WTF with Marc Maron Podcast - Episode 1617 - James Mangold
Episode Date: February 13, 2025James Mangold writes and directs films across multiple genres, but the one style he uses as a prism for so much of his work is the American Western. James and Marc talk about how A Complete Unknown fi...ts into the Western mold and why the placement of the camera was of utmost importance in telling this specific story about Bob Dylan. James also explains his directorial strategy and how it factored into the making of his films like Heavy, Walk the Line, 3:10 to Yuma and Ford v Ferrari. Sign up here for WTF+ to get the full show archives and weekly bonus material! https://plus.acast.com/s/wtf-with-marc-maron-podcast. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Alright, let's do this.
How are you?
What the fuckers?
What the fuck buddies?
What the fucksters?
What's happening?
I'm Mark Maron.
This is my podcast.
How's it going?
Welcome.
You okay?
Everybody all right?
I guess I should tell you who's on the show today.
It's a pretty big show.
James Mangold, the film director, the movie maker.
James Mangold, real deal, old school in a way,
great director, he made Copland,
he made 310 to Yuma Ford versus Ferrari.
He's nominated for best director at the Academy Awards
for his film, A Complete Unknown, the Bob Dylan movie,
which you should probably see at least once.
I've seen it once, I will see it again, I'm sure.
But I'll be talking to him in a minute.
I'll be in Iowa City tonight at the Engler Theatre.
Come down. I don't know if it's going to be snowing or what.
I'm a little nervous.
I don't know if there's going to be air traffic controllers in the towers.
A lot of things that my brain does that are probably unnecessary.
Some of them practical, some of them just panic driven.
I'm in Des Moines, Iowa at the Hoyt Sherman Place tomorrow, February 14th, Kansas City,
Missouri at the Midland Theater this Saturday, February 15th.
Then I'm in Asheville, North Carolina at the Orange Peel next Thursday, February 20th,
Nashville, Tennessee at the James K. Polk Theater on Friday, February 21st. Louisville, Kentucky
at the Baumart Theater on Saturday, February 22nd. Lexington, Kentucky at the Lexington
Opera House on Sunday, February 23rd. Then I'm coming to Oklahoma, Texas, South Carolina,
Illinois, Michigan, Toronto, Vermont, New Hampshire, and New York City for my special
taping. Go to wtfpod.com slash tour for all my dates
and links to tickets.
All right, so here's where I'm at.
I've decided, and maybe I've talked about this
in conversation, call me crazy.
I'm sure that knowing my audience,
though I know there's a separation between
my audience generally speaking
in terms of health-oriented stuff,
and, you know, off-the-grid whack jobs who are,
you know, only cooking with tallow,
eating lots of butter,
and probably not getting vaccinated.
But, you know, the spiritual kind of
new age health community.
I'm sure I've got a few members,
but there's an umbrella of those types of people.
But I've decided that, look, walnuts.
Can we talk walnuts for a minute?
And then, and I am asking for feedback.
And I imagine the subject line will be walnuts.
And I talked to my trainer, who's pretty well informed
and a nutritionist.
They all are on the spectrum of nutritionist.
So walnuts, they're supposed to be good for your heart,
good for your brain, good for everything.
You know, you look these things up
and they're kind of like, wow,
these are miracle working nuts.
A lot of nuts.
Hazelnuts, Brazil nuts, pumpkin seeds.
Now because I've been vegan, and also I'd like to mention that I do wear leather.
I do and I do eat honey.
So if I'm not on team you, suck it up.
That's the kind of vegan I am.
It's not ideological. Some of it is, but most of it is health oriented.
So, walnuts. Let's just focus for a minute.
Now, these walnuts are supposed to be miracle drugs, so then I figure
why not just eat the oil?
Like, some people use walnut oil for furniture. It's very good for a lot of things.
But, I started to think, while back that walnut oil, if walnuts are so good, why wouldn use walnut oil for furniture. It's very good for a lot of things. But I started to think, while back that walnut oil,
if walnuts are so good,
why wouldn't walnut oil be good for you?
And so I started putting like a tablespoon
of walnut oil in stuff.
I have to eat the nuts to get my omegas
because I'm, you know, vegan-y.
And I make a meal, like a ground up, walnuts,
pumpkin seeds, a few Brazil nuts
and hazelnuts to put in the oatmeal.
So I get the full on omega, omega oil effect.
But I really begun to think,
and somebody can, you know, somebody can chime in,
you know, some of you is sort of armchair
supplement professionals.
I believe that the walnut oil,
which now I'm getting pretty high-end walnut oil,
virgin press walnut oil from this place called Corky's.
They do this stuff.
Small, it's a small operation, I think,
but they do walnut oil.
It's not, this isn't a plug.
It's just that I know somebody over there who I knew back in the day who is now involved
with it and they sent me this virgin pressed walnut oil.
It's got a date on the bottle.
So you know, they mean business.
So now I'm just doing straight up walnut oil, not roasted walnut oil, virgin pressed organic
walnut oil, not roasted walnut oil, virgin press, organic walnut oil.
And I gotta be honest with you,
I think it's affecting my joints,
I think it's affecting my brain,
I believe that it's helping my heart.
Now, what proof do I have?
The only proof that I really have is right now,
like my memory, well, my memory's good,
but I do believe it's doing something there, but I do know
that
I have arthritic big toes and it's been significantly better in the last year that might just be a vegan diet
It's an inflammation thing
But i've grown to believe
that
pure walnut oil
I take a tablespoon of it a day if if I'm drinking it after I work out,
and if not, I'm just doing the walnuts in the oatmeal,
I think it actually does something.
And I can't say that for most supplements.
I know a lot of them you're not gonna feel,
but I believe that the two things
that have changed my body chemistry and my body's health
are this pure walnut oil, which I don't do intravenously.
I just mix it in with stuff.
And a magnesium potassium aspartate vitamin,, I think has changed my entire gut health.
So, that's what I'm positing.
That's what I'm saying.
That's what I believe.
That Magnesium Potassium Aspartate and the walnut oil have had a significant impact on my health.
That's what I'm putting out there.
Now, I'll hear from you,
but no one ever talks about walnut oil as being a thing.
Why isn't it a thing?
I don't understand why it's not a thing.
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Here's another thing I'd like some input on.
Where do we stand on old school soy milk?
Like old school.
Now, like I've heard all this stuff, you know,
I've heard too much soy will give me boobs.
I don't think it's true.
I, you know, I would look to China,
nothing but soy in China.
And there's not a bunch of, you know,
I don't think there's a lot of fully defined
man boobs everywhere. But I've been leaning into the old hippie Eden soy brand because
it's got protein. So there and it's not there's nothing else in it. There's no gums or fillers
or whatever the fuck they just, you know, straight up unsweetened boxed soy milk.
And I think that's also, that's the thing.
I guess the reason I'm talking about this
is that some people ask, how do you do the vegan thing?
Well, a guy named Mitch once told me,
and this was about something else.
When I asked him how to maintain his weight, he said I eat the same thing every day and
If you really think about your habits you kind of do that and people are like, how do you get this?
How do you get that with vegan and it's like you just basically eat the same stuff every day just not meat. I
Don't need to talk about this all day long
but it's just you know, and it doesn't mean
I support RFK as Secretary of Health and Human Services.
You know, I'm perfectly comfortable with almost all of Western medicine.
But this is dietary stuff and I know, and I don't, like, it's not speaking to me.
I don't eat a lot of garbage.
And if I do eat garbage, I know what I do, and I'm doing it on purpose.
How about a donut?
How about a cheeseburger?
There's a place here in LA that does,
it's like a knockoff McDonald's, all vegan.
I think it's called McDaniel's or something,
I don't know, whatever.
Also Indian food.
People ask me about that.
How do you eat vegan on the road?
Indian.
Sometimes Thai.
Sometimes there's a vegan place.
There's a fucking Indian place right down the street from me.
I love Indian food.
And I hardly ever went to this place down the street.
And it's amazing.
They've shifted half their menu to be vegan.
It's fucking amazing.
All India Cafe.
Right down on brand.
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James Mangold is here and I love talking to directors.
They're hard to get for some reason, but I've talked to a few recently,
a couple anyways, and Mangold,
the great thing about directors is when you make a movie and you make big
movies and you know what you're doing is that these guys, they can speak to all elements of film and
art and literature many times and in terms of what they're dealing with subject wise,
history.
I mean, the conversations are rich and full.
I love it.
I talked to Brady Corbett that that'll be upcoming, the guy
who directed The Brutalist, and that was some high-level then, high-level
intellectual gabbing. Same with James about films and it's just such a treat
to have them in here. Great guy too. His movie, A Complete Unknown, is playing in
theaters. James is nominated for the Best Director Oscar, which he deserves.
It's quite a bit of business he pulled off there.
It looks great.
But there's so much thinking involved
to really make a movie right and to honor your vision,
if you have a vision.
That's the difference between like an indie movie
that was a good script and people just did whatever they could
to get it on camera and somebody with a vision, I've been noticing that.
I've been watching films by just, you know, new directors or indie directors that clearly,
you know, don't necessarily have a vision, but they achieved the completion of a film.
And indie directors that have a vision and you're like, holy shit, this person has a vision and they've
created a space up there on screen that's kind of miraculous. And James
definitely has a vision, creates miraculous space, but the levels of
expression and concern that directors have to deal with is pretty profound.
But this is me talking to James Mangold.
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So you can manage
the anxiety of making a movie.
But well, it's what I've done all my life. So there's I mean, I'm sure there's this shit So you can manage the anxiety of making a movie, but.
Well, it's what I've done all my life. So there's, I mean, I'm sure there's this shit you've done all your life where
it's somehow, you know, how to kind of.
Oh, that's yeah, sure.
It would be like stand up or this.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But there is the finite amount of time and you've got the team and you got.
Yeah.
And kind of this stuff is more random, rando.
It's like, you know, is this a cock,
do you wear a suit to this?
Do you, can you be casual?
Do you blah, blah, blah?
Is there a red carpet?
Do you have to do your third advance?
Do you, you know, and am I taking a car?
Am I driving myself?
Am I, and every day is a new set
of just these logistical questions that-
And that's more exhausting than making a movie.
Yeah, because it's, out of making a movie,
it's just, you've got AD, well, you know, you know, yeah, you've got a DS
They tell you where to be you plop your you get in the dream car. Yeah
Shit yes. Yeah. Well, that's interesting. I think I should start thinking about
Thinking about it more like that. So what do you do about just the day-to-day anxiety?
I don't I just live with it.
It's just, I mean, it's partly what fuels us, isn't it?
But the- Yeah, yeah, well, there is that.
But then you have those days where you're like,
but is it worth it?
Right, but that's life.
I mean, that's just, I mean,
I think that you ask yourself those questions-
All the time?
If you're a little, if I think-
If you're that guy.
If you're that guy. If you're that guy.
Yeah.
Yeah.
If you're awake in the world, you got to ask yourself existential questions.
Yeah.
Gets a little overwhelming though.
It doesn't seem like, you know, I thought for a minute there, like I was getting
older and it was getting better, but I'm not sure.
No.
Um, I don't know better or worse.
I just know that it's constant, but it's also the, the, the, the, the
coarseness of everything is, um, disturbing to me.
Coarseness.
And yeah, that, that was very diplomatic sentence.
Somehow you mean the hell we're living through is
existentially upsetting and terrifying every day?
Yes, but I, yes, that, but I also mean that the coarseness in the, in the, uh, I feel like we've lost our ability to discuss or argue.
And that, that, you know, what are the syllogisms of kind of logic
have been thrown out the window and it's like,
it's just a free for all of,
and it apply, I'm not really talking politics alone,
I'm talking almost everything.
Yeah, somebody wants the idea of shamelessly doubling down
on everything.
Was entered into the culture as a way of communicating.
It's just all bets are off for, yeah, to try to coexist
and have this idea that there's compromise and tolerance.
Yes, well those words in and of,
I mean there's so many things.
I mean it's so many things. I mean, it's so,
even just earnest feeling has become kind of, I mean, within the world we live in that is so
snarky that there's a kind of, some of the things I most cherish in making movies,
just feeling the spaces between words,
the way people behave, which are fragile things
that have a hard time existing in an atmosphere
that's charged because-
Right, well, and but because of that,
I wonder about this all the time, obviously, you know show business has shifted into you know, uh,
Well, the old school show business has you know shrunken
And become a little more insulated and these sort of do-it-yourself operations that have become empires and dictate a lot of the cultural language
Which there is not very, you know very artful or thoughtful or even genuinely
intellectual or genuinely philosophical.
And entertainment has been limited to what we can hold in our hand.
I do find that the impact for me, but I'm a different guy than the regular people, I
don't mean to say it like that, not to be condescending.
No, no, I know what you mean.
Exactly.
Yeah. not to be condescending. No, no, I know what you mean. Yeah, that, you know, I can, you know,
for me to be carried through a story or a film
or something with nuance and poetry,
I desperately need it right now.
I mean, it's something that I go to.
And the kind of sensory overload,
I mean, show business is such a broad word,
I don't know how to address it,
but if we talk about movies.
Yeah, movies and the idea that it held a primary
cultural place for most people.
Yes.
Done.
Now it's more of the Wild West in terms of.
Totally.
Yeah, yeah.
Totally, like there's stuff comes out with big people,
and I'm like, I don't know where that is.
Where is that?
How you even find it.
Yeah, what is that on?
Yeah. Well, it'll be on this for a month, and then you can see I don't know where that is. Where is that? How you even find it? Yeah, what is that on?
Well, it'll be on this for a month,
and then you can see it at this other thing.
Right.
Fuck.
Yes, oh, do I subscribe to that?
Did I cancel that?
Yeah, yeah, is that part of my box thing that I turn on?
Well, I mean, I've somehow managed,
or I don't know if it's managed or been stubborn or stuck,
but that I just make movies.
So the, and movies have a kind of very orderly way
of presenting themselves to the public.
Yeah.
There's a few weekends where you kind of have
this platform of publicity or whatever.
Running around?
Yeah, and then it lives or dies out in the marketplace
and then it, after a couple months,
finds its way onto these other, you know.
And then you hope it lives.
And you hope it lives.
But there's, I have no experience making films,
you know, for a streaming service or other modes
where I don't even know completely how it works.
Like it kind of...
I think how it works is like with me, okay,
so where I'm at, doing standup.
Right.
Right, so I'm old school.
I'd like to be paid to do a thing.
Right.
So, you know, it's like HBO is gonna give me money.
I'm gonna do a special in May.
I know how that works. But other people- You tape the thing. Yeah, HBO is gonna give me money. I'm gonna do a special in May. I know how that works
But other people tape the thing. Yeah, and they give you the money, right? And then you know, okay So well, I hope it does well, right?
and I think that's the the way that you know, you were brought up in the business because a lot of people are like look
We'll make it ourselves and then we'll try sell it somewhere or we'll just put it up and see who comes
That that to me is like not always at risky
But I can't sit there
and watch how many people watch a thing on YouTube. It would make me crazy.
Well, but in some sense, even, you know, the world of film that we were talking about,
John Sayles and Maitwan before we started. But the world of independent film, which I
came up in originally, my first movie, Heavy, was Sundance movie.
I, well, a lot of those movies also could fall under the make it yourself outside the
system.
Right, but there was a time where like now the idea with that is like, well, you know,
it'd be great if it got on a streamer.
I mean, when you did Heavy, you still want to be in a movie theater, at least for a month
or two.
And then there was still like this idea that like well there are people like I like independent film
And I don't know that people can even identify those
Distinctions anymore. No that that's the the part that that to me is most
Disappointing about what's happened with you know, if you try and be objective about it you go
Okay, now there's all these platforms to watch movies
and shows and any kind of audio visual entertainment.
Right, so, but contrary to what you might expect,
all this bandwidth doesn't somehow promote variation
that independent films have a really hard time finding their way.
Sure, because the bandwidth has its own...
Well, it's just kind of a microcosm of the feature, what's happening in features, where
it's all about the things everyone has to see and the things, the mega things of the
month or whatever.
Right, right.
There's a pattern. Right.
But also the other thing is like if you're in a movie theater,
you're not, it's not like, yeah, I went to the movies,
I watched it for five minutes and left.
Well, also there was, what was the streaming network
that closed about five years ago that was, you know,
nothing but old films and now kind of Criterion
has picked up that. What you mean, like but old films. And now, kind of, Criterion has picked up that.
What do you mean, like Turner?
It was part of, they were using the Turner Library.
And I think what ended up kind of bringing them down
was that Warner's pulled their library from this service.
I don't remember what it was called,
which only makes me sad in and of itself.
But what I mean by that is that not just independent
new voices, but also the kind of entire literature
of movies is hard to find.
Right.
On, on, given the fact you can watch anything.
Right.
Why is it that you can't?
And that the claim is you can kind of see any kind
of film at any time.
The truth is it's really hard to find old films,
particularly, you know, Criterion has a thing
where they're kind of have a rotating schedule.
And those are pretty, that's heavily curated.
Yes, because I think it's a money issue.
They can only afford the license so much.
That's right, right.
And also like the, that's true, you can't,
but also the canon of anything is
kind of gone
That I don't know if it's people's interest
but then again, I'm getting old you and I are like exactly the same age I think and and you know there I
Don't know what the the young people are gravitating towards in any general way or what interests them
I do know that there are some young people that are sort of like I was and they go find this stuff,
but culturally I have no fucking idea.
No, but I don't, my thing is not that I,
I feel like it's purely a kind of,
these are the must watch movies or the canonical films,
but that it's just gets you out of the current fashion.
Meaning that-
Well, what do you go back to, like movie-wise?
Oh, everything.
I mean, you could, I could talk and wax about
golden age Hollywood movies.
Well, I mean, you remade 310 to Yuma,
so that must've had an impact.
Well, the original had an impact.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, and that was,
the Western has had a huge impact on me in terms of just how the beauty of the,
well I guess I'd have to back up.
Movies are inherently simple.
Although there's a real high density of information, visual and audio coming at you, that in order
to preserve what I love in movies,
which is kind of the spaces between things,
the spaces between people, the behavior images,
you can't, plot is the enemy of-
Poetry?
Of lyricism, yes.
So they're at war with each other as you make a movie.
And so what's interesting is you construct a film
from the ground up is you kind of have to make a decision
how cluttered this thing is going to be with,
let's call it plot.
Yeah.
And Westerns are so, they share this with noir films
and samurai films.
I think there's a kind of simple universe
that doesn't mean simple, I don't mean simple-minded,
and I don't mean simple thematically or character-wise,
but just less elaborate plot-wise.
And that what happens with the vacuum
that's created in a narrative
when the story can be told, you know,
I'm a struggling rancher and I get the chance to,
for 300 bucks to escort an incredibly dangerous
and infamous cattle thief and bank robber to justice.
And that 300 may save my farm.
Yeah.
Um, therefore I am now escorting this, uh, incredibly dangerous figure through
uncharted territory with his gang stalking us.
Um, and at the same time coming to grips with my own sense of right and wrong,
Self-worth.
Self-worth, how much am I willing to sacrifice for the public good, for morality.
And is that really it?
But the reason I could in 12 seconds or less already have gotten to the themes that, for
instance, Christian's character or Van Heflin's in the original
struggle with is because the story is simple.
Yeah.
And I don't mean, again, simple dumb.
I mean simple like it's not cluttered.
That's funny because like on those terms, you know, you can, I think people say this
all the time, that there is an element of a Western to the Dylan movie.
Yes. I don't, I see almost everything,
Complete Unknown, I see,
the Western is a prism through which I feel like it helps me
get extraneous shit out of the story by looking at it through that prism.
The Western in its, in, in a kind of surface way can be identified as, you know, a gunfight
in the end and everyone's wearing their hats and holsters and there's a saloon and, but those are
external. Those aren't really it. Those aren't really it. It's this, because there is, you know, Yojimbo is a Western, there's no six guns.
It's usually about a guy.
It's about a guy, but it's also just about actually, usually an incredibly complex existential
or philosophical issue this person is faced with, which runs almost counter to
the perception of Westerns as kind of shoot them up or surface.
I just watched, when was the last time you watched Jeremiah Johnson?
It's beautiful.
It's unbelievable.
Yeah.
And it's straight up a Western, but he kind of subverted the whole thing.
Like it's not, the guy that Redford plays is a Western character.
Of course.
But his journey is so different and it's so solitary.
Well, it's kind of a, it's a very 70s Western, the sense that it's starting to take kind
of modern ideas of who am I, what does life mean, and drop them into the context of this
kind of, but I think that if you think
about it, I mean, Gary Cooper was struggling with what does life mean in High Noon.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Van Heflin is struggling with what does life mean in the original Three Ten of Yuma, and
I hope Christian is in the version I made. And the, um, but those questions, those, the, the beauty of the, what am I, how do I fit in?
Um, part of what makes the Western beautiful is
the, the barren aspect of, of the landscape.
And again, I don't mean just visually, I mean,
the absence of infrastructure means also the
absence of plot complexity that is more spaghetti.
Yeah.
And have you, like, have you always thought this way?
I mean, I mean, like, I know, like...
I've loved simple.
I mean, my first film, Heavy, was really influenced
by the work of Yasujiro Ozu, who never made a Western.
Right.
But told character stories
with a kind of, I mean, precision or focus
on performance, but also on the visual.
Meaning that there's, to me, there's kind of a world
of performance-oriented movies
where the machinery of production, motion picture production, is really used
to record the performances.
Right.
In a sense, it's no different than what we're doing right now.
There's all this gack on set to record wherever the actors wander and whatever happens.
Sure.
That's not as perc- I love films, Cassavetes.
There's films like that that are just kind of like,
whatever happens, shoot it, follow it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Right?
That's never been personally my focus.
I'm always trying to go, how can you get that lovely mess?
The beauty, like I'd use a movie like On the Waterfront
is a beautiful visual piece as well.
So there's the mess, the kind of sense of volatile
unpredictability about the performances,
yet the thing has also a kind of aesthetic.
And that sometimes I always think that the trick you get into, and I thought about it,
I certainly think about it when I make films involving musicians,
and I can tell you why in a moment, but this aspect of recording something that's interesting
versus the camera investigating, framing, and participating in something that still, my hope is, feels as unruly
or improvisational or unpredictable if I were just chasing actors with cameras.
Right.
And, but I don't want to chase actors with cameras. I want it also to feel like
there's this harmony or this kind of sense that the filmmaker knows what they're doing.
But at the same time, there's a kind of herd of cats
spontaneity to what's going on at the same time.
Well, doesn't that come down to the,
it seems that when I've worked in,
as an actor or behind the camera in the small amount of time,
I've done it, that really the gift of any director is
you harness all this stuff and then you do
however many takes you're gonna do,
but you've got to know instinctively
when you say like, that's the one.
Yes, but you also have to know,
is it the one in the right shot?
Meaning, is that that's where the visual side comes to bear,
which is that that's where the visual side comes to bear, which is that you can,
I think the most tricky thing, you know, when I teach, when I've done, you know, Sundance or
film schools or whatever, and when I talk to younger directors, the most important thing,
the most important thing, directing is kind of terrifying, particularly for young directors, because you make a plan,
and you might have thought about this plan for years, maybe a decade.
You've got this in your head, right?
You've written it, you've rewritten it, you've got notes, you've been told no,
you go back, you write it again, you do storyboards, you think, you see a movie,
you revise, you have this plan.
Yeah.
And you're alone, essentially, with your plan.
Right.
And then suddenly, in prep, the chaos begins,
and then you land on this set, and now you have
all these collaborators.
Yeah.
And if you're holding too tight to the plan,
to the specifics of the plan,
these exact shots, this exact way.
Yeah.
Well, there can be a kind of beauty to that,
but you are, in a sense, your own hostage,
meaning that you are ruling out discovery.
Okay.
Wow, I saw this whole scene in this building looking this way, but the sun's breaking through
the windows on this morning that way, and it's stunning and evocative.
But if I do that, my storyboards are out the window.
Fear, panic, loathing.
I have to lead this whole group of 150 people.
And now I don't have my fucking map anymore.
Or my actor comes up with an idea
and I had it all built upon this player staying at the bar
while this player crossed to the window.
And now this one is saying, why am I going to the window?
And, or the other one is saying, why am I going to the window? And, and, or the other one is going, I, I feel
like I'm losing the scene here at the bar.
I feel like I'm just doing it because you told me to.
Right.
And, and these are, you can look at these as a kind of, um, uh, mutiny in which,
which sometimes it can feel like, like you're
just, what you had planned to do is falling
through your fingers through all this kind of
special orders, you know, can I have soy in that?
Can I?
Yeah, yeah, sure.
And suddenly you don't even know how to run
your coffee shop anymore.
But there is another way I think to think about
directing, which is you make your plan,
and then you look at your plan and you go,
what is the plan?
Meaning, beyond the specifics.
Oh, I see, I wanna hinge, I want Mark sitting here
so I can hinge off his looks to the other characters.
I wanna be in his point of view.
And the other characters exist at a distance.
This one you'll see through the food slot in the kitchen
and this one you'll see pulling in through the window.
And so now how do you take that plan?
And I turn to you on the set and I go,
I get you don't want to sit at the bar, Mark.
But here's what I need.
I want to hinge this scene off your looks
to the cook in the kitchen
and to your wife arriving in the parking lot.
And I need somewhere to put you where I don't,
where you have sight lines to these things.
Yeah.
Um, and that's the moment that you identify
architecturally what you need without being a
slave to the exact blueprint you drew in a
vacuum before you got there.
And someone like you, I'll, I'll bet.
And now you, you can tell me,
if I say that to you, that seems reasonable.
Right, I'm not gonna be like,
well, I still don't know why I'm sitting here.
No, but you can sit somewhere else.
Meaning, it now becomes our shared problem
to go where can we put you,
just so I can get these.
That you can solve your problems
and I can still have my plan.
So you have to leave it open for collaboration
or else you're gonna get into it.
Without losing your North Star, without losing your map,
meaning you still want to drive to Glendale. Yeah. I may be going a
different way. Right. But I need to and you can't let your actors or your DP or
anyone subvert the fact that you need to get to Glendale. So the the the that's
where that's where I think it's hardest for a young director
not to panic because the cacophony of ideas on a set
can end up driving you to San Francisco
when you wanted to go to Gundale.
And you've been convinced that it's practical
and it's what we should do.
You just, but for me it's practical and it's what we should do. You just, you just, but, but that for me,
it's always being able to identify what the North Star,
what is the movie about.
Right.
Because I find that I've never met a DP or an actor
who won't respond to and even make themselves an ally
to carrying your largest purpose forward.
Right.
Usually what they're struggling with
is some specific that you're asking them to do
that is, is, doesn't feel right.
The other thing to do sometimes I do
is I actually ask my actor to step off their mark
and I try and do what I'm asking them to do.
Which, which, and do what I'm asking. And I suddenly realized, oh, this is awkward.
Awkward, yeah, yeah.
Yes. And because you can suddenly sense what,
why am I having them turn 180 degrees and their
drink is on this side and the da da da da.
And it's like, who would sit like this when this
person is over there.
And you realize this is all
servicing these sketches I made. But there's another thing that even happens, which is you
get on set and you put your sketches into action and you line them up and you actually, if your
eyes are open as a photographer or as an eye, that these aren't the best shots for this scene as it exists with these faces in this
light. But that part of the reason we cling to this is that there's this kind of, probably
mainly created by Hitchcock, there's a kind of reigning idea of vision, right?
Yeah.
That we all have as filmmakers, artists, we
have a vision.
Yeah.
And then we make our film and all these people
get in the way of our vision, the financiers,
the executives, the actors, the crew who don't
see our vision.
Right.
And I see my job almost entirely as kind of a brain
in a jar that talks.
And my main responsibility is to evangelize,
you could call it vision,
but it's not necessarily every shot exactly like this.
It's what is the broader agenda of the movie?
Here's to be specific, like I made this movie, Walk the Line,
20 years ago with Joaquin Phoenix and Reese Witherspoon, Johnny Cash movie.
And what was so interesting to me about their story,
and particularly his, was the ways
that it told the story primarily of two people falling in love.
But what was so interesting to me,
spatially, filmically, however you want to describe it,
was they fell in love on stage.
Yeah.
And so that's kind of already a kind of contradiction.
Like, love is almost defined by intimacy. Yeah. And so that's kind of already a kind of contradiction.
Like, love is almost defined by intimacy.
Yeah.
But the stage is defined by massive exposure.
Okay.
But at the same time, anyone who's spent any time on a stage knows there is a kind of intimacy
on stage.
Heightened.
Yes.
That you, that if you're with someone on stage, there's a kind of connection you have with
them that is extreme.
And focused.
Yes. And that the people in the audience in a way vanish or they're omnipresent as witnesses
to this kind of intimacy. This makes sense, right? Okay, so that became this really interesting place where I go, I haven't seen that in a movie at least.
And it's really interesting to me,
this aspect of two people,
partly because they were married to others
and partly because they met and kind of vibed on stage.
Fall in love literally in front of 10,000 people every night and then have to kind of fold up
their love relationship and return to their other
domestic lives only to return to this relationship.
It's like it's for two, three hours a day,
they connect and then they, and that it ultimately
in real life ended up with Johnny Cash proposing
to June Carter on stage.
Well, that's interesting because, you know, somebody spends time on stage.
Everything, the focus, the world of focus you're in on stage is so heightened and so
specific that whether what's around you quiets down or not, there's a singleness of emotion,
you know, like it's almost pure.
Yes.
And so to capture that, because I sort of,
because there was a bit of that as well in Complete Unknown.
Yes.
That the dynamic that unfolds with Joan and Bob,
you know, is very specifically
kind of comes to life on stage.
Yes, but privately, see now here's where,
so this is connecting, Mark, to a point I was making about kind of
directorial strategy, right?
So let's, so when I made Walk the Line, and then I'll bring this to a complete unknown,
it occurred to me that to try, because this is like how I feel about my job, my job is
to somehow photograph this unspoken thing we're just talking about. This kind of contradictory to normal logic, this
intimacy that runs contradictory to normal logic. Which is that intimacy
means alone. But in this case it's the opposite. It's under the
gaze of 10,000. So, but yet intimate. So that becomes a really interesting thing
to try to photograph because it's first of, triangles, threes, it's always more one to one is kind of a ping pong match.
But the second that audience is involved, the thing becomes more complex because there's three people involved.
One being an audience and then the two in this case being
on stage. Now it's more complicated because these connections or moves or offerings between the two
are all being witnessed and commented on by this kind of unseen and through the haze of the spot
light and felt by others, judged by others or even misperceived or missed.
Some of it, you know, a very cinematic thing
is something the two people know is going on,
that none of them know is going on.
But also that unspoken thing between people
that you're talking about in the beginning,
that transcends plot and is the meat of the thing,
the possibilities become so amplified.
Yes.
Right, and because an audience feels whatever,
they may not understand what they feel.
So how do you translate all the things
we're talking about right now into a visual plan
that isn't necessarily shot to shot like drawn out,
but I mean, I did board,
but only to kind of try and solve this question for myself.
What it occurred to me was that every concert film
we ever see, most of the cameras exist for a variety
of logistical and aesthetic reasons
and kind of the premium seat, if you will.
You have to capture the performance.
From the audience's point of view,
from like third, fourth row center
or tracking back and forth from that row
or whatever it is kind of capturing
how a comedy special would be shot.
But the reason you wouldn't shoot it with the camera,
like let's use you doing a show,
the reason you wouldn't have a camera literally
on your shoulder breathing down your neck,
looking over your shoulder as you sip and check your notes
is because A, it would,
well, that might be cool actually, but.
Yeah, I just said, I like it.
But the reality is that the reason people don't do it
is it's a break of the default idea of kind of,
here we get into recording versus telling.
What most people do in a comedy special
or a stage show is record the concert event.
They don't invade it with cameras
where the cameras would have to make themselves visible to the other cameras. There's a kind of
technical distance that everyone maintains with longer lenses so that everyone can kind of,
all the cameras and stuff can exist without being omnipresent in the other shots.
When you make a movie, you're not doing that. So, but I'm, so I'm thinking how do I enter this arena,
this bubble, this intimate bubble on the stage,
where you are with the performers.
And so how does this translate?
So when I was scouting, um, that movie 20 years ago,
I, the location scouts would bring me to all these
theaters in Tennessee, you know, old theaters where
we would do a concert do one concert or another.
And they'd show me what it looks like from the audience.
And I'd be like, instinctually, I go,
I don't really care what it looks like from the audience.
Can we go on stage?
And I'd go, what do the wings look like?
What do the backstage, what do the backings look like?
What does the audience look like from the stage?
Because what I wanted to encourage everyone
to think about on my crew and my actors
was that this was a movie where the camera
and the storytelling was gonna live on the stage,
not where a concert film lives.
And that we were gonna be in kind of French overs
or kind of in with the actors around the mic.
And we were gonna feel what the audience doesn't see
sometimes going on the friction, the connection,
the slight, whatever warbles of drama
that are going on between the characters
that create tension because the audience is unaware
of the depth of what's going on
and what just happened in the wings
or who's in the wings watching
that the audience can't even see.
Now I have all this tasty cinematic shit, right?
I have who's backstage, who's watching,
what's going on between them on stage,
how much does the audience know
of what they're feeling on stage?
It's much more loaded than if I were living
watching a kind of Disney Hall of Presidents
recreation of a famous concert.
And also, like, you know, so that what's, uh, I guess, uh, pre-shent on, on your
part is that however long you're working on the Dylan movie, you got all the
tools that you needed, you knew you could do that.
You could have the language that you just talked about.
Cause it was in place.
Yes.
When you needed it.
I was building off of a confidence I had, I mean, on many levels, like encouraging the cast
to sing themselves, all of that, because I had all
the same people on this movie going,
what if he can't do it?
What if he can't sing it?
What if he can't play it?
And I'd be like, well, you're never
going to find out if you don't try.
And the end.
And you've got guys like Joaquin and like, uh, Timmy,
uh, that, that'll go deep. So, you know, they're going to figure it out.
Yes.
Well, that's the point.
It's like, I'm like a coach of a major team and I have to expect my players to
reach high, right?
That's kind of, the whole point is lowering the bar when you have the best players.
It would be raising it to where they're uncomfortable and have a challenge.
But the point I was making about directing
to whatever degree it's interesting is that,
that doesn't, so that whole philosophy doesn't translate
into an exactitude about where I'm going to be,
the shots I must have, sometimes they're those,
but that that strategy is a strategy that converts
well to an actor's mind, to my DP's mind, meaning
they understand what I'm trying to say with the
camera and its relationship with the actors.
And the actors understand, Oh, I know how I can
mind shit out of that.
If the camera's here, you're going to see stuff
you'd never see if you're like frontal on me at the mic.
And-
So you gotta stay open a little bit.
You gotta stay open a little bit,
but I never let go of that idea.
And that idea translates into a kind of visual game plan
that then hopefully gets you both the mess
of live performance or what you feel like is something
where it hasn't been worked
out to the T. There's a kind of beautiful random blossoming to the acting, but also
it's in a beautiful frame that's correct or right or feels right for that moment.
That's kind of very old school thing I'm always kind of chasing when I'm making movie. The difference that's interesting to me
between a complete unknown and, and walk the
line is at another narrative level, which is
that walk the line is really a story of, it's a
love story, but it's also a story of addiction
and psychological trauma.
Yeah.
And that, that, that, and, and in that way,
the narrative fits in a fairly well established,
um, uh, architecture, establishing the
trauma of the young man, seeing it, caring with
him, um, seeing him getting seduced into kind
of self medicating to get through what, what he
doesn't want to deal with in his past or in his
heart or, or that's plaguing him.
Um, and then kind of the classical, you know,
ordinary people, goodwill hunting, walk the line
sequence where the character confronts the
demons that haunt them.
Right.
And by speaking their name in a sense, um, uh,
eclipses them to one degree or another, or gains
control over those things, which he didn't have
control, a beautiful story.
Yeah.
And, and one that I don't think will ever get tired.
Yeah.
It's a part of human life.
Yeah.
But I didn't feel that in terms of writing
and directing a movie about Dylan.
It's like the opposite.
I didn't feel, well, at first I was like,
well, what if he doesn't have a secret?
I wrote this scene in Girl Interrupted a long time ago.
Other movie I made that takes place in a mental institution,
it was a scene that ended up being played by Angelina Jolie and Winona Ryder.
And I just thought of this that in that scene,
Angie's character confronts Winona's character who's new at the mental institution.
And it's an hour after her first therapy at the institution.
Yeah.
And I'm paraphrasing cause I don't
remember it exactly, but Angie says something
to Winona like, so did you cough up a big one?
And, and Winona is kind of confused by this.
And she goes, a secret.
Did you tell them that you're your secret?
And, and, and Winona's character says
something like, I don't understand.
And, and Angie's character goes, you need to cough up a secret
or else they don't let you out.
If you cough up a secret, they think you've confessed
and kind of will eclipse.
The very thing I described, it's kind of like-
The self-awareness.
The business of psychology is almost built
on the same narrative, if you will.
Or at least that's what I was presenting.
And Winona's character in the scene goes,
well, what if you don't have a secret?
And I think Angie's response is something,
well, then you're fucked.
But that's always been interesting to me.
Like, yes, it's very convenient and manageable
in a dramatic narrative to kind of isolate
the trauma of someone's life
and then kind of isolate the trauma of someone's life. Yep. And then kind of navigate their journey to kind
of getting in grips with it.
But what if the trauma is either A, or the burden
or the load they're carrying as a character,
what if it's complex to the point that it can't
be reduced to one specific or kind of, one kind of
hazing or torture or trauma.
Yeah.
What if it's more of an equation or what if it
isn't even, what if, I mean, this is a lot of
what seventies and eighties cycle, what if it's
chemical, what if it's, what if it isn't even
trauma at all?
What if it's a kind of, your burden is who you
are and how you're wired.
Yeah. And, and the narrative has had a struggle
kind of, uh, telling stories like that because
it, it defeats in a way we have a very, or a kind
of Aristotelian desire for kind of the simple
thing that's going to get revealed.
For stories.
For stories point of view, that there's something from the past that's impacting
the present and the second they solve the shit from the past, the present
will open.
Yeah.
And, but as I began working, both talking to Dylan and writing and researching, it kept occurring to me that either,
what if what's unusual about him is more hardwired
than trauma inspired?
Well, that was the biggest trick of that movie for me
in terms of Dylan is that Chalamet was able to play
that you never know with Dylan
if it's being intentionally mysterious
or being, you know, or if it's a gimmick,
you know, that when he says things that are cryptic
or seemingly snarky, but there's something
about Dylan not talking where you're like,
oh my God, what the fuck is going on in there?
Yeah, it's so interesting because I, part of
this is when you write about someone and you get
to meet them and spend time with them and they're
very pleasant and enthusiastic and you also
are appreciating in a way, of course, like I go on
a deep dive in his work making a movie like this
and you are kind of inundated by the depth and power and prolific nature of his work.
You begin to get very empathic toward them in the sense that the easy kind of adjectives
that are used in the kind of TV guide versions of describing them enigmatic, mysterious, arrogant,
difficult, you know, become too easy.
Well, the risk of being, of building an empathic relationship
with that guy is, I would imagine is that then you're
out to sea in a way that you can feel it, but you're still,
you feel like you could put your...
Well, I don't mean empathic like I don't have objectivity
to see when he's an asshole or when he's...
No, no, no, I just mean to get into that quiet part
of Dylan must have been sort of exciting.
It just kind of happened, it was exciting,
but at first, what I did creatively
on the screenplay level was make this kind of mandate to myself
that I wasn't gonna do the kind of story we were
just discussing for Walk the Line, the kind of
classic trauma.
But really it isn't there though that you could
identify.
Of course.
So the, well, but this is gonna come full circle
because I kind of think there is a trauma.
But now that I, but it's kind of interesting.
But let me get there, which is that the,
I wanted to do, one of my great teachers was Milos Forman
who made the film out of Peter Schaeffer's great play
Amadeus, which is ostensibly the Mozart story,
although it's really-
Great movie.
Yes, but it's really the Salieri story or other,
which is a really interesting and profound
and brilliant narrative repositioning, meaning the title character is not who you're kind
of tracking closest.
And I found that strategy to be really inspiring for tacking, tackling, uh, Dylan's story, particularly for these years,
because I felt like it freed me, at least in the
beginning of the writing, from having to diagnose
him as opposed to viewing him as a kind of strange
and wonderful miracle.
Um, uh.
So there's, there's not essentially a Salieri,
but there's many people around him that.
There's a consortium of Salieri's.
Yes, right.
Each, none of which are experiencing, I mean, I wasn't trying to mimic-
No jealousy necessarily.
Well, I think envy is a part of it, but I think-
But not paralyzing.
No, I think it was more, I think there were, as much as that, there's also people falling
in love with Dylan or Mozart for their talent or becoming, or forcing them to
ask themselves questions about themselves or their own work. All of that became really ripe to me
and really interesting and was my first effort on the script was to kind of, and that's how,
by the way, I ended up meeting Dylan was was I really dove into Joan and Suze Rotolo
and Albert Grossman and of course Pete Seeger,
because I thought there was so much dramatic juice
in these characters.
Well, that's interesting because then the onus
isn't on you or Tim to explain himself.
Verbally.
Yes.
But the, but the, but what,
and that became really fruitful.
Yeah.
But I caused alarm bells to go off in the Dylan camp
because they read my script.
Yeah.
And were like, this, that this is not the mandate
we had wanted for this movie.
We wanted this to be about the music,
not about Bob's personal life.
Were interesting. And I was like, I about Bob's personal life. Well, interesting.
And I was like, I don't know how to do that.
Yeah.
I don't know how to make a movie that's just about the music.
And COVID hit and kind of killed the movie for the near term anyway.
Was this before you had focused on this one particular time or was that always the arc?
That was always the arc. There was always the arc, but the anticipation,
like the book, Elijah Wall book,
is not really, doesn't really delve into the personal.
And, but to put the book into film form
without that other stuff, to me would have been a crime.
Like it would have removed the music
from all context, personal content.
What taken the heart out of the movie?
Well, at least as I saw it.
So we were at a kind of moment of tension or impasse
and then COVID hit and in a sense made it irrelevant.
And then about two months into COVID, this is 2020,
I get a call from Bob's manager who goes,
well, you know, Bob's tour was canceled.
I'm like, okay.
And he goes, so he asked to read the script.
Yeah.
And I go, okay.
And he goes, and he likes it.
And, and so suddenly the team, team Bob had
completely changed because Bob was at a different
point of view than what they had anticipated.
Yeah.
And, and he goes, and he'd like to meet you.
So then that became a series of meetings with Dylan
where we discussed the script and his life
and this period and a million other things.
But the point being that I suddenly had license
to go to places that his team had said I couldn't.
And you had read, had you read that autobiography?
His.
Yeah.
Yes.
Because like as odd as that book is,
the details of that time are so clear.
Yes, and but then I got the in-person version.
Sure.
And I got to ask the questions directly
about all the figures in the movie
and about his feelings about that time.
Like what, Von Rock and all those people?
No, I mean, Von Rock didn't figure so heavily in this narrative.
So that, but-
He's like in the movie for a second.
Yes, but like Seeger, I mean, we talked about all of them,
but Seeger and Baez and certainly Suze, who is called Sylvie in the movie.
And Guthrie.
And Guthrie and all of that.
But also him.
What I wanted to know is what he doesn't talk
about much is, and how did that feel?
What did that feel like?
What do you remember about what that felt like?
And you could get that out of him?
He wasn't resistant at all.
He wasn't, I didn't find, I mean, my four or five
meetings with him, which were hours and hours
long, I didn't feel like
I was the one who was probably cutting it off.
Like there was a point where I felt like, you know,
he was never going, we're done, or there was no one watching.
There was no one listening.
There was no one controlling.
It was the two of us in an empty coffee shop
for hours on end.
And this is an older man with memories
that doesn't have anything, you know, there, I would
imagine that he has, and I don't know if he ever
thought this way, but yeah, he's nothing to lose
really.
No, well, of course there's something to lose in
the sense that, that this is going to be a large
scale, high profile.
But I mean to tell the stories.
No, I think he's has enough distance that he's
comfortable talking about them.
But I also think he, um, he was also honest in what he doesn't know.
I mean, he really, even as of 2020, when I was talking to him about this, didn't
really understand why everyone freaked out so much and why, meaning there was a
level-
At the time.
Yes.
Which, which you could see, say was, is disingenuous level. At the time. Yes. Which you could say is disingenuous with
historical perspective looking back.
Right.
But when you transport yourself, as I had with
the research, into that moment, you're kind of,
it does occur to you that there's a whole series
of interpersonal bargains and agreements and
commitments that have been made and set in place
between these characters that would make Bob confused.
For instance, uh, Bob never promised
not to play rock and roll.
Oh yeah.
He never, I mean, one thing he was very clear
to me about was that he never, the way we each
imagine our careers when we're 18, 19 years old,
he never imagined himself as being the musician he imagined in his mind's
eye was sure Woody Guthrie, but also Buddy
Holly.
Sure.
Sure.
Sure.
Pete Seeger, but also little Richard.
Yeah.
Why wouldn't you?
He carried all of that in his mind on his way to
New York.
So the idea from the moment he took the stage at
Gerties, Folk City or the gaslight that he had,
according to some kind of dogma or tribunal
kind of pledge.
Folk dogma.
Yeah.
That he had pledged to never make something
different in his life was completely bizarre
to him and he would never, I mean, and, and he had never made such a
commitment in his mind.
His point of view about his ascendance as a
folk star in a solo act was that that's what
happened and therefore I, of course, I had no
money and no notoriety.
And so I took what happened.
But what's also interesting in what you're
saying about what he's carrying as he heads to
New York, what he was also carrying was complete control
of what he did.
He didn't have a band, he wasn't on a bus,
he didn't have a drummer that drank.
So like-
He didn't have a manager or producer.
Nothing.
He had the guitar and-
He had the beauty of total singularity.
Yes.
And so that's interesting
because then he becomes a collaborative artist,
not by default, but by the gravity of him. One of the most beautiful and honest things I think he was telling me in these sessions
was the reason he wanted to make music with a band was because he felt lonely.
Yeah, right.
I mean, a kind of loneliness.
I'm sure you understand.
Well, that's interesting because that's the silence.
Yes.
He described it.
He said you're alone in the car on the way to the show.
You're alone on the stage in the spotlight.
You're alone when it ends.
And you're alone when you're writing the material.
And that at some point, he was looking at some people
he admired, and Johnny Cash, Richard, the Beatles.
None of them were alone. They alone. And that I thought this married to something else
going on for him at the same time,
which was that all the relationships he did have
in the folk community with his ascendance
to this kind of megastar level
had become quite transactional,
or at least tainted with transactionality,
meaning everyone had an agenda, they needed him to appear here.
And also a politics within the community.
Of course. So he felt suddenly not only alone as an act, but also alone in the community.
Because as the center post holding up the whole tent at that point. I think there was a tremendous amount of pressure and a tremendous amount of
agenda laid upon him that I think made him yearn for just company.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And that was, I mean, that was what he said to me was the primary reason to
wanting to get in a room with other musicians was to play.
Yeah.
And to not feel any of, in a way that I,
seemed so pure and easy to understand.
And therefore, this movement toward electric
and toward a band didn't come from someone going,
I'm going to turn the historical, the culture,
I'm gonna make cultural history today.
And more so, I saw Newport as the script took shape
and these conversations took shape
as a kind of Thanksgiving dinner run amok
in a family that had been living
with some tightly held beliefs
and the prodigal son wasn't gonna live with them anymore.
He couldn't, he had to break from dad, break from
sister, break from everyone.
This was the night he gave the big angry speech
at Thanksgiving and got in the car and drove off.
Right.
And that, and that, that it ended up making history
was a beautiful
and interesting additional observation, but that
to dramatize it and to help actors make it come to life,
I felt like what was so wonderful coming from Dylan himself
was the sense of the extremely personal feelings
that were driving all this for everyone.
Yeah. Like how uncomfortable for Pete Seeger
that, that he's this, I mean, Seeger and Dylan
are such different artists, which is so
interesting to evaluate.
You know, Seeger probably wrote a handful of songs
in his whole life where Dylan has written over
600, 700 songs, the, of humongous, um, importance
to the culture and,
um, and hits and that, well, what is the
difference Seeger's focus was building a
movement was changing the world.
Yeah.
Political populism.
And, and, and literally affecting change
through music, through community and music and
the way music binds us together, which is all
beautiful.
Yeah.
Dylan's was much more a pure artistic, even narcissistic journey,
which is I want to express myself through my shit, through my heart.
Thank God for the beatniks.
Right. And that the, so you almost have them destined for a kind of conflict
from the moment they're bound together, because to Pete,
Bob is an, is not just an incredibly talented
artist, but an instrument for elevating the
movement and advancing the movement.
Sure.
To Bob, Pete is a stage and a platform for which
to get started in this world as an artist and to
get, to find an audience and to find a community.
But the, the goals, the agendas of each character
were never alike.
And that therefore, and Joan to one degree or another
was very much bought into the folk dogma.
Many of the artists of that,
most of the arguments and discussions be,
what is folk, what isn't folk?
Well, why wouldn't you want to be part of a context through which you knew how to rise?
You know, like once you lock in, I mean, whether you believe folk music is the big powerful
change it is, it's certainly like, well, if I play this, I can play at this place and
I'll be on the same stage as these people.
And you know, I have a certain amount of intention and I believe enough, but I think all artists
are a little selfish.
Maybe, you know.
Some more so than others, maybe.
Right, yeah.
Or maybe what drives them is essentially
more internal than others.
But I think it's interesting what you're pointing out
is that Dylan was unbounded in his desire
to express himself however it was gonna come.
And-
But I don't necessarily see that as arrogance.
No, no. That's kind of like any one of us.
Sure.
I don't, I'm, I identify in my own humble
way with it. I've made movies of a lot of
different genre. I'm always, I've made
independent Sundance films. I've made
gigantic studio pictures.
I, from where I sit, the experience is
awfully similar. One to the, I'm not sure
if you find it that different, but the,
you essentially
have to get in a space with a camera, make a scene seem real. The core tasks at hand
don't change much.
But also you have in your own sort of lexicon of people that inspired you, it's not unlike
Buddy Holly and Woody Guthrie. There's a full spectrum of people who express themselves
and have made a mark.
So why limit yourself to any one?
So what was so intriguing to me about the story
of this period for Dylan and why I thought,
because I didn't wanna make, I'm not,
I wasn't such a Bob Dylan super fan
that I was like driven to make a Bob Dylan movie.
Well, that's helpful.
Always, even me when I talk to people,
it's better if you're not a super fan.
Well, it will screw you up.
Yes. And what you always want to do,
like I was describing about Walk the Line,
is how does the movie eclipse the kind of,
the recreation of history and characters
to be about something bigger than just,
I mean, obviously, audiences and press are gonna describe
this movie as the Bob Dylan story,
they're gonna describe the other one as it,
but if the movie's gonna have any kind of transcendence,
it's gotta be about something more than just
an historical recreation of scenes from this artist's life.
Well, yeah, you found the story.
And the story in this case is not about, is not about all this stuff is interesting in the folk dogma
and the community versus the self and all, but
where it gets interesting is when it starts to
become not about Bob and about, well, what is an
artist's duty?
Are you, are you part of a movement or are you
listening to your own voice?
But even more importantly, and this is where I try
and get full circle with what we were talking about
earlier when I was saying, Bob didn't have
a kind of visible or obvious trauma that I could see.
Yeah.
I did, it did start to occur to me that there
was one, which was genius itself or, or let's call
it intense talent because the word genius is so creates such a
reaction is so polar, but let's just say someone
who is intensely talented, who's touched, which
you have to see Dylan as given the pro the, the
yeah, it's a rare thing.
You can't not see it.
Even he doesn't know where the songs were coming from.
That's why, yeah.
That beautiful interview he did with, with Bradley. Bradley on 60 minutes. Yeah. I don't not see it. Even he doesn't know where the songs were coming from. That's why, yeah, that beautiful interview he did with, with Bradley.
Bradley on 60 Minutes.
It's great. Yeah. I don't know where it came from.
And the honesty of it is beautiful.
Yeah.
And, and, um, but that in itself could be a kind of trauma, meaning that let me.
Certainly in terms of loneliness.
Yes, right on.
Yeah.
It separates him from everybody else.
Right.
It, it means that he's tuned into a station
that no one else is hearing.
And it means that as he's living his life,
part of his brain is tuned into that thing
and part of him is present with them.
Trying to be present.
Trying to be present.
And the struggle becomes a kind of,
how do I nurture this thing,
which is not only keeping me alive, but making me a star and pleasing people around the world,
but also stay present and intimate and with those around me and how do I navigate that?
And I'm, my behavior is in a sense being evaluated by those who don't have that secondary voice
in their head.
And it's ever present and I would imagine in your interpretation, probably consuming.
Yes, and also gives him the most pleasure, meaning that as success drives forward and
most relationships become transactional and people want shit from him, what is the purest
place he can retreat?
And this is something any artist can identify
with that solitude with your voice, in his case,
a voice that is so acute and so intense,
such a lightning bolt at that moment.
The work is coming so fast.
How rewarding to be a vessel with that kind
of electricity running through you.
How could you not retreat into that?
And how does one then navigate being alive and present in the world with your friends and
lovers and business compatriots and whatever.
And also tuned into that thing that none of them
have, but even worse, some of them resent or, or
to them feels like hokum or a mystery or, or what does it
even exist?
Try to put you in a box.
It, and, and that to me became, let's not call it
a trauma, but a problem the character had to navigate.
Well, I liked the way he shot some of that where
he's like that, that becomes the primary
relationship, even when he's among people and he's
just writing, it's like, all right, I'll leave, you know, like whatever.
And one thing Timothy and I talked a lot about was how,
because you know, it's hard to tell an actor
to play a condition, arrogance, a loop.
There is no such thing as a loop
if you're playing it as an actor,
meaning no one is a loop.
Where is the loop?
Where are you?
Meaning you have to be somewhere else,
but to play that you need to identify
where are you that isn't here?
And that became what I just described
became for Timothy and I at least one kind of tool
to help him maintain a secondary active brain life
and emotional life in every scene that in a sense was leaving
everyone else out.
So you explained to him.
We talked a lot about it.
Yeah.
About this other world that Bob was a vessel.
But it's also, I don't view myself, Timmy was also doing, we did, I mean, he was with
me on this for almost five and a half years of work.
He was, in learning the in, in entering Bob through
the music, which is largely what he did. I think he was encountering from his own end. I mean,
I was telling him all I had learned from Dylan and all I was observing, but I think he was
observing, absorbing on his own end, a kind of similar observation, which is these streams of
thought and music could only come to someone, what that only comes to him
between like he's nine to five, punches a clock
and, and you know, it's, it's when it comes, it
comes and you gotta, you gotta write it down and
it doesn't matter if you're in your girlfriend's
bedroom or if you're, if it's 3 AM or, or you're
in your dressing room, shit's gotta stop for you
to get this down
because it's good.
Yeah.
And, and, and that, that struggle, that tension
internal, as you said, became a way to not
play aloof as a condition, arrogance as a
condition, but to play, well, it's not arrogance.
I'm actually carrying on.
I'm actually trying to be polite to my other conversation as well
Yeah, meaning I'm trying to be polite to two simultaneous conversations and probably failing my creative voice at times
Yeah, and definitely failing my interpersonal life at times. Well, that's a that's a brilliant
Insight and now you know it explains a lot to me on how he approached that role
What was interesting in talking about you know know your love of Amadeus is that
Foreman did that amazing audio montage. Yes. With Solieri looking at the
unfinished pieces. Yes, we're hearing them. Yes. In his head. Yes. And that
explained everything. Yeah. Yeah and you know that was the way he managed that.
And in many ways I you know I feel like mean, some of it's silent in the sense that
you're just drawing it off Edward Norton's eyes or Monica Barberow's eyes. You're just
looking at these people and you're seeing not just admiration, but there's all sorts of thoughts they're having as they watch this,
which I think is really, uh, uh, where, um,
interesting, which is, which is that salieri
energy, which, which doesn't have to get to
murderous jealousy, but can just get to a sense
of one's own limits in the face of one who has
less of them.
And, and, and one is forced as we all are at
moments to confront people who have broken
through something.
I know it's hard for a creative person.
It's hard.
And it can be both inspiring, but it can also
take you off track.
Like you can start trying to do what they do.
Have you had that moment?
Of course.
Like with who?
Oh, um, well, watching old films, it's easy
to be at peace with it.
But watching, no, I remember watching Boogie Nights and just going, holy fuck.
He is brilliant.
Yeah.
And Paul and, and, and feeling utterly dwarfed by the courage for him to leap into the kind of,
the world he was leaping into. And then the way he was being unselfconscious about it and kind of,
like it was- Empathetic. Empathetic. In a world that had only been kind of treated with a kind of judgment.
And there was, I remember that. I mean, I can remember even as a young, I mean, it's kind of
amazing that my life has taken me to befriending some of these people, but like, or Spielberg on
another side, it's like, there's more, you know, you watch the, uh, close encounters, the 39 or Jaws or, or, uh,
I just recently saw the first half hour of
saving private Ryan.
Oh my God.
And the, and you're, it's just like, uh, or
there's someone put up a scene he did in Munich
or because I did the Indiana Jones movie, I'm
watching his staging, like just the beauty of his blocking
and staging and, and it's awe inspiring.
And there's moments where you're like, how
did he do that?
And, and, and it's not that it's complicated,
it's that it's so crystalline and pure.
And that is, um, that drives us.
I think the place where you can always get screwed up as an artist is if you're, is you can't be what they are.
Sure.
You have to be what you are.
And that can be hard under the pressure of that.
And it may be what you are will never hit like what they are.
But you can't be what you are.
I have to be what I am.
Right. Yeah.
Right.
And maybe it will meaning that Steven never knew
whether his particular outlook in the world was
going to explode.
Paul never knew.
Yeah.
You just, you just do it.
And, and we also never know how long it's going to
hold or whether it's momentary or just this movie
or we all live with that fear.
Um, uh, the world is filled with artists who have their moment,
and then that moment goes away,
and they're still artists.
And, but the, so...
I think you did do something amazing with this, though.
Thank you.
In terms of, like, you know, to make that story,
and to make that character, you know, to make that story and to make that character, you know, live
and be appealing to people of all ages, like the number of young people that are, you know,
taken with that story and also taken with the reality of Dylan is pretty phenomenal.
It's pretty cool.
I mean, it's like, I don't know if you could have ever anticipated that.
No, the only other thing I ever thought
when I was making it, it was a movie,
we started talking about Westerns,
and you talked about how it might apply to this,
and it's a really good observation.
The simplicity in the shooting style,
I shot it in a way, I felt like Bob is such,
my whole cast and the world is so eccentric in the film in a way, so rich.
And their world is so rich in style,
their uniforms.
And you got that right. Thank God.
You know, you got that perfect time in the 60s
to where the clothes were cool.
You didn't have to be bogged down by psychedelic bullshit.
And it was so...
Well, it's early 60s.
I know, that's what I mean.
That's the beauty of it.
Totally. Because like all of that stuff... I mean. That's the beauty of it. Totally.
Because like all of that stuff, it's about to
change when our movie ends.
That's right.
And it's like, this was the last cool time.
Now Dylan had a great observation about that,
which he said, he said to me, you know, the
sixties, there really was no sixties.
Yeah.
He said, uh, the 60 to 65 was an extension of
the fifties and 66 an extension of the 50s.
And 66 on was really the 70s.
Well, that's cause they were still wearing the clothes
of the late 50s.
They were just making them their own
with a different idea.
And musically and artistically,
what was happening, the beats and the,
it was all 50s and in music.
And then it all went upside down.
But the temptation, like a lot of my collaborators
on the movie when they came on, it's like,
are we gonna do this super grainy
and kind of handheld like a Maisel's film?
And I was like, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
And I was like, I feel like putting too much
directorial overt style on a movie about characters
who were so style positioned already
would be like a hat on a hat on a hat, as they say.
And that in a way I wanted to observe
and to watch and to be focused more.
I tried to, you know, another real icon for me
and a kind of touchstone for me is like Ilya Kazan, I mentioned
I mentioned Waterfront, but also East of Eden.
It's a great movie.
And the
So that Technico or whatever that was.
And widescreen.
Yeah.
And the way, I love the way closeups, you have these
kind of asymmetrical closeups where you have this
really obviously widescreen.
So a face, you don't want to plop it in the center
with kind of these two big wings coming off.
So it's kind of the closeups get asymmetrical
or you end up with these incredibly beautiful
two faces within the rectangle anyway, blah,
blah, blah.
But the, the, it was really interesting to me to
try to just land in the world and to let us try
and experience that world and to hope the camera
was ferreting out some of what we've been talking
about without spelling it out verbally,
but just seeing it in us.
I thought it was perfect, that color.
Thank you.
And I have to assume though, because I can see
your passion for New York at that time. And I assume you grew
up there.
Yeah, I went, well, I was born in the Lower East Side in New York in 63.
Yeah, and there's something that never leaves New York. It may have almost left at times.
I have sense memory, I think, of the late 60s and the pickle barrels and the finish
salesmen and the Hebrew bookstores and just,
I mean, some of that's still there,
not the pickle barrels,
but the garbage blowing in the street
and just general, the smell and feel.
And against that, what was the classic melting pot
emerges this thing.
Like the character of New York
is always prone
to birthing things, you know, that come from a lot
of different places.
Think about that moment in New York
within just a one half mile radius.
You've got literally Bob Dylan at the gas light,
Von Ronk, Baez, onward.
And then around the corner, you've got Coltrane
and Davis and I mean, this've got Coltrane and Davis.
And I mean, this is literally the same three blocks.
Sure.
And Ginsburg's around probably.
Oh my God.
And, and I mean, and Edward Hopper's painting over there.
And I mean, it is a hot, it is, it's just a square mile with like so much shit going
down.
Yeah.
It's hard to believe.
Yeah. Yeah. It's, it's hard to believe. Yeah. And, um, and how much that's inter braided into
trucking companies and bookstores and, and
shipping and pickles and conditions and smoked
fish and, and Chinese restaurants and, you know,
and those clubs weren't even clubs, but kind of
retrofitted, you know, Italian restaurants, they
weren't built as clubs.
They were kind of things that just happened
in basements or in places.
And, um, yes, such an exciting time.
There's an intimacy to it.
Yes.
And I thought you got the, I thought that one
moment that like, there's a couple of moments
that stand out to me that I thought were so
exactly what you said, that it wasn't about
plot, but it was about that space between people.
And just that moment, which I must've been
an interesting decision on your part,
that when you had that moment where Cronkite
is saying that we might be bombed,
and everybody's freaking out,
and Joan's trying to get out of the city,
and she walks by and Bob is just playing guitar
in a basement.
And you know, like disconnected from it all.
That this was.
Or is he more connected?
Whatever it was.
Where is he going to run?
That's right.
What, what, why not die doing what you like?
Right.
Uh, and that I thought that was great about him.
It's really interesting.
And, and this thing about plot is, I mean, we could obviously talk forever.
The plot is, I think plot has been just overdefined
with like bad guy, good guy, and then this one makes
this move and then there is such a thing as an emotional
plot and, and I think it's more foreign to audiences
at this point because they've been so stuffed to the
gills with the world will end if this doesn't happen
movies, but there is, there, you know, watching so stuffed to the gills with the world will end if this doesn't happen movies.
But there is, you know, watching Joan fascinated,
repulsed and falling in love with Bob at the same time
is really interesting and has many movements to it.
Watching Bob kind of in awe of Joan
and kind of envying her career and her guitar playing
and wanting and being so ambitious and hungry for
his own shot at things. Watching, you know, Sylvie, L. Fanning's character kind of wrestle with being
almost our emissary as a kind of regular human in this world of each of these characters has so many
movements that, but they just don't involve a bank heist
or needing to get X or Y.
But that's where movies get exciting to me,
is when that kind of, you know, I mean,
I think Sid Field had a gigantic effect
on a whole generation of filmmaking.
The screenwriting book?
Yeah, with like page 10 this, page 15,
turnabout, blah, blah, blah.
I never was able to work from that stuff.
And partly because I just felt like what I was doing was so architectural
and unalive when I was trying to write that way.
I'm not saying it couldn't work for someone else,
that it was, I really felt like I learned to write
from a director actually, Milos Forman at
Columbia University.
He taught you personally?
Well, he taught me by example, he, I, I was
teaching there.
He was teaching there and it was a directing
class and each student was supposed to come to
the directing class with something to direct.
Yeah.
And he came to, there were five of us and he
comes to me and I'm like, I don't, I just
haven't an idea about a fat guy who's invisible.
And he goes, okay.
And, and he goes, what's it, what's it about?
And I go, and I remember saying something
terribly pretentious, like cinema.
And he goes, you can't make a movie about that.
What's it about?
Like the people and the, and he goes, and he's
just said, here's the deal.
Um, here's my address, write 40 pages a week and
send them to me and I'll come in and talk to
you about them.
Yeah.
And what could be more inspiring, you know?
Yeah.
So I'm writing 40 pages a week, like feverishly
and just sending them to Milos.
And what he did immediately is instead of me
having to follow, oh, I need a hook or I need it.
I just wrote about characters I knew.
And then he would come in and he'd a, I just wrote about characters I knew.
And then he would come in and he'd go, page 37,
this is life.
Yeah.
And, and he goes, and it was a moment, it's
actually in the movie where Debbie Harry Harry's
character is showing Liv Dyer's character how
to show the cash read, play the, use the cash
register.
And she's going, no, don't press this, press
reset first.
And then you hit this and then the drawer opens.
Yeah.
And it was so funny, Mueller circled this page press reset first, and then you hit this. And then the drawer opens. Yeah.
And it was so funny, Mueller circled this page. It was just people talking about how to use
an old cash register and he goes, this is life.
Yeah.
And, and that was one lesson, which is life
itself when recognizable is compelling.
And so sometimes you don't have to identify
this bomb under the table.
If humanity itself, there's a kind of universal something where we all recognize
ourselves in that moment, that in itself can
hold an audience, one lesson from him.
The other was, there was a point when I was
writing and I didn't have really a story where
he goes, uh, page 52.
So your character comes home after his mother
dies at the hospital, but he doesn't tell anyone
that she's died.
Yeah.
And his mother runs the place he works.
And, and I go, yes.
He goes, that's your movie.
And he goes, just make it as long as possible
before he tells anyone what happened.
And, and that also was, he was helping me find my plot,
but through a kind of organic exploration of character
instead of this kind of like log line,
kind of methodology which never worked for me.
Wow. And like with Dylan, there's this moment
that I'm kind of hung up on outside of your film is that he's always,
despite the fact that he's a vessel,
he's always hyper present somehow.
Yeah, he's hyper intelligent.
I found that with him.
I mean, there was a lot of these perceptions about him
just seemed so inaccurate.
I mean, like I had driven a car to go see him the first time
and he had walked me out to the parking lot as I was leaving.
And a year later, I saw him again and, you know,
I had a different car because my lease had gone up
and he was like, what happened to that other car, man?
And it wasn't like I was driving some kind of, you know, Mach 7 or something.
And he's an observant person. He remembers shit, you know, Mach 7 or something. And he's an observant person.
He remembers shit, you know, and he, he's present.
And we, and he had seen Copland and Three Ten Yuma.
And when I referred to Ozu, he knew what I was
talking about and he had this whole way of
embracing what I was doing that A, he wanted to
get it true to the feelings and of the characters
at the time.
But he also, as a storyteller, recognized artistically
what I had to do with his life to make it a movie.
Yeah.
I remember this one, he said this like,
I love the way you use Woody.
Yeah.
And he goes, you know, it begins with Woody
and it ends with Woody.
Yeah.
It's like a sandwich, you know?
You're almost, you're home free because it doesn't matter what it ends with Woody. Yeah. It's like a sandwich, you know, you're almost,
you're home free because it doesn't matter
what's in the middle, because you got bread
on both sides.
And, and, and it was so Bob, first of all,
he's saying this and it's just so Bob.
Yeah.
And he's teaching me how to write him
as he's saying this.
But the, but the other aspect is he's right.
He's recognizing symmetry and circularity and kind of Aristotelian theory and storytelling.
I mean, that's what he's recognizing in his own way and showing awareness of.
And that was this incredibly freeing aspect, which is that he wasn't there
just to protect his image.
He was really interested in it being a good movie.
Yeah.
And that was an incredible license to drive in a way
that I am really grateful to him for.
Yeah, well that beat that I was gonna tell you about,
did you watch that doc, the weird Rolling Thunder thing
that, it's great.
But like it's all building to him getting back on stage
and then after he gets off stage,
the moment he gets off stage, I don't remember who,
the guy who's holding the camera goes, how do you feel?
And Dylan goes, about what?
Right.
Right.
The whole build was to this moment.
And then he just sort of.
But don't you know, don't you, haven't you done,
I mean, I'm in the middle of it.
But the most often asked question I arrive,
how does it feel to be nominated for da da da da da?
What does it feel like?
And it's like, uh, uh, awesome.
Like, I don't want to say, like, the one thing I have to say,
having gotten to know him a little bit is Dylan doesn't want to speak in cliche
or kind of obvious.
So like, like, like it's kind of like going,
do you like the cake?
Yes, I like the cake.
Like it's like so boring.
Like what you're asking me is so boring.
So he'll take it out and do another zone all the time.
Yes, because it's, it's just so, it's kind of,
you're asking me to be, to become a zombie
by asking me a zombie question, you know?
And, and, and if I, if I, um, and that was, I mean, I never felt that pressure with him
because I just don't think I asked, what does it feel like?
Yeah.
He just wanted to beat you.
So that was such a triumph.
You must've been so, like, I never did that kind of thing.
You just let him lead.
Well, but also doing exactly what you're
doing here, which is just talking.
Did he see the movie?
Uh, no, not that I know of.
I, I, he, according to him, he hadn't seen
any movie that have been made, that's been
made about him, that he, he was happy to
participate in the screenplay, but, and I
kind of get it, like I kind of go, would I
want to watch, like it's, there's a whole
amount of kind of shit you'd have, I kind of go, would I want to watch? Like, it's, there's a whole amount
of kind of shit you'd have to go through watching a picture like this. And I'm not sure. He was really
into going over the script, understanding me. I felt like he was really trying to, you know,
he told, I felt like, you know,
his manager called me after the first meeting
and it was like, he likes you.
And I was like, oh, good.
And he goes.
That's not Rosen.
Yeah.
Oh, Jeff.
Yeah.
And he said, you know what he said, which makes
me know he likes you.
And I go, no, he goes, he doesn't have an agenda.
And the, and to me that taught also taught me so
much about, I mean, of course I had agendas galore, but I
know what he means.
Which is I didn't have some kind of preordained
biographical observation.
I was out thesis, I was out to prove on his back.
I was actually trying to live in his world,
assimilate all this shit and then put something
on the screen that was hopefully transcendent or evocative,
but that was also true to the mixed up crazy
feeling of that time.
Sure.
Without having one conclusion or another.
Yeah.
And, but that fear of the agenda, I think the
agenda to, to, to categorize that to me is a part of Dylan I really identify with, which
is that need for, we all have in order to talk
about something to box it in, in a way that can
be, that three sentences are good enough.
Yeah.
And that's the death of.
It's the death of everything.
Yeah.
I, it was so funny cause I tried to get Dylan
on this show.
Oh, that would be great.
I know, but it was so funny cause I'd met Rosen a million years ago and I wanted to
get Dylan to do our, like it was an anniversary episode.
And I was told by the publicist, like, you know, maybe you should write a handwritten
letter and, you know, and he'll maybe respond to that.
But I know I had talked to Rose.
I knew I'd met Rosen.
So I write this handwritten letter and I send it off.
And then all of a sudden I get a message, like, just call Jeff.
And I'm like, okay.
So I get on the phone with Jeff and I'm like, look, you know.
Who's great, by the way, super honest guy.
I mean, in terms of just being really frank with you about.
Well, I say, look, you know,
this is our 2000th episode or whatever it was,
1000th, I don't know.
I mean, like, I think it'd be really great to have Bob on
because we could, you know, it'd be great for the show, it'd be great for me.
I think I'm good for talking to him and I just do this big, big pitch and I go, so what
are the chances of him coming on?
Next to nothing.
No, Jeff literally said zero.
And he goes, he says, and I'm like, why?
He's like, look, he's not great at the interviews
and he doesn't have an ax to grind.
And there's just no reason that for him to do it.
And I said, well, what about you?
Why don't you do it?
He's like, no, how do you think I keep this job?
I'm not talking to anybody.
Right.
And the, but the, the thing is I didn't,
and the other thing I didn't ask,
which was him to explain his songs or his, which I think- How is he gonna do that? Well, people seem, I didn't, and the other thing I didn't ask, which was him to explain his songs.
Yeah, how is he gonna do that?
Well, people seem, I mean, this is a whole separate topic
for another day, but like the whole idea
that he's an enigma who has written over 600 songs
and released 55 albums of original music played
and sung by him is so unfair to me.
What he really is is a really vexing and interesting artist whose music asks questions
that we want answers to and he won't give us.
Well, that's what art is.
Right.
But like, it's maybe a kind of oversimplified thing,
but like think of Frank Sinatra,
probably released a similar amount of records,
never wrote a song or just a few,
but no one calls it an enigma.
So why?
Why does one guy get kind of, why is,
and he, he lived behind walls.
He wasn't open.
They didn't do interviews all the time.
Yeah.
But it's, it, why is this mantle?
And I think it's because he's such a
successful and provocative artist, Dylan,
that we keep wanting more when, and he, there's
a finite limit to what he's going to give us.
And when we reach that limit, that boundary, we
get frustrated with his mystery because we are
now in a world where, look at what I'm doing with
you, where artists arrive and explain themselves
ad nauseum and that, that, and don't just let the
work speak.
And there is, there is, I have no problem with it
because film is incredibly complicated and.
But you're talking about craft and even in
Bob's book, you know, he spends like a good 30
pages talking about a chord progression.
Right.
And I think he'd be happy if he had some kind of
guarantee that the conversation was going to
live in craft,
I think he's got a lot to say. I think that the problem is this kind of profit.
To explain himself.
That everything becomes another quote down from the mountain that then gets amplified
and turned on its head and analyzed. And it's a burden.
Like it is the burden of, that is the burden, the burden of that we were
discussing the burden of genius.
Yeah.
And he's going to sap you of your energy and why
would you want to focus on that?
No, he's, he likes making art.
Yeah.
I tell you, there's a part in, to switch films
and Ford and Ferrari.
Oh yeah.
Where, uh, one of the, one of the great moments
in that, and it's really just, it was a totally human moment.
And where he, we, we got let's as Henry Ford,
the, what was it, second or third.
Yes.
And he takes that ride in that Corvette and he's crying.
Yes.
It's the best thing.
It is.
It always terrified me in the script because we had written it and it was kind
of just sitting there, they had balls and it just, and even Matt Damon
was teasing him on the day, you know, and, and,
oh, today's your crying day.
Yeah, yeah.
Which I was shocked at by the way.
Right, that Damon was busting Tracy's balls?
Yes, that, I mean, like, I mean, just, just,
it shows you the kind of locker room bullshit
in the makeup trailer sometimes, but the,
but Tracy just, he not only nailed it, but it's
so primal, it's such a beautiful thing because
it actually endears you.
Yes, totally.
What, what I always thought it was going to be
was just a scene about kind of the corporate
chairman being kind of, um, flustered and
freaked out.
Yeah.
And what Tracy does with it makes it's utterly,
he's a guy who's lived in a velvet bubble all his flustered and freaked out. And what Tracy does with it makes it's utterly,
he's a guy who's lived in a velvet bubble all his life.
And suddenly he's had this primal life,
life endangering experience.
And it's just caused this kind of pouring of a feeling.
Well, Tracy is a brilliant actor and a brilliant playwright
and a great guy.
Yeah, great guy. But he really, that is a moment in that a brilliant playwright and a great guy. Yeah. Great guy.
But he really, that is a moment in that scene. It's so good, right?
It is so good.
And that is, you know, another movie about artists in a way.
Sure.
Uh, it's got no music singers in it, but it's just changed guitars for a wrench.
And it's kind of a similar story.
Yeah, it's great.
Yeah.
And, uh, okay.
So one last thing.
So is this true that you're gonna gonna you're gonna do Swamp Thing?
It's true. I'm I'm working on a story for Swamp Thing.
Because like I'm not a big comic book guy, but I love Swamp Thing.
Me too. I mean, I literally wrote to to the new team at DC when they took over and just said if this was available,
I'd love to try something.
What is it about Swamp Thing?
If this was available, I'd love to try something.
What is it about Swamp Thing?
Uh, Gothic horror, kind of Frankenstein legend, the whole concept of man plant, I find really like kind of.
But there's something about that character that is sort of like.
I love the name.
I love just the title.
I love.
But he's an existential character.
The Bernie Wrightson art to me of the original series is so incredible.
Yeah. writes an art to me of the original series is so incredible and the aspect of kind of being
separated from your life and suddenly haunting
the woods and kind of living in this abject
um, deformation and loneliness.
And, um, that's really interesting.
I honestly don't know what's coming next.
I've kind of, I kind of went really rapid fire
through a series of movies, the last three.
And this is kind of my kind of,
and then I didn't anticipate, you know,
the kind of whole fall season dance of,
which is a commitment in and of itself.
Yeah, well, it's very, it's exciting.
I actually talked to, talking about Copland,
I talked to Robert Patrick.
Oh. He's something, man's very, it's exciting. I actually talked to, uh, talking about Copland. I talked to Robert Patrick. Oh, he's, he's, he's something man.
He is.
He is.
He's the force to be reckoned with.
Yeah.
And, uh, um, and, uh, and he was great.
I, the great in that movie and he is also
in Walk the Line.
Yeah.
I love him.
Yeah.
Did he play the dad?
Yeah.
Oh yeah.
He's great.
Well, great talking to you, man.
I really appreciate it.
Me too.
I really enjoyed this.
Thank you so much, Mark.
Yeah, he's great. Well great talking to you man. I really appreciate you. I really enjoyed this. Thank you so much mark
There you go Complete unknown is still playing in theaters and that was a lovely chat and he offered to be of
service to me if I get to the
the opportunity if I get the opportunity to direct a film which I'm hoping to do by the end of this year and
That's a nice guy.
That's a nice guy.
Hang out for a minute.
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Folks, if you want more Director Talk,
we posted a WTF collection on the Full Marin featuring some great directors when they were guests in
The garage William Friedkin Greta Gerwig Quentin Tarantino Guillermo del Toro and Paul Thomas Anderson
I mean these stories are good these kind an end of a certain kind of innocence
You know that always sort of makes for a good thing and I think that's what's going on there
It's singing in the rain. Basically, it's like, you know, what happens when when we got to start talking you know what happens when video comes in now anybody can make a
Porno movie yeah
You know now how much porn did you grow up with outside of consuming it?
I mean did you know houses in the valley did you yeah? Yeah? Yeah? There was one across the street from my grandmother's house
Honest to God. And I wouldn't, I probably wouldn't have put two and two together if
she hadn't been so indignant about it all. That she saw this van there all the time and
the windows were blacked out. And you know, if you waited long enough, you would see some
pretty suspicious looking characters coming in and out of there. And then I remember,
I remember so well looking at the frame and the front window, there was
a kind of a bay window in the front of the house.
And anytime I would watch a porno film, I'd be looking for that bay window.
I'd be looking like, where's that bay, I wonder if that's in that house.
To subscribe to The Full Marin, go to the link in the episode description or go to WTFPod.com
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is hosted by Acast here's some guitar tried to keep it simple and sloppy yeah that's what I do So So So So So So Boomer lives, Monkey and La Fonda, Cat Angels everywhere.