Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast - GGACP Classic: Brad Bird and Michael Giacchino Part 2
Episode Date: July 7, 2022In this conclusion of a 2-part episode from 2021, Gilbert and Frank chat with Oscar-winning writer-director Brad Bird and Oscar-winning composer Michael Giacchino about James Bond homages, iconic supe...rhero themes, incorporating everyday objects into movie soundtracks and the over-the-top pleasures of the Wachowskis' "Speed Racer." Also, Bernard Herrmann plays the Theremin, Lily Tomlin (almost) voices Edna Mode, Brad directs a modern-day film classic and Michael reveals the key to his Oscar-winning score for "Up." PLUS: "Tomorrowland"! The brilliance of Jerry Goldsmith! Al Hirt meets the Green Hornet! Milton Bradley's Fireball Island! And Michael recalls his time on "Lost"! (Thanks again to audio producer extraordinaire John Murray!) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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TV comics, movie stars, hit singles and some toys.
Trivia and dirty jokes, an evening with the boys.
Once is never good enough
For something so fantastic
So here's another Gilbert and Franks
Here's another Gilbert and Franks
Here's another Gilbert and Franks
Colossal classic Cool, ready for takeoff
Who are you supposed to be?
Well, I'm Incrediboy
What? No
You're that kid from the fan club
Frankie, Mikey, Braddy.
That's it. Braddy.
My name is Incrediboy.
I've been nice.
I've stood for photos.
I've signed every scrap of paper you pushed on me.
But this?
Oh, no, no, no. You don't have to worry about training me.
I know all your moves, your crime-fighting
style favorite catchphrases, everything.
I'm your number one fan.
Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha.
Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha.
Hi, this is Gilbert Gottfried,
and this is Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast
with my co-host, Frank Santopadre.
Hey guys, Frank here, and we hope you enjoyed last week's part one of our very in-depth interview with
director Brad Bird and composer Michael Giacchino. We know you did. So here is part two. It's chock
full of goodies. Brad talks about the experience of making the wonderful Iron Giant, one of the best films of the 90s.
And Michael talks about some classic Planet of the Apes music from the 60s
and unveils some strange instruments that were used in the making of that soundtrack.
And Michael even takes some music cues from Gilbert, if you can believe that.
So, without further ado, part two of our terrific interview with Brad Bird and Michael Cicchino. Enjoy.
Here's a question from a fan for you guys. Given that the Incredible movies, this is from Jeffrey Westhoff, given that the Incredible movies have a ton of Bond homages in both story and score, obvious question, would Brad and Michael like to work on a Bond film?
I feel like we already made our version of a Bond movie.
Twice. Three times. Twice.
Three times. Right.
Guys, Protocol, too.
Right, right.
I mean, look, I love
James Bond. I love those movies,
but I feel like we did
our version of it. We did our thing,
and I'm happy with that. Yeah.
It's basically that
Bond is not the,
when we talked about it,
we talked about Bond,
but we also talked about
The Man from UNCLE,
Mission Impossible.
You know, there were a ton of spy movies.
The Secret Agent Man,
you know, Secret Agent Man.
That's a great one.
I mean, it was, you know,
there was a lot of that
in the early 60s. And for me, it filled the space that superheroes were trying to fill. In other words, Superman had was in reruns when I was a kid. And, you know, I loved it. But, you know, George Reeves was a little tubby and he, you know, he was obviously going off of a springboard.
And then Batman came on and it was campy, campy camp.
And Adam West also, you know, was, you know, not not able to.
Yeah. And, you know, it was not convincing.
And the Bond movies were over the top.
They were they had crazy villains. You know, you had a guy throwing his top hat with a razor on it was not convincing. And the Bond movies were over the top. They had crazy villains.
You know, you had a guy throwing his top hat with a razor on it.
You know, I mean, they were crazy.
They were just as stylized as Batman and Superman.
But they were a lot more believable.
And so for me, and my parents were cool.
They allowed me to see those movies when they were rated M, you know, for mature.
And I was not mature. They allowed me to see those. And they filled that space for me. So when I
think when I was imagining a superhero movie, I went back to what I thought was cool when I was
a kid. And there was a lot of the spy films. I loved all those spy films and spy TV shows
and spy music and, you know, so...
The Bond knockoffs too, the Matt Helm stuff and...
Yeah, it's still, you know, in like Flint.
Yeah.
You know, it has some Flint pictures.
Jerry Goldsmith.
Really cool.
And a great Bond knockoff is uh the get smart theme yeah right which is also
a great piece of music written by bill dane his brother gilbert well it was and it was just all
over television at the time it was amazing like you couldn't you know turn turn the channel without
hearing something great yeah uh so and also henry mancini was a massive, you know, influence, I would say, even for,
for me on, on the Incredibles as well, you know, all of that. So, yeah, I mean, I still have the Peter Gunn soundtrack that my dad gave me. My dad bought it in the PX in Germany when he was in the
army. And, uh, and he, you know, that was one of the things he bought there and he's, it was always
in our basement and I have that record, which I, I i i must have wore out the grooves on it i loved it so much i love what you did with speed racer too oh yeah
man i love the movie and i love the soundtrack so bravo the movie the movie gets lambasted
unfairly but i feel like it's so ahead of its time in so many ways. It's a fever dream. The thing is, is that people don't realize they like I could see some movie executive
going, yeah, that was a really popular show, Speed Racer, but we'll get the Wachowskis
so it'll be like the Matrix.
And the thing is, is the Wachowskis actually knew the show.
Yeah, it shows that their whole mindset, as far as I could tell, was, you know, you sit down with a big bowl of cereal that has got about two days worth of sugar in it.
And you power down three or four bowls of that stuff and you watch Speed Racer.
Your heart is racing before the episode even starts.
And that kind of manic thing is what it is.
So when they did it at Mach 5, you know, and over the top and the colors are over the top
and the music is over the top.
I mean, that's the perfect version of Speed Racer to me.
I agree. ΒΆΒΆ
ΒΆΒΆ To me, what drives me nuts is when they're doing a movie of an old TV show
or a new version of the TV show,
and they figure the way to modernize it is to take the theme music and put in a rap section.
Right.
Yeah.
Well, yes, that's about that's about selling records.
Right.
Or just or, you know, or.
Well, yeah, that's a big part of it for sure.
I tried to get Brad to put more rap music into Ratatouille but he just didn't want to do it. He wanted to
call it Rapatouille. I was like
come on, the kids will love it.
Rapatouille.
Yeah.
And I said come on.
Mike, you know Lalo Schifrin
and he's still around. He's still with us.
God bless him. When you're
doing your homage, when you're doing
your version of the Mission
Impossible theme, and I'm not even sure how to put this question together, how much license do
you feel comfortable taking? And did he ever get in touch? Did you guys ever have a conversation
about it? Well, when I was hired for Mission Impossible 3, which was directed by J.J. Abrams, which is a film I almost didn't get because I hadn't done a movie yet.
You know, Incredibles was just about to come out.
But to Paula Wagner and Tom Cruise, I was still just a TV composer, you know.
And I think that they were, at the time,
thinking about going with someone a little bit more established.
I won't name names,
but that was the feeling. And I remember JJ having these conversations with me going,
I don't know. I'm pushing and doing what I can, but I'm not sure how this is going to go.
And then The Incredibles came out and that sealed the deal. That was it. And then Tom loved the
movie. And he was just like, yes, okay, you can have your
guy. So thank you for that, Brad. And then when it came to working on Mission Impossible, I was
so nervous about what to do, exactly what you're talking about. I didn't know how much I could
change it, what I could do. That's what I mean, yeah.
I was very nervous about it because I- Tribute and homage.
Yes. And I idolized
Lalo, you know? All the ones
that weren't Ghost Protocol
had a very shortened
title sequence, too. They were
very short.
The first film with Danny Elfman
doing that theme is
literally like 10 seconds. It's like
dum-dum-dun-da-da-da!
Yeah, well, we had fun with it
and on on the one that uh we did together i wanted to pay tribute to the opening titles
of mission impossible where they show bits yeah of the episode to come under the fuse and do a
modern update of that and so mich Michael had a lot more screen time because
we did all of the main credits under that. And he just went to town.
But prior to that, on the first one, so what I did was I called up Lalo Schifrin. I had never
met him and I didn't know, but I got his phone number. I called him and I was like, hey, Lalo,
my name is Michael Giacchino. I'm going to
be working on Mission Impossible. Would you mind talking about a few things? I have some questions.
And he said, well, why don't we meet for lunch? So we met at this Italian restaurant in Beverly
Hills. And I remember I was so nervous. I felt like I was about to ask him if I could marry his
daughter or something because I didn't want to like ruin the whole thing. But I'll never forget. I was like, all right,
basically what I really need to know is what should I do? What shouldn't I do?
What are my parameters? What's the roadmap? And he looked at me like I was crazy and he goes,
just have fun with it do whatever you
want with it go have fun no zithers stretch it you know squash it no zither just go do it
and i remember him after hearing that i felt such a sense of relief and and i i i just went bananas
with it i had i had a blast it's really one of the most fun themes you could ever be blessed
with working you guys you guys are smart to know that it brings you right into the movie yeah well and also jekino took
cues from other cues that schifrin had done for that show yeah
the plot he we you know he he did it uh in the greatest homage because these little melodies would trickle in every now and then that kind of reminded you of the show.
And it was this great sort of scenting that he did on the movie that I thought was great.
Okay, wait, I just got an email from Frank Marshall.
And he said, indeed, he said, indeed, he was. and he was also in the army band
with John Williams
so that
rockin' Munsters theme
was written by your friend's
dad that is craziness
there you go Thank you. Well, if I've accomplished nothing else today, Michael.
That's amazing.
That's awesome.
Now I've got to get in deeper with him about John Williams being in the Army band with his dad.
I want to know more about that.
Yeah.
Tell me about them catching the clap.
Did they ever?
Another composer that I grew up with because he i was a monster kid and that was uh hans j salter
do you know anything about him i know he you know the wolfman the wolfman he did a lot of
the universal stuff right yes yeah yeah he did all the universal stuff the early days of film
composing i don't know a lot about him personally,
other than, you know, what he's done and there.
I don't know.
We should do a show on him.
Let's do one where we just talk about him.
Let's do a deep dive.
I would love that.
I just remember that Wolfman was...
It's so good.
Well, those were movies that were not afraid to be movies. I feel like nowadays there's so many films that are made that are afraid to be movies,
you know, afraid to just be out there and be entertaining.
Everything has to be restrained and held back.
And in many cases, they're afraid for it to feel too emotional or to this or to that.
feel too emotional or too this or too that, you know,
the audience has gotten so powerful in terms of putting the studio on edge and on guard at every little move, you know.
But it puts management on guard.
It doesn't put artists on guard.
No, no, it doesn't.
But a lot of times the artists are sort of held back.
Prisoners of management.
Yeah. Yes. Yeah yeah brad here's
one for you from andrew laposha can mr bird tell us about how he ended up being the voice of edna
edna mode in the incredibles and i can't and i can't imagine anyone better by the way well thanks
uh the short version of the story is i was cheap and available. I actually, I had somebody that I wanted this wonderful,
well, I think the secret is out now so I can say it, is Lily Tomlin I wanted. And I met with her,
my producer, John Walker, and I met with her down in LA. And I showed her pictures of the
character and I talked about the character. And as I was talking, I kind of did a little bit of
the voice. And she said, that's interesting. And then she said, would you mind just recording
all of the part, you know, because she's only in a couple of scenes,
just record it into this recorder and leave it with me. And so I'm sitting there and I'm like,
well, yeah, I guess I can do that. And so she leaves and I'm there with John Walker and he's
reading the other characters and I'm reading Edna and I'm looking at him like,
what are we doing? You know, like she doesn't, does she want to do this or, or, you know, so we,
we do it and she's very nice. And she sends me on my way and she says, I'm, I'll, I'm going to
listen to this over the weekend and, and I'll have something for you by next week and we can talk about it. And I went, okay,
great. And so I left and I talked to her and she said, you know, I tried, you know, kind of getting
what you have and I can't quite get it. I don't think it's as good as what you do. You know, I really think, you know, you should
consider doing it. And about the same time I had an internal screening of the story reels of the
movie where you have temporary voices, just people that work on the movie are the voices. And it's
just to get kind of a generalized timing and kind of be able to present the movie in a in a crude form and uh the after the screening uh andrew stanton and john uh lassiter both said
you you should do the voice and so i was just like well you know i'm available i'm not going
anywhere so what the hell so i did it, but it really happened by accident.
I wasn't intending to be in the movie at all.
And when you're in the park and you see the giant Edna Mode walking around,
does it play with your mind?
Well, yeah, I actually worked on that.
Oh, you did?
They brought the character up and wanted notes.
I love it.
It's really strange.
Can you do some of the voice first now?
Alright.
I don't know. What do you want me to say, darling?
I don't do these types of shows, you know.
I wait for
the more prestigious offers
that never seem to come.
That's great.
It sounds a little
like Zsa Zsa Gabor.
It is. It's like Zsa Zsa Gabor and Maria
Uspenskaya had a child.
What's the woman
from Russia with love?
Oh, Lottie Lenya. Yeah, Lottie Lenya. Fantastic. what's the woman in from russia with love oh a lot of lenya yeah a lot of lenya right
reminds me of fantastic let's let's plug something worth very worthy and that is uh
speaking of of animation and animated films deserving a lot of respect and that's the iron
giant and i want to bring up i want to bring up anthony michael your brother anthony's great
documentary he's around here somewhere. Which I watch.
Oh, and congratulations to him.
He's spooning his Oscar.
Yeah, he's in the other room spooning his Oscar.
He just won an Oscar for Colette.
But the Iron Giant doc, which is on the Blu-ray, is just wonderful.
Yeah.
I agree.
He did a great job.
He did a great job.
It's wonderful and it's heartbreaking too, particularly when you're telling the story of how you went to the multiplex and the standee had the broken leg.
All true.
I mean, what a terrific film, Brad. It was the best of times. It was the worst of times. But it ended up being happy because we got to make the movie that we wanted to make,
which, you know, was kind of a fluke.
But I'm really happy that we made it.
It's a masterpiece.
And you can't dislike any movie that references Mad Magazine, Will Eisner, and Zeppo.
And Zeppo.
That's the first.
And actually, when Brad was just here a couple weeks ago and uh which was really
great because we hadn't seen each other in so long because that's nice working working on said
musical working on said musical so but one of the things i asked him about was the scene he you know
he animated one of the scenes in iron giant and it it is the scene where Hogarth is given coffee.
And if take a moment and just Google Hogarth coffee,
Iron Giant,
watch the scene.
Cause I have to say,
I think it's brilliant and it's beautifully animated.
And it's just,
you know,
we don't get to see you do that that often.
And so that is a great sort of little time capsule of what you can do.
Well,
you're,
you're very kind.
It was a very stupid thing for me to do while I was trying to make the movie.
It's so good.
Because it was one of those high-maintenance scenes.
We will return to Gilbert Gottfried's amazing colossal podcast after this.
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I think it was also admirable of you
to not throw Warner Brothers
under the bus in interviews
that you've given
and say that you, you know,
you were impressed by them.
I made some big mistakes too.
Well, that you made mistakes,
but that they were courageous enough to make the movie in the first place. That's right.
They didn't run from the room when they heard your rather unusual pitch. Right. That they
actually embraced the rather unusual pitch, which was very cool of them. But they were kind of,
you know, they were live action guys and they thought that that was a cool twist.
So they didn't approach it like a lot of people approach animation.
They just looked at it as a story, and that's how it should be approached.
And animation is just a method.
Here's something I ask every songwriter and composer who comes on this show
where
does music come from
I'm still
trying to figure it out
but I'll tell you this, this is what usually happens
when men and women get together
they have special feelings
a man loves a woman.
After they're married.
No, what happens is I, for me, I need to watch the movie.
Say if we're talking about a movie, all right,
we could talk about a couple of different versions of this,
but it's a movie.
And I really take in the story and I track how it's making me feel.
I really try to understand what the characters are going through.
And I really, it's a tough thing because you have to engage your emotions.
You're not just making things up.
I don't like to just make things up when I'm writing.
I want them to feel like they came from someplace real.
So it's really digging into the movie,
no matter what movie it is, and trying to put yourself in the shoes of those characters and go,
how would I feel if that happened to me? How would I feel? And from that, I'm able to write something.
Yeah. Composers, I think, are kind of like actors of the story, not one particular part, but of the story. They're like actors giving a performance of the totality of the story.
And that's what they remind me of, you know, at their especially at their best, because they're performing an aspect of the movie that is unique to to them.
And, you know, it's hard when it's done well, it's hard to separate it from the movie that is unique to to them and um you know it's hard when it's done well it's
it's hard to separate it from the movie i mean i you think of the godfather you're right there with
i mean yeah or you mentioned the zither before in the yeah that's right yeah yeah no so it is one
of those things it is like being an actor i always do think about it in that that in those terms so if you do it right you're exhausted by the end of the day i'm sure and
i always forget what was that uh that the uh beach boys used and it was used in the theremin
yes it was used in all the 50s science fiction oh yeah it yeah. It's so great. The Theremin and, well, you know, most famously by Bernard Herrmann in The Day the Earth Stood Still, which is incredible.
Big influence on Iron Giant, too.
Yeah, I was just going to say that.
Yeah.
I love your little homages.
I love that instrument.
I have that.
I actually played it on Super 8, the movie Super 8.
So there's a portion
of the movie where it's showing the movies that the kids made. And we did a lot of like sort of
stock music, what we would consider stock music. And I got to play the theremin on it.
Michael has a guy that has the most exotic. Well, I don't think he's left us, right?
He's no longer with us. Yeah. Emil Richards is one of the greatest percussionists ever.
But he had a giant truck full of these crazy instruments that were from all over the place.
Emil, he was a percussionist. He played with everybody. He was best friends with George
Harrison. So in terms of music, he played every style of music.
And he came in, I think it must have been in the late 60s, early 70s,
into Hollywood and became a studio session player
and just could do anything, could do anything.
But along the way, along his travels, all the concerts,
all the shows he did over the years,
he would collect anything that he would knock up against
and would make a sound.
He would be like,
actually,
I have something I'll show you.
Michael has gotten out of the chair and he's walking to his trophy case.
I'm going to do play by play here.
His, his eerie silence of the lambs lit.
Yes,
it is a little,
it is a little eerie.
What do you,
what do you see here?
It looks like a,
it looks like a pasta bowl, a metal pasta bowl.
Yeah, it's just a metal mixing bowl.
Excuse me.
So when I was doing Planet of the Apes, you know,
Emil came over to me, and I knew this.
Emil said, you know, I played on Jerry Goldsmith's,
the original Planet of the Apes, you know?
And I was like, yeah, I know that, Emil.
And he goes, well, I still have some of the instruments. Would you want them? Would you want to use them? I'm like,
yes, what do you have? So he hands me a stack of these, right? And this one in particular was his
favorite, he told me. And I said, what are you giving me, mixing bowls? And he said,
and he told me this story about how he was in a hardware store
one day and jerry was trying to figure out what he was going to use for the movie and do something
because he was always trying to deliver some weird interesting sound that would help jerry with his
scores so he uh he said he knocked over a stack of mixing bowls by accident as he's like looking
around and they made this horrible clanging sound and he and he picked one of them up and there was
some other thing there and he just started banging on it and this mixing bowl is is used in the
original planet that was used in the original planet of the apes film and he would just do it
like this he'd be like you know and it gets this really weird sound to it. But mixed in with all the other percussion stuff,
it just creates such a unique identifiable signature
that you're not going to get anywhere else.
And that was Emil.
Emil was responsible for so many of these weird sounds.
You know, in the very beginning of E.T.,
there is this sound, and there's no music, really.
It's just the logo.
It says E.T., et you know and you hear this
kind of a sound yeah it's like ambience that is uh amel on a giant gong with a super ball and he's
rubbing dragging a super ball against this giant metal gong and creating this weird you know sound
wow and you know i used to use that a lot on i
mean he taught me so much about all of this stuff you know some you would think weird sounds are
created by synthesizers and things like that but he was a guy that was able to make these sounds
with real things i assume that clanging noise in planet of the apes was meant to to create a sense
of dread oh yeah yes yes when you were hitting the mixing bowl just now,
I thought, oh, my God, I see the movie in my head.
Yeah, isn't it crazy?
Yeah.
Yes, yes.
There's a lot of chaos in that sound,
and he captured it so beautifully.
And, of course, Jerry was one of the most inventive composers
ever to live,
and he was always looking for some other thing to do.
That also is, those are a couple
of your best scores as well i mean i thought those the michael scores for the new apes movies were
amazing absolutely and mixed really well too in the theater you know they they they really filled
the theater he's my favorite guest to do research for and there's, I always noticed with like musicians who they sometimes will refer to as
hack musicians. Uh, but it's like mechanical that there are certain notes that are going to make you
happy and certain notes that make you sad. Yeah. yeah, it's very strange, isn't it?
Like you could sit there and go, you know.
That's not a happy sound, right?
No.
You know, but then you-
But now play it on the banjo.
You change one note of that.
You know, suddenly all you're doing is changing one note
wow you feel feel the difference that's just one one one note and it's a half step it's it's you
know what the notes between a note so the note between the d and the e is the half step there
you know and that's it that's just a c minor chord or a c major and then there's the chords
that are like like this is one of my favorite ones, this, you know, a major seventh thing.
You know, that's a very specific feeling. Yeah. And you feel there's a sense of melancholy there
that, you know, and then there's also the combination of chords. If you start with,
and then you go to,
combination of chords. If you start with, and then you go to,
just change the one, one thing, you know, and it's just suddenly you're like, you want to,
you want to cry, you know, it's like this weird and, and it's this power that I think no one really truly understands, you know, we, we know just enough. Well, it's purely emotional, you
know, it's, it's like a language that everyone speaks.
Yes.
And yet it doesn't use words.
But that's the stuff.
To have that come at the end of the process is scary as hell
because it completely influences the experience of the movie.
And if it's great, it makes it.
And if it's not, it can just kill you or if he's
annoying me i can really like i know which buttons to push by doing something exactly
doing something wrong on the this is just the way you like it so if if you just wanted to pick up a
check and you didn't care how
the quality of the music,
you could probably write a movie
theme in about like
an hour, I guess. Yeah, I mean,
depending on, yeah, you could,
but it's always much better if you actually
care about it. It will actually come out
better if you care about it, which is...
Gilbert can't relate to caring about your work.
That I understand.
That was made painfully clear.
Obviously, you've never seen me
if you think I care.
That's a language he understands.
But from the audience's
point of view, it's like, I see a lot
of these superhero films
and I can't tell you what
the theme song is at all.
Like, you know,
I mean, when I was young,
or even John Williams' score for Superman is super iconic.
Yeah, it stays with you.
You think of Superman instantly when you hear that. And Danny Elfman's thing for Batman is equally memorable.
You know, Michael is one of the few
guys that still has an
identifiable, you know,
you have a melody
in your mind when you think of a certain
character, and I feel like
the others
are kind of into this ambient
wall of sound that is
interchangeable to me.
And Michael...
It's a gift.
Okay. For this
part of the movie,
we're getting ready.
There's a montage of everyone
working out. We're
going to win this big game.
Could you do that?
We're going to win the big game?
Well, normally you would just go, use the eye
of the tiger.
Yeah.
I don't know.
And they're swathering oil on each other here.
They're finding a sunlit room for the oil to reflect off of.
I mean, there was one of those scenes in Speed Racer when they're building the car the night before the race.
Oh, I love that.
Six hours to do it, or 36 hours or whatever it is.
That's the name of the cue, I think, 36 hours.
But yeah, those things
are really crazy. Since we have our friend John Murray is here with his daughter, Samantha Murray,
and she was just asking you before we turn on the mics about Up. And since we're talking about
emotion, just talk a little bit about finding the key to that score. Because you told us about it
last time. Actually, I did play the...
That chord is the key to that whole movie.
That's it, huh?
Yeah, that's it.
The F major seventh.
You can go right off of that.
It tears my wife apart every time.
Every single time.
Sometimes what I'll try to do is sit down and when I sit at the piano, the first thing I'll try and do is,
okay, if I had to distill this into one chord, what's it going to be?
And it's very difficult, and it's not always achievable, but for that movie, it seemed to work for me to do that.
And then from there, it just, you know, melody is a very tricky thing,
because you want it to feel like
it's something you've heard before but you also don't want it to be suddenly you're like singing
some other song you know so it's it's it's this it's a magic trick in a way it's about leading
but i think it was also very smart of you to do kind of a waltz thing because it's a dance between
uh men and women you know and and this is really behind the love of
his life. And, you know, even when it's used to go behind the house being lifted up into the air,
the core of that moment is the relationship between him and his wife, you know, who's no
longer with us. We almost messed that up talking about how music can ruin a movie. There's an
interesting, there was an interesting thing that happened
in that scene when the house is being lifted up, where we knew we were going to use that theme,
and we're going to do it in a big, big way. And I remember Pete Docter and I were talking about it
before I started writing. And he was like, it should feel triumphant and big, like something
momentous is happening. And he's going on this adventure, and he's going to just take off and leave everything behind. And that was sort of the feeling. And I was like, yeah,
that makes sense. That's great. The exercise montage.
Yeah, basically. So I went and I wrote this piece of music and we recorded it. We were all so happy
with it on the stage. It was big and grand and adventurous and all of those things. But then when we watched it in context with the movie,
when we were reviewing it, it felt very wrong.
It felt very wrong.
And it felt like we were missing and we were forgetting the most important
thing of that scene, which was, you know,
that this is all about his wife and his relationship with his wife.
This is essentially his last dance with Ellie.
Yes.
You know, and Pete and I both sort of sat back and we're like,
okay, we need to rethink this.
Let's take another go at this.
Let me have another go at this.
And I went back and I wrote a completely,
it was essentially the same music,
but it was much slower and much quieter.
And it became more of a soft sort of
waltz, you know, that was much more nostalgic. It never let you forget what this was really about.
Yeah.
You know, and to see that sometimes when I do concerts, I'll play both of those back to back
to kind of explain to audiences how music works and what it does and how it can change the story
and how you have to be really in tune with it. But sometimes when you're working,
you're going so fast, you don't. You miss it. And that was one of those ones. Luckily,
we were able to go back and redo it. Yeah. He had a moment like that in
Ratatouille because oftentimes he will try out a theme not knowing exactly, you know, necessarily where it goes.
Like, here's a sound that this movie should have.
And he recorded the version of the Ratatouille theme
with the full orchestra.
We had like five minutes at the end of a session
and he had not recorded it yet.
And he did this very lush, very romantic version of the song. And
we had a recording of it. And it was just one take. And it was not for the film necessarily.
It was to hear it with a full orchestra. And so he said afterwards, he said, you know,
it's probably over the top. It's probably too romantic, but there it is. And you know, I'll,
I'll, I'll do a version that's not so romantic. And so we finished the sessions. He does the
version that's not so romantic for other parts of the movie and it works perfectly and everything's
great. And I have not come up with the idea of the review yet and i and i have the idea for the review and it seems so
crazy to me that i have john uh lassiter and andrew stanton come in and i say look this is i
understand how these work this is the part of the movie where you get fast and you get loud and all
that stuff and i said but the movie seems to want to be this different thing. And
I took the recording that I did a version. I did the narration, but I took that recording of the
theme that I had in the bank and I put it behind me reading the words of that review.
And that persuaded them that it could work. And if I hadn't had the super romantic version of it,
I don't know if the scene would be in the movie.
And then we just used that version.
I think we did another take
because you had some technical things
you wanted to clean up.
But it was that emotional version of it
is behind the review.
And that was orchestrated by Jack Hayes.
Jack Hayes was one of the great orchestrators of Hollywood of all time.
And when we were working with him, he was in his 90s.
And he belonged to an orchestration team, Shukin and Hayes.
And I think Shukin had died many years ago, but Jack had continued to work,
and I worked with him on everything that I ever did up until he actually orchestrated the married
life scene. You know, I, you know, wrote it and let him do the orchestrations on that. And
he was just an incredible guy who had this incredible knowledge of old school voicing,
you know, old school Hollywood voicing. And that's
part of the reason that, you know, I think that works so well is he had some great ideas on how to
deal with some of the chords and the progressions and things, which was amazing. You know,
I loved them. I like Brad's story because it's the perfect marriage of the storytelling and music.
I lucked out that I had that in my back pocket because if he hadn't chosen to record that and record it with that interpretation.
Or if we didn't have time or something, you know, we may not have had time, but we had the time,
so we did it. Yeah. Yeah. Right. How much time do you spend immersing yourself, Mike,
in something like Ratatouille or Coco? You know what the assignment is. You know what the style of music is, the flavor of music.
What is the homework like?
And do you stop at some point because, no, that's too much direct influence?
Well, for me, because I'm such a nerd about these things, there isn't really homework.
It's just about, you know, because I've been doing this homework for all my life.
I see.
I've been listening to that style of music, all the different styles that make Ratatouille.
Ratatouille isn't one style of music.
And one of the great sort of directions from Brad at the time, I remember, was, look, think
about this score as you're in your kitchen.
You got home late from work.
You don't know what you're going to make for dinner.
Look around, see what you got.
We'll put a little bit of this, a little bit of that, a little bit of this.
So for me, it was about taking like Debussy.
It was taking Django Reinhardt.
It was taking a little bit of Henry Mancini.
It was like taking all,
I have little bits of all this stuff.
Let's see what we can make out of this.
Whipping up something delicious.
You know, and that's what Ratatouille was,
was really just pulling from all the influences
and things that I loved
and seeing how we could all make them work the same way that a chef would would throw together a meal based on whatever you
had in your kitchen you know and it sounds trite but that's what it was one of the things that
happened on Incredibles was uh we had we talked with someone else about working on the score and
it didn't work out you know he was just not into it and
not doing what we needed and and so the word got out that I was looking for a
composer and I got a deluge of CDs and a guy that was working on the film had
worked with Michael and knew Michael Teddy Teddy Newton. And I remembered him as well. And I had CDs from Michael.
And one of the things that struck me about Michael's work at that point, which was video
games and television, was that he was a chameleon. He did a World War II thing and one, and he did a
spy thing and another, and he did a romance and,
you know, he could sound like a thirties cartoon and he, you know, there was nothing
that was, uh, beyond his range. And, and that's one of the things that convinced me to, uh, you
know, try to work, you know, get him involved in, in the projects were, were because he's a chameleon,
which is like a good actor again. You know, he can play
any part, you know, and. It's so insane, though. It's so insane that you that I got that job. Like
I feel like, you know, looking back, you know, for a company like Disney and Pixar, Pixar,
especially had been working with Randy Newman and Thomas Newman. And then the next thing is,
well, let's get this guy who has never done a
movie. Well, there's your explanation for the time that went by before I called. Yes. It was
a controversial choice to go with someone who had not done a movie yet. But everyone got persuaded. Once you play his other work, it's like it's a no brainer.
It's like, you know, he's absolutely going to kick ass. You just know it.
I always thought it was because you had already blown the money on the last on the guy you just
fired. So they're like, well, this is the only one that we're going to be able to afford.
You know, not at all. I just thought of another scene.
The girl says to the guy, you know,
you lied to me and I'm leaving.
What is this movie?
I got to know what this movie is.
It's his Yiddish porn movie.
Yeah, it's a Yiddish porn movie. It's the Yiddish porn film that he's writing in his head right now.
Fluff her on the roof.
After she says that to him, he's standing there his head right now. Fluff her on the roof. And after she says that to him,
he's standing there in shock and sadness.
You know, like there's an old, you know,
maybe he's an old detective, let's say.
Let's say.
He's confused.
He doesn't understand why she's leaving.
You know, this is all like, what's going to happen to me?
And then I think, and he looks over and he sees the knife on the counter, you know?
And he looks up and she's still getting her coat on.
And then he's just like, oh, I'm going to grab.
He slowly, his hand is slowly moving
towards the knife you know and then he's like dragging you can hear the knife scraping along
the uh the counter as he's dragging it towards anyway yeah we could go on with
and then his uncle who's from the yiddish theater comes in and he's in a really good mood
do you have a charisma over there who's from the Yiddish theater comes in and he's in a really good mood.
Do you have a charisma over there?
I don't have a,
I don't have the clarinet.
No,
I can't do that.
Brad,
here's my last,
uh, listener question for you.
Okay.
This is from Megan,
Megan Reinhart,
no relation to Django.
Uh,
question.
What is going on with Brad's 1906 earthquake film? Our listeners know their stuff,
Brad. Yeah, wow. I still am interested in it. It's a very weird project. There's a lot of
misinformation about it on the internet. Supposedly, they shut it down because we did a budget and it
was so wildly out of control that they shut it down.
And it's like, it never got to that point. You know, it never got to the point where
we felt that we had the story. It's a very specific time. It's an amazing
city at a moment in time between the wild west and sort of a sophisticated 20th century um they
were still clunking people on the head and shanghai-ing them for money and uh but they had
you know gas lights next to electric lights and horses next to automobiles and it was both centuries centuries happening at once in a very corrupt city hall and just wild. It's a wild thing. So
to get that all in a movie-sized box was really a tall order. But I still have, I'm very interested
in it. Michael is interested in it. It's an enormous undertaking, but I think that it would be
amazing if it all could
come together. It would be great. I'd love to see it.
You're not one to shy away from an ambitious project.
No, as long as I
drag that guy.
Oh, hey. We gave
it our best shot.
You have a clarinet with you?
I don't have a clarinet.
Do you have some other... Gilbert,inet with you? I don't have a clarinet. Do you
have some other... Gilbert, what are you?
Do you have some other
kitchen utensils that you'll
hang?
What are you, Lawrence Welk, Gilbert?
You realize that Gilbert is making a movie
and he's not paying Michael.
That's what's happening here.
This is how Hollywood works.
What is that?
This is, I got this, you know, I worked a bit on Sacha Baron Cohen's last movie,
Borat 2, and he sent me this as a thank you.
Is that a didgeridoo?
No, it's like some crazy trumpet thing.
It's a didgeridoo.
Don't.
Okay.
I don't even know how to play it.
Michael is blowing a four-foot-long trumpet.
Yeah, wait.
Yeah, that works.
And, you know, the weird thing is I just actually recorded this.
I recorded this and some other instruments I had to make a new instrument for Jurassic World, which we just finished.
It sounds like a β I was going to say it sounds like a dinosaur.
Yeah, it works out great, except the way I used it,
I recorded it, pitched it down.
It becomes more of an effect.
It's like a weird thing.
Here's what I was going to ask.
It's not a clarinet, sorry.
Gilbert's project involves a dinosaur and a unicorn.
I know, this is the Yiddish porn.
We're heading down this Yiddish porn thing again.
Does he have a sitter?
He's getting ambition now.
I want music.
I don't know if you could do it without a clarinet.
I need music for a Jewish spy movie.
A Jewish spy movie?
Yes.
Wow.
Yeah, that I don't know
if I can do
at this very second,
but maybe I can...
What the fuck are you
on this show?
I can throw something for you
and I'll get it to you.
You know?
Oh, my God.
I'm trying to think.
I have the Yiddish stuff, but...
My fantasy is to hear you
do a version,
a variation,
or an adaptation of Billy
Mays' Green Hornet theme. Oh my god, you know,
one of my favorite versions of that
theme was recorded by Al Hurt. Yeah,
Al Hurt. You know, and
it's on the trumpet. Oh my
god, it is like one of
the best versions. And actually,
that was a big influence for
me on The Incredibles as well.
And in particular, for the scene where Dash figures out that he can run on water.
Right.
And I just remember the energy of that tune and that theme.
And especially Al's playing.
I was like, I want it to feel like that.
So those really crazy jazz voicings in the horns,
they're all inspired by that version of the,
you know, inspired by that version
of the Green Hornet theme. What was funny is that the horn section was exhausted after that take.
They were like on the floor by the last note.
Yeah.
In fact, I get rough recordings, you know, like a day or two after the recording session.
And what cracked me up is they have all this sound of the conductor going,
you know, okay, you know, tacit this. Okay. Let's go. And,
and right after that take was finished with that piece,
you could hear a couple of the horn guys go like that.
And I always connected that. I always hear it when I hear this thing,
even though they clip it off, of course, you know, that that is the true version of that cue is the,
yeah, it's true at the end of it. Cause we exhausted them. ΒΆΒΆ
We will return to Gilbert Gottfried's amazing colossal podcast,
but first a word from our sponsor.
Gil, I've got one question for each of these boys before we let them get back to their lives,
unless you want Mike to pull out a flugelhorn.
Unless we're still in development on your film.
I want, if I were a Rich Man, but in a
horror film.
Make it If I Were in
Richmond.
Because it's kind of
a little sketchy.
Yeah, If I Were in Richmond.
If I Were a
Rich Man. I think you would just have to do this to all the If I were a rich man. If I were a rich man.
I think you would just have to do this to all the chords.
Yeah, you could do this.
We'll have to get you to sing it, though, Gilbert.
I mean, we'd have to do that.
Yes.
I know.
I think we could.
Yeah, you could do it.
If you want to hear Gilbert sing, rent Aladdin 2.
If you want to hear Gilbert sing, rent Aladdin 2.
If I were a rich man, yabba-dabba-dabba-dabba-dabba-dabba-doo.
I think that's like the Flintstones version of...
Yabba-dabba-doo.
Yeah.
Or as Brad said before, yabba dabba don't.
One for you, Mike.
One last one for you from Charlie Bruce.
Michael's work on Lost was phenomenal.
You brought me to tears so many times,
especially with the death scenes of Charlie and then Sun and Jin.
Any one quick memory from Lost?
And our friend Josh Chambers adds,
if you revisit Lost,
could Gilbert possibly get slipped
into the Dharma Project's original design team?
I'll just say yes to that.
Okay.
As the designer of the canned goods.
Yeah, he'd be great.
Yeah, that's what he's talking about.
That's the crying.
Yeah, that's what he's talking about. That's the crying.
Anyway.
Beautiful.
What's the question, though?
One quick memory of Lost.
It could be short.
You know, I have so many memories of that,
but I remember one of the biggest ones was like wherever all of us,
and I have such good friends that I've made from that show. A ones was like wherever all of us and I have I have such
good friends that I've made from that show. A lot of times you do these things and you move on and
you don't see these people again. But the cast and crew I've remained close with and and it's
great. You still do concerts. Yeah, we still do lost concerts. And if any of the cast is available,
they come and we hang out. And it's a great way to just kind of reconnect with all the fans and um but i do remember watching the finale together with the whole
cast we were all together watching it and it was one of the most emotional experiences that i've
ever experienced because you know you do something for for that many seasons and together and you
will really are a family and that show in particular everyone was a So, you know, and there are people who complain about the ending
and this and that.
I personally absolutely love the ending.
I feel like if life were really like that,
why wouldn't you want that, you know,
if you all end up together with the people
that you sort of experience all these wonderful things with
and bad things as well.
But I just, I don't know, I love the movie
and I loved watching it with the people that we made it with, the finale with the people that as well. But, but I just, I don't know. I love the movie and I loved watching it with,
with the people that we made it with the finale with the people that we made
it with all those years. That was probably, that was a great,
and they would always come in and guest conduct sometimes. In fact,
Jorge Garcia is a good friend and he and I, for the past,
I think we are now up to almost 48 weeks.
He played Hurley for people that don't remember.
Yeah, he played Hurley in the show.
And Jorge and I, every Sunday,
with a couple other friends of ours,
we get on Zoom for the past 48 weeks
and we play a game called Fireball Island,
which is an old Milton Bradley game from the 80s.
And so staying in touch with these,
I've made a lot of good friends with everyone.
And it's just, you know, it's just such a special show.
So thankful I was involved.
So.
Okay.
I lied.
This one's from a friend of yours, Gene Beretta.
Michael, having grown up around Philadelphia, let's hear a little of your best Philly accent.
Well, I'm going to get me, I'm going to get a glass of water.
I'm going to get a glass of water.
I'll get a glass of water and watch out for that pile of cement over there that hasn't dried yet.
So, yeah.
Oh, the Berettas.
The Beretta Brothers.
You just did their podcast.
Yeah, I did.
They're the best.
Great guys. They're so much fun.
Great guys.
And we love Kirk, too.
Oh, yeah.
Gilbert, unless you want to turn into Dimitri Tiomkin again,
we're going to let
these gentlemen have given us so
much wonderful stuff. I think you've got to follow
up on Gilbert's movie. I think
he needs to go all the way with it.
I think we could do a
reading of it first. We'll just do a reading.
A Zoom reading of it.
Okay, how about I'm very happy because Brad wants to make my movie. reading of it first. We'll just do a reading, a Zoom reading of it once we get the script in order.
Okay, how about I'm very happy
because Brad wants to make my movie.
Oh, well, that's not going to happen.
I will go see your movie.
He'll go.
He'll see it.
Let me thank some people and we'll get out of here. Michael, thank you for being such a sport.
Uh, thank you both for entertaining us within an inch of our lives. Not only, not only here
tonight, but for the last couple of decades. I want to thank Michael's, uh, Michael's associate,
Curtis Green, who helped us get this done.
We want to tell people to go see Anthony Giacchino's documentary, Colette, and also the documentary about Iron Giant, which is terrific.
And what else is coming up?
Quick plugs?
Anything you want to talk about?
Can you say anything about Batman other than you're working on it?
I saw the first 20 minutes yesterday and it's,
maybe that's all I'm allowed to say,
but I left very happy.
That's good enough for us.
And I hope you turn out to be right
about movie theaters
because all of those movies that,
all of those 10-pole movies
that Michael's working on
need movie theaters.
Yes.
And, you know,
where's Gilbert's film going to go?
Right. Well, in that theater down on second avenue
could you uh can i hear with the porn porn of my movie oh well that i definitely did like the
guitar thing okay but but no then the dinosaur comes in right at the end.
Kind of ruins the feeling.
To our listeners who haven't seen The Iron Giant, please see The Iron Giant.
One of the best, I won't say one of the best animated films ever made.
I'll say one of the best films ever made.
Oh, very, very kind.
Absolutely.
And thank you.
Thank you guys for putting up with our nonsense.
Oh, please. No problem.
This is essentially a conversation that Brad and I
would have. Consider it therapy.
This feels very normal.
Gilbert, anything else
you want to torture these gentlemen with?
I know
you're a sadist at heart.
Yeah, couldn't we do a porn dinosaur?
By the way, Brad, how much of that stuff...
As a podcast?
How much of that stuff from the cool comic book shop in Tomorrowland did you actually get to take home from the set?
Not very much, unfortunately.
Oh, that looked like a set dresser's dream.
Yes, it was actually yes it was fun for that reason you know it was it was just like uh you know everything under the sun was in
there i have to say that jekino's cameo made that film for me yeah man he has a whole he has
speaking of stories he's got a whole backstory for this character.
Yeah, Mike Lazarus is his name.
Mike Lazarus, and he's putting his life together after.
Mike Lazarus.
I couldn't see the Disney badge.
I was wondering if it said Mike on it. I still have it.
It does, actually.
His life was going bad, and he's got this ride operator thing as a way to put it back together.
I have it somewhere.
There's a whole story.
I can't.
And I loved his cameo in Coco, too.
That was a nice homage.
Michael has gotten out of the chair.
He's back at the scary trophy case.
Michael, do you hear me?
Yes, I can hear you.
You can hear me?
He's got it.
He's bringing it.
Oh, here it is.
Get the horn also.
It puts the lotion in the basket.
Get that dinosaur horn.
Oh, he's got the badge.
Look at that.
Very nice.
Now, can you get the fucking dinosaur horn?
That's still here.
Don't worry.
All right.
I want a romantic moment between two dinosaurs.
That's actually very accurate.
We could talk to you guys for hours.
Thanks for doing this.
Absolutely. Looking forward to doing it again one day. Take care. All for doing this. Absolutely. Looking forward to
doing it again one day. Take care.
All right. Bye-bye.
I'm Gilbert Gottfried.
This has been Gilbert Gottfried's
Amazing Colossal Podcast
with my co-host Frank Santopadre.
And we've been
talking to the very talented
Brad Bird and the
how the fuck does this guy pay his rent?
Michael Giacchino.
He's got an Oscar, Gilbert.
He walks in and he puts the Oscar down on the table
like Shelley Winters did.
Yeah, I don't get it.
I'm sorry.
The Oscar and the Grammys do all his talking.
Yeah, Michael, Michael, I'm sorry.
I don't get it.
Thank you, boys.
Thank you.
Bye-bye. My spirit of adventure is something to indenture. My spirit of adventure is you.