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-== INTERVIEW ==-
Question:
Do you think movies are getting worse?
Answer: No. I've never thought that.
There's always enough good movies that come out at the end of the
year to justify everything -- studio-wise and independents. If you
can get one masterpiece a year, do you have any right to expect
more than that? We're talking about a masterpiece that will live
on for all time. And sometimes you get two or three or four. If
you get one, that's enough.
Q: Three years ago, you were the one.
"Pulp Fiction" was a huge success, and it changed the world of independents.
How did that affect you?
A: I think I was mentally prepared
for success. I always thought that through a body of work, I'd get
to a place where I'd be respected. My work would matter, and I'd
have my place in film history. I always figured I would make a splash.
I just didn't think I'd get to where I wanted to go in two movies.
But I always wanted success. And the more success you have, the
more power you have. I don't need to talk a hot actor into doing
my movie to get my movie made. And that's true power -- if you don't
need Tom Hanks or Tom Cruise to say yes to your movie to do it.
Which isn't to say I wouldn't want those guys, but it would be my
choice. I want me to be enough. That's the power I have. But it
happened very quickly, and that was a surprise. I became an adjective
sooner than I thought I was going to.
Q: An adjective?
A: Every third script out there is
described as "Tarantino-esque."
Q: Right after "Pulp Fiction," you
acted in the "Tarantino-esque" "Destiny Turns On the Radio," and
then in "Four Rooms." People went crazy. I think that the public
felt you shouldn't act, you should just direct.
A: The main thing people took shots
at was that I didn't make another movie right away. And I'm never
going to be the director that makes a movie a year. I don't see
how directors do that and live a life.
Q: Did that backlash get to you?
A: I don't think it has any effect
on my work, but it's sort of affected my life. Journalists can't
conceive that the things they wrote in Entertainment Weekly or Movieline
don't really affect my life. I was made fun of and kicked around
a little. I learned pretty early on to stop reading that stuff.
Q: But you felt press was critical
to the success of "Pulp Fiction."
A: That's true. The reason I'm popular
overseas is because I spent a solid year overseas with "Reservoir
Dogs" doing the talk shows and interviews. I would arrive
in a country unknown and I would leave known. So when it came time
to sell "Pulp Fiction," they knew exactly who I was. I walk in Tokyo
and they recognize me. In Communist countries and everything. We
showed "Pulp Fiction" in China. The Government sanctioned it, and
I've never seen a more enthusiastic response. When I went to introduce
the movie, it was more like a rock concert than a movie. It was
like freedom, a night of freedom. But as far as America is concerned,
I did the talk shows and magazine articles and profiles and all,
and people started writing that "Quentin
Tarantino is a master of self-promotion." That was a big thing:
master of self-promotion. And I didn't do anything different than
an actor does. I didn't do one more interview than an actor does.
I just did the publicity rounds.
Q: Do you think it was crucial to the
success of the movie?
A: Nah. That much press doesn't really
sell a proportionate number of tickets, but it does make you famous.
I actually don't think that this article in People or this article
in Us sells a ticket. But it does make you famous. You could take
30 percent of my fame away and I'd be just fine. It's not that I
don't want to be famous, but 30 percent less would be great. I used
to like to walk and be in my own head, and I can't really do that
now. If I was trying to pick up a girl every night, it would be
the greatest thing in the world, but I'm not. That's really easy
now, but I don't want to do that.
Q: Did Miramax ever pressure you to
get back to work?
A: Never, never, never, never, never.
Q: You're seen as Mr. Indie Guy Success
Story, but you actually wrote "Pulp Fiction" for a studio, Tri-Star.
A: They said no right away, so there
was no problem. And Harvey Weinstein of Miramax got it like, bam!
-- in the second breath. Tri-Star never saw it until I was finished
with it. It said on it, "Last Draft." They knew, This is it. I said,
This is what I'm prepared to make.
Q: Were you worried they'd say yes?
A: What I was worried about was that
they wouldn't be into it and they'd do it anyway because it was
so cheap. But they were scared of it. And they didn't think it was
going to be funny. Mike Medavoy, the head of Tri-Star then, was
the guy who put the kibosh on it. He actually had just come back
from Washington, where Clinton had done this big thing about how
Hollywood
has to be more responsible and all this stuff. He'd just come back
and we threw "Pulp Fiction" in his lap. I was very disillusioned
when he turned it down because I thought he was a studio guy with
guts and he was just scared of the material. At the same time, I
have to give him a little credit for some honesty. He didn't lie.
He answered questions I'd always wanted to
know.
Q: Like what?
A: Well, they knew they weren't going
to be able to control me. They had to buy me hook, line and sinker
or forget it. It said on there, "Last Draft" -- they knew I wasn't
going to change it. But I gave him a cast list. It read like, for,
say, the role of Pumpkin, "This role will be offered to Tim Roth"
-- who ultimately played it. "If Tim Roth turns it down, this role
will be
offered to the next person on the list and so on." There were no
maybes about it. It was how it is. And Medavoy read the list, and
we had a big meeting about it and he goes: "Tim Roth is a very fine
actor, but Johnny Depp is also on your list. I would rather offer
the part to Johnny Depp. And if he turns it down, we should go to
Christian Slater. That would be my order."
And then I got to ask him the question I'd always been dying to
ask. I said, "Do you actually think that Johnny Depp, in the role
of Pumpkin, who's only in the last scene and the first scene, do
you actually think that would mean a dollar's worth of difference
at the box office?" And he goes, "It won't mean a dime, but it will
make me feel better." There's nothing else to be said after that.
That says it all. I don't want to make movies that way. But that
doesn't make Medavoy a crooked bastard. It makes him very honest.
Q: Tri-Star had paid you a million
dollars for that script. Weren't you nervous about breaking the
deal?
A: No. I had heard all the stories
about projects sitting on the shelf. There was every chance, in
fact, in all likelihood, a studio would not want to make "Pulp Fiction."
If any studio would have done it, it would have been Tri-Star. Mike
Medavoy had run Orion, which functioned like an independent.
Q: You and Miramax sort of grew up
together.
A: Oh, yeah -- I'm their Mickey Mouse.
I always joke with them that three years ago, at any major event
or anything -- like, if all the studio people had Thanksgiving --
Miramax would have had to sit at the kids table. Now, not only is
Miramax sitting at the big table, but everyone's watching what they're
eating.
Q: Do the big studios ever tempt you?
A: After "Reservoir Dogs," I got a
ton of offers from actors with production companies. And some things
came my way. "Speed" was offered to me. "Speed" was originally supposed
to be an independent-type action film. It's hard to believe that
now, but they used "Reservoir Dogs" and "Bad Lieutenant" as examples
of the direction they were headed. It was supposed to be the same
market. Then the other real big movie offered to me was "Men in
Black." I never even read it. If I'd been offered "Hero," I would
have done "Hero." That would have been my Capra movie. It would
have been smaller. I would have cast Travolta. The screenwriter,
David Peoples, wrote a great script. Stephen Frears, the director,
took "Hero" as a job -- I can tell. The movie is hitting its head
on the ceiling of his talent, where the script wants to go to the
moon. I've seen that a few times now.
Q: Do you think studios mess up movies?
A: No. It's totally the director. I've
never gone through the whole big-studio experience, but ... I have.
That's a lie. Miramax is a studio. There are no two ways about it.
Q: But people are crazy about Miramax.
A: When "Pulp Fiction" came out, I
didn't realize the resentment toward Miramax throughout the industry.
When the movie came out, there was a big think piece published in
Variety questioning the sense of Miramax releasing what is definitely
viewed as an "art film" so wide -- 1,000 screens. How foolish they
were. And that they were overspending on advertising. Then, if you
remember, we were in 1,100 theaters, and "The Specialist," starring
Sharon Stone and Sylvester Stallone, was in, like, 2,300 theaters.
We were No. 1 and no one believed it. And then, came Week 2, we
killed them. At the end of the day, the studios don't like these
intruders coming into the business. In a weird way, Harvey
and Bob Weinstein kind of remind the studios where they all started.
They're the real W.B. I call them the Brothers Weinstein. The B.W.'s.
Q: Do you still think about budget?
A: Yes. Jackie Brown only cost $12
million. You can't lose. You absolutely, positively can't lose.
And you don't have to compromise. After "Reservoir Dogs," all the
studios thought: Wow -- that's a good film. This guy is a very exciting
film maker. And you could tell they were thinking, If we match this
guy with more commercial subject matter, he can bat it out of the
park.
And they'd be right, by the way. At one point, it was a major consideration
for Scorsese to do "Dick Tracy." And that's right up his alley.
If I used bigger actors, made action movies, I wouldn't be selling
out. De Palma did not sell out when he did "The Untouchables" --
it was a marriage made in heaven. And I love "Mission: Impossible."
To me, that's a $100 million movie
made with the integrity of an artist. And the more I've seen it,
the more I love it. I own a print of it. If I go and do "The Man
From u.n.c.l.e.," I'm going to make it with Warner Brothers. That's
what Warner Brothers does. That would be the logical place. But
not because I'm standing on a stepladder reaching for commerciality.
I don't have to prove anything as far
as audience is concerned.
Q: Your confidence is impressive, but
neither "Reservoir Dogs" nor "True Romance" was a hit. Didn't you
ever worry?
A: During preproduction on "Pulp Fiction,"
"True Romance" which Tarantino wrote came out and it didn't do well.
That scared me. I thought, Maybe there isn't a big audience for
what it is that I do. But the example that gave me confidence was
Jane Campion. That year, she had her big breakout hit with "The
Piano." There was nothing to suggest in her previous work that she
would ever find a large audience. But her doing what she does with
the right film and the right story did find that audience. And now
there are these insane $100 million expectations on "Jackie Brown,"
which is a smaller, character-based movie with a female lead. Well,
I'm not in this for a couple of movies. I'm in this for a lifetime.
Q: Do you watch movies while you're
shooting?
A: During "Jackie Brown," I would watch
one side of the laser disk for "Carlito's Way." My cinematographer
and I watched two movies: "Hickey and Boggs," which was directed
by Robert Culp and was shot in the 70's -- it's a really good movie.
And then we watched "They All Laughed," by Peter Bogdanovich. Both
were perfect for "Jackie Brown." "They All Laughed" is a
masterpiece, I think. It captures a fairy-tale New York. It makes
New York look like Paris in the 20's. It makes you want to live
there. And we kind of used it. And then we watched "Straight Time,"
one of the best L.A. crime movies ever. But I wanted "Jackie Brown"
to look more like a movie than that. "Straight Time" is too gritty.
Q: How about casting the movie?
A: You actually have to cast your own
movie. By that I mean, on "Reservoir Dogs," they wanted us to cast
a bunch of made-for-video actors, a bunch of semi-on-the-rise B-level
guys thrown together without any thought of whether or not they
would work well together. They wanted us to use these medium names
on the rise. We wouldn't do it. The hardest part to give up in "Jackie
Brown" was Ordell, who is played by Samuel L. Jackson. I was Ordell.
It was so easy to write Ordell. I was
Ordell for the year I was writing the script. I had to really work
hard in letting go of Ordell and letting Sam play him and not being
a jerk about stuff. Sam was him for 10 weeks; I was Ordell for 52
weeks. Ordell was all my mentors as a young man growing up. Ordell
was who I could have been. It was interesting writing the film because
that all kind of came back to me, and that persona of who I could
have been at 17 if I didn't have artistic ambitions. That was it.
If I hadn't wanted to make movies, I would have ended up as Ordell.
I wouldn't have been a postman or worked at the phone company or
been a salesman or a guy selling gold by the inch. I would have
been involved with one scam after another. I would have done something
that I would have gone to jail for. But I picked my path. And luckily,
I was able to deal with all those things about me through
my work.
Q: And Robert De Niro is in the movie.
Lately, it seems, his talent is taken for granted.
A: Definitely. De Niro's work in "Heat"
is amazing. And he's amazing in "Casino." He was robbed of a nomination
on either of those films. De Niro is a major supporter of me acting.
We're going to do a movie together. Critics have taken potshots
at me for acting. I don't think they think I'm as serious about
acting as I am. But I have had nothing but support from other actors.
So who am I going to listen to? Am I going to listen to J. Hoberman
or Robert De Niro? Am I going to listen to Caryn James or Nic Cage?
Q: Nic Cage is about to play Superman.
Which superhero would you want to be?
A: That's tough. long pause I think
I'd be Luke Cage, the black superhero. Nic Cage took his name from
Luke Cage. Luke Cage was a blaxploitation comic-book hero. He's
my favorite character. Luke Cage was framed for heroin possession
and he was in jail, and a doctor did an experiment on him and he
busts out of jail and he ends up with super strength. The doctor's
chemical bath gave him steel-hard skin. His skin is bulletproof.
He changed his name and rented himself out: Luke Cage, Hero for
Hire. Everyone thinks he's dead, but he's always on the run. He's
a superhero version of "Shaft." He's a great character.
Q: You've always had a great love of
mainstream, pop stuff. You're like a collector.
A: I don't believe in elitism. I don't
think the audience is this dumb person lower than me. I am the audience.
Q: Do you ever think about how you
would change the movie business?
A: Well, I have a big problem with
the stars getting $20 million. I think it's just greed, it's a greed
that will ultimately kill the business.
Q: Do you say that to John Travolta,
who gets $20 million a picture?
A: I have said that to him. He says,
That's the going price. And I understand that. If I was going on
the market, and the going price for directors is $6 million, I could
get $10 million with the right project. And I would start to care
about kicking it up.
But I don't want to. It's not right. My hero when it comes to taking
care of himself and owning his stuff is Clint Eastwood. That's who
I pattern my entire business after. He takes short money when he
works for Warner Brothers, brings the movies in for a price and,
goddamn it, when they make money, he gets paid. He's my hero.
Q: Do you ever get scared? Are you
always in such a doubt-free zone?
A: Why should I be scared? You do the
work and that's what is important. It sounds big, but I've built
my whole career on courage. This whole thing is about when I'm an
old man and I'm not doing anything anymore. It ain't about the moment.
I'm not making films for right now -- I'm making films for 40 years
from now.
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