Last Updated on July 28, 2021
As
I was being
driven to the glamorous Hotel du Cap outside of Cannes to interview the cast and
director of
A
SCANNER DARKLY (hitting screens on July 7th), the fanboy in me started to kick in.
Yup, I’m a huge fan of
Keanu Reeves (POINT BREAK, baby, POINT BREAK), Robert Downey Jr.
(LESS THAN ZERO rocks!) and Richard
Linklater’s BEFORE SUNRISE/SUNSET films. I was excited!
When we got to the Hotel, I was totally taken by its lavish beauty and it
formidable view of the Mediterranean Sea. WOW! And then the talent came in and I had to subside the fanboy energy
that was oozing within me and be, nay… “act” professional. Here’s
what came out of the interviews…
View from the Hotel du Cap! A place to hang a hat!
RICHARD
LINKLATER
(Writer/Director)
Very laid back, Richard
Linklater was the first up to bat and here are a few interesting things he had to
say about his new film A SCANNER DARKLY.
-
He’s not a huge
sci-fi guy,
but he’s a Phillip K. Dick guy. Much like he’s not a huge “comic book guy, but he’s
an “American Splendor” guy.
-
A Scanner Darkly demands to be
taken as a comedy he thinks, then a drama and lastly as a total tragedy. It’s several
stories on top of one another.
-
He envisioned Scanner Darkly
as being animated after making Waking Life (which was translated with the same software).
He felt that the look really worked for this story, in the way that from the viewers
point of view, it is analogous to what the characters are going through. He
thinks this animation is the best way to feel this story and what the characters
are going living.
-
The Phillip K. Dick book was written coming
out of the Nixon era in the 70’s. He feels that the movie is also relevant today. For him,
making this film really started going in his mind after 9/11 and the application
of the Patriot Act.
-
He always thought that Keanu
Reeves would be perfect for the lead role (Bob) because of his qualities. He
says that you care about Keanu, he’s a deep thinker and big-hearted guy, and
he feels the world in a way that works for this character. Keanu is the
kind of guy that would call you at 2 in the morning he says, to discuss the film and his
research (Keanu actually had the German passages in the book translated to
English).
-
The film was a collaboration
between him and the actors. “You rock and roll with somebody and get somewhere
that you wouldn’t have reached on your own”.
-
He planned the shots like he
did any other normal movie, but the animation process, gave him more freedom. They
could deal with all the imperfections (technical) later and just focus on the
performances throughout the shoot.
-
This story spoke to him,
especially taking into account the climate of our times. A Scanner Darkly feels
more relevant now. It seemed like its moment had arrived.
KEANU REEVES
(Actor)
As opposed to the chilled
Richard, Keanu Reeves was wired. On coffee? I don’t know , but his eyes
were wild and his movements big. A great man nonetheless and a positive presence
to be around! He gave us a lot of juice about the film and a
“he wants to do it” in terms of Constantine 2. Here’s Keanu!
-
He didn’t know Phillip K
Dick until he was 26 years old. Dick is a pretty influential cat in his opinion in the
realm of sci-fi.
-
He feels that the film reflects
today’s society as we’re being watched and evaluated. A Scanner Darkly is a story that
relates more to people who live in cities.
-
Working with the cast and crew
was very stimulating for him. He had two weeks of rehearsals, working with the
script and then the cast. They all shared a nice chemistry and played off each other very
well. Once on set it was really fun for him. -
He’s very pleased with the
way the animation feels. If you relate to it, it can be a very haunting and
melancholic film he says. The animation served the performances well in showing the
details and movements of each character.
-
Richard Linklater used a different lens
and came in very close when it came to the “morphing suit scenes”. That
amplified the impact of those scenes, as it seemed to capture a lot of the
internal process within the character.
-
The intimacy of the lens and
the opportunity to dramatically communicate the moment made the
“morphing suit” scenes so poignant in his opinion. -
The only time he would think
of “the animation process” as to his performance on set was when
playing Fred and Bob– which is when he would make bigger arm movements. But
mostly, the animation was not an issue in terms of how he played the
role while shooting.
-
He feels that the film is for
everyone. He’s sure that it has a lot that would be enjoyable for many.
Hopefully it won’t be marginalized and described as “it’s for them”
i.e. “high brow” crowds.
-
Constantine 2?
He hopes so. They’re trying to get a script going for that. Hopefully
he says.
-
He’s trying to do different
kind of work, tackle different kinds of genres. He really enjoys making films.
There’s a misconception in his opinion that a large budget, Hollywood picture
is a different experience than making a small budget film. In terms of process, it doesn’t really
change for him from one to the other.
ROBERT
DOWNEY JR.
(Actor)
The first thing I asked Robert
Downey Jr. when he showed up at our table was: “Hey! How ya doing?” To that
he retorted (well, yelled out): “AAAAarrrghh!!” — a playful dog-like growl. That’s when I
knew it was going to be “that kind”
of sit down…in a good, Bobby Jr. special kind of way. Yes, the man was cracking
jokes left and right, didn’t take himself seriously and was just having fun
with the whole thing. Here’s his two cents on the flick…
-
He jokingly said that he was
up at 6:30 AM and did the five Tibetans steps: Chain smoked cigarettes, checked his
e-mails, farted around, called the missus and went to the Gym. He just wants to
be efficient.
-
He thinks Phillip K. Dick is
great but he’s a Gen X guy, he knows the books because he saw the movies. -
The director and
the rest of the cast is what attracts him to projects. When he’s the first person cast, he
already likes who’s in it, hence he’s interested in the project. Note:
This guy is hilarious!
-
He likes doing broad stuff. He
started in WEIRD SCIENCE and BACK TO SCHOOL. He wasn’t “method”
then, he was just big
and fun.
-
He hasn’t fully figured out
his character (of Baris) in the movie yet. He knows that he thinks he’s smart, on to
something, a tweaker and a propeller head. He reminded him of people he grew up
with: strung out, without jobs, living in shacks, yet still
believing themselves to be King of the Castle.
-
He loves
sci-fi, it gives him
permission to really animate his own landscape. For him, you’re kind of
co-creating when reading a sci-fi book.
The fanboy in me broke! I asked Bobby Jr. for a pic!
-
He got really picky since his
second chance in Hollywood. Like ZODIAC with Fincher, he says. He wasn’t satisfied with
his life (obviously, allusion to his drug days) after his nomination for
CHAPLIN. He didn’t care in terms of pissing it all away.
Now, he’s just a little more sensitive, he wants to be an artist if he
can, it would be fun.
-
He would do Chaplin again.
Then again, in his opinion, it would be kind of dumb, kind of like Pacino
doing Scarface Part 2: The Afterlife. -
He lived the life of a monk in
Austin Texas, which would have been one a hell of a town to waste energy, get new
tattoos and chase pussy…since he had so much dialogue to memorize for A
SCANNER DARKLY.
-
Working with Keanu was a blast.
They lived in rooms next to each other and both worked 12 hour days. He’d
hear Keanu do research in his room, or translating something from German or
whatever. And he’d be staring at his own hotel wall with a big poster board on
it with his dialogue for the next day. Like 1175 words. Since his character (Baris)
is never “not” talking, he decided to learn his lines as one big sentence, because
his character is never listening to others anyways, he’s always about
himself.
-
When asked if
KISS, KISS, BANG, BANG would be the closest we’d see him being an action hero, he jokingly
answered: “No, I’m getting gunned up, will get my black belt, go to Hong
Kong and kick some ass.” Seriously though, he’d like to do something “action
hero like” sometime down the road.
TOMMY
PALLOTTA
(Producer)
And last but certainly not least, I had a little chat
with producer Tommy Pallotta. The man was cool,
collected and very endearing.
Here’s what came out of it…
-
When
he and Richard Linklater were filming WAKING LIFE five years ago, they talked about
Phillip K. Dick a lot. Even in WAKING LIFE there’s a reference to
Phillip K. Dick. It started there.
-
A
SCANNER DARKLY was a $8.5 million-dollar movie. Everybody took a pay cut,
and they had to do
two films! Shoot it and then animate it. The latter took 18 months to do. They had 50
full-time animators working full-time on the movie. -
It
was meant to be an animated film form the beginning. It would be a great way to get into
that other world, semi-futuristic, alternate reality. Also for design
issues, like the “Scramble Suit”, it was going to be a design problem no
matter how you filmed it — it would always have to be animated in some way. It
felt like a natural solution to animate the film and the best way to tell the
story.
-
The
first actor attached to the film was Keanu Reeves and that helped a lot in
locking the financing and getting the studio on their side. -
When
asked about who the target audience was for this film, Pallotta said that from the beginning,
he was very hesitant in aiming for THE MATRIX audience. Instead, he said that
they are aiming
for the Phillip K. Dick fans, the Linklater fans, the animation fans, sci-fFi fans,
the Keanu fans, the Downey Jr. fans — all of the actors in it have a very strong fan base and he thinks
that all those elements together makes for an interesting movie. He suspects that
college students will really love this movie.
-
BLADE
RUNNER was a commercial and critical failure when it was initially released,
said Pallotta, and now it is one of the all-time
more respected sci-fi movies. When they started this project, they really tried to
stay away from production design or music that would date it down the road, because they really wanted it to be a movie that people would be able to enjoy 20 years from now.
-
For him, movies are made right
now for the opening weekend. For them, they were thinking long-term the whole
way. If you’re really trying to express something and tell a story, he says, it’s a valid
approach.
-
Since he’s met with Phillip
K. Dick’s daughters for this film, they got friendly and they might be doing
more work together in the future. For him, it was a respect issue as he informed
them as to what was going on with the film and invited them to witness the
process and they
appreciated that. In the past, they never really had that opportunity when their father’s work was made into films,
but nowadays, they’re hooked and want to
be more involved in the movies and take a much more active role in their father’s
legacy. -
The dedications at the end of
the film were in Dick’s book and were always in the script. It was fitting, as A
SCANNER DARKLY was ultimately Phillip K. Dick’s
story.
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