Doug Loves Movies - The Kings of Summer
Episode Date: June 21, 2013Doug sits down with the cast, director, and cinematographer of "The Kings of Summer" for a Q&A after a showing at the Landmark Theater in L.A.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/priva...cy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Doug hates candy wrappers screaming baby sticky seeds with 50 azepop or kernels in his teeth.
There's still not one that he won't see, cause Doug loves movies!
Hey everybody, my name is Doug and I love movies. This is Doug Loves Movies.
As the title of this not-so-mini-mini-ep suggests, on Wednesday, June 19th, 2 Oceans 13, I got to go to the Landmark Theater in Los Angeles and conduct a Q&A with the director, cast, and cinematographer of a little gem that I've already told you about called The Kings of Summer.
be soon, like Scottsdale, Arizona, San Diego, San Francisco, New Orleans, Minneapolis, Austin,
Milwaukee, and more. And more cities will be added on Friday, and even more cities on July 5th.
So go to thekingsofsummermovie.com to see if it's playing near you, and if possible,
see the movie before listening to this. There are no major spoilers, but there's lots of little ones.
Enjoy!
Hey, everybody!
That was Kings of Summer, as you know,
and a lot of the people involved in making this movie
are here tonight.
I'm Doug Benson.
For anybody who doesn't know me,
I have a podcast called Doug Loves Movies, this movie are here tonight. I'm Doug Benson. For anybody who doesn't know me,
I have a podcast called Doug Loves Movies.
And I was fortunate enough to see the movie a few weeks ago and have on two of the guys that I think are here tonight.
And we'll bring them out.
But first, let's bring out the director of the movie,
Jordan Vogt-Roberts is here.
Jordan Vogt-Roberts.
the director of the movie, Jordan Vogt-Roberts is here.
Hey, thank you guys for coming out.
Like I said, you guys are supporting independent
cinema and that's a big deal.
If you like this movie, please help us spread the word
about it. Because with movies
this size, one or two people actually
makes a big difference.
Where are we at for the listeners of the podcast?
You obviously don't need to tell these people where they can see it,
but is it still expanding into more cities pretty much each week?
We're expanding.
Last week we got our ass kicked by a little movie that no one's ever heard of
called Man of Steel.
So I think that's screwing up our expansion right now.
But yeah,
we're in like 60 cities right now.
You can go to our website and it'll tell you where it's playing.
Kings of summer.com.
The Kings of summer movie.com.
I love how they always have to stick movie on there because some jerk went and
grabbed the Kings of summer.
As soon as he heard that was a movie.
Actually,
the best part about it is people were so nervous about this movie
and the fact that there are kids swearing and kids drinking.
And the Kings of Summer is a legitimate corona ad campaign right now.
I think if you go to thekingsofsummer.com, it's like a corona party.
That's funny, because I think Bellagio's the most interesting man in the world.
Oh, there's a thing at the end?
There's a tag at the end.
There's a scene at the end, and we're missing it? There's a Marvel-esque tag at interesting man in the world. Oh, there's a thing at the end? There's a tag at the end. There's a scene at the end and we're missing it?
There's a Marvel-esque tag at the end of the movie.
We're setting up the Avengers of Kings of Summer.
It's just more, it's extra footage of Bellagio.
Bellagio.
Biagio.
Biagio.
Do you want me to bring these guys out?
Yeah, let's bring everybody up here.
All right, so we have our wonderful cast here.
First, I want to bring out Gabe Basso,
who plays Patrick.
Next.
Hey, dude.
Nice to meet you.
The very wonderful Joe Toy,
a.k.a. Nick Robinson.
And then the very odd creature Good to see you again
I've been good
Have a seat, grab a microphone
He's just chatting with me over here
He's high
The very odd creature
Biagio
Moises Arias
Moises actually
he won the
movie game
we play on the show
when he was on
he was
my favorite question
I get all the time
is like so
Biagio
the kid who plays him
is a weirdo right
and it's like
yeah but in a
totally different way
yeah
he's a thug
and then next
Mark Evan Jackson
who plays Mr. Kenan.
Hey dude, nice to see you.
And primarily because I like embarrassing him,
a very dear friend of mine
and a huge part of this movie,
Ross Riggi, the DP.
and a huge part of this movie,
Ross Riggi, the DP.
So we kind of have a ragtag group of people here.
Hey, Ross. Nice to see you.
Let me just jot that down.
Late edition, Ross Riggi.
How do you spell it?
R-I-E-G-E.
It's very... It's like Riege.
It's like Riege or Riggi.
Yeah, I realize I've been pronouncing
Your last name wrong forever, I'm so
Sorry, like I've been saying Rij
That's right, I'm a man of many names
It's tough for some 17 year olds
To bum us out, so it's okay
Where did you, Jordan, where did you
Find Ross or how did that
You know, collaboration get going
We met like six
Seven years ago now at this point.
I was looking to, I used to
shoot all my own stuff and I'm super
hands on and kind of an asshole because
of it.
And I didn't want to shoot my own stuff anymore.
And he
was at the same agency as me and I went to them and
I was shooting this short film called Successful Alcoholics
and I wanted someone to do it.
And I got a bunch of great commercial reels.
These guys look fucking incredible.
I was like, why would they want to do this?
And they're like, well, these guys make a bunch of money.
They want to do something cool.
And there was this one reel in the pile
that was definitely a little more rough around the edges than Raw,
but it was way more exciting and definitely felt hip.
And we've just been working together ever since.
And he's kind of what saved me in this whole process.
So he shot Successful Alcoholics?
Yeah.
That's a terrific film as well.
It's short. It's like 25 minutes long.
25 minutes.
It's a medium.
It stars one of the biggest banes of my existence, T.J. Miller.
Mine too.
Yeah, yeah.
He's a nut.
He's kind of Biagio-like, but he's
a real person.
It's not a tremendous performance by a talented
young actor.
I don't want to say in a public environment,
but to describe him as the Bane,
as long as we can just both agree to describe him
as the Banes of our existence, that's great.
Yeah, he's, you know,
he's troublesome.
He's a
troublemaker, but
hilarious dude.
You know he talks shit about me
by name in GQ magazine?
That's true.
First time I was ever in GQ magazine.
My parents pick up a GQ magazine to read
and it's this guy talking shit about me
for no reason unrelated
to what they're talking about. It's great.
Really good. I would like to really dig into this,
but there's such a big panel here
that they maybe haven't even met T.J. Miller.
Oh, man, what a douche.
I know.
Yeah, he just comes on my show
and is one of the top three or four most obnoxious guests,
and I have to have him back because the listeners love it.
They love how frustrated I get with him.
Beautiful.
But let me ask you guys specific questions about the movie, starting with Nick Robinson.
Monopoly.
It's a big plot point in the movie that you play Monopoly a few times in the story.
Had you ever
played prior to
playing this role?
I had, actually.
I didn't
actually play it anymore in preparation
or anything, but
it was certainly a very cool
time. I had a good time.
It's so high.
You're so high right now. No, I'm not.
You're high.
That scene
was one of the first ones I shot
with Nick Offman.
He's a machine.
He's hilarious.
He's a very funny dude.
A lot of ruin
takes for laughing at...
That was rough. We basically set aside that whole day for that scene.
Just because we knew it was an important one.
So we had like six or eight hours just to do that Monopoly scene.
I mean, the kids in general, I just threw them under the bus.
Because you've got Mark and Megan Mullally and Alison Brie and Eugene Cordero
and these incredible comedians.
And then you've got these guys.
And I'm just like, all right, keep a straight face.
Yeah, don't laugh at their crazy antics.
But that's like, finally, an intense Monopoly game in a motion picture.
Because I've never gotten through a fucking Monopoly game without somebody getting pissed at somebody.
Yeah, I mean...
It gets personal.
It gets personal.
If we really wanted to be accurate, I feel like it would be Risk.
Just because I don't think I've ever...
Yeah, dude, Risk kills.
I've never accepted a game of Risk, being friends with those
people. Were there any things
like that, any choices in the movie that
you had to go
a way that you didn't want to go because of
the rights or something?
Is it hard to... Boston Market
was on board, although it was the greatest
story. It's not really the
greatest story. It's like a medium story. Yeah, it's a big build-up.
Yeah, you really set yourself up for a fall there.
This is the shit.
At one point in the movie.
So cool.
At one point in the movie, the guy at the party when he shoots the gun right now, he
says, you little shits.
And he used to say, you little cunts.
And that's just terribly offensive for no reason.
And I love it.
And we went to Boston Market.
For some reason, CBS went to Boston Market
to be like,
hey, do you want to sponsor this movie?
Do you want to do a tie-in meal or something?
Yeah, in case they start serving rabbit.
Right, exactly.
And Boston Market,
I guess, initially came back
and was like,
yeah, you know,
maybe we could do this.
We could do this.
And then they were just like,
wait, is the word cunt in your movie?
Yeah, no, we can't be involved
with this at all. That's just a random random question that's the one word they're concerned
about no i think it occurred to them after the fact that they're like oh right i think i heard
someone say cunt oh okay but you didn't say we're changing it to shit it's just on their bullet
point of like general deal memos at boston markets do you say the word cunt nick also has it does in
fact have to...
There's a pretty gnarly section of the movie
where he's dealing with preparing a rabbit.
And you'd never done that before, right?
No, no, I'd never scared a rabbit before.
Did you feel very Jennifer Lawrence in that sequence?
Because she, of course, did similar shit to a squirrel in that movie.
I don't want to drop any other movie names right now.
We're concentrating on Kings of Summer
in theaters.
You were into it, because I approached him about it.
Okay, no, don't say into it.
That's creepy.
No, you said you were like an Inuit.
I was not really
excited about the rabbit skinning scene.
He told me that he grew up watching a bunch of Bear Grylls and Man vs. Wild.
Yeah, that's true, but I wasn't into it.
He was open to the idea when I said to him, I want you to really do this.
And his mom was not into that.
I don't think to this day his mom has watched it.
Yeah, she hasn't seen that scene once.
The best thing about it was just that we shot in Ohio,
which was great for a lot of reasons,
and also when you shoot anywhere, it has its own unique issues.
But the best thing about Ohio for the production was
you could just post on Craigslist and be like,
does anyone have a dead rabbit?
And people are like, I got a dead rabbit.
That's so weird.
They're looking at Craigslist, but they raise their hand.
Yeah, exactly.
It's very old-fashioned.
It's more like Craigslist is just a guy with a list of people with rabbits.
Yeah, pretty much.
Gabriel, can I get you a cold washcloth is the first thing I wanted to ask you.
Because that is the funniest thing a parent has ever offered a child and his friend.
That is hilarious.
Was that like a
Megan Mullally riff?
No, that's a writer.
My grandma has done this to me
all the time, I swear to God. I'm not actually
kidding.
Can I get you a cold washcloth?
Yeah, she gave me a cold washcloth
and she fluffs the pillows and puts the cold washcloth? Yeah, she gave me a cold washcloth and she fluffs the pillows
and puts the cold washcloth
over the pillow.
Wait, you get a cold washcloth in bed?
Yeah, that's how it works.
You get a cold washcloth and you lay down.
Just because someone tells you
that's how it works
doesn't mean you should go along with this.
You've got a lot to learn.
They're teenagers, guys.
They don't know.
But that's Chris.
That's the writer.
That's like his weird...
That's like Megan Mullally in...
First of all, Chris the writer
basically is Biagio to a T.
They even look similar.
But Chris, for the record,
he would never say that.
He would never say that.
He would never admit that.
Yeah, that's a diss to Moises here, though.
Whoa.
No, I'm sorry.
I was kidding.
But Chris is very on the record as saying,
like, Megan Mullally is his mother.
Like, the dialogue that comes out of her mouth.
And we did a lot of improv, and we did a lot of riffing,
but that washcloth thing and the whole, like, Will Smith thing,
those are all, like, based on real conversations,
like, of his mom just not getting it.
Yeah, I think
Mark,
I think the camera's not even on you at that
point, but I think you call Hancock
Hemlick or something?
Heimlich, yeah.
That makes a little bit more
sense than Hemlick.
But if you,
like you said, Mark plays
kind of, he's
Megan's husband, and
they're just
weird parents. I mean, I guess
there's a lot of things that are similar to
all of our
lives with our parents, but they're
a particularly strange couple,
I thought. Thank you.
In a fun way, yeah.
I think that they are a really common couple.
I mean, you know, it wasn't hard to tap into
very recent seeming memories of my own parents
asking me stupid questions like,
so you decided to wear the blue shirt,
not the one with the pocket?
Like, that's just one of those things.
That's a scripted line in the movie,
and it's one of those great questions. That's one of the first things that made me fall in love with the script it was like
that really tapped into that question that you it instantly transported me to being 15 again to go
like what the fuck are you talking like hey why do you care and what like but that's what's so
interesting about it to me is it but he you know this you can you develop a rash because of the parrots and but but it's but
they're always very uh sweet and uh and silly and like so it's it's interesting that you have that
the uh you're able to make it seem like yeah he would want he'd need to get away from those people
you know because like there's more issues with Joe and his dad.
Those are more well-defined in terms of why a kid would run away from home.
Well, at the end of the day, both kids, I think when you take a step back,
you should be so lucky.
Joe's problems are a little more intense.
They're not really, though. I would take my dad over
Patrick's parents
like,
during the day of the week.
Disagree.
That's so hilarious.
No, man.
They're so nice, though.
They are saying
a lot of fucked up shit,
though,
even though they're being
real nice while they're doing it.
Those dinner table scenes,
too,
like the Hancock one,
that was like
two in the morning,
three in the morning.
And he couldn't keep a straight face, i was just trying i was eating that burger was
cooked for like 20 seconds in the microwave keep in mind our prop department was like fired
immediately after that scene for feeding me that but i was forced feeding myself raw hamburger
meat to not laugh i was like i can't do't do this. And you got mad at me.
And you're busting up laughing behind camera.
I hear all that laughing, and I'm the only one
that's trying to keep a straight face.
Yeah.
I'm allowed to laugh.
Ross, how's it going?
I'm great. I just want to make sure
you get a question in. Holding down the left side
over here.
Were there any particular uh
you know challenges to uh to shooting the the the woods of ohio absolutely everything yeah
was it difficult very difficult uh we had six day weeks which to begin with is tough
and then on the seventh day our director j Jordan asked us to go out again and shoot
and we can all speak for that
so there was very little rest
obviously very worth it
but we all in certain ways became
our own zombies during this production and managed
to function somehow
yeah
you were the nicest zombie ever though
you were always in the best mood
I don't know how you did it
it blew my mind
Ross is allowed to be in a good mood so I don't have to be
I gotta balance out Jordan
while watching
next to Biagio's name I wrote down
formal dance training
Moises
how do you do that?
Juilliard School of Dance at 3.
Quite the prodigy.
None of that shit's in the script, either.
It doesn't say, and then Biagio dances the weirdest dance you've ever seen?
None of that's in the script.
Yeah, what Ross just said, the seventh day, our first day off,
Jordan took us three guys, them two and the rider, into the woods.
It sounds very creepy, yes.
But we just started, you know, banging on the pipe.
Also sounds creepy.
Yeah, that whole day was improvised.
The whole pipe sequence in the movie.
Improvised pipe dance.
Yeah, we just went out there.
The audio from that scene is recorded on my iPhone.
That's just like guerrilla filmmaking. We just went out there. The audio from that scene is recorded on my iPhone. That's just like guerrilla filmmaking.
That just happened. The music, or whatever
you'd call it, from the pounding on the pipe,
was a... Music, music.
It's music. It's a repeated
motif throughout the film, but that's not
composed by anybody? That's just something the guys
riffed? That just happened on our first day off
and as soon as it happened, there are so few
moments on a set where you actually feel like
occasionally you capture something and you're like,
this is good, this is exciting, that's going to work,
that's going to be okay, we're going to have to
fix it in the edit or whatever. Very rarely
do you come across a moment where you're like, oh,
that's special, that's fucking
magic, that's movie magic and you're
watching it. And that was one of those things when
we put them on the pipe, that
just kind of unfolded. Like I said, it's on
my audio. For the listeners of the
podcast, they're standing
on a giant pipe. They didn't like put them on
a, you know, put them on the pipe. Sounds like
you got them to smoke some crack. We put them on the pipe.
We got them all hooked on the pipe
and just bang out of tune, boys.
Put them on the pipe, took them to the woods
and just banged.
For the listeners to the podcast, the three boys are smoking crack right now.
But yeah, as soon as we shot that, I just started rethinking the entire movie.
And I just knew that was something special.
And so we started rejiggering it.
And I didn't know, there's no violin in the script.
I just found out he could do it.
Moises is just incredibly talented as a dancer.
And it's like, yeah, Biagio, why wouldn't he be able to dance?
But Patrick's foot injury, that was in the script.
That's a script.
Yeah, yeah.
That wasn't one of those deals where, like, he showed up on the set with a fucked up foot.
And you're like, oh, got to rewrite some pages.
Got to change some shit.
Got to fix that.
Was that weird walking around with that thing on?
It was miserable.
To be completely honest, like,
I have this guy telling me to do everything, you know,
Moises and Nick are doing, except in a boot.
And so he was like, sprint down the
field. And I was like,
I'm in a boot. Yeah, I saw the slow motion
running scenes. It's like, that guy really has a
thing on his foot. But he's super competitive
is the best part. So he'll be like, yeah, I'm gonna do
this and then bitch about it later.
So he'll do it. I never
bitched about anything. Until right now.
Later.
I didn't say how much later.
It'll happen.
So, Jordan,
the title got switched at some point
in the process of this movie.
And I'm,
I'm just curious how that happened.
And,
uh,
it used to be when we permitted Sundance,
it was called toys house.
Uh,
which on one hand is a title that I loved.
On the other hand,
no one is used to the possessive form of the word toy.
And people would like,
literally like out of Sundance,
we would have reviews that would come out and it would call it Toys House
and then by the third paragraph they were calling our movie
Toy Story.
So
it's this weird thing where some people
love the title, some people... In fact, when Offerman
got brought on board, he pitched me a bunch of weird
alt titles that were like Pussy Canyon
and weird things. Just like weird
Offerman titles.
He just shows up. I'm not
happy with this title.
We're going to have to discuss some options.
The Frank Toy Story.
Just like weird shit
like that.
We always knew it was sort of a thing, but
then CBS... Toys in the Attic?
Toys in the Attic.
It wasn't taken already?
Just weird shit. So it wasn't taken already. Just weird shit.
So it wasn't like any kind of studio or any kind of pressure.
No, no, no. CBS came in later.
Oh, okay.
I mean, I will say this freely.
I found out about the title change via Deadline Hollywood.
Yeah.
I don't understand that reaction from the audience,
but two or three people are disgusted with Deadline Hollywood.
Yeah, so switch the title.
They did market testing,
and it was this weird thing where they just found
that more people would be willing to go to see a movie
called Kings of Summer than Toys House.
And not even by that much, by like 10%.
But the weird thing was on the exit polling when they were like,
alright, now that you've seen the movie, do you feel like
Toys House is a better title than Kings of Summer?
It was even. They were like, yeah, we feel like
they're both fine titles. It is kind of
a spoiler that there's going to be a
house.
And as it is, I was disappointed
they never became royalty.
But I did like the fact that no one at any point
in the film, because of that sequence
of events, no one had the opportunity to have
the line yelling out, like, we're the kings of summer
and then jump into the lake or something.
Come on back to
Toy's house.
Pussy Canyon.
No, it's Pussy Canyon. Canyon.
Canyon.
So, yeah,
that's an interesting story to me.
Or, I mean,
I thought it might be
an interesting story
and turns out
it was amazing.
A writer to this day
still calls it Toy's house.
But there's that moment,
I was going to say,
there was that moment
where Moises,
as Biagio,
is standing in the shopping cart
with his arms out
as if he's about to say, I'm the king of the world.
So it is sort of in there, I think.
Everyone's nodding in agreement.
I thought he was going to say Pussy Canyon.
That's what it looks like he's going to say.
That's what I say every time I'm in a shopping cart.
Oh, yeah, this is Pussy Canyon.
Offerman's notes in general were amazing because they were all
these things it was like he'd be like you know um you know a snake wouldn't behave that way
like you know it's totally unrealistic that the boyfriend would be wearing a tool belt and driving
the truck at the same time no one does that it's like's like, alright dude, you're a man, I'm not. I'm a boy, I get it.
I don't know about these things, like
survival things. They were all incredible
weird notes. Yeah, he's
an intimidating figure. Yeah.
Where the hell is he tonight?
He's with his loving wife on vacation.
Oh, the two of them
blowing you off in your hour of need.
Yeah, that's what they do. But I'm
thrilled to have all you guys here,
and I would like to ask a question
before opening it up to any audience questions
that are out there
that I ask on every episode of my podcast.
Nick and Moises have already been through this.
But let's start with Ross on the end down there,
crack cinematographer.
What have you seen lately?
Have you been to the movies lately? I have been to the movies lately. What have you seen lately? Have you been to the movies lately?
I have been to the movies lately.
What did you see?
Man of Steel?
This is the End?
The most recent movie I saw was This is the End.
Yeah?
Did you enjoy that?
I don't mean to put you on the spot.
Let me just ask you, how was the cinematography in This is the End?
I appreciated it.
I think it actually, for a comedy, I think we're in a world that comedies aren't giving emphasis to the way they're shot.
And I think that they at least looked at that and took that seriously.
I think yours and your movie and that movie are probably the two most hilarious movies
that also have lens flares that are playing in theaters this summer.
Lots of lens flares. I appreciate lens flares.
You could have said good-looking or textured or anything.
Well, I don't know if I'd say that.
I mean, I'm not sure if I'd say that about the other movie.
But yeah, of course the cinematography in this movie is beautiful.
You were all about the flares.
I love lens flares. Every time there'd be a
sunset, oh, flare!
And we'd stop shooting and get the flare.
Like through the trees.
We did the math. There's actually,
if you break it down, there's a flare
once per minute in this movie.
That can't possibly be true.
It's not actually once per minute, but sometimes they happen.
There's 92 flares in the movie we we counted we counted there's 92 that's the only reason i'd go
back to see this is the end to do a flare i would have i would have guessed 50 at most if asked i
thought i saw it three or four times and that's why i was being so clever bringing it up. 92. 92 times. Yep. That's a fun drinking game.
You'd be dead.
Next time I see that movie.
Mark, what have you been to lately?
I think the most recent movie I've seen was To the Wonder.
Yeah.
A Terrence Malick movie.
Yeah.
Did you like that?
I did.
It was gorgeous.
Yeah.
It was very spare and lovely.
Do you enjoy all of Malick's work?
You know, I will admit that I didn't
know much about it until meeting Jordan.
And when he found out that
I hadn't
known that much about Terrence Malick, he put
our friendship on hold until I
studied up. So yeah, becoming
a giant fan. Tree of Life?
Yes.
Moises is saying yes to Tree of Life. Yes. Moises is saying yes
to Tree of Life.
Incredibly trippy.
And what have you seen lately, Moises?
Have you been to the...
Yeah, I saw Man of Steel.
Did you like it?
Yeah.
I wish I could say
it was really, really good,
but it was okay.
All right. I haven't seen it yet, really good, but it was okay. All right.
I haven't seen it yet,
but I've heard mixed things,
so it's fair assessment.
Yeah.
I don't want to trash on it,
but it was decent.
This kid is slick.
Nick, what about you?
This is the N2, actually.
Oh, they already made that?
Oh, my God.
They just screen like shit so fast these days.
Yeah, I know.
I got a pre-screening.
It's really cool.
It's just going to blow your mind.
And it's twice.
It's crazy.
It flares like at least 130 times.
Damn it.
Hold up.
But, no, it was good.
I laughed.
That was what I came to do
was to laugh
and I did.
I'm here to laugh,
everybody.
I'm here to laugh.
Make that announcement
to the theater.
Well,
also,
the thing about
Kings of Summer
that like,
you may not get,
the trailer's pretty funny
but it's consistently
funny throughout.
Like,
it's very,
it's,
do you call it a comedy?
Or you can't call it a rom-com,
obviously. It's not really a rom-com.
Even though those boys do fall in love with B.I. Jim.
I think you have to call it a comedy.
You probably have to then even go
another level down and be like, it's a coming-of-age comedy.
But I don't think that that
represents what it is.
At the beginning, when I prefaced the intro,
I was like, it's sort of a really weird movie, and it's not.
And I think that there's stuff in this movie that is very weird.
That was an interesting thing to put into our heads.
It's weird, but it's not.
Enjoy.
Because it is.
It's quirky, but it's also relatable at the same time.
There's also just absurd stuff.
I just wanted to make something that was a throwback
to Amblin movies and John Hughes movies and then
basically make a really dumb Terrence Malick
movie, which is to say
have impressionistic and ethereal elements
and match it up with dick jokes.
Yeah, it's artsier than your typical
John Hughes movie.
But then I think there's really weird alt comedy in that.
All the stuff with Thomas Middleditch and Marilyn
Rice Cup is the cops.
There's crazy... I think Thomas Middleditch and Marilyn Rice Cubs, the cops, just like fucking, there's crazy.
I think Thomas Middleditch studied T.J. Miller
before playing that part.
Well, I...
He was channeling him or something. Yeah, and Marilyn Rice Cubs
is very, very funny. And Kumail
and Johnny has a funny scene where he
shows up as a delivery guy.
I love when he's like, what's that, a pager?
Who's got a pager?
No, no, no. That dude had a beeper.
Yeah, beeper. That dude had a beeper?
Yeah, beeper.
That dude had a beeper somewhere?
Is that a beeper?
That had to be you, right?
Biagio had a beeper.
Yeah, Biagio had a beeper. Hell no.
Of course he did.
I hope everyone listening to this as a podcast watches the movie first.
Go see it somewhere and then listen to this.
This is a weird time to tell people that.
watches the movie first. Like, go see it somewhere and then listen to this. This is a weird time to tell
people that. But
I hope that's what happens because
of what I'm about to
say. When Biagio asks
his dad those questions,
I like to imagine
that Biagio just returned home
and the father never noticed
he was gone. In my mind, the dad had no
idea he was gone. Yeah, and he was just shaving and, oh
yes, he just asked me some questions like he
does sometimes. It's been
a while. But also, that scene was
written in English, and Moises
is Colombian, and he
made great strides in telling me he was from
Colombia about
30 times. And so
one day I just put him to the test and was like,
alright dude, do the first half of the scene,
do this whole scene in Spanish Spanish except the last line.
And it's so weird because that character should be Italian
and he's speaking Spanish.
And then the last line, but the dad's responding in English.
It's like the weirdest thing.
It is pretty weird now that you mention it.
Yeah, but the dad had no idea he was gone.
At all.
Alright.
I can live with that assessment.
Who do I leave off at?
Gabriel, have you been to the movies?
Yeah, I saw Man of Steel.
It was decent.
Whoa. Wow.
This is smart. You're getting people to check out your movie.
You know, just talk down every other movie. I'm not saying... RCG is way better. wow this is smart you're getting people to check out your movie like you know
just talk down
every other movie
I'm not saying
our CG is way better
like the snake CG
yeah
kills it
you had a real snake
running around
we had a real snake
running around
one that actually
could hurt somebody
no it didn't have fangs
and it wasn't venomous
it was a gopher snake
it was a gopher snake.
It's a gopher snake, apparently.
It was a real pain in the ass. Never did anything I wanted it to do.
Yeah.
Bit the wrong actor.
We didn't feed that snake for like two weeks,
which is like a normal thing in snake training.
It makes them aggressive.
And then he showed up on set and like,
what do they call it when they kill the mouse?
Thumping it? Oh, yeah.
Well, that's what Jungle Terry is. Oh, yeah. So our animal trainer's
name was Jungle Terry.
And he drove around in a zebra-printed
Range Rover. Yeah.
And dressed in
various safari regalia.
And just yelled at people, welcome to Jurassic
Park. Welcome to Jungle
Terry. Yeah. Welcome to Jungle Terry.
Yeah, it's fucking weird.
Yeah, that snake sucked.
All right, I think we've run out of time, actually, but let's get... Let's get some audience questions.
Yeah, let's get a couple quick ones, because no one's given me the stop now.
I didn't get to answer the movie I saw.
Okay, we've been told we have three minutes, so speed round of audience questions.
This gentleman right up front here, just yell it out real loud.
I was just wondering, I thought the first half...
Okay, we don't have time for your critical assessment of the emotion.
How did you balance the tone from being hilarious to being really serious throughout the movie?
How did you balance the serious and wacky?
If you watch my short film, Successful Alcoholics, it does something similar where it starts off really funny
and then gets really dramatic and then ping-pongs back and forth.
I'm going to speed through these questions.
It's just testing.
It's always about making it real and grounded and about something
and ideally rooting it in these characters.
It takes a lot of testing and revising in the editing process
to make sure the audience is willing to go on that path.
Thanks for that question.
You're free to go. You serve.
After a bunch of testings, was there anything that you were surprised the audience
reacted to that you didn't think they would
react that way? There's still things when I watch
this movie. Do we need to repeat the question?
Did you watch the whole thing this time?
No. I've seen this movie like 500
times. It's stupid.
I hate this movie.
Yeah, you do have to see it a lot, but
laughs in different places. Yeah, well,
there's always things that people laugh at that I'm like,
why are you laughing? That's not even a joke. What's
going on? The things
that I am not only surprised
people laugh at, but really happy
people laugh at are a lot of the loose
improv things that I really
let these guys do and really bring themselves
to it. Like before the camouflage scene
when Patrick exits the house
and is swinging that stick around and hits himself in the foot.
That's really him hitting himself in the foot.
That was no joke.
So there's a bunch of weird stuff
like that. Filmmaking's a
fluid process. You never know what people
are going to react to. Don, you can go.
Let's ask some of the actors.
Do you have actor questions?
Dude right there? Okay, go.
Yes, sir.
Moises, just for the sake
of the podcast listeners, I was hoping
maybe you could just bust a quick move for us.
Oh, yeah.
He's saying that for the podcast
you should dance because I always like to have things that the listeners just go, what's happening? I just backflipped, yeah. He's saying that for the podcast you should dance because I always like to have things that the listeners just go,
what's happening?
I just backflipped, guys.
I'm so slick.
Use your imagination.
I got a tweet from somebody after you were on Douglas Movies, Moises,
and the person said, you know, he was on Hannah Montana.
Why didn't you ask him about that? And I said, because I bet you
he doesn't give a shit about talking about
Hannah Montana. He's probably
had enough questions about that.
Well, I mean, you just asked it, so let's get into
it.
Cancel the 10-10 screening. We're going to
talk about Hannah Montana for an hour.
I was 10. I'm 19.
Kings of Summer.
Exactly. I had no idea Kings of Summer. Exactly.
I had no idea he was on that show
until we were in Ohio at grocery
stores and teenage girls would come up to us
crying, being like,
are you Rico from Hannah?
I don't give a shit about that show. I know nothing about
that show. But to an entire generation,
he's like their Steve Urkel. He was the
comic relief on a
show that was huge. But he's clearly escaped from those shack. He was the comic relief on a show that was... Steve Urkel to me is huge.
But he's clearly escaped from those shackles
and does a great job of, you know,
like we're not seeing, what's his name, Jaleel?
Jaleel White.
Yeah, we're not really seeing a lot of him
in movies like this, so good job.
Last question.
Well done.
One more for...
Maybe like a question that everyone could quickly give an answer.
Everyone shout it out at the same time.
Land trunt.
Yeah.
Land trunt.
Land trunt.
That's a great one.
No, that was in the script.
That is from the mind of Chris Coletta.
That's not a question.
Walden.
Henry David Thoreau's Walden.
Two years in the woods.
It's an influence, certainly.
The New Yorker
referenced that
and thought we were okay.
Do you have a few other influences
you could mention?
I mean, it's sort of what I was talking about earlier.
Look, the influences to me at the end of the day are just
goddamn being 14 is the best slash
thank God I'm done with that.
That was the most painful,
terrible, awkward time
of my life.
But it's what makes you
who you are.
That's the influence.
Have you guys ever seen
Speed, the Keanu Reeves movie?
Yeah, that's how I refer to it
every time I bring it up.
Bad Boys 2,
Over the Edge,
Kids,
Goonies,
Stand By Me,
It was like Kids without the AIDS, I thought.onies, Stand By Me,
It was like Kids without the AIDS, I thought.
No, the AIDS is there.
You just missed an important plot point.
It's Biagio.
It's Biagio.
We cut it.
Well, thank you so much to all you guys for doing this.
I really appreciate it.
Jordan Van Roberts, Nick Robinson, Gabriel.
Is it Basso?
Basso.
Yeah.
I didn't want to say it the wrong way.
Moises Arias, Mark Evan Jackson,
and Ross Rigi Rigi
Go see Kings of Summer
Thank you for coming out
People listening, it really does make a difference
As always, podcast listeners
and as always, anyone who doesn't go see
Kings of Summer is a shithead
is a shithead
Now it's time for Doug to watch another
talkie.
Eyes of gold,
his viewing prowess
makes him cocky.
There's no room
in his heart for you
because Doug
loves movies.