Monday, 31 January 2000

January 31, 2000

Archived update from Cigarettes & Coffee, run by Greg Mariotti & CJ Wallis from 1999-2005

According to the two best unofficial Fiona Apple Websites, Never is a Promise and Fiona Has Wings, MTV will debut the new PTA directed Fiona Apple "Limp" video tonight (Sunday/Monday) during 120 Minutes. The show begins at 12:00 a.m. with estimates that the video will debut around 1:00 a.m. Set your VCR's or stay up and late and don't miss it!

Saturday, 29 January 2000

January 29, 2000

Archived update from Cigarettes & Coffee, run by Greg Mariotti & CJ Wallis from 1999-2005

Well, it looks like the Kevin Smith/Magnolia story got big enough that Entertainment Weekly picked it up. There is not much to the story, and that's good, because I have had enough of it. Now, let's talk about more important things.... 
Hope you caught PTA on Late Night with Conan O'Brien last night. It was pretty short and sweet, but it's good to see him and the film get some more exposure. It was nice to see Tom win the Golden Globe Award, let's hope that will equate to Oscar Gold this time.  
In case you missed it, the official Magnolia Shooting Script/Companion Book is out in paperback. There will be a Hardback coming out as well. I'm still trying to get the latest information on the Jon Brion score being released on CD. I will keep you posted. 
True West will open in New York on March 2. For those that don't remember, it's the play with John C. Reilly and Philip Seymour Hoffman. The official site is up and running so take a look. 

Friday, 28 January 2000

Interview: DGA Magazine

DGA Magazine, Written By Darrel L. Hope
January 2000

Making Magnolia Blossom

If ever there were a poster boy against the problem of U.S. runaway production it would be director Paul Thomas Anderson. Foreign locations and exotic settings have no appeal over him. For Anderson, all the intrigue in the world can be found a few steps from his front door in L.A.'s San Fernando Valley. After all, he shot his last two films there, the critically applauded depiction of life in the porn word fast lane, Boogie Nights, and the eagerly anticipated almost indescribable ensemble drama, Magnolia.

In Magnolia, Anderson set out to make what he has called "the Mother of All San Fernando Valley Films." The film weaves together nine story lines, each connected to the other by tethers not immediately apparent to the audience, but revealed over the three-hour course of the film. Magnolia's cast of characters include a kindhearted beat cop (John C. Reilly), a troubled drug addict (Melora Walters), a troubled child genius (Jeremy Blackman), an addled former child genius (William H. Macy), a game-show host (Philip Baker Hall), a brash personal motivator (Tom Cruise), a troubled young widow-to-be (Julianne Moore) and her soon-to-be-deceased husband (Jason Robards), and his caretaker (Phillip Seymour Hoffman) - all shedding their secrets and looking for love, acceptance, redemption and forgiveness in their various lives along the boulevard that bisects the San Fernando Valley.


"I didn't want to make a vignette movie," he said. "The goal was always to make each plot intricate to the other. We tried to do that through all of the good old-fashioned methods that you have to tell a story when you're directing a movie - visually, musically, color, that sort of thing."

The complexity that Anderson was striving for is prefaced by several short scenarios in Magnolia's prologue, each of which illustrates an odd connection of coincidences that led to a tragic outcome. Although these scenarios have no true connection to the main body of the film, they set up the proper attitude for what is to follow.

"It is a slight bit of a sucker punch," Anderson confesses, "but the prologue sets things up in such a way that hopefully it hooks you in and says, 'I promise by the end of this movie that our stories will get as strange as the ones that I've just shown you.' Hopefully, that enables me to do the best thing that a movie can do, which is to keep you asking, 'What is going to happen next?'"

After the success of Boogie Nights, Anderson was looking to do a smaller project that he could shoot in about 30 days. He was not exactly successful in that endeavor. Magnolia weighs in at slightly more than three hours and according to Anderson, "took 200 pages and 90 days to get it small and intimate." But for him, the movie was always there, even before the editing process began.

"The truth of the matter is that the editing process on Boogie Nights informed the writing process on Magnolia. When there was anything I recognized in the editing room that I didn't feel I successfully took care of in Boogie Nights, I immediately ran to my computer to start writing the next movie to make up for mistakes that I felt I made. The editing process, to me, is fun and it's wonderful but it's truly just trying to keep it as honest to what I mean to write."

With a film as rich in story line and performances as Magnolia, one wonders where a director would begin to make edits. Anderson says that making those kinds of decisions is self-evident and instinctual.

"It's usually not a decision that you make. It's just a decision that is smack dab in front of your nose, where you say, 'You know what? This scene just does not belong in this movie. I feel it in my gut.' What happens is you start to whittle down the sub-plot that maybe doesn't work. And then you whittle it down and you whittle it down until it's practically nonexistent, and then you wonder, 'Why is it almost nonexistent as opposed to just completely nonexistent?'"

The final print of Magnolia only has two full scenes that didn't make it from the earlier versions. Anderson's final cut was more of a tightening process.

"It was really just the heads and tails of scenes. That, to me, is the editing process. As you start, you just keep asking yourself over and over again, 'What can I get into a little bit later and what can I get out of a little bit earlier?'"

He also credits New Line Cinema for backing his cut, despite the fact that distributors generally tend to shy away from longer films.

"They were wonderful about it, to tell you the truth. I think that if you're up front with the studio about what kind of movie that you're making, they appreciate that honesty. And, listen, it was their choice whether or not to make the movie. I was very clear about how long it was going to be, and they didn't have a problem with that. I was actually pretty dam close to what I thought it would be. I thought it would be about 3:10 and it turns out that it's about 3:08 with credits."

If the characters in Anderson's earlier work were, as he says, "all searching for their dignity," his Magnolia characters are in search of an equally elusive quarry. "I think they're all in search of the good old-fashioned thing called love. We've seen that in movies before, but hopefully we haven't seen it like this. On top of that, they are all characters who have made mistakes, who either through the process of what the movie does to them don't want to make the same mistake twice or are trying to make their mistakes right. Redemption is a big factor, but the truth of the matter is that you try and figure out where redemption is possible and most of the time it isn't. So what you should ask yourself is, 'What have I done wrong before and how can I be sure to not make that same mistake again and how can I not?' You know, the question is asked, Jim Kurring (John C. Reilly) says, 'If we can move through this life and not hurt anyone else, then that's the goal.'"

One of Anderson's trademarks has been the ensemble of actors he has used and reused in previous works, Hard Eight and Boogie Nights. Magnolia will mark his second collaboration with Julianne Moore, Alfred Molina, Luis Guzman, Ricky Jay and William H. Macy, and his third with Melora Walters, John C. Reilly, Philip Seymour Hoffman and Philip Baker Hall.

"The simple fact of the matter is that they're my favorite actors. Faced with the choice between Robert De Niro or Philip Baker Hall, I'd take Philip Baker Hall. And that's nothing against Robert De Niro, but just a way for me to highlight how much I love these actors. On top of that, there's a wonderful comfort that I have in working with them. It's not laziness, believe me. I take them very seriously. It gives me the ability to write for people who don't normally get to play these kinds of parts. I like to think, in a very fatherly way, that I give them a chance to shine. Each role is tailor-made for that actor. If I write the part well, my job as a director becomes so much easier. I don't have to worry so much about rewriting. I don't have to worry so much about explaining to each of them their characters. The other benefit of having them all as friends is that we've been able to talk through the process far in advance of shooting."

Anderson says that it's in the writing stage where his actual rehearsal period begins. But he admits, it's a very low-key affair in the beginning. "Right after I've written a first draft, before we start shooting, it's like 'Can you come over to my house for, like, 45 minutes and just talk through this new scene that I wrote?'"

William H. Macy once said that one of Anderson's directing strengths is the fact that he really loves actors. Anderson replies that his respect for them came as a process of working with actors who were already proficient at their craft in the very beginning of his career.

"The first actors that I got to work with were Phillip Baker Hall, Sam Jackson, John C. Reilly and Gwyneth Paltrow. So I got to see four different styles and four different personalities. I love actors just because I have so much respect for them. I think acting is the hardest job in the world, and it's one of the most embarrassing and sort of debilitating things that you can do. I appreciate that so much that I just feel like a great protector of their work and I take it very, very seriously."

That respect for great actors almost resulted in difficulties for the young director when it came to calling the shots for acting icon Jason Robards.

"With Jason, I was truly intimidated. And for no reason other than he's a great actor. He is such as sweet person. The first two hours of the first two days he shot, I was truly tongue-tied and embarrassed to give him direction. At one point he just said, 'What's going on? Are you going to direct me?' Once I felt freed-up to give him direction, it was a wonderful experience."

Anderson's producing team, cinematographer, composer, costume designer, casting director and editor are all former collaborators. And his 1st AD, Adam Druxman, was Anderson's 2nd AD on Boogie Nights.

"Once you find a group of people that you really work with well, that understand what you're after, it's a wonderful thing to promote from within and give opportunities," said Anderson. "Adam did a wonderful job as the 2nd AD on Boogie Nights and I felt like he was ready to do this movie. It's kind of amazing that, as a 1st AD, this was his first movie. I mean, I think even the most seasoned 1st AD would have had a hard time getting through it. And he just did an incredible job."

Part of that job was bringing 2nd AD Christina Stauffer to Anderson's attention.

"Adam found her. I told him...'I want a woman around. There's far too many men fucking around on this set.'"

Magnolia's UPM, Daniel Lupi, is also credited as the film's co-producer. However, Anderson believes the title is a more accurate reflection of all Lupi brought to the picture.

"I actually think that it is one job. It's just a way for me to give him a title that accurately reflects the work he did on the movie. Danny's the ringleader of the whole operation, and that is deserving of a single card co-producer credit."

Still, Anderson sees the inherent danger of knowing his cast and crew so well that they fall into line like the usual suspects. "What you do is strive to push each other. You strive to not get comfortable. You strive to say, 'You know what we did last time? We're going to do the exact opposite this time.' And that makes everybody not get lazy."

Perhaps the greatest uncredited collaborator of Paul Thomas Anderson's films has been the San Fernando Valley, where he grew up. Anderson's love for his hometown is evident in a long, sweeping collage of scenes transitioning from one end of the Valley's Magnolia Boulevard to the other as the characters all sing the same tune.

"One of the great advantages of shooting in the Valley for me is that I know it, I live there, and it's where I from and so I'm able to write around locations that I know. So as I'm writing, I'm visiting those locations as well as mapping out shots."

Plus, filming in the Valley has its practical advantages. "My vision can be produced and I can sleep at home, " said Anderson. "And that, at the end of the day, is the bottom line: making movies is hard enough without sleeping in a strange bed every night."

Growing up in the Valley, Anderson set his sights on becoming a filmmaker from the point "when I came out of the womb," he laughs. His first actual hands-on film experience came as a PA on several small independent films.

"I was the best in PA in the world," Anderson recalls, "I knew how to get coffee and get shit done better than anybody."

But if he was getting his practical film education in the trenches, the theatres were his schools of higher learning.

"I didn't really work with any directors of note as a PA. The directors that have majorly influenced me are Jonathan Demme in particular, Mamet I really love. And of these sort of older school filmmakers, Max Ophuls and, of course, Orson Welles. And certainly Scorsese and Altman are big influences. I think that, besides any kind of technique or anything like that, it's just a persistence of vision that all of them seem to have, and a stubbornness to get their vision on the screen."

Anderson first recognized his need for the protection of a strong Directors Guild during the making of his debut feature, Sydney (a.k.a. Hard Eight). Developed at the Sundance Filmmakers Workshop, Anderson ran into creative rights issues with the film's financier and the distributor Rysher and Samuel Goldwyn.

"There was a point where they had actually taken the movie from me and recut it. I said to them 'I want to take my name off of it.' They said, 'Well, we're not going to let you take your name off of it because you're not a member of the DGA.' Eventually - and this is very important to print this - eventually, I got the movie back. But it opened my eyes to the reality, which was, I better get in that goddamned Guild because I need them and I need some help. No matter how hot shit you think you are, you're going to need some help sometime. And I was in a position where I would not have been able to take my name off the movie. And I had no one protecting me or helping me from these evil people. Rysher Entertainment has eventually gone out of business, which is good news, and so has Samuel Goldwyn.

"More than anything, the Guild is helpful just that they exist in your back pocket. Do you know what I mean? Whether or not you've used them or not, to be a member is just like having this little pile of ammunition in your back pocket when you go in to meet with the studio. Going, 'Oh, by the way. If you ever want to start fucking with me, I have this pile of ammunition in my pocket you should know about.'"

Of the issues the Guild is facing into the next century and beyond, the one Anderson most wanted to address was the current controversy over violence in the media.

"I think that it is a big, fat, silly lie to pretend that we don't have a social responsibility. Or that violence in movies doesn't cause violence. It does. It absolutely does.

"I know, as a kid, I would do what I saw in the movies. And I just happened to be lucky enough that it has resulted in a really well-paying job. But the fact of the matter is, is that another, a different set of circumstances and I could have ended up imitating movies in a very bad way."

"There was one scene in Magnolia that I cut eventually, but it was a scene where a little kid had to hold a gun. And the little kid held the gun in this sort of sideways, gangster-style. And I said to him, 'Why do you hold the gun like that?' And he said, 'Because I saw it on television.' That scared the shit out of me. And it opened my eyes to the reality, which is we don't need violence raised as a topic anymore in movies. That's just not an excuse. It's not good enough. We need to not raise it as a topic. Do you know what I mean? We need to not put it in our movies as a statement. I feel really, really strongly about this."

To the assertion that even Magnolia portrays scenes of a violent nature, Anderson replies, "It's on display in Magnolia, but I don't think that it's a movie that centers around violence. But I'd also like to see drama made out of more everyday, human issues. Like, will I take phone call from my dying father who I haven't talked to in years? I'm not saying that we should all be pussies and not address the issue. But enough is enough. Thee is a glorification of violence. Kids do what they see in movies. Period. You know? Let's not help it."

After wrapping his three-hour opus through the hearts and minds of the citizenry north of Mulholland Boulevard, Anderson is planning to recharge his batteries before delving into his next directorial project.

Monday, 24 January 2000

Interview: Toledo Blade

The Toledo Blade, Written By Chris Borrelli
January 24, 2000

Son of Ghoulardi-Hot Hollywood Director

Paul Thomas Anderson is 30 years old, with stylishly rumpled hair and seemingly permanent stubble. He looks the stereotype of the handsome, tortured artist, which works well for him because he makes big sprawling movies that weave and connect multiple plot lines, grand statements about epic subjects like family and home, compassion and love. He's what is called by the media a "hot young director."

His latest, Magnolia, is the kind of self-indulgent but exciting opus that great artists attempt: 3 hours and 15 minutes of gut-wrenching anguish and soul-searching.


This is not the kind of guy you might expect to spring from the loins of Ghoulardi.

But, hey group! - as Ohio's famous horror-movie host might have screamed.

Mr. Hot Serious Director of the Moment is the son of the late Ohio legend Ernie "Ghoulardi" Anderson, who became a local phenomenon during the 1960s when he threw a ratty fright wig on his head, popped one lens out of his sunglasses, and hosted horror movies - from Little Shop of Horrors to House of Wax - on Toledo and Cleveland TV.

Ghoulardi was a bane to parents, telling his audience to "Turn blue!" and "Stay sick!"

He turned the Cleveland suburb of Parma into a running joke. He even made fun of Mike Douglas.

And through most of his fame, Ernie Anderson was shuttling between Cleveland and Toledo, taping one day at WJW in Cleveland and the next at Channel 13, which was then WSPD and the studio was on Huron Street in the building that now houses WGTE.

But Paul Thomas Anderson hadn't even been born yet when Ghoulardi was loved by children and reviled by parents. Last week the young director talked about a lot of things, including Toledo-born actor Philip Baker Hall, whom Anderson casts in all of his films. On the subject of Ghoulardi, the filmmaker almost lapses into the familiar excited rhythms of his father.

"As I got older," Paul Thomas Anderson said, "I kept thinking, 'What is this Ghoulardi thing? What is it? What? What?' We went back to Cleveland once when I was 14 and we were mobbed at the airport by people chanting 'Ghoulardi! Ghoulardi!' And when I do interviews anywhere in the country, constantly, constantly, people who are enamored of my father or who grew up with him bring him up or even thank me for Ghoulardi!"

When Anderson was growing up, his dad was best known as the voice of ABC, and later the announcer on America's Funniest Home Videos.

Since Ernie Anderson's death three years ago from lung cancer, there have been Ghoulardi conventions and a book written about him. Drew Carey even dedicated an episode of his sitcom to Ghoulardi.

"But when I was a kid," Anderson remembered, "he used to tell me, 'I was a really big deal. No, really, I was!' I just couldn't fathom it. We lived in the San Fernando Valley [outside Los Angeles] and his existence was so pedestrian. He would just get up and go to this little recording studio and say a few words and come home."

Anderson's first experience behind a camera, though, was because of his dad.

"He worked on the technical side of ABC," he said, "and knew all these engineers and so he was privy to all these new kinds of VCRs that were coming out in the '70s. Some of those friends stole him a VCR from ABC, and we had a bootleg copy of Jaws. . . . That's how he got an early videocamera, and I think I just took it from him."

Anderson walked out of New York University film school after two days but later headed for Utah where he attended the Sundance Institute's filmmakers' workshop. In 1997 he made a huge critical splash with two movies: Hard Eight and Boogie Nights.

There's a scene in Boogie Nights where a kid heightens the tension of a drug deal by setting off firecrackers in the background. "As Ghoulardi, my dad blew models and stuff up with firecrackers, and that was certainly the inspiration for that scene."

In Magnolia, the estranged father-son relationship between Tom Cruise and Jason Robards is "not at all, not even close" to how Anderson and his father were. But as actor Philip Seymour Hoffman nursed Robards in the film, Anderson says he kept long vigils by his father's bed when he was sick.

"I'm only now starting to see how my dad influenced my work," Anderson said. "When I first saw a tape of his show I cracked up. Some of it was funny, and some of it was pretty bad, actually. But he loved the bad stuff and would comment on how bad it was. Every once and while, though, he would do something legitimately clever and inventive, and to me that was when he had the most important influence.

"What I do and what he did is so different, but he hated authority and he wanted to stir things up. And I hope my work always has that kind of spirit."

So as Magnolia begins, the following title card appears:

"A Ghoulardi Film Company Presentation."

Interview: "Son Of Ghoulardi-Hot Hollywood Director"

Toledo Blade, Written By Chris Borrelli
January 24th, 2000


Paul Thomas Anderson is 30 years old, with stylishly rumpled hair and seemingly permanent stubble. He looks the stereotype of the handsome, tortured artist, which works well for him because he makes big sprawling movies that weave and connect multiple plot lines, grand statements about epic subjects like family and home, compassion and love. He's what is called by the media a "hot young director."

His latest, Magnolia, is the kind of self-indulgent but exciting opus that great artists attempt: 3 hours and 15 minutes of gut-wrenching anguish and soul-searching.

This is not the kind of guy you might expect to spring from the loins of Ghoulardi.

But, hey group! - as Ohio's famous horror-movie host might have screamed.

Mr. Hot Serious Director of the Moment is the son of the late Ohio legend Ernie "Ghoulardi" Anderson, who became a local phenomenon during the 1960s when he threw a ratty fright wig on his head, popped one lens out of his sunglasses, and hosted horror movies - from Little Shop of Horrors to House of Wax - on Toledo and Cleveland TV.

Ghoulardi was a bane to parents, telling his audience to "Turn blue!" and "Stay sick!"

He turned the Cleveland suburb of Parma into a running joke. He even made fun of Mike Douglas.




And through most of his fame, Ernie Anderson was shuttling between Cleveland and Toledo, taping one day at WJW in Cleveland and the next at Channel 13, which was then WSPD and the studio was on Huron Street in the building that now houses WGTE.

But Paul Thomas Anderson hadn't even been born yet when Ghoulardi was loved by children and reviled by parents. Last week the young director talked about a lot of things, including Toledo-born actor Philip Baker Hall, whom Anderson casts in all of his films. On the subject of Ghoulardi, the filmmaker almost lapses into the familiar excited rhythms of his father.

"As I got older," Paul Thomas Anderson said, "I kept thinking, 'What is this Ghoulardi thing? What is it? What? What?' We went back to Cleveland once when I was 14 and we were mobbed at the airport by people chanting 'Ghoulardi! Ghoulardi!' And when I do interviews anywhere in the country, constantly, constantly, people who are enamored of my father or who grew up with him bring him up or even thank me for Ghoulardi!"

When Anderson was growing up, his dad was best known as the voice of ABC, and later the announcer on America's Funniest Home Videos.

Since Ernie Anderson's death three years ago from lung cancer, there have been Ghoulardi conventions and a book written about him. Drew Carey even dedicated an episode of his sitcom to Ghoulardi.

"But when I was a kid," Anderson remembered, "he used to tell me, 'I was a really big deal. No, really, I was!' I just couldn't fathom it. We lived in the San Fernando Valley [outside Los Angeles] and his existence was so pedestrian. He would just get up and go to this little recording studio and say a few words and come home."

Anderson's first experience behind a camera, though, was because of his dad.

"He worked on the technical side of ABC," he said, "and knew all these engineers and so he was privy to all these new kinds of VCRs that were coming out in the '70s. Some of those friends stole him a VCR from ABC, and we had a bootleg copy of Jaws. . . . That's how he got an early videocamera, and I think I just took it from him."

Anderson walked out of New York University film school after two days but later headed for Utah where he attended the Sundance Institute's filmmakers' workshop. In 1997 he made a huge critical splash with two movies: Hard Eight and Boogie Nights.

There's a scene in Boogie Nights where a kid heightens the tension of a drug deal by setting off firecrackers in the background. "As Ghoulardi, my dad blew models and stuff up with firecrackers, and that was certainly the inspiration for that scene."

In Magnolia, the estranged father-son relationship between Tom Cruise and Jason Robards is "not at all, not even close" to how Anderson and his father were. But as actor Philip Seymour Hoffman nursed Robards in the film, Anderson says he kept long vigils by his father's bed when he was sick.

"I'm only now starting to see how my dad influenced my work," Anderson said. "When I first saw a tape of his show I cracked up. Some of it was funny, and some of it was pretty bad, actually. But he loved the bad stuff and would comment on how bad it was. Every once and while, though, he would do something legitimately clever and inventive, and to me that was when he had the most important influence.

"What I do and what he did is so different, but he hated authority and he wanted to stir things up. And I hope my work always has that kind of spirit."

So as Magnolia begins, the following title card appears:

"A Ghoulardi Film Company Presentation."

Sunday, 23 January 2000

Interview: NY Times

NY Times, Written By Damon Wise
January 23, 2000

Progress from Hardcore to Soft Sell

Director Paul Thomas Anderson has followed the success of `porn romp' Boogie Nights by talking down his new film, Magnolia. Bernard Weinraub met Anderson on set, while Damon Wise applauds his use of anti-hype

It's a day and night of heavy rains in the San Fernando Valley and, in the new film Magnolia, at least a dozen disparate lives intersect in sometimes strange ways. The characters include a television game-show host and his angry, estranged daughter; a boy genius, who appears on the game show, and his ambitious father; a dying old man, his young sexy wife and his lost son; and a policeman in love.


`It's funny,' says the film's 30-year-old writer-director, Paul Thomas Anderson. `I fell in love with movies as an adolescent growing up in the Valley, and I thought I could never be a great film-maker because I had never lived on the mean streets of New York, or I had never been in a war. Once you get past that and once you think where you're from and what you've seen makes for good stories, you realize you can do it too.'

No one would dispute that. Anderson's acclaimed 1997 film Boogie Nights, about the world of pornography in the Valley in the late Seventies and early Eighties, placed him on the map as one of Hollywood's most innovative and talented young film-makers. The dark humour of his new film, which opens here in March, has already proved a hit with audiences in the United States.

`Magnolia breaks the standard studio mould of the usual prestige melodrama,' says Mike DeLuca, of the distributor New Line. `It doesn't pander, it doesn't manipulate and it defies convention with its structure and its imagery. It's a cinematic wake-up call illustrating what ails us at the end of the century.'

The film is set on or near Magnolia Boulevard, a main thoroughfare in the San Fernando Valley. Its theme is the loneliness of its characters as family bonds break and mend over the course of a day and a night. The actors, many of them from Boogie Nights, include Julianne Moore, Philip Seymour Hoffman, William H. Macy, John C. Reilly, Jeremy Blackman, Melinda Dillon, Philip Baker Hall. Starring as a barfly, and pivot for one of the film's killer twists is impressive newcomer Melora Walters.

Also in the supporting cast are Jason Robards and Tom Cruise as the dying old man and his son. Unusually for Cruise he takes a secondary role, as a charismatic sex guru who makes television infomercials on men's empowerment.

Anderson says Cruise called him after seeing Boogie Nights in London while working on Stanley Kubrick's Eyes Wide Shut. Anderson was also in London, and Cruise invited him to the movie set to meet Kubrick. `It was like meeting J. D. Salinger,' Anderson says. `I was thrilled.' When Cruise asked Anderson to keep him in mind for his next film, Anderson, who had already begun writing Magnolia, said he would call him in six or seven months.

`I finally sent him the script, and the next day Tom called me and said, `Please come to my house to talk about it',' says Anderson. `And away we went. What I said to him then was, `If you hadn't called me, I never would have thought of you.' A movie star like Tom Cruise was, I thought, out of my reach.'

At three hours the film's length may put off some people. `The challenge for us, quite simply, is not only having a three-hour film but also having a film that's not easily described in a single line,' said Robert Friedman, of New Line. `The challenge was to get people in to see the movie.' (Which they have done in a steady build-up in the States.)

`Making a movie at this length does set you up for criticism,' says Anderson. `It's slightly arrogant and a little bold to require three hours of someone's time to tell a story. It means you really have to deliver.' He laughs: `Like, if I hear a movie I'm going to see is three hours, I get a little uneasy.'

Anderson is now writing a script for Jonathan Demme and has promised Demme that he will not talk about it. `It's not set in the Valley,' he said. `I'm getting out of the Valley.'

Interview: Creative Screenwriting

Creative Screenwriting, Interview By David Konow
January 2000

PTA Meeting

An Interview with Paul Thomas Anderson

On the eve of Magnolia’s release, Paul Thomas Anderson is clearly a happy man. Then again, it’s not every twenty-nine-year-old filmmaker who gets compared to Martin Scorsese and Robert Altman on his second film, gets final cut on his third, and is able to get Tom Cruise to work for peanuts. Yet Paul’s journey to where he is now wasn’t always so smooth.

Paul Thomas Anderson was born in 1970 and grew up in the San Fernando Valley where Boogie Nights and Magnolia take place. Paul’s father was Ernie Anderson, a comic who played a wild horror-show host in the ‘60s named Ghoulardi. Ernie would later gain fame in the ‘70s as a famous voiceover announcer for ABC. His voice was instantly recognizable when introducing spots for America’s Funniest Home Videos, The Winds of War, Roots, and of course, The Love Boat. Ernie instilled a unique sense of humor, as well as a strong independent streak, in his son which Paul carried with him into his filmmaking career. And as you’ll read here, Ernie’s antics would later inspire one of the most celebrated scenes in Boogie Nights.


In 1992, Anderson wrote and directed a short subject, Cigarettes and Coffee. After it played in the Sundance Festival in 1993, he secured a deal with Rysher to make his first feature. He expanded Cigarettes and Coffee into a full-length film, which was then titled Sydney.

Anderson’s dream come true of making his first feature turned into a nightmare when Rysher took the film away from him and retitled it Hard Eight, a title he still hates. In order to try to save his version of the film, he sent a work print to Cannes; after it was accepted into their competition, Rysher relented and allowed Anderson’s cut to be released. With the help of the film’s stars, Gwyneth Paltrow, and John C. Reilly, Paul raised $250,000 to finish Hard Eight, but Rysher dumped the film into theatres with little support and it quickly disappeared.

Boogie Nights also had its origins in a short subject, namely The Dirk Diggler Story, which Anderson shot on video at age seventeen. During his perpetual frustration with Hard Eight, he threw himself into writing an epic 300-page screenplay. The film would pay homage to the golden age of pornography, with its centerpiece being the rise and fall of a young porno star loosely based on John Holmes.

Shortly after shooting wrapped, word got around that Boogie Nights was really the film to watch that fall. Variety wrote that Anderson’s “striking command of technique, bravura filmmaking and passionate exploration of the possibilities of a new kind of storytelling recall the young Scorsese of Mean Streets.” Anderson was also drawing comparisons to Robert Altman during his Nashville period, and Steven Spielberg as he was coming into his own with Sugarland Express.

Boogie Nights not only showcased Anderson’s assured directing, but his strength in writing strong, three-dimensional characters. The film featured breakthrough roles for Mark Wahlberg, Heather Graham, and Don Cheadle, and not since John Travolta in Pulp Fiction had anyone made as fine a comeback as Burt Reynolds (many felt it was his best performance since Deliverance).

The expectations were high for Boogie Nights to be the next Pulp Fiction, and while it didn’t get medieval at the box-office, the film’s popularity and its influence on a number of films that followed can’t be denied. Anderson also earned an Oscar nomination for Best Original Screenplay.

Already everyone was wondering how Anderson would top Boogie Nights, but he kept his plans for the future vague, telling the LA Times, “I’m mostly thinking in terms of writing great roles for actors I love.” He also promised Details, with tongue firmly in cheek, “I’m gonna reinvent drama. Rashomon will look timid compared to what I’ll do next. I don’t know what it’s going to be about, but from the beginning of the movie to the end, nothing bad is going to happen.”

By late 1998, Anderson had finished his next screenplay, Magnolia. Throughout the making of the film, Magnolia’s plot and characters have been kept a closely guarded secret. Anderson was granted final cut of Magnolia, which guaranteed his innovative screenplay would make a smooth transition to the screen.

Like Hard Eight and Boogie Nights, Magnolia follows a group of haunted lives intersecting with one another, this time during a twenty-four-hour period in the Valley. Again Anderson has written strong and unique characters that fuel great performances, the character Frank T.J. Mackey already generating much advance buzz and talk of an Oscar nod for Tom Cruise.

Anderson hasn’t lost his appetite for risks and Magnolia takes plenty, including a spectacular freak-of-nature climax that proves once and for all, it’s not easy being green. Magnolia is Anderson’s most mature effort to date and it’s a complicated, unique, and often painful movie that’s both uplifting and haunting. I spoke with Anderson as he was completing post-production and found him as unique and thoughtful as his films.

How long did it take to put Magnolia together? When did you first start writing the story?

I was kind of where I am right now, as I’m mixing Magnolia. You start thinking about, “Well, gee… what am I going to do next?” It was the same sort of thing on Boogie Nights. On Boogie Nights we had an incredibly long editing period because I was going through a lot of MPAA negotiations regarding the rating, trying to get an R rating. I had a lot of free time to think and tinker with the editing on Boogie Nights, and I started formulating some of the thoughts that were Magnolia. Now what happened was, as I came closer to the finishing of Boogie Nights, that’s when I started to write stuff down. While I was mixing Boogie Nights, I started jotting ideas down. Once the movie was off and out into the theaters, I was able to jump right into writing. That was November 1997

How were you able to avoid the hoopla of Boogie Nights and concentrate on writing another movie?

You know, it’s actually pretty easy for about three hours of the day and those are the three hours of the day that I’m writing. You’re really only self-conscious or thinking about it when you’re not writing. My general work pattern is that I wake up very early in the morning and I write. I can really only write for three or four hours before I’m either tired or I’ve smoked too much. And that’s when you start getting self-conscious and you start thinking, “Jeez, there’s all these people paying attention to me and what I’m going to do next.” I’m just thankful that it’s not when I’m writing, because it’s not affecting it. You know how it is: when you’re alone in your room and it’s you and your computer, you’re truly not thinking of anything else. In the off-hours, I was probably self-conscious, but in the on-hours, I wasn’t.

Did you ever feel any pressure to follow up to Boogie Nights?

Well, I might have. The truth of the matter is when I sat down to write Magnolia, I truly sat down to write something very small, very quick, very intimate, and something I could make very cheaply. Boogie Nights was this massive, two-and-a half-hour epic. And I thought, “You know what? I wanna bury my head in the sand and just make a little small movie.” So, in other words, I might have been reacting to the size of Boogie Nights. But obviously, no hoopla informed it, otherwise I wouldn’t have made a three-hour movie that’s as big and long as it is. I truly just ended up writing from my gut and my gut took me to writing Magnolia as it is, as opposed to a smaller version of it.

Why do you feel you write with such a big scope?

I think if I have a problem as a writer, it’s writer’s block in reverse, which can be just as detrimental as no knowing what to write. I think I have so much shit in my brain that sometimes I just kind of vomit a lot of it out. Boogie Nights is a three-hour movie, but believe me, I had enough pages to make an eight hour movie. It’s just about pairing it down to where I think it’s right. It’s funny because the movie that helped me make a mark, Boogie Nights, was long, and then this movie’s long. But my first movie was an hour and forty minutes, a regular movie length. So it’s not as if I’m completely interested in being the “epic guy” each time. I might sit down with a master plan and want to write a ninety-minute movie. But if it ends up being 200 pages, at a certain point, I’ve just got to decipher whether I’m being lazy or whether my gut’s truly taking me to a proper place.

How did you avoid repeating yourself?

I’m not exactly sure that I haven’t. Maybe I’ve just dressed the same thing up in different clothes, you know what I mean? I was not really able to notice a pattern in my work until I made three movies. Now I’m starting to decipher that they all have something to do with surrogate families and family connections. I’m only noticing this probably because people say it about my stuff. I think a lot of things interest me, so I’m prone to repeat myself because there’s a million different styles of clothes that I like.

In Magnolia you did a really good job of going back and forth between stories without confusing the viewer or losing momentum. Are you able to write a story all the way through like that?

What I did on this was, at certain points, if I felt lost or confused with any of these characters stories, I would break it out and string it end to end chronologically instead of its being interrupted by another person’s story, just to see how that was working as a movie of its own. Like the Jason Robards/Phil Hoffman story, I plucked that out on its own just to make sure that it was going well. I think the writer in me loves to branch off to other characters, but it’s the director in me that gets excited in terms of working on transitions and how to successfully pull it off. So I think I end up writing for myself as a director when I go to places like that.

How did you come up with Tom Cruise’s character Frank T.J. Mackey?

About three years ago, a friend of mine was teaching a class on audio-recording engineering. He had two students in the class that he thought were particularly interesting. One afternoon he was going to lunch and he noticed these two guys talking in the recording studio. There was an open mike out there, and he recorded a DAT of these two guys talking. So a couple of years after that, he found this unlabeled DAT and what he heard blew his mind. He played it for me, and essentially what happened was you heard these two guys talking about women and about how you’ve got to “respect the cock and tame the cunt.” They started talking all this trash and ultimately what we deciphered was they were quoting this guy named Ross. Well if these guys were talking this ridiculously, who was Ross? What we decided was, there’s this guy Ross Jeffries who was teaching this new version of the Eric Weber course, “How to Pick Up Women,” but this guy had a whole new slant on it which had to with hypnotism and all these subliminal language techniques. Then after researching him, it led me to four of five other guys like him, and so I just went hogwild in the arena of this guy, trying to decipher, Why is anyone like this?

How did Tom Cruise become aware of the role and did you write it for any actor in particular?

I wrote it for him. He had called me up when Boogie Nights came up. He was making Eyes Wide Shut, and his agents called me to ask if I was interested in meeting him. He was a big fan of Boogie Nights, and I said absolutely. Coincidentally, I happened to be going to London to promote Boogie Nights. So I went and met Tom and told him I was about to sit down and write my next movie. I was just sort of formulating the character and Tom said, “Listen, anything you do I would love to take a look and be involved.” I said, “Okay, let me call you in about eight months when I’m done writing.” I talked to him once or twice over the course of the eight months and I said, “When you’re done shooting that movie, I’m going to be done. I’m going to give this to you and I think you’re gonna have a lot of fun.” So I finished writing it, handed it to him, and it was literally like one of those Hollywood stories. We got together the next day, talked about it, and we were off.

How happy were you with his performance?

I am completely enamored with his performance. I must admit to writing a very show-offy role, and Tom kinda knew that. I told him, “You get to do everything in this. You do the banquet hall seminar where you get to be on-stage and you get to do the ‘going to see Dad’ bedside scene. You really get to run the gamut here.” I think he was really excited by that, and I think he just went with it. There was not a moment where he was scared, there wasn’t a moment where he questioned what I asked of him. If anything he brought too much to the table, and I would say, “No, you can’t use a whip in this scene!” I would just have to calm him down and remind him to keep it simple sometimes. That was really the only direction I gave him. He really was spot-on with how to do it.

In the scene where Mackey sees his father before he passes away, in the screenplay it seems like they came to some sort of reconciliation. But in the film, we don’t know if they reconciled or not.

There are very, very, very few times as a writer where I will write a scene and leave it to what happens. That was one scene where I just kind of underwrote it intentionally. I just said, “Listen. The most important thing is that this character goes to see his father.” I felt when he decided to see his father, he should walk in very quickly, very aggressively, with a real hard on to get back at his dad. And whatever happened after that was really, truly up to Tom. It’s one of those moments that you do leave for an actor. It’s a very scary, dangerous thing to do, and generally I don’t do it because you should have a plan. But it was one of those things where I decided the best way to do this is probably leave the room for whatever happens and whatever Tom can emotionally bring to the table. I said, “Listen, you can be as angry as you wanna be, you can be as sad as you can get. Let’s start doing it and let’s see what happens.”

The rain of frogs at the end of the film was great. Several scenes in Magnolia refer to the book of Exodus in which there was a plague of frogs after Moses’s people weren’t allowed into the promised land. Was the rain of frogs a natural reaction to the turmoil that built up in the film?

Well, that’s certainly an element. There’s certainly a Biblical reference there, but I’d be a liar if I said to you it was written initially as a Biblical reference. I truthfully didn’t even know it was in the Bible when I first wrote the sequence. I had read about a rain of frogs through the works of Charles Fort, who’s a wonderful writer. He was the person who coined the term UFO, who wrote about odd phenomena. So when I read about the rain of frogs, I was going through a weird personal time. I don’t want to get too personal, but maybe there are certain moments in your life when things are so fucked up and so confused that someone can say to you, “It’s raining frogs,” and that makes sense. That somehow makes sense as a warning; that somehow makes sense as a sign. I started to understand why people turn to religion in times of trouble, and maybe my form of finding religion was reading about rains of frogs and realizing that makes sense to me somehow. And then of course to discover it in the Bible and the reference that it makes there just sort of verifies it, like, “Hey, I guess I’m on the right track.”

Do you want everyone who sees Magnolia to have to interpret the scene in their own way and think what it could mean to them?

Absolutely. I’m normally not a big fan of that; I generally like to make my points. But there are some times where if you pull it off properly, you can put something on the plate of the viewer and go, “You know what? However you want to decipher this, you can.” And there absolutely is no wrong way. If you want to reference the Bible, that’s good; if you want to link it to something else you can. There’s a notion that you can judge a society’s existence by the health of its frogs. There’s something about a frog’s health; the color of its skin, the texture, the wetness on its back, that’s an indication of how we’re treating ourselves as a society. So when you look around and see that all the frogs are dying or deformed, it’s sort of a warning sign about how we’re treating ourselves.

The ironic thing is as I was thinking this up, I met with Phillip Baker Hall, who’s an actor I work with over and over again, and he asked, “What’s the next one about?” And I said, “Well, I can’t really describe much to you Phillip, but there’s this one sequence in the film where it starts to rain frogs.” He was looking at me and just nodding his head. Then I explained the history of frog rain, because it really does happen, it’s something that has happened many times. Then he said, “I have an interesting story. Just after the war, I was in Switzerland and I was in a rain of frogs.” I said, “What?” Phillip had been driving on a mountain pass in Switzerland and he said for about fifteen minutes it rained frogs. It was really foggy and the mountain road was covered in ice. The frogs falling was not the thing that freaked him out. What freaked him out was that his car could not get any traction and he was afraid he was gonna fall off the mountain! I just thought right then and there I gotta go through with this sequence.

Magnolia and Boogie Nights have a lot of great songs in their soundtracks. Do you write to music?

Absolutely. Even more with this one than ever before. This one was very specifically written to Aimee Mann’s songs. She’s a good friend of mine, she’s a wonderful singer and songwriter. In addition to a lot of great songs that have been released, I was privy to a lot of demo stuff she was working on at the time. So I had those to work off of. In a way, I sat down to adapt one of her songs. There’s a song called “Deathly” that she [wrote] and the very first line of the song is “Now that I’ve met you, would you object to never seeing me again?” Melora Walters says that in the movie. That sort of notion of being unlovable or being so fucked up you can’t understand how anyone could love you back was really important and really beautiful to me. It kind of made sense to me at that time in my life. I probably owe Aimee a ton of money for the inspiration she was to this movie.

In the firecracker scene in Boogie Nights, I noticed some of the lyrics of “Jessie’s Girl” seemed to show how afraid Mark Wahlberg was, like “I play along with the charade” and “He’s watching them with those eyes…” Was that intentional?

It was but actually not exactly in that way. What I liked about “Jessie’s Girl” playing there was just a weird sense of romantic melancholy that the song gives me. It reminded me personally of a far more innocent and goofy time in my life. I liked hearing this goofy love song over watching Mark Wahlberg just squirm. The relation I have to that song is being fourteen and having a crush on a girl at the mall. It was wonderful to plug it in there because that’s where that character should be at that time in his life. Instead, he’s stuck in a house with firecrackers going off in some stupid, pseudo drug deal. That song should mean something else to that character. Instead, he’s suffering though that song.

Your father, Ernie Anderson, was a horror-movie host in the ‘60s named Ghoulardi, and I read that on his show he used to perform skits with firecrackers. Is that where the idea for the firecracker scene in Boogie Nights came from?

Yeah, absolutely. It comes from two places. It comes from the inspiration from my dad lighting off a bunch of firecrackers on his show as well as… if you watch Putney Swope, which is a movie Robert Downey Sr. made, there’s a wonderful piece of background action where a character throws a firecracker off in a scene and everyone turns around and looks. Now that’s practically the end of it. I called up Robert Downey Sr. and I said, “You have a great piece of background action that I want to take and make a piece of foreground action.” He said, “Great, be my guest.”

So did that scene in Putney Swope give you ideas about how to build tension in your own scene?

No, I just thought it was wonderfully goofy and thought that would be enough. I remember rehearsing that whole Rahad Jackson sequence in Boogie Nights, and it was very nervewracking. We did the full rehearsal, my friend Joe Chan played the kid with the firecrackers, and I told him, “Just for the rehearsals, we’ll mime that you’re throwing the firecrackers. You’ll throw one here, throw one here…” We would do these full rehearsals and here we were for the final set-piece of the movie and I was not exactly happy. I was wondering what was wrong with this scene and was really nervous. This two and a half hour movie was coming to an end and my punchline isn’t working. So I said, you know what? I guess the only thing to do here is start shooting it. Well the second one of those firecrackers went off for real, I knew I was okay! Everybody jumped! Everybody except Alfred Molina, and he didn’t jump because he had an ear-wig playing the Night Ranger song in his ear, so he couldn’t hear the firecrackers going off. His character is completely unresponsive to it, but everybody else on the set and in the room is jumping out of their seats because these firecrackers were so fucking loud!

What a lot of people liked about Boogie Nights was the film told a story in a non-judgmental way. It didn’t paint the world of porno as an evil empire, but it didn’t exactly say it was the greatest thing in the world. It just said, “Here’s the story, draw your own conclusions.” How were you able to do that?

Well ultimately I think the funniest thing is, and I think this might attribute to the lack of box-office success for Boogie Nights, is that it is, to a certain extent, judgmental. I love those characters. And I love pornography just as much as it completely disgusts me and completely depresses me. So the first half of the movie is all fun and games, but the back-half of the movie is a sort of punishment for those fun and games. It’s my own guilty feelings about pornography. So to a certain extent, the characters and pornography are judged. It’s just done in such a gentle and honest way because I didn’t know I was doing it. I also write for my friends that are actors. And no matter what I do, I’m never fully writing the character. I’m writing eighty percent that character and twenty percent that person I know will be playing that part. And I’ll never truly never let them get hurt.

I actually tried with Magnolia to make one judgment that was important to me, and I hope this is very clear. I wanted to judge Jimmy Gator. I wanted to make it very clear that I wouldn’t let him kill himself. I would let a frog fall from the sky, land on a gun, make that gun blow up a television, cause a fire, and make him burn. Because it was my judgment that what he did was so wrong and so unforgivable that it would not be good enough for the writer to allow him to kill himself. I wanted to put a writerly judgment on that character and relate to an audience what my moral standards are. Frank T.J. Mackey is on that line where you’ve made enough mistakes in your life and you better start making up for them. Because if you don’t really, really soon, you’re pushing to that place of unforgivable. But I can still forgive Frank. If he smartens up by the end of this movie, I’ll be happy. If he doesn’t, fuck him, (laughs) because he’s hurting too many people.

The transformation that Mark Wahlberg made in Boogie Nights was really well done. It’s hard to pinpoint an exact moment when he starts to change and it’s so gradual, it’s totally believable.

I just like movies, and I guess what I like in my movies is where you see a character change by maybe two degrees as opposed to the traditional movie change of maybe ninety degrees. I guess that always feels false to me in movies because that doesn’t truly happen. Around me, at least in the life I live, I guess I don’t see people change ninety or a hundred degrees. I see them change in very small increments. I think it’s just a monitor I might have on myself as a writer not to make any false scenes. I would have had to sit down as a writer and think, “I’m gonna write the scene where Dirk changes.” But instead I’m keeping a tab on the reality factor while hopefully making it entertaining. Therefore it’s going to creep up on me, just as it maybe crept up on you. I’m just going along, and as I’m hitting a certain point in the movie, Dirk’s just kind of changing. It’s a hard thing to describe but I can probably only successfully pull that off if I’m not being self-conscious.

One scene in Boogie Nights that was very effective was when Dirk’s mother screams at him and kicks him out of the house. A lot of people who come from dysfunctional families told me that scene was like something out of their lives. Were you surprised a lot of people could not only relate to the scene but also though it was one of the strongest in the film?

Yeah, but I was also surprised by how many people thought it was one of the weakest scenes in the movie. When his mother comes at him like that, she’s really crazy and out of control. She’s kind of without motivation to a certain extent. I think one of the greatest mistakes that I’ve made in the past and that a writer can make is, “What’s the character’s motivation?” Well, a lot of times it’s so fucking confused and so polluted that you really have no idea. That woman is pretty nuts, and I think it’s sometimes hard for an audience to grab a hold of a character whose intentions aren’t clear. You don’t really know what the fuck she’s yelling about. You know she has an odd jealousy towards him or towards the neighborhood girl that he’s banging, so she’s upset about that, but her actions are so manic, you can’t get a hold of them. I was just really glad that the actress in the scene didn’t require a lot of clarity on her behavior, because I couldn’t have given it. I really wrote what made sense, and what made sense was sometimes so illogical. There are some people that saw it and said, “That scene doesn’t make sense! Why is she going crazy?” And I would just say, “You know what? I’ve never been able to figure it out.” But it sure makes sense, and I’ve sure been there.

One of my favorite lines in Boogie Nights was during the documentary that Amber Waves made. Reed Rothchild says, “If movies caused violence, we’d be able to wipe out violence tomorrow. Boom! No more films!” Of course, there’s a lot of debate about how movies supposedly cause violence and the way I interpreted that line, it almost showed how silly that argument was. Was that your intention?

I think John [Reilly] and I have both had a good laugh many times about this argument that movies don’t cause violence. But movies do cause violence. Movies absolutely promote violence. I know that as a kid when I saw movies, I would want to be the characters in the movies. I would want to dress like them, and I would want to talk like them. Now luckily I’ve channeled that into a pretty good job making movies. However, if I’d maybe gone a slightly different course, I could see how wanting to kill my classmates might have been appealing to me. It might have been promoted by what I saw in movies. Listen, I think [the scene] is a very sarcastic approach to that argument, because I just don’t buy that filmmakers don’t have a responsibility. They absolutely do. I feel like I have a responsibility. I don’t particularly want to see a whole lot of guns in the rest of my movies. I’m not really interested in it anymore. I’m sick of it. I think a movie like Fight Club is an incredibly irresponsible film.

I wasn’t expecting you to say that. Most of the time when a filmmaker is asked what their responsibility is towards an audience, they’ll say something like, “If someone blows up a building, that’s not my fault.”

Bullshit. I think that’s a bunch of bullshit. Listen, I don’t want to make beautiful, candy-coated movies, but there’s a lot more dramatic things and more tension-filled moments in my life than guns coming out, you know what I mean? I’m sick of it. I’m sick of the violence, I’m sick of the easy way out which is, “Well I’m just showing how it is.” It’s time to do better than that. We have an obligation.

Were you ever afraid that anything in your movies might have been interpreted in the wrong way?

Absolutely. I think I came to this kind of theory and fervor because the very first time we screened Boogie Nights for a test audience, when Little Bill discovers his wife on New Years Eve and goes to get his gun, the audience cheered. And when he shot her, the audience cheered. Now I sank in my seat, and I have never felt worse in my life. I thought that I’d really done wrong in terms of those characters, and in the movie and everything else. But I felt a little bit better when he shot himself because they weren’t laughing and applauding anymore. There was dead silence and they really felt it. So when I saw that and I felt that, I really kind of changed my tune and felt a real responsibility to not want an audience to cheer, laugh or have a good time when violence happens. I’m all for having fun, but gunshots hurt. You know, I always thought the subtitle for Boogie Nights should be, “It’s all fun and games until someone gets hurt.”

If you make a film that’s really outstanding, will the studio trust you? The word of mouth on Boogie Nights was strong before it came out, and it seemed like the studio was happy with it. If you make a movie like a Boogie Nights or a Pulp Fiction, does that put you in a position to call the shots?

Not during that movie, but after that movie, yes. The truth of the matter is, I thought Boogie Nights was a great movie. I still had to fight for my cut of that movie. Eventually I got it, but there were a lot of people within New Line who thought it should be shorter, who ultimately don’t even like it that much now. The truth of the matter is, it’s only now since the success of Boogie Nights that I haven’t had to do a true song and dance to defend my vision of the movie. When I showed Boogie Nights to the studio the very first time, they came out and hugged me and shook my hand and said, “This is the greatest movie we’ve ever made at New Line. We’re so thrilled, it’s wonderful.” Then we went and tested the movie, and when the movie did not test well (because there’s no way in hell a movie like that is going to test well), they got cold feet and were real confused about their own opinions. I have to thank Lynn Hirschberg, who’s a wonderful writer and a journalist. When she saw the movie, she wrote something about it to send to the heads of New Line, basically saying this movies’ one of a kind, it’s fantastic, etc. That helped them get their confidence back that was lost from the test screenings. So then all the press reactions started to happen and the truth of the matter is, I don’t think a few of the New Line executives got their full confidence back because it resulted in a very weak release strategy.

The bottom line is, I started to realize why movies cost so much money. And sometimes it’s quite a good thing if they cost a lot of money because it means the studio is then shackled with that cost, which means they’ve got to pour even more money into marketing it. If a movie is as cheap as Boogie Nights was, they essentially knew that with the reviews that they had they could under-advertise it and walk away with a break-even. It’s a very scary notion, but there are actually computers that run studios where they plug in how much the movie costs, they plug in how many theaters are going to get it, they plug in the reviews, they plug in the subject matter, and they can know exactly how much it’s going to make. And they will get to that number so they can know exactly how much it’s going to make. And they will get it to that number so they can walk away without having risked anything. I knew exactly how much money Boogie Nights was going to make before it came out because a marketing executive at another studio told me so. He said “$29,000,000 and da-da-da-da-duh cents.” And if you look it up, that’s exactly what the movie made.

You have final cut on Magnolia, and you’re certainly in an enviable position as a writer and director. A lot of people reading this could be on the verge of a break as a writer and are about to face the den of wolves that’s known as development hell. Do you have any suggestions or advice on how writers can empower themselves more?

Right off the bat, I want to say that my motto is: remember that the power is yours. The power is in the writer. It seems that the writer has been so neutered lately that he’s forgotten that the buck starts and stops with him. I think that’s how I got to direct my first movie. Basically it was a bribery situation; it was, “I know that you like this script, but there’s no one else who’s going to direct it, and I own it.” I think to get paid for a script before you write it is just certain death, because you’re basically giving ownership to someone else. I think what most writers have to remember is they can not only have power of authorship, but if they really want to, they can have power of ownership. There’s a very big difference. Ultimately, it is my choice about who I give my script to. Anyone who is writing alone in their room, that is their material, that is their product, their copyright; they own that. Don’t give up easy: never fuck on the first date. However, I think I’ve only come to learn a lot of lessons because I got incredibly fucked. I’d made my first movie with a company I’d never met. I never shook hands with anyone at Rysher Entertainment, and it was the biggest regret of my life, because there was that small period of time where I had my first movie taken away from me. Ultimately I got it back, and what’s out in the world is my version, but I went through a movie being taken away from me, a movie being recut behind my back. I went through all of that, and it created a sort of paranoia and guardedness in me that I’m glad I have, because that will never, ever happen to me again. But I was so fuckin’ anxious to get my movie made, I would have gone anywhere So it’s hard to say. Is it good advice to tell someone to hold out? Well, I sure wouldn’t have taken that advice when I was twenty-three years old and I could get my movie made. You’re gonna go where you can go, but if you can just remember that your brain is yours and they can’t own it, then it’s a really healthy thing.

Saturday, 22 January 2000

Interview: Toronto Sun

The Toronto Sun, Written By Bruce Kirkland
January 22, 2000

Art for Commerce's Sake

Magnolia director Paul Thomas Anderson likes honours

Fast forward to Feb. 15, Oscar nomination day. That's a big day for filmmaker Paul Thomas Anderson, a day for hope and maybe more pain.

Emotionally battered by the rough ride his extraordinary film Magnolia has received so far from many American critics, Anderson is hoping that Oscar nominations will rescue it, especially at the U.S. box office, where Magnolia has not performed as well as it has in Canada.


"It's a big day," Anderson said yesterday on a two-day Toronto visit. "It's very important."

One reason is the guaranteed box office boost. Another is ego gratification.

"It's not that I think I've written the best movie of the year," the 29-year-old Anderson told The Sun.

"I would want to win an Oscar because it's a piece of movie memorabilia. It's just like I would want Rosebud, the sled (from Citizen Kane). I want a f---ing gold statue to put in my house so I could go: 'Look at that! I got one!' ... My house is decorated with movie stuff. I want one of those gold things too, with my name on it."

The affable and often hilarious Anderson arrived in Toronto this week with his girlfriend, sublime singer Fiona Apple, at his side and his head swimming with mixed-up emotions.

On Thursday night, he and Apple attended the third annual Toronto Film Critics Association dinner, where he was presented with certificates honouring Magnolia as the best film of 1999 and him as best director and as best screenwriter.

"I had a great time, I really did," Anderson enthused yesterday about the awards night.

"And it is encouraging. Awards are encouraging. Maybe there are directors who pretend and say: 'Hey, that's great but it doesn't really matter.' It does matter to me.

"It means you guys (the 18 Toronto critics who voted for the awards) get the film. When everyone does not get it, it is painful, it hurts. When somebody does get it and says: 'We want to give you an award because we got it so much,' then I say thank you, that's why I did it."

Anderson has discovered that all three of his films -- Hard Eight, Boogie Nights and now Magnolia -- have been better received in Canada.

"Canadians are different. Obviously, that's true. I see Atom Egoyan's stuff and I start to put the pieces together. The cross-pollination of the art film and the commercial film works better here. There is more of an indulgence here, and I mean that in the best way. In America, it's: 'Just give me some gawdamn entertainment!' "

Magnolia is a three-hour, eight-minute episodic drama about searingly painful relationships between various people in the Los Angeles area. Some of the stories interconnect.

With dark humour and surreal touches such as the now famous frog sequence, the film features an ensemble that includes some Anderson regulars, including Julianne Moore, John C. Reilly and Philip Baker Hall. Star newcomers to Anderson's films include Jason Robards and Tom Cruise (whom both Anderson and Apple said they adore and respect).

Despite Magnolia's length and challenging subject matter, Anderson said:

"I'm under the delusion that this movie is going to make $100 million. I thought the same about Boogie Nights and even Hard Eight. But I have to think that or I would not do this job. So I just have to decipher if I'm on a path for that kind of disappointment over and over, or whether I'm not yet successfully doing my job, which is to communicate.

"The question is: Can I be a truthful filmmaker and do difficult and challenging things, and then also pull a Spielberg and make $300 million?"

Friday, 21 January 2000

January 21, 2000

Archived update from Cigarettes & Coffee, run by Greg Mariotti & CJ Wallis from 1999-2005

Here's a picture of the recently released Magnolia Screener DVD which was sent out to Academy voters. Of course, I would love to get my hands on one, but so far I have had no luck.
I have also heard that there may be some Seduce And Destroy "infomercials" that are circulating on late night TV. If anyone has seen one, knows when the next one is going to be on, or can tape it for me, please let me know! 
As people see this film repeatedly and pick up new things, there are many new "secrets" being noticed. In addition to all the 8:2 references, and the many active phone numbers, there are many website addresses that link back to the Official Magnolia Page. Here are a few:
www.wdkk.com  
www.seduceanddestroy.com
  www.tameher.com
There are a few readers of the site that are working on "Secrets of Magnolia" type web pages. I will let you know the link when they are up and running.
Aimee is scheduled to perform live on the net at vh1.com, here are the details:
JAN 27, 7:30 p.m. EST - LIVE STORYTELLERS WEBCAST FROM SUNDANCE FILM FESTIVAL
Guests include Aimee Mann, John Popper and Lisa Loeb.
Aimee Mann is also scheduled to perform on Conan O'Brien on February 18th. Hopefully she will be performing her Oscar nominated song "Save Me"!

Thursday, 20 January 2000

Interview: Boston Globe

The Boston Globe, Written By Beth Carney & Jim Sullivan
January 20, 2000

Harvard Film Archive Screening of Magnolia - January 19, 2000

Director Paul Thomas Anderson is doing his best to keep attention on his new movie ``Magnolia.''

"It's a three-hour movie. I know what that means to people. They might get to it a little later," said the 29-year-old director, who screened his film and fielded questions yesterday at the Harvard Film Archive.

"I guess I've always looked at the three-hour movie as a genre by itself," said Anderson, whose breakthrough hit "Boogie Nights" was also a viewing commitment at 2 1/2 hours. "I get suspicious any time I go to see a three-hour movie, and not because you're afraid you're going to be bored or anything. You just instantly structure your day differently. You think: You know, we should eat before we go see this movie."

"Magnolia" intertwines the stories of nine people over the course of a day in the San Fernando Valley in vignettes that include biblical references, a sky raining frogs, and a scene in which characters burst into song simultaneously.

"I guess I went through a strange time" before writing the movie, Anderson said, "and this is what I found."

Wednesday, 19 January 2000

Interview: Corona's Coming Attractions

Corona Coming Attractions, Written By Jean-François Allaire
January 19, 2000

15 Questions For Paul Thomas Anderson

I had the privilege of interviewing Academy Award nominated director Paul Thomas Anderson. His previous works include Hard Eight, Boogie Nights and this month's release Magnolia. Here are the results of our brief chat:


Are you disappointed by the Golden Globes nominations?

Sure I feel disappointed by the Golden Globes -- it's fun to win stuff. I want more! But I'm real happy for Aimee. She deserves some major recognition.

Since the critical success of "Boogie Nights" have you felt any pressure from the media and the industry concerning the critical success of "Magnolia"?

I feel pressure but it's self-induced pressure. I want to have success for me, not for anyone else.

Does the box-office results of your movie matter to you?

The box-office does matter because it means that the film is communicating well if it makes money. I want my films to communicate. Yes, it matters....I don't know if it means that I'll be able to do it better, though...(meaning: if I wanted big time success in dollars and cents if I'd be able to do it...)

Do you plan to do what the industry calls a "commercial" film anytime soon?

I thought Boogie Nights was commercial. I thought Sydney was commercial. I think, but am losing hope, that Magnolia is commercial...so....

Will you ever direct a movie where you don't have final cut?

No, I will not direct a movie if I don't have final cut.

Concerning the PTA regulars (John C. Reilly, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Philip Baker Hall): do you write specific roles for them in all of your movies?

All the roles are written specifically for the actors in the film. Yes.

How did you get Tom Cruise for "Magnolia"? What is Tommy like?

Tom Cruise is the coolest, hardest working guy I've ever been around. He works so hard and is so dedicated. I hope I make a hundred films with him. He called me after seeing Boogie Nights -- we had a mutual admiration thing going --

Will you write Tom Cruise a role in your next project?

I plan to write for Tom as much as I can --

Any actors or actresses you're dying to work with?

I'd love to work with Juliette Binoche... Kate Winslet's great and so is Adam Sandler.

Any truth to the rumors that you've done a cameo in "Little Nicky"?

Little Nicky cameo -- no that's Quentin. Me: I just love Adam Sandler. [DP note: Today's Hollywood Reporter confirmed this...]

What was the last movie from the past two years you saw that amazed you?

The last movie I saw that really amazed me was Sweet and Lowdown. Sean Penn is soooo f**king great it blows my mind.

What do you think of the Internet?

The Internet....is uh....I don't know.

Is there any other amazing stories to tell from the San Fernando Valley?

I hope there's more amazing stories to tell from the valley -- otherwise I'm out of a job.

What's next for Paul Thomas Anderson?

What's next is: Sleep. Sleep. Write. Sleep. Drink Coffee. Drink Bourbon. Drink More. Sleep. Watch movies. Sleep. Write. Watch movies. Be a good boyfriend.

What advice would you give to any young writers?

Advice: You own your brain. Which means: You OWN your material. Do not sell it until you feel safe. Nothing beats the pride of OWNERSHIP.....authorship is great but ownership is better.

Special thanks to Mr. Anderson and his agent Mr. John Lesher for helping me getting this mini-interview done.

January 19, 2000

Archived update from Cigarettes & Coffee, run by Greg Mariotti & CJ Wallis from 1999-2005

MTV has a short article regarding Fiona Apple's latest PTA directed music video "Limp" which will be released in the next few weeks. If you have or download a Real Player, you can even check out a small clip from the video. Paul's David Letterman appearance has been postponed again as Dave is suffering from some heart/artery problems. If this gets rescheduled, I will let you know.

Sunday, 16 January 2000

January 16, 2000

Archived update from Cigarettes & Coffee, run by Greg Mariotti & CJ Wallis from 1999-2005

Things are getting vicious over at Kevin Smith (Dogma, Chasing Amy, Clerks) website and more specifically his posting board. There have been many positive posts about Magnolia and Kevin & his director pal Vincent Pereira (A Better Place) has took the opportunity to not only say he did not like the film (he called it the worst film of the year) but really had  some harsh things about the movie and Paul Thomas Anderson. I don't want to fling mud here as Kevin is entitled to his opinion of not liking the film but I think he stepped over the line with some of his comments: Here are just a few from the posting board:
1/14/00
Poster: Out of all of your films, is there one particular scene or moment that you absolutely cringe at... just an awful moment. "What was I thinking???"
Kevin Smith: The scene where I had the little boy come into his father's room and insist he be treated better.
Oh wait - that wasn't me.
There are a few moments in all the stuff we've done that I shake my head at. Can't call any to mind right now, though, but I know I've spotted my share.
Poster: I guess I'm in the minority on this board, but I think 'Magnolia' was insanely brilliant.
Kevin Smith: Oh, good Lord. There's the 'B' word being thrown around again. And as wildly inappropriate as it is when people use it in reference to our stuff, in the example you've put forward, Neil, it's just plain daffy.
Poster: I've seen it 3 times so far
Kevin Smith: You poor, poor man.
They sent me an Academy screener DVD this week. I'll never watch it again, but I will keep it. I'll keep it right on my desk, as a constant reminder that a bloated sense of self-importance is the most unattractive quality in a person or their work.
Poster: To each his own, I guess.
Kevin Smith: Too true. I'm sure there are folks out there who regard 'Detroit Rock City' as the best movie ever made too.
Hell - there are folks who post here who regard 'Mallrats' as the best movie ever made.
In the words of Will Hunting...
"Fucking people baffle me."
 
1/16/00
Kevin Smith: This 'Magnolia' nonesuch has got to stop. I don't get some of you people. If you're a fan of 'Magnolia', God bless you. I'm not. But why is that such a stone in your shoe? Hell from the tone of some of these posts and some of the email I've gotten, it's apparently a stone up the ass of some people.
Is that what rabid fandom is like? Do those of you who claim to be big fans of what we do at View Askew behave in the same manner as some of these P.T. Anderson apostles - by attacking those that don't agree with you and demanding justice for a fucking opinion? If so, then you do me and mine no good service, and I request that you stop being fans.
Honestly - who gives a fuck. It's an unfair world. There is no justice. And half the time, you're going to be in a minority. People will not always agree with your opinion. Shit - in the case of this flick, I say I don't like it, and I've suddenly got a gaggle of you attacking my character, as well as my craft! Honestly - I've got assholes shooting off their mouths with shit like "You only WISH you were as good as P.T.!" What am I - nine years old? Is this the fourth grade? Some dick-lick even went so far as to EMAIL me his post from the board, so I wouldn't miss it; a post, I might add, that maintained I couldn't taste the shit on Anderson's heels - so lousy an auteur am I in comparison. What the fuck possesses some people, I ask you?
Hey man, I enjoy 'Boogie Nights'. I didn't enjoy 'Magnolia'. Maybe I'll cream my pants over the guy's next flick. But sweet Christmas! What the fuck do you care? You liked 'Magnolia'? Wonderful. I hope it illuminated your darkness in some way and fuel-injected three hours and change of joy into your engine. Me? I found it to be cinematic root canal. I'll take 'Short Cuts' any old day. There are very few movies that make me want lost time back, and that movie tops the list.
Oh, you precious but pesky few who feel maligned if 'Magnolia' is questioned! From beyond my rage I thank and bless you - for this has been a life-changing, eye-opening experience for me. If this is what rabid fans are like, then I don't want any. Oh, defenders of my imagined cinematic crown, please don't do me any favors in the face of those who'd blah-blah-blah about what shite I be! I can fight my own battles. And I've gotta tell you: someone not digging what I do is not a war that needs waging. That's film. That's art. That's life. You make something and put it on display, you get some people nodding and some people shaking their heads. What a better world it'd be if it could stop at that, as opposed to the nodders and the shakers clawing at one another's throats for having different (not better or worse) tastes.
I only wish it were a line I'd written, but again...
"Fucking people baffle me."
 
1/16/00
Vincent Pereira: P.T. Anderson's "style" is a direct lift of Martin Scorsese's style, only P.T. doesn't know how to use it. Sure, MAGNOLIA was chuck full of LONG steadicam shots, "dramatic" push-ins, and various other little tricks, but to what end? NONE of these devices were well used in the film- they ALL called attention to themselves. If Kevin wanted to be self-conscious, he could wildly throw around the camera too because it's "cool", but you know what? He doesn't need to dress his films up with a bunch of window-dressing to make them interesting. Take away all the overbearing "style" and what have you got with MAGNOLIA? Three still boring, but less annoyingly self-consciously "cool" hours of tripe. Every camera move in MAGNOLIA seems to serve but one purpose- P.T. Anderson looking at us and jumping up and down exclaiming- "LOOK! I did a steadicam shot like the one in GOODFELLAS! I'm cool, right? RIGHT??"
Actually, he's probably saying he hasn't seen any of those movies- there's a boatload of movies that I'm sure were really bad that I didn't see this year, because I had no interest in seeing them. MAGNOLIA is the worst kind of failure, because it's such a self-conscious, insincere attempt to be "meaningful" and "important", and it fails so badly because P.T. doesn't have his heart in any of it, and it shows.
 
Ricky Jay on the X-files
That's right the man himself will be featured on tonight's episode as an illusionist! Hey you might as well get one of the best if you're going to do an episode about magic. Check your local listings!
 
Reilly and Hoffman to the Stage
John C. Reilly and Philip Seymour Hoffman will return to the stage as feuding brothers in Matthew Warchus' staging of Sam Shepard's True West. When I can get some dates and ticket information, I will post that here but I believe this will be in New York.


Saturday, 15 January 2000

Interview: National Post

National Post, Written By Katrina Onstad
January 15, 2000

Doing It To Music

Magnolia director Paul Thomas Anderson says he owes the inspiration for the film to Aimee Mann. 'Her music is in my DNA, always has been'


Asked about the first album he bought, Paul Thomas Anderson goes into a full-body nostalgia fit -- slapping the table, cigarette waving wildly. No doubt part of his excitement about the question comes from a welcome change of pace: "You don't want to talk about Magnolia? Greeeeeat!" he says with relief, in San Fernando Valley-dude speak -- "great" has three syllables.

For the past two months, writer-director Anderson has been travelling the world chatting up Magnolia, his critically acclaimed follow-up to Boogie Nights. An ambitious, ranging collection of L.A. stories that twist around each other like the freeway that joins them (the film's title comes from the San Fernando Valley's main thoroughfare), Magnolia has brought Anderson to Toronto to pick up best director and best film of the year awards from the Toronto Film Critics Association.

Anderson has a galumphing likeability, his big kidness furthered by gangly limbs and a lightly freckled face. He is a laugher. At 29, he seems at once younger -- the more he likes the question, the more he says "f---" -- and older than his age; Anderson is settling into his success, and is confident enough after only three films (the first was Hard Eight) to refer to Warren Beatty as "a good friend, a life preserver" in an off-handed, almost jaded way.

His live-in girlfriend, singer-songwriter Fiona Apple -- defiantly sporting a midriff-baring T-shirt in --15 degree weather -- wanders the hallway outside the hotel room in which Anderson is conducting interviews, politely asking a publicist how to arrange a cab to the airport. It's Friday, and on Sunday, the couple will be back in L.A. to watch the Golden Globe Awards on television, where they will see Tom Cruise take home a best supporting actor trophy for his role in Magnolia as an infomercial slimeball who instructs men in the art of the pickup. But it's the mention of the other nomination, for best song -- Aimee Mann's Save Me -- that gets Anderson giddy. Anderson, a self-described "film geek," is an even bigger music geek.

"I really want Aimee to win, you know what I mean? Tom F---ing Cruise -- whatever. He'll do just fine the rest of his life," he says with a hiccupy laugh. Mann was Anderson's muse for Magnolia: "Her music is in my DNA, always has been," he says. "I edited Boogie Nights to [her CD], I'm with Stupid. Never took it off."

Anderson was a fan before he became close friends with Mann, the spiky-haired blond from the '80s band 'Til Tuesday, whose solo work has created a hard-core cult following but little commercial success. Following the weird, incestuous laws of Hollywood celebrity, where cool people are drawn to other cool people, Anderson met Mann through her husband, Michael Penn, who scored Boogie Nights. Via Mann and Penn, Anderson met Mann's producer, John Brion, who went on to score Magnolia and to produce Fiona Apple's album -- hence the young woman wandering the hall.

Post-Boogie Nights, Anderson was trying to decide on a next project just as Mann got the unceremonious boot from her label. She was sitting on "a bucket of songs," as Anderson says, and listening to an unfinished version of one, he heard the line that sparked Magnolia: "Now that I've met you / Would you object to never seeing each other again?" He wrote the character of Claudia (Melora Walters), a drugged-up thirtysomething, around this line, and the film's other stories -- the earnest cop (John C. Reilly) who loves Claudia, the dying millionaire (Jason Robards) and his estranged trophy wife (Julianne Moore), the crushing failure of a grown child quiz-show star (William H. Macy) -- all grew from there.

"Whether I'm directly quoting her or not, she creates the mood," says Anderson of Mann. "Falling in love, the hell of love, the f---ing torture and great thing that love is -- that's the basic stuff of Aimee's songs, and the movie is that all over the place."

Mann became Anderson's Simon and Garfunkle to his Graduate. Her songs weave through the film, her lyrics sometimes cutting into the characters' dialogue at the same sound level. In tribute to Mann's addictive music, he has Claudia snort cocaine off an Aimee Mann CD. "Aimee hated that," grins Anderson.

I would not have wanted to be in the room with Anderson -- a man who swears like Lenny Bruce when he's happy -- at the moment Mann lost the Golden Globe to You'll Be in My Heart (Tarzan), by Phil Collins. Movies propped up by a soundtrack make Anderson physically wince: "Anytime you see a commercial for a movie, and the last thing up there is 'New music featuring so-and-so,' and there's no discernable pattern to the songs at all, it's just a hodgepodge, you get a little nervous. You know the studio has obligations to record companies, and the director isn't paying attention. It's about selling soundtracks, not making films."

Since Hard Eight -- a film he has said had "interference" -- Anderson has demanded complete control of his work, and that starts with music. "There's this terrible theory you should be able to take the music out of the movie, and if it still works, it's a good movie," he says incredulously, lighting another cigarette. "That's like saying let's take the actors out of the movie, and see if it still works."

Boogie Nights, an ode to the California porn scene that burgeoned down the street from where Anderson grew up (he is proud to mention that "the adult classic" Amanda by Night was filmed a few houses from where he was raised), is nearly wall-to-wall music: It's a grand document of the shift from the frivolity of '70s disco to the meaner, guitar sound of the '80s -- in mainstream music, an ultimately dumb decade best defined by the oxymoronic phrase "power ballad." It is the era in which Anderson, who turns 30 in June, grew up. "I don't really want to be 30. I gotta keep that boy wonder shit going," he says, laughing.

Boogie Nights' unforgettable climax has Alfred Molina waving a gun around while "Mix Tape #6" spins in the deck, Molina air guitaring to Sister Christian by Night Ranger. The song (from 1984) is a classic Anderson choice: a long, maybe best-forgotten radio hit, more valuable for nostalgia than music. Not surprisingly for a man whose films are choked with big, overlapping conversations, he is partial to any song with a narrative -- Rick Springfield's Jesse's Girl, Supertramp's Goodbye, Stranger. Though some of these choices have been written off as irony, talking with Anderson, you get the sense he's too big a fan to make fun of these songs -- even bad music is important to someone. To wit, he admits: "My first album was probably by Oingo Boingo." This would be an utterly shameful admission were it not for one thing: Danny Elfman, arguably the most popular film and TV composer of the past 15 years (The Simpsons, almost every Tim Burton movie from Edward Scissorhands to Sleepy Hollow), was a member of this over-gelled New Wave band.

"My family would make fun of me, saying: 'This fucking band is terrible.' I'd go: 'No, no, no! There's something about Danny Elfman! When I get to make movies, Danny Elfman is going to score them.' " When Pee Wee's Big Adventure came out, with Elfman at the helm, a 15-year-old Anderson "honest to God cried." "The first time I met Tim Burton, I said: 'You don't understand, man, you stole Danny Elfman from me.' "

Anderson's movies have been praised for their showy looks -- long single shots and Scorsese-rich lighting. But the visual flourishes, says Anderson, only come with the music in place. "I always have the music before I write, or as I write. Even structurally, the movie becomes a little like verse, chorus, verse, chorus, bridge."

Anderson has four or five musicals in his head that he'd like to make, with Mann and Apple as possible collaborators. First, he wants to make something small, a shift from the three-hour-plus long Magnolia.

"I have a couple of thoughts," he says, of this unwritten film. "But I actually haven't been triggered to write it because I haven't found exactly the right music."

While the now infamous, biblical moment of the frog shower in Magnolia had some people scratching their heads (for his part, Anderson won't even attempt to answer the frog question: "I just dodge those questions and bullshit. I thought I knew what I was talking about when I was writing it, but I've gotten so far away from being interested in it now."), Magnolia has an earlier climax that's equally genre-shattering and ambitious, or irritatingly opaque, depending on where you're standing. One by one, every character -- including two who are comatose -- join in a singalong with a song by Mann called, appropriately, Wise Up. In the theatre where I saw it, the crowd seemed distinctly on edge during the scene, not knowing whether to laugh or cry. They coughed a lot. Anderson nods vigorously at this admission; he's heard it before, and says he is genuinely surprised.

"OK, I could see somebody saying, with the frogs, what the f--- was that? I kind of expected that, but I never in my wildest dreams expected the singing to be something that would offend people, or take them out of the movie," he says. "I always thought it was a natural progression from the scene before it. I consider it a musical number, but I actually also consider it real. I think we've all been in situations where you're so sad or so lonely, and a song comes on the radio that you use to allow you to wallow in your sadness, just to help validate it, put a little soundtrack to your life."

January 15, 2000

Archived update from Cigarettes & Coffee, run by Greg Mariotti & CJ Wallis from 1999-2005

Here's what Roger Ebert had to say recently when asked about critics who spoiled a major plot point in Magnolia:
Q: "Magnolia" has a completely unanticipated scene that David Denby revealed in the first paragraph of his review in the New Yorker. Was this fair? 
Ebert: Denby should be drawn and quartered, metaphorically, of course, for describing the film's astonishing and inspired surprise. The scene you refer to does not develop necessarily out of what goes before, and there is no way for a viewer to anticipate it; therefore a critic does not need to describe it in order to discuss its function. Denby's eagerness to blurt out Paul Thomas Anderson's gift to the audience was unseemly and ill-mannered, like a dinner guest shouting out the punch line to the host's best joke.

Thursday, 13 January 2000

January 13, 2000

Archived update from Cigarettes & Coffee, run by Greg Mariotti & CJ Wallis from 1999-2005


Paul will be hosting a special screening of Billy Wilder's Some Like It Hot and Ace in Hole at The James Bridge Theater in UCLA at 7:00 p.m. on Sunday, January 16th.
Call (310) 206-8013 for up-to-date information. Here's the link.