She's incapable of being false. So I, right when I saw Keanu, I was like, oh,
she, I would love to be her husband in a movie. That's a fun energy right there. And when I first
started writing the movie and I conceived of Kai, she was the first person in my head. We have the same manager, and I never met her.
And I was like, hey, I really am going to write this for her.
And he was like, cool.
She's, I think, might have a big summer.
She did this movie.
She's great in it.
And I was like, great, whatever.
And then Girls Trip came out, and it was this huge hit.
I thought she was going to honestly blow off the meeting.
She's going to be like, no, I'm going on a yacht with Steven Spielberg.
And she came to the set of the Mindy Project, and we sat and we talked and had a long, long talk about not just our lives, but what's happening in the country and her take on it.
And we got very deep, and she's like, okay, I'll do it.
And people say I'll do it all the time and they back out you know
but God bless her man
she showed up
and in a big way
and just
she blew us away
it's a totally different
side of her I think
it's a pretty dramatic part
it is
it's a heavy part
and you know
her character in it
is
it's a little bit
inspired by my own wife
who
we could not be more
on the same side
politically
socially
everything
but I was making her fucking crazy I was I remember I told her one morning who we could not be more on the same side, politically, socially, everything.
But I was making her fucking crazy.
I was, I remember I told her one morning at like 6.18 a.m.
I read something that the president had done.
I said, this country is lost.
And she goes, I am breastfeeding your daughter
at 6.18 a.m.
That is heavy, man.
And I was like, you're right.
And so I kind of used her as the basis.
And I think Tiff does a great job at kind of the first half of the movie.
She's very contained.
And she's trying to, like, support her husband even though he's driving her crazy.
And she's, you know, biting her tongue a lot.
I know that my wife is going to need eye surgery because she rolls her eyes so much when I walk out of the room, you know, because I'm just crazy.
And then, you know, she blows and she turns into this just insane force of nature and she's doing all of it just to keep her family safe.
And, you know, the message of the movie is we can't allow external forces to affect our internal core.
That was really kind of the main message of the movie while we were making it,
and everything Kai does in that movie,
she's doing for her daughter.
She's doing for her husband, and she is so real.
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Okay, now back to my interview with Ike Barinholtz.
I want to send a quick shout-out to two other actors.
One, there's like a little bit of a John Cho moment happening.
Oh, my God.
And he's
really really funny
in this movie
did you see Searching by the way
I did
fantastic
and Nish the director
was here last week
yeah
that movie was great
really good
really really awesome
the other person
is Billy Magnuson
who's like now
with a little bit of a thing
and is amazing in your movie
he should be a thing
he should be a movie star
I think
he is
feels like it right
yeah so that part
the cast really is basically just my
family, and then there's these two guys
that show up from the
CPU, which is basically
my version of, well,
if this mandate was put into
place or this suggestion was put into place,
who would enforce it? So this is basically
our version of ICE, for lack of a
better comp. And
I knew right away,
I wanted John Cho knew I wanted show.
I've known show for a long time.
I have always just thought he is one of the most watchable actors in the world.
And there's something in real life.
He's like the nicest guy,
but even on camera that just,
that just drips off of him.
He's just nice.
And I really wanted the character of Peter to be like a nice civil servant
who's kind of mixed up in the room and he's at the wrong place at the wrong time.
And so Cho and he came on board right away and we couldn't believe that he joined us and he is so good in the movie.
But for the other part, the part of Mason, who's for lack of a better word, the bad guy of the movie, I'd say, that part went through a big evolution.
Initially when I wrote it, it was an older guy.
It was, in my mind, like Michael Rooker or Stephen Lang, a tough old angry white guy.
Then Charlottesville happened.
And I will never forget watching footage of it that night.
And I think I said to my wife, I said, these are all fucking kids.
These are all young, young guys, man.
Very quickly, the whole concept of the character changed.
And it went from being instead of being like an aggrieved old ex-cop, he's a young guy.
And so there was a couple names floating around.
But early on, someone pitched Billy Magnususon who i'd seen um you know
i'd see him on like boardwalk empire he was on that and he had you know yeah he was in the big
big short he had a little thing he was great as kato kalin but i i loved his look he's got that
blonde hair blue eyed you know and the character is not like a white nationalist but he's someone
who probably knows white nationalists and i met with him he's a he's a real actor, but he's someone who probably knows white nationalists. And I met with
him. He's a real actor. He's like a real New York theater actor. And we talked for a minute or so
and broke down the character and really got into kind of his backstory of why he's so angry and
why he's relishing this power he has and the growth that he'll kind of go through a little
bit.
And he was on board.
And he really blew everyone away.
I couldn't believe what he looked like when he showed up
because he's very handsome.
He looks like shit in my movie.
He looks unhealthy and he's got that awful mustache
and bad spiked hair.
And he really, he's one of those transformer type guys.
He's really, really good.
And I think he's going to jump out to people when they see it.
Let's talk a little bit more about directing.
What was the most surprising thing for you when you were actually doing it?
You had done Mindy, but doing a movie is a little different.
This was a small movie.
Shot it in 19 days.
That's fast.
That's really fast.
And, you know, the thing that didn't even really surprise me, I kind of knew it was coming, but it was just more intense than I anticipated, was how much moving around, how you never stop.
Like, even when you direct a TV show, like, you know, you set up the shot, but there's like a minute or so of downtime.
You could make a phone call, have lunch.
But, like, when you're doing a movie like this, especially a small movie,
you basically are just nonstop walking, right? You rehearse and then you have to hang back and talk to your DP and set the shot and then walk over to your line producer who tells you the bad
news about the next day. Then you got to kind of walk around and take a look at the stunt guy who's
been building the stunt. And then you walk into the actor's room where they're all hanging out
because you got to bond with them because they're in the cast
as well. So it was really
just
I think it was just the
amount of work that really
I was like, this is hard.
Every day, at the end of the day, I was so just ready
to have a beer and just think about my
mistakes and stuff. I look forward to
my next movie having a little bit more time.
Is your plan, your strategy here now to be a filmmaker as your primary gig?
I think so. I never know how to answer like whose career would you want to have? I think
ideally if you're able to do something where once a year you're able to make a movie,
maybe it's a small movie like this, or maybe it's like a big studio comedy
and still, you know,
actively be trying to get
like a TV show going and stuff.
It's, I like writing.
Like my happy place
is when I'm sitting
either with my writing partner
or even by myself
and just writing.
And now that I've directed this movie,
I'm confident I could direct
any movie that I would be in. So yeah, I definitely
want to do it again. Hopefully people like the movie enough that they let me do it again.
You got to cut that deal right now.
I have to. When I get off the phone, I'll be making a phone call to one Jared Levine,
and I'll tell him to shake the cages. But yeah, it's exhilarating. And I'm about to enter,
I think, what might be the worst part of it, which is the release, right?
There's five aspects.
There's the writing, the shooting, the editing, the promotion, and the release.
And the release is going to kill me a little bit just because it is a movie that just there will be some people that have strong reactions to it.
And you know what I mean?
Like, it is.
So will you be reading, like, the Daily Caller's review of this film? Like, how is that going to play out for you? it is so will you be reading like the Daily Callers review of this film like how is that
going to play out for you
like what will you
engage with
first of all
it's ridiculous
is there anything
more annoying
than a Daily Caller
like hey
it's me calling again
yeah no
they're going to
people like that
they're going to
come at it
but what about everything
like are you really
interested in
the reviews
are you concerned
about the box office like how do you think they reviews? Are you concerned about the box office?
Like, how do you think they'll engage with all that stuff?
The box office stuff, in my mind, once I'm done, I'm going to 13 cities, right, to have screenings and Q&As and meet people and stuff.
That's fun.
Once that, I can't wait.
I can't wait.
I'm so excited.
Like, I put it on, like, Facebook.
And, like, there's so many people that I went to high school with that are living across the country.
I'm very excited.
But once that's done, there's nothing else I can do.
So the box office, you kind of have to remove.
And I'm typically not someone who reads reviews, especially in the past, because it was out
of my control.
You know what I mean?
I'd read a couple of the big newspaper reviews, and if they liked me, they were right.
And if not, they were idiots.
But now there's a little more riding on it.
It's so much more personal like you know when you when you make a movie like this which is especially
about like very loosely based on like the worst version of my life it's so personal and you're
inviting people to look you know come to my window watch my family and so i just hope people like it
let me ask you one other thing about when you're making the movie and the news was happening in
real time were you concerned that something would happen about when you're making the movie and the news was happening in real time. Were you concerned that
something would happen that would mess
with the reality or the necessity
or the credibility of the movie? The only thing that could
happen in the news that would disrupt
this movie is a nuclear
bomb, right? Someone said to me,
if he gets impeached,
your movie might not be so relevant.
And I was like, I will trade never
watching another movie ever again. I will trade never watching another movie ever again.
I will literally never watch it.
Bold claim.
Can I watch TV though?
I can watch TV.
I'm not setting the rules here.
I would give up either movies or television
if he would go away.
Okay.
This is a fascinating parlor game.
I'll take this to drinks tonight.
This is a good one.
But so yeah,
I wasn't too worried about that.
I think the reality is it's going to stay bad and then it's going to get worse for a little bit.
Probably true.
And then, you know, look, it's impossible to prognosticate anything now.
If you told me that you are 100% positive next week Donald Trump is going to leave
the White House, I'd be like, okay, he might. If you told me Donald Trump is going to be king for
life, I'd be like, okay, he might. I just don't know anymore. So I couldn't even let that affect
me. We just kind of looked at it more as just like, holy shit, this is happening. There was
something called the National Oath Day or something, which is actually something that's
been around for a long time. But of course, Trump's the first president to be like, there's a whole day for it.
And we were like, holy shit.
It really more, the news cycle really kind of inspired us at a certain point.
We're just like, oh my God, let's hurry.
Let's get this thing out.
Because it just, it seems like very of the moment.
I'd be remiss if I didn't ask you about the concept of studio movie comedies
you were in one this year
you've been in a few, they've been mostly
successful, but it's been kind of a theme
in the conversations, Kay Cannon was here earlier
this year, you know Game Night was pretty successful
but there's a little
bit, things feel a little different now
it does, this movie doesn't necessarily
perfectly slot into that idea, although
it has really more in common with a movie like Get Out than it does Blockers. Yes,
definitely. But I'm just curious as somebody who makes these movies and has participated,
if it feels like the playing field is different, are there fewer opportunities for somebody like
you? There was definitely a moment. I feel like we starting kind of with Zoolander and kind of ending maybe around Neighbors.
There was this feel of a studio comedy.
Tonally, they went from more outrageous, like Zoolander and Stepbrothers, to a little more grounded-like, like Neighbors and whatnot.
But it felt like, I don't know what quite changed.
But I think they had a string of them that just weren't working and even though they
kind of still say oh comedies don't work i think you look at you know blockers and game night and
even i feel pretty did really well like like they do do they do make money they don't make infinity
war money but they they do do well um you know i've heard a lot of excuses for i've heard some
people say well tv's so funny now that people get their comedy from TV. And I still believe that it just takes one movie to reignite the whole thing.
You had The Hangover re-kickstart everything. And The Hangover begat Bridesmaids, which begat
Neighbors. And it just takes that one movie that's the right combination of
funny people who the public like, an accessible idea, and a good script. And you could still have
that elusive $50 million comedy weekend opening. I really think you could do that. It just needs to, I think, thread a lot of needles.
It needs to be very inclusive, and it needs to, like I said,
be a concept that is just accessible.
The reality is blockers and game night, while accessible,
could have been more accessible.
Not these stories, but stories like them.
Yes, we've all had a game night,
but not everyone's had a game night, you know?
And like with blockers,
like yes, prom is a theme
and parents are a theme,
but you know, sex packs quite aren't a real thing.
It's not a universally known concept.
So I still think there are, you know,
once that one movie comes out
that just perfectly hits those zones
and opening weekend
is like $44 million,
then it's just the studio's kind of like,
oh shit, let's just start waking up again.
But I do think there are,
I know of a few projects
in the works right now that are
definitely comedy with a capital C
that studios are like,
let's do it.
I think the days of comedy with a budget over $50 million are done just because the risk is too much.
Unless it's like a huge action comedy with like, I don't know.
It's got to be Ghostbusters.
It's got to be Ghostbusters.
It's got to be Ghostbusters.
I still think that the content dictates it.
And you find the right one, all of a sudden, we're back in it.
Great segue.
Ike, I end every episode of this show by asking asking filmmakers what's the last great thing that they have seen
and you are now a filmmaker so what's the last great thing you've seen the last great thing i've
seen i really really loved crazy rich asians yeah tell me about it i just thought it was
i i didn't know what to expect i thought it was going to be just all camp. And there was so much heart in it.
It's more a drama, weirdly, than it is like a rom-com or a comedy.
Yeah, there's funny moments and stuff.
But she is such a good actor, that Constance Wu.
And if you don't have the right person in that part, I think a lot of people would be like, just marry him.
He's hot and he likes you.
Fuck his mom.
But you could see her issues with it and
why it was so troubling. She was so great.
But
the thing that really I keep going
back to is I fucking loved
Eighth Grade. I thought
what Bo did was so
nuanced and just
simple and I was
devastated by that movie. I cried
so hard at like three different moments.
And my wife kept walking out of the room to deal with the kid.
She would come back in, and I would be like, like my eyes were just like puffed out, and
I was like sobbing like, yeah, it was crazy.
So I just thought that movie was so beautiful.
It's the one that's just kind of really just sitting with me the most right now, still
like a month after I saw it. It's a wonderful answer. The Oath is still sitting with me the most right now. Still like a month after I saw it.
It's a wonderful answer.
The oath is still sitting with me.
Ike, thanks for doing this.
Thank you so much for having me.
Thanks again to Ike Barinholtz and thanks to you for listening to this week's episode of The Big Picture.
If you like conversations like this, we have quite a few good ones coming up, including a upcoming conversation with Damien
Chazelle, which Bill Simmons and I will be doing later this week. And you can find that on his feed
somewhere down the line. He's obviously directed a new film called First Man, which I wrote about
on TheRinger.com. And on next week's show, I had a very fun, long, fascinating conversation with
Jonah Hill, who like Ike Barinholtz and Ethan Hawke and other people who've been on the show
recently, is an actor turned director.
And his first film, Mid-90s, is coming out next week.
So tune in then and you can hear us talking about that.
Thanks again for listening.