Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast - Michael Giacchino Encore
Episode Date: October 10, 2022GGCAP celebrates the birthday (AND the release of his directorial debut, Marvel's "Werewolf by Night") of Oscar, Emmy and Grammy-winning film & TV composer Michael Giacchino with this ENCORE presentat...ion of a fascinating interview from 2018. In this episode, Michael talks about the birth of film scores, the golden age of "contract musicians” and the influence of Dave Grusin, Henry Mancini, Lalo Schifrin and Max Steiner. Also, Don Knotts gets tough, Martin Scorsese picks out pop songs, Jerry Goldsmith conducts in an ape mask and Michael teams with the legendary John Williams! PLUS: Ray Harryhausen! Appreciating Randy Newman! The genius of Hoyt Curtin! Paul McCartney grooves to Dr. Strange! And Michael pays tribute to Japanese monster movies! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Hi, this is Andrea Martin, and you are listening to Gilbert Gottfried,
and this is Gilbert Gottfried's amazing, colossal podcast
with my co-host, Frank Santopadre.
We're once again recording at Nutmeg with our engineer, Frank Fertorosa.
Our guest this week is a Grammy, Emmy, Golden Globe, and Oscar-winning composer of blockbuster films, hit television series, and popular video games.
You've heard his celebrated compositions and scores in TV shows like The Wonderful World of Disney, Alias,
Wonderful Worlds of Disney.
Alias.
Oh, alias, fringe, and lost in movies such as The Incredibles, Star Trek, Star Trek Beyond,
War for the Planet of the Apes, Inside Out, Doctor Strange, Star Wars, Rogue One.
That's one title.
Jurassic World, Spider-Man Homecoming, Ratatouille, Coco, and Up, for which he was presented an Academy Award for the best original score.
And as timing would have it, he has two movies opening this month.
The Incredibles 2 and Jurassic World Fallen Kingdom.
But that's not all.
He's also written, arranged, and conducted music for dozens of video games, short films,
and TV movies.
In 2005, he collaborated with Disney Imagineering to create new soundtracks for Space Mountain at Disneyland, Disneyland Paris, and Hong Kong Disneyland. He's also asked to... He was also. He was also asked to conduct the Academy Awards Orchestra for the 81st Academy Awards. He was. And in 2017 was honored with a 50th birthday celebration at London's Royal Albert Hall.
In his busy and very prolific career, he's worked with everyone from Steven Spielberg, to J.J. Abrams, to John Williams, to Paul McCartney, as well as former
guests Richard Kind and Patton Oswalt.
Please welcome to the show our very first film composer and a man known to his closest friends
as Star Wars Stormtrooper FN-3181.
Our pal, Michael Giacchino.
And there's no more time for anything else.
That's the show, Mike.
Thanks for coming in.
Thanks for having me.
This was a blast.
Yes.
This has been Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal.
Please tune in next week.
Did we get the Stormtrooper number right?
You got it right.
FN-3181.
That's it.
How did you become a Stormtrooper in Star Wars The Force Awakens?
Well, I'll tell you.
You know, J.J. Abrams and I have really – we've done everything together.
He hired me.
He played the video games that I worked on and hired me for Alias, which got me to Lost, which got me to Mission Impossible and Star Trek and so on and so forth.
impossible and star Trek and so on and so forth.
But of course, when he was picked to do star Wars,
that was going to be John Williams doing that because that's,
that's,
that's all his territory.
And he said,
listen,
I,
I feel so terrible about this.
He goes,
but I can offer you the role of a storm trooper.
I said,
I'll take it.
I said,
that's even better.
That's even better than I don't have to do anything except show up, put on a helmet and I said, that's even better. That's even better.
Then I don't have to do anything except show up, put on a helmet and walk around.
It'd be great.
It was literally the most uncomfortable thing I've ever worn in my life.
How long did you have to keep the suit on?
About eight hours.
Oh, jeez.
And you can't take, the only thing you can take off are your gloves.
You can take off your gloves and your helmet.
Everything else has to stay put.
And it's just, and you can't sit because you're like
leaning again. There's no way to sit.
It's not fun.
How do you pee?
There is a clip underneath.
You would have thought, first of all, that they
made this in 1977,
right? How many years have passed? You would have thought
they would have figured the whole
peeing thing out by now.
But no, you're still wearing what amounts to a black wetsuit underneath all of this armor.
So there's this clip you have to reach down real deep and get this thing out.
And then you have to zip down as far as you can.
And of course, it doesn't go down as far as you need it.
So you have to pull down the rest.
Of course.
All of this while wearing this ridiculous armor you're in the urinal urinal and it's i wish somebody had filmed it because that probably would have been amazing now amazing i imagine taking a dump was more no there was no number two that day
not possible and this is in the future yes exactly but a small price to pay for being able to play a stormtrooper in a Star Wars movie.
Exactly.
I got to arrest the character of Poe Dameron in the beginning of the film, Oscar Isaac,
and I frisked him, which also, by the way, is ridiculous frisking because you can't see
anything in that helmet.
So all I'm doing is touching him.
I'm looking like I'm frisking him, but literally it amounts to me just feeling somebody
up.
But you had a line.
Did he give you a line too?
Well, it wasn't my voice in the line.
That was somebody else's voice doing the thing, you know?
So I did a lot of nodding and shaking my head.
Too relaxed.
Do you, how do, what do you do?
Do you lean against stuff?
Yeah.
You lean against the wall.
They had these stools, these extra large stools that you could just lean on, sort of, kind of sit on.
It was terrible.
But it was fun.
I mean, you know.
And the funny thing was, like, we were in London filming this, and there was all these young guys there. Now, I'm 50, so when we did this, it was a few years back.
So maybe I'm 47 or whatever at the time.
All the other stormtroopers were like 21 years old, right?
And they had us running up and down these hallways, and it was so hot on the set.
And I'm practically dying each time.
I'm like, okay, I need a break before we go for another one.
And all the other guys, they're like these young, buff guys that are just running up and down.
Ready? We're doing another one.
And yet every time they needed a storm trooper, they would call for me.
And all the other guys would be like, well, why do they keep calling that guy?
He's old. He can't even run.
What is going on here?
But that's what guilt gets you.
They didn't make the connection.
JJ felt bad, so he let me.
They didn't realize you were a personal friend.
No, no.
And you must, like, sweat a lot.
Yeah, I think I lost about 12 pounds just in that one day.
But you're so proud of it, I want to point out to our listeners,
that he signs his emails now.
It's the signature in your email.
Yes, FN3181.
And Mike and I hadn't talked in a number of years,
and I said, send me your number because I want to do a pre-interview.
And he sent this, and this was in the email, FN3181.
And I said, wait a minute, that's a six-digit number.
I know that trick.
But he said, no, it's my stormtrooper number.
See, now, the funny thing is, if you went to one of those autograph signing conventions you know the hell with all the music
that you wouldn't even have to mention you just have to have a photograph of you in that storm
trooper thing and that is exactly that you are exactly right people are so much more excited
about that a lot of times than they are about the fact that you know all the whatever else i worked
on i hope you got headshots for that reason in the Stormtrooper getup because one day when
you're at a convention down the line and you're selling, you know, you're signing.
Don't say that.
Don't say that.
When you're in your dotage, when you're a man of a certain age.
you're a man of a certain age when you're with some when you're sitting next when you're sitting next to the guy who was a bank robber in a chips episode i know that's so sad that's gonna be me
it's all right you know what there are worse there are worse worse ways to end your life i guess now
we wrote you about gilbert's of course g up with The Most Obscure. He manages to come up with a
composer I never heard of. See, I'm
in love. I'm one of those
pathetic monster kids.
Oh no, me too. He's a monster kid. I love it.
In fact, you know, it's funny because
when you mention Hans,
right? Hans Salter, yeah. Hans J.
Salter. He
actually did the score for one of my favorite
movies. Now, I give this talk and it talks about what I do and everything,
and I do it for kids or different organizations.
And one of the pictures that I pull up to talk about the different kinds of stories you can tell
is a still from The Incredible Shrinking Man.
Oh, there you go.
And it's one of my absolute favorite movies.
And he did the score for that movie, you know, amongst a million other things.
So it's, you know.
Well, I remember, like, the Wolfman theme., you know, amongst a million other things. So it's, you know. Well, I remember like the Wolfman theme.
Yeah.
Can you sing it?
Off key.
Let's ask him if I know.
It would go like.
Da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da.
Da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da.
Da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da.
Da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da. You know what's so funny?
That's how I pitch themes to the directors I work with.
You actually do that?
No.
I think he has perfect pitch, Mike. But I will from now on.
That was actually pretty good.
Not bad.
That was really good.
I like that.
He is strangely musical.
Well, he did also Creature from the Black Lagoon.
Yes.
And Son of Dracula and House of Frankenstein.
Exactly.
I mean, come on.
But in those days, those guys were staffers.
They were staff workers.
It was like going into a room with a steno pool.
And they were all just there.
And he sort of fell into the horror genre. and they just kept throwing those movies at him.
And that was his day job.
He would just sit there going, okay, what am I writing today?
Right now I'm writing The Wolfman.
What is this?
And for all I know, he could have been like, what is this crap?
I don't even know what a wolfman – who knows what his love or disdain was for what he was doing.
I'm not sure of that, but it's pretty amazing to think in those days,
they were just in the same way that the actors were all employed by the
particular studios.
They also had their stable of composers that would be there and they would
just work on whatever was thrown their way.
Well,
even directors in those days.
Everyone,
right?
Michael Curtiz.
I mean,
Casablanca was just a job.
Yeah.
It's like those directors. It's like they would call them in and say, okay, you know, it's a Western or it's a comedy or it's a romance.
Bang them out.
Yeah.
Screenwriters too.
And they would just go and do it.
And there's something also to be said about the fact being thrown a project and then having a very short period of time to do it.
It seems very different today.
And I don't know if the results are any better if you have a lot more time or get to be choosy about what you do.
And it's an interesting thing to think about.
And speaking of Michael Curtiz, then you have Max Steiner.
Max Steiner.
Yeah.
Nice segue.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And actually, what's cool about Max, do you know, obviously, King Kong.
You guys know King Kong.
Yeah, of course.
I was listening to the score last night, the whole thing.
It's so good.
Yeah.
It is so good.
You could put it on and just listen to it like a record.
You can.
It was one of the first film scores that just sort of blew my mind as a kid.
I remember watching that because I was also obsessed with stop-motion animation.
So Willis O'Brien, who did that film, I was obsessed with that.
But then by watching the movie, I would hear this music and be thinking, what is going on?
And it wasn't until years later that I found out that Max Steiner, that was really the birth of film scores with King Kong.
Because up until then, they would do a lot of stock music.
The guys would write a bunch of music and they would be like, I need an action cue.
Well, pull it from the action pile.
I need a love theme.
Pull it from the love file.
And they would just use whatever.
But Max on King Kong said, you know what?
I'm going to take this what they call a Wagnerian approach, meaning the Wagner operas, he would write themes for characters or situations.
I was going to ask you about that.
Yeah.
And he said, I'm going to write a theme for King Kong. I'm going to write a theme for Ann or situations. I was going to ask you about that. Yeah, and he said, I'm going to write a theme for King Kong.
I'm going to write a theme for Ann Darrow.
All the characters in the film get a theme,
and every time that character's on screen,
you're going to hear that theme.
And it's a way of guiding the audience
to be with the characters every step of the way.
He was the first one to do it,
and that process literally hasn't changed at all.
And all of these years since 1933,
he probably wrote it in 32,
I guess came out in 33,
but it's fascinating.
It's fascinating.
And I've noticed when I was a kid watching the old monster movies,
they would have the compositions just like they'd have scenes out and out
scenes that they would repeat
in the lesser movies yeah then they would exactly all of that music was used over and over it wasn't
like it is today where that music just belongs to a particular film you know it would be like
if you went and saw star trek and and my music played and then you went to see you know some
lesser science fiction film,
and they used it in that as well.
You can't do that now.
But then they were just writing it for this,
and then whatever they could use it for after that, they would.
It's interesting that you talk about Steiner.
I was doing a little research on him last night.
I found an interview with Danny Elfman.
No flies on him either, by the way.
Great composer.
And he was saying just what you
said, that in those days it was so early that he had no real references to draw upon.
Right. Because he was originating it. They were inventing it as they went along.
You know, and the thing to remember is these guys really came out of the classical world.
They were guys that were in Europe at a time of, you know, political unrest and all of this craziness.
He was Viennese, I believe. Yes, yes, yes, he was. As was Hans Salter, right? That's right. I believe
so. And, and you would, these guys were fleeing Europe, and they would find work either first in
on Broadway or in New York, doing shows playing the piano at shows or whatever. But eventually,
a lot of them made their way out to Hollywood and they used all of their
classical training, all of everything that they were writing, concert music at the time.
They were doing more what you would consider legit work.
They used all of those influences and all that learning and put it into film scoring.
And they became sort of the new, you know, when Mozart was young, right?
Everyone thinks Mozart, you think of Mozart and you think it's all fancy and highfalutin and everything.
But the truth is if Mozart was running around looking for jobs just like everyone else, he would spend a few weeks in this small town of Italy trying to impress the guy in charge so that he would hire him to write a mass or write something for him.
You see a little of that in Amadeus.
Yeah.
It's amazing.
Work for hire.
Yeah.
Just read the letters between he and his dad.
They're,
they're,
they're,
they're no different than what happens today.
Here's something I always wondered with composers,
but it's like when you watch a movie,
you know,
movies failing.
If you go,
boy,
that what witty dialogue.
That's so clever.
Or when you go, oh, what a great shot that was.
And it's like sometimes I'll watch a movie and the music comes on and I'll go, okay, now I'm supposed to be sad or happy.
The music is too obvious and manipulative is what you're saying?
Well, it's because the movie is not working.
You know, it's movies not working.
And they always think they can fix a movie with music.
And you can't.
You can't do it.
You know, the scene has to be working to a certain level for you to be able to write to it honestly and then for someone to watch it and just let it go into them and just accept it on face value.
When you start going, oh, that's pretty music or wow, that's really pushing me to feel this was a romance that is blossoming.
That's when it's not working and that just mainly goes back to the scene not working.
Now, there are times when just bad music is written too. So mean there's that as well but i would say mostly it's when a
film isn't working so you're saying gilbert that you you start you're out of the story
yeah because you start noticing you start noticing the trappings and the wallpaper and
the music come on and when you start going oh music is coming on now. Yeah.
That's a bad thing. And I'll go, okay, this movie tells me I should cry now.
And this movie tells me the characters are getting ready for the big game.
You know what?
I noticed it in sitcoms, Mike, and you must be aware of this.
I was watching an ABC sitcom, something with Jenna Fisher, who used to be on The Office.
I can't remember it.
It was a new sitcom about two exes that decide to live under the same roof.
And they will telegraph jokes.
They will telegraph comic moments with music.
And it's very intrusive.
It's incredibly intrusive.
And that's either because they think something is not working comically.
Yeah, they don't have belief in the material.
So they say, let's just put funny music on it.
But that is the worst thing you can do.
Yeah.
I feel like if the comedy is not working, then make it emotional with the music somehow.
Go the other direction.
And maybe you can do something with it.
But I have these rules where it's like once in a while you'll get asked, can make this funnier and i'll be like no that's your job every week i'll be like i'll be like no this
that was your job not my job that was your job to do that not me you know it's kind of like i've
noticed in a lot of comedies i've seen over the years where they're doing some comedy business
and the music is non-stop.
It'll be annoying.
Ba-ba-ba.
Yeah.
Unless it's done ironically
like the way Larry David uses
the horns and the trombones
in Curb Your Enthusiasm.
That's fine.
He's making a comical statement
with that music.
Yes, that works great.
Right.
That is the right way to do it.
Right.
You know, but a lot of these sort of, you know, and romantic comedy sort of became this
weird genre all on its own.
And a lot of them have this kind of music in it, which is so irritating to me.
And it's all done usually with these pizzicato strings.
Yeah. You know, and you're just like, okay, now I just, I can't stand that.
And they said music when the guy and girl are flirting with each other and they'll give a look
and it'd be. So you must, you must spend a fair amount of your time thinking, how do I avoid cliche?
How do I find a way to run in the opposite direction and do something different than this?
Yeah, I usually try.
And turn it upside down.
Like, I can give you an example on Star Trek, the very first Star Trek.
So the opening scene of the film was a scene in where, and hopefully it's not spoiling anyone, but you know what?
It was out in 2009.
Should have seen it by now.
Exactly.
Opening scene of the film, James Kirk's father has to take control of the ship,
and his wife is giving birth at the same time as they're being attacked
by some crazy Romulan ship.
So he orders everyone to evacuate, including his wife,
who is in the middle of giving birth,
and he has to stay on the ship by himself because, you know, unfortunately, the autopilot system fails.
Anyway, and there's a huge action scene.
Everything is blowing up.
They're trying to get people off the ship and all of this is happening.
And I remember watching it and, you know, they use temp music in a lot of movies you know because
when they're editing they just need to know if it's working or not and they'll put temp music
in just to see so i can show studios and there was all this action music in there and i but i kept
thinking when i was watching it how sad that situation was you know this i said yes this is
an action scene but the truth is this is like a really sad, sad moment. So the piece of music I wrote was this really slow sort of hymn-like piece of music that was speaking to the separation of a family, the fact that he was never going to meet his father.
His father is going to sacrifice himself, all of that.
And I remember when JJ was there, he was just like, oh, my god.
That's it.
That's like – because it really – it speaks to the emotion of what you're trying to say.
So sometimes the action is not as important as what is going on inside the head of the character or inside the heart of the character.
Interesting.
Now, if you do a movie that's a sequel to a movie that some other composer did the music for.
Is it kind of like that thing, like if you're an actor and you're cast in a part that another actor played,
it's a weird thing because you want to go out of your way
not to do the same readings that that actor did.
You have found yourself in that situation, haven't you?
I have.
Cars 2?
It's a lot like being a teenager.
There's a lot of rebellious feelings that go into when you sign on to something like that, you know?
And you want to do your own thing.
So, yeah, I did Cars 2.
I did – I'm trying to think.
Well, the Mission Impossible movies aren't really sequels.
No, they're episodes.
You could almost say they're episodes in a way.
And you have a main theme, which is fun to use.
And Lalo Schifrin, you know, that theme is probably one of the best themes ever written.
If not the best.
Yeah, on the history of music, you know.
It's been used as a gag theme more than – it's right there with Rocky.
You're right, actually.
It has been used in movies
that have nothing to do with spies
or anything as comedy.
You're right.
So that one,
that just shows you how big that theme is,
how well-known it is.
But the thing about going into a film,
say, like, well, Cars 2,
I didn't reference anything that had been done in Cars
1 because this was a very different movie.
It was a spy film, whereas the other one was much more of a family sort of hometown, all
of that.
I know you both are huge Cars fans, I'm sure.
I've seen them both.
But I was able to do my own thing in that.
Yes, exactly.
And so I was able to do my own thing in that. Yes, exactly. And so I was able to do my own thing on that one.
But even on something like Star Trek, here you have Star Trek, right, which has a huge legacy of music.
Of course.
James Horner, Jerry Goldsmith, Alexander Kerridge.
All of these guys who wrote beautiful music all over the years.
And it was a really tough assignment.
I remember thinking, like, what do I do to do something that is as good
as all the stuff I grew up with and loved with it?
And it took me a while to figure out the theme for that film,
but it came down to sort of what I was talking to about before,
which was being told, you know, after writing 17 versions of this theme
that I was not happy with, J.J. was not happy with,
the producer Damon Lindelof, who also worked on Lost with me, he said, look, forget about Star
Trek. Just forget it. Let's just say this is a movie that we're working on that is about two
people that meet and become the best of friends and then go on to have these crazy adventures
together. He goes, what would you write for that? And then that's when I went home. I wrote a whole
new thing. And that
became the theme for the film. Good advice. You know, yeah. And it was sort of the baggage of
what came before was really affecting me trying to do something that stood up to that instead of
looking for what was at the core of what the story needed. Thank you. ¶¶
Oh my God, it's so good. The best thing about the film.
Yeah, it is, it is.
I don't want to knock the great Robert Wise or anything.
No, Robert Wise is amazing.
He's amazing, but that score.
Yeah, it's beautiful.
It is.
This is another thing with composers.
Whether you're a brilliant composer or just like a regular working hack,
composer or just like a regular working hack it's like there aren't there just some chords where you go right away like okay this chord with this chord is sad and this chord with this chord
is exciting yes yeah absolutely well what's the saddest chord is it d d minor d minor yes
supposedly i mean you know it's just everyone says.
But, you know, like if you do a major followed by a minor, that usually invokes a very melancholy feeling, you know.
And a lot of it is just personal.
So what affects you when you hit those keys?
But some of it is very universal as well.
And I still think, like, how is it possible people can still write new music
after all the music that's already been written
and you only have these 88 keys to work with?
You know, that's all you have.
How does it work out that you can continually do new,
you know, bring new things to life?
I have no idea how it works.
That is actually fascinating.
You think everything's been done?
You would think, you know,
I mean, it's been
hundreds and hundreds of years of this, right? And so many people doing it that, you know,
and maybe at this point we are ripping off stuff we just don't even know. Well, let's talk about
something sad and something emotional. And that is that wonderful opening sequence in Up, which
you obviously, which you won an Oscar for. Yeah. And tell us the story of that
because I know
part of it or all of it
came to you in the shower.
And Gilbert and I
were talking about that scene
and I watched it last night.
Even to watch it
just by itself
on YouTube
you will cry.
I remember watching it
for the first time
and it was just storyboards
and I cried.
That's amazing.
That is amazing. Didn't you say the engineers and
the musicians cried while recording it, while laying it down? Yes. And the problem is you have
to record it more than once. So you do it once, you do it again, then you cry. You do it a third
time, you're still crying. By the fourth time, you're like, we have to stop this because we have
to move on to a different cue. Can we play something a little happier? Because if we don't,
everyone's just going to have to call their therapist or sit in the corner and cry.
That segment,
it is one of those you could watch as a movie
by itself. It's one of the most beautiful segments
or one of the most beautiful things really ever committed to
celluloid. I agree.
And, you know, of course, Pete Docter, who directed that film,
is a brilliant director.
He's one of my favorite people.
And Ronnie Del Carmen, who was the story supervisor
and really boarded a lot of that as well,
they put together just a beautiful, beautiful scene.
And on its own, it just speaks to – it has such a universal truth to it.
So when you watch that,
that is something we are all going to go through at one point in our life or another. And you
really realize that when you're watching it, you start thinking about the people in your life and
your parents or the people that have moved on already. And it's really something that speaks to life in one of its truest forms, you know, life and death.
That's how it works.
And when you're left alone, when someone leaves you, how do you handle that?
How do you deal with that?
And we probably all at one point or another have asked ourselves that, right?
I mean, you know, if something like that were to happen, how would you go on?
So I really think that scene speaks to you in that way.
Now, the first melody I wrote for Up wasn't very good, I don't think.
I wrote this one melody.
It was okay, and it sort of has the DNA of what it ended up being.
But I remember playing it for Pete, and I was like, look, this doesn't feel right yet, but let's just play it.
I played it, and he was like, yeah, it's almost, it's not quite there.
And then I said, okay, I went back home, and a few days,
I was just thinking about it.
And I remember being in the shower in the morning,
and I came up with that melody that it ended up being.
And I was thinking about it, and I thought, oh, that could work.
But I didn't write it down, and I didn thinking about it and I thought, oh, that could work. But I didn't write it down and I didn't record it or even sing into a mic or any of that.
I just said to myself, you know what?
I'm going to wait a day.
And if I wake up tomorrow and I can remember this, then maybe that's worth pursuing.
And so I let it go.
And then the next morning I woke up and I thought okay can I am I
can I remember and I remembered it and I thought okay then at that point I went to the piano
and I wrote it down and I played it for Pete and he really loved it because he really wanted
something that had sort of a music box quality but also could then grow be big and emotional as well
but it's weird sometimes you know these things go through your mind all the time, and a lot of them are red herrings. So I tend to try and see if I'm going to remember it or not.
And that was one of the ones where thankfully I remembered it. It's beautiful. Watching it again
last night, and this is purely a gut response, and I could be way off base, but it almost felt
like a scene from a Chaplin film. Yeah, absolutely. Absolutely. I agree. I agree 100%.
from a Chaplin film.
Yeah, absolutely.
Absolutely.
I agree.
I agree 100%. You know,
when you can tell a story
with just visuals and music,
I think that's one of the most
beautiful experiences you can have.
Look at that last scene
in City Lights.
Yeah.
And how the music is subtle
and how it doesn't intrude,
but it just...
He was a master at that.
That's what I felt like watching that scene. I don't know if that ever occurred to you.
Well, Pete would be very happy to hear you think that way.
And you've said too that you prefer to work, obviously, you're in a position where you can choose your projects and obviously you prefer to work on something that you connect to emotionally.
Yeah, I have to.
It's like one of those things where if I'm not emotionally invested in the thing that I'm working on – because you work really long hours, as you know, on this stuff.
And I just don't get inspired.
I actually get angry if I'm working on something I don't like or with people that I don't like.
It really just sort of ruins my day. And I really avoid that at all costs. And so I'm very careful, A, with the projects I pick
and with the people that I choose to work with. Now, I work with a lot of the same people over
and over. And whenever I'm in a room or I'm about to meet with someone that I've never worked with before,
you know, that first conversation we have is extremely important to me because I want to
know if I can connect with this person or if there feels like there is some sort of,
you know, personal sort of back and forth that I can have with them. And if that doesn't exist,
then I always say no. Don't you say that, I saw you say that when you're working with JJ,
it's like your two kids in the basement trying to put, trying to assemble models. Yes,
yes. It's the best. It's like literally when we're working together, it's the equivalent of,
you know, that kid who would come to your house when you were, you know, from next door and say,
hey, you know, is Michael around? Can he come out and play? It's nice. You know, let's go,
let's go. And then we go outside and we find an old trash can. Well, let's see if we can turn this into a robot.
And of course we can't, but we try.
But that is always what it feels like working with him.
And I have to say that with many of the directors that I work with, Brad Bird, Pete Docter, Matt Reeves, a lot of these guys, that's the essence of our relationship, that love of just making things.
Because of the statement, wouldn't it be cool if?
Right.
They've all got to be monster kids in their way.
Absolutely.
Every single one of them.
Every single one of them.
And I really do look for that.
Of course.
Okay.
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Boom, boom, boom, boom. Gilbert and Frank. Ba-da-ba-da-ba. So unnecessary for a limited time only at participating McDonald's restaurants in Canada.
Hi, I'm Bobcat Goldthwait, and I'm not dead, and you're listening to Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast.
Now, you're friends, and you've worked with John Williams.
Yeah.
Now, John Williams seems to be the master of wonderment.
You know, you know if you want to show something incredible is happening.
He's like the perfect composer for that. He has always been the best that there is,
you know, and he certainly was a huge part of my childhood, a huge part of my, you know,
I always refer to him as one of my most important teachers, you know, just, you know, because a lot
of what you learn in this business is by watching how other people do it, you know, and other people
whose work you respect. Did you tell him that when you met him?
Oh, yeah, definitely.
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
And he's been so sweet to me over the years and very nice. And I remember after Up won, he called me the next day and, you know, just to say congratulations
and that he was really happy for me.
And we worked together on – oh, this was actually one of my favorite things.
happy for me. And we worked together on, oh, this was actually one of my favorite things.
We worked together on a ride on an attraction for Disneyland. It was called Star Tours.
So they were kind of redoing it and they wanted to update the music in the queue line and all of these things. So I had this idea. I said, you know what? I said, you know, like, why don't we do all the Q line music in, you know, take John's themes, but do them in the style of like Esquivel or Denny Martin or, you know, like those kind of guys at which, which I absolutely love that music.
That very sort of early 60s RCA stereo, you know, crazy, you know, very loungy thing.
You put some of that in the first Incredibles.
Oh, yeah.
Some of that music.
It's all over.
I'm in love with it.
But so I said, why don't we do it like that?
And they looked at me like I was crazy.
They're like, no, no, John's never going to go for that.
John's not going to.
Now, of course, I knew John started writing music like that.
In fact, you know, if you listen to his first theme that he wrote for Gilligan's Island,
the Calypso thing.
Johnny Williams.
Yes, Johnny Williams.
And he had albums, which I have, of all of these great show tunes,
but done in this really cool lounge jazz style.
So I knew he came from there.
And they were like, well, no, John's not going to go for that.
It's got to be very traditional.
And I was like, look, let's just at least go ask him. So we set up this meeting. I go
over to Amblin Studios where he has his office. I meet with him. I bring these demos that I made
of like Yoda's theme, but in this very sort of lounge jazz style. And I start playing all these
for him. And he's like, I really like this. He goes, you know, it reminds me of I did this Scandinavian documentary one time long ago, and I did a similar kind of a thing.
And I was like – he goes, I think this is great.
We should definitely go this direction.
And I was just like – I was like, ha-ha, see, see?
I told you.
But I love the fact that he came out of that world, and I love that.
I love that world.
And that was – all of that jazz and i and i i love that i love that world and that was
you know all of that jazz stuff is a huge influence obviously we've played his we we talk about him on
this show and we've been playing the irwin allen stuff we were playing lost in space his themes for
that and the time tunnel they are jazzy oh they're great and i'm not a musician i'm not an i'm far
from an expert on this but i think you can hear the influences oh absolutely all of his stuff is
it's beautifully and it's and usually once he's written something you look at it and you're like
okay well that's perfect damn it and henry mancini oh my god yep before he became really a revered composer. He was working on all of these like kind of low budget sci-fi pictures.
Yeah.
Yes.
Yeah, I know.
Well, all of those guys did.
Look, think about it.
Like Bernard Herrmann was all over the Twilight Zone TV series, right?
Yeah.
And Goldsmith did Twilight Zone.
Goldsmith did Twilight Zone.
And then you go further back into like the 40s.
I listened to a lot of radio dramas.
Like when I'm in the car, I listen to old radio dramas.
Oh, that's interesting.
You know, Johnny Dollar.
Inner Sanctum.
Inner Sanctum, Johnny Dollar, Suspense, all of these things.
And whenever they say, and music composed by Bernard Herrmann or Jerry Goode,
you'll hear these guys' names mentioned.
So they were cutting their teeth in radio before then television came of age, and then they started – they moved into television and then eventually into movies.
You don't have the similar kind of path now because technology was advancing at the time, and they just followed with it.
They just went along with it.
So I always love hearing the names of these guys in those old radio shows
and then on the old television series and then into movies.
It's pretty impressive the amount of work that they did
and the different genres they did it for.
People talk about, obviously, when you think of John Williams,
you think of the blockbusters.
Yeah.
You think of the Spielberg movies.
You think of Jaws.
You think of the Imperial March.
But you never think of the fact that his original Gilligan's Island theme
got tossed after season one.
I didn't know that.
Well, it was a-
He had to do two Lost in Space themes, too.
Yes, that's true.
That's true.
There are two of those.
Well, actually, I think the Gilligan's Island theme was only, it only lasted for the pilot.
Oh, really?
And then it was cast aside for the-
Breaking news.
The one we all know.
I was talking about like the Poseidon Adventure and the Long Goodbye.
Gilbert, a movie you like, Cinderella Liberty.
Yes.
That he scored family plot.
Did he do Towering Inferno?
Towering Inferno. Towering Inferno.
Yeah.
The Cowboys.
Cowboys is an awesome score.
Go back and listen to those scores and see the range of this guy.
What was that music we were playing on this show?
Was that the Dave Grusin stuff?
I wonder if it was Time Tunnel.
We were playing.
Well, Mike just met Dave Grusin a while ago and spent some time with him.
Yeah, a few years back I was in Spain.
I was doing a film music festival, and we were doing concerts.
And he and I were doing concerts there together at the same time.
And it was – the guy was unbelievable.
He was an incredible professional.
He was so on point, and he is very sort of serious at times.
But he performed Goonies with the orchestra.
Of course, Goonies.
He was playing the piano as he's conducting the orchestra.
And it was really one of the most amazing things I've ever seen.
And, of course, his music for The Firm, which he scored that movie just only on piano.
There's nothing else. It's just him
and a piano, and you listen to that
score with that movie. It's one of the
most effective scores for a film that I've ever
seen. It's one of my favorites.
We were playing something. We were playing It Takes a
Thief for the name of the game.
Some of his TV stuff.
Yeah. Again,
these guys. Wild Wild West is another one that he did.
Isn't that great?
That he did.
And also comedy.
Good Times and Maud.
Oh, yes.
Dave Grusin themes.
I mean, again, versatile.
And if you would meet him, you'd be like, really?
You did Good Times?
Well, I mean, that's so funny.
And the graduate in Three Days of the Condor.
I mean, there's a body of work there.
Okay.
graduate in three days of the condor i mean there's a body of work there okay here's something that annoys me in um what what was the uh tom cruise and jack nicholson oh a few good men oh
a few good men yeah yeah yeah the music there that keeps playing throughout the movie is da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da. And whenever that happens,
I'm singing,
if ever I should leave you.
Oh, it's too similar?
Yes.
Is that what it throws you?
Interesting.
Well, we'll have to ask
Mark Shaman about that.
Yes.
We want to ask you about,
and we don't know
the proper name for this,
and I'm glad you talked
about how characters,
you talked about characters getting their own individual themes
and how it goes back to Wagner and it goes back to opera,
which I didn't know.
When I was a kid, I watched Batman, as I'm sure you did.
Of course.
And the Joker had his own theme and the Riddler had his own theme.
Yes.
And I was at Billy May or Neil Hefti.
Neil Hefti.
Neil Hefti.
And I was at Billy May or Neil Hefty. Neil Hefty.
Neil Hefty.
And what is it called?
Gilbert's obsessed with the music in the Andy Griffith show.
I don't think it's called interstitial music.
Michael would know.
What are you talking about?
Okay.
A recurring motif or a theme within a show.
Like Don Knotts.
When he'd get tough, it was da-da-da-da, da-da-da-da.
It was almost Highway Patrol.
We might just call it the getting tough theme.
All right, we'll play the getting tough theme here.
I mean, it's literally that inane.
There's no real special, we could try and be fancy, but I wouldn't even bother
because we'd just say, oh, just play his theme there or his getting tough theme or like even on Lost.
So every character, so many characters on Lost, and there was new themes for all the characters.
But some themes – some characters had like sad theme, like Hurley, the character that Jorge Garcia played.
You had sad Hurley and you had just kind of fun Hurley, you know, the character that Jorge Garcia played. You had sad Hurley and you had just kind of fun Hurley.
So it would always be like, well, I'm going to play fun Hurley's theme here.
I'm going to play sad Hurley.
So it's exactly what you're talking about, that same idea.
So it's not that exciting an answer.
They don't actually – it's interesting that there's no actual technical term for it.
You could call it a motif, a leitmotif.
A leitmotif.
Which is a leitmotif, which is a small theme.
And that's probably if you want to get serious about it, you could call it that.
But I'm not going to say it.
And just recently, we played the theme to Mayberry RFD.
Right.
And that was one of the interstitial music from the Andy Griffith Show.
Yeah, they brought it back for a spinoff.
Or it was just easy to use.
Yes.
It was on the table, so let's use that.
It was on the table, so let's use that.
By the way, Lalo Schifrin, since you brought him up,
and you told me a fun story on the phone,
that when you were hired by JJ to do Mission Impossible,
you felt compelled to reach out to him?
I did because I love that show.
I love Mission Impossible, and of course I love the music that Lalo wrote for it.
And I was terrified, actually.
I thought, oh, my God, what if I do something that this man who I revere. Still with us.
Yeah, he's amazing.
We're friends now.
And I love that I can say that.
But at that time, I didn't know him.
And I said, what if I do something that this man who I consider a hero hates or doesn't like?
That would break my heart.
I said, so I got to find him.
So I called him up.
I introduced myself. And I said, can I take you to lunch and talk to you about this? I'm about to
do. And he was like, sure, absolutely. So I met him at this Italian restaurant. And we're sitting
there. He's eating his salad. And we're having small talk. And I said, listen, look, the real
reason is, and honestly, I felt like I was asking if I could marry his daughter or something.
That's how nervous I was.
Yes, exactly.
And I said, I don't want to mess this up.
And I would just love your advice.
What should I do with the theme?
What shouldn't I do with the theme?
How can I avoid disappointing you?
And he looked at me like I was crazy.
And he was like, what are you talking about?
He goes, just have fun with it.
And I was like, that's it?
He goes, yeah, just have fun.
Do whatever you want.
It'll be fun.
And I was like, really?
And he was like, yeah, it's just like, you know, it's jazz.
You just go for it.
And I always will remember, that's one of my favorite memories, that moment, because it really does.
It sort of just opened me up to just say, you know what?
You're right.
This is nothing is sacred.
And don't be afraid to just experiment and have fun with it.
But yeah, Lalo.
Lalo is the best.
Okay, quickly, since you're on the subject, three favorite TV themes.
Mission Impossible.
Yeah.
Oh, for you.
Oh, Six Million Dollar Man. I love Six Million
Dollar Man. I love
that theme. I'm sorry.
I'm blanking on the composer.
I know.
We can figure
that out. We'll have somebody look it up
here. But Six Million Dollar
Man. I know you like Hoyt Curtin
and Johnny Quest. Well, Johnny Quest is
absolutely one of the greatest TV themes ever written. Isn't that thing fantastic? You know, the Flintstones. Hoyt Curtin and Johnny Quest. Well, Johnny Quest is absolutely one of the greatest TV themes ever written.
Isn't that thing fantastic?
You know, the Flintstones.
Hoyt Curtin also, you know, Flintstones as well.
And Hoyt Curtin was amazing.
That was a guy who was a jazzer, you know, and you hear it in all the music.
But the Johnny Quest stuff was a massive influence also for what I did in The Incredibles.
I feel like that's a huge love letter to him in a lot of ways.
But there's tons.
I mean, look.
You like the Green Hornet theme?
I love the Green Hornet.
Especially the Al Heard version.
Al Heard, Billy May.
Yes.
Lionel Newman, I think.
Oh, my God.
It's so good.
When I was a kid.
And I remember this.
That's part of the drinking game on this show.
Yes. Our fans say, take a shot when Gilbert says, when I was a kid. And I remember this. That's part of the drinking game on this show.
Our fans say, take a shot when Gilbert says, when I was a kid.
So they're taking a shot.
We're not live, but they will.
Yeah, when I was a kid, and this is true,
I remember being outside playing,
and my mother called me into the house.
And why?
Because Perry Mason was coming on.
And as a kid, I really loved the Perry Mason theme.
So she would call you into the house for this? Yes.
Okay.
Right.
Wasn't that Fred Steiner? Yes. Fred. Right. Da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da.
Wasn't that Fred Steiner?
Yes.
Fred Steiner.
I think you're right.
Well, what about Mannix?
Wasn't Mannix an awesome one, too? Mannix was Lalo Schifrin.
Yeah, and that's a great theme.
Am I mistaken?
I think it is him.
I think so.
I think it is him.
I love that one.
That's a great theme.
I was in a movie that the score was Lalo Schifrin.
What was it?
Well, nobody ever saw it.
But it was called Bad Medicine.
Lalo Schifrin did the score for Bad Medicine?
Yeah.
Wow.
Yeah.
Wait, what were you in that movie?
Some Spanish student.
I think he played a Spaniard with Steve Guttenberg.
You played a Spaniard? Yeah.
Typecasting. Tony Sandoval
and
Alan Arkin was in it.
Do you remember any of your lines? Can you give us a
bit of your Spanish accent?
Well, all of us.
It was kind of like
how in the Charlie Chan
movies, you'd have
white actors playing the main Asians,
and real Asians wouldn't have any lines.
Right.
And that's the way bad medicine was.
I don't think any Spanish people were in the lead.
Probably not in Lalo Schifrin's resume, on his resume, bad medicine.
I'm going to have to watch this.
Were you doing an accent?
Yeah, yeah.
And all of us are varying degrees of bad Spanish accents.
And I remember one line in particular, I tell Steve Guttenberg, the line is supposed to be, old shoes must be black.
And I say it in a Spanish accent, and it comes across very clearly in my Spanish accent as, old Jews must be black.
Old Jews must be black.
Old Jews must be black.
Just a Sammy Davis reference?
Or Yafit Kodo. Or Yafit Kodo.
Or Yafit Kodo.
Do you know Yafit Kodo is Jewish, Mike?
No.
You'll learn on this show.
I'm learning something.
He's one of the two Jewish Bond villains.
Him and Joseph Weisman.
We are going deep.
Deeper than you want to go.
Frank promised me we were going to go deep.
I've never let you down before.
Oh, another case of a cartoon that rose above music-wise is Charlie Brown.
Oh, yes, yes, yes, yes.
Vince Giraldi.
Vince Giraldi, yes.
I mean, that stuff is like as classic as Mozart,
you know what I mean, in my mind.
It feels like it definitely reached that level.
It creates emotion.
Yeah, it does.
If you watch the Charlie Brown's Christmas.
If you hear those pieces on the radio during the holidays,
it's just like it melts you immediately.
Yeah.
You know, you're instantly brought back.
And that's what I love about music.
You could hear something,
and it instantly brings you back to a moment in time.
It's like when I smell, you know, hair mousse,
I instantly think of senior prom.
And that is true.
That is a great thing
about music.
There's a song
called Precious and Few.
It was a pop song
by a band called Climax
before you were born.
And every time
I hear the song,
it takes me back
to reading a Fantastic Four comic.
And I even remember the issue.
This is too much information.
No, it's not.
That stuff is stored.
That stuff is hardwired.
I love it. And I can trace it. I can look up the song when it's not. But that stuff is stored. That stuff is hardwired. I love it. And I can
trace it. I can look up the song when it
charted. I can find the corresponding
Fantastic Four issue and
1972, it all
lines up. I have a similar thing
with an Avengers comic. Whenever
I see a 7-Eleven, I always think
of this one particular Avengers comic
that I bought. And I don't know
why, but I remember
because maybe I rode my bike there and bought it with my own money or whatever. But it was, you
know, with the Human Torch and all of those guys, everyone was like one of those crazy issues.
But I always think about that, just like it's weird what triggers your memory.
So how exciting is it for you, obviously, to now be composing for Marvel films?
It's really fun.
Being a superhero kid and particularly a Marvel kid.
It's really fun.
You know, and I, in particular, I really like the movies that are about, like, a character, you know.
It's hard, always hard, when you're doing something that's about a ton of characters.
So I always gravitate towards, like, I remember, you know, Spider-Man.
When I saw Civil War, Captain America Civil War, there's a moment in there where Robert Downey Jr. goes to visit Peter Parker.
And it's a small scene in the film, but it's sort of Peter Parker's introduction into the Marvel Universe.
And I remember watching that scene, and it's probably, I don't know, eight minutes long, if that.
And it was the most incredible scene.
There were no superhero costumes at all in it.
It was just literally Tom Holland and Robert Downey Jr. in a bedroom talking to each other.
And I thought, that's Spider-Man?
I want to score that.
I want to work on that.
And I remember as soon as the movie was over, I sent an email to Kevin Feige, who heads up Marvel and who's just really a fantastic guy.
He's just like us.
He loves this stuff so much.
He's doing a great job with it.
Yeah.
And I said, who's doing Spider-Man?
I want to do Spider-Man.
I want to do that so badly.
Please let me do Spider-Man.
And it was the same thing on Doctor Strange really.
I love what you did with Doctor Strange.
Oh, thanks.
That was such a – I always loved that comic.
I loved that character.
I love what you did with Doctor Strange.
Oh, thanks.
That was such a – I always loved that comic.
I love that character, you know.
And I like the guys that are sort of a little bit sort of left field, you know,
and the movies that are about sort of their development as – because I feel like then you can really musically, you know, write something.
And someone who's done interesting things, and he'll usually –
in the movies where he does this, he'll pick old pop
songs. And that's Martin Scorsese. Yes, yes. And it'll be a song that doesn't match what's going
on with the scene. No, it could be a beautiful sort of like, you know, 60s Motown ballad against someone getting beaten with a baseball bat.
Yeah.
Yep.
Yes.
He does it beautifully.
Well, there's using Donovan's Atlantis in Goodfellas.
Yeah.
Well, and that's the idea of that contrast, right?
So what can you do to get the actual emotion that,
you know, because it's not truly about,
a scene like that,
it isn't about someone's head being bashed in, although sometimes it can be.
But he's so smart in that it's violent and it's ugly in front of you,
but he's also with those songs reminding you sort of what it's really about, you know,
what's really going on here.
And that's sort of what we were talking about earlier is just speaking to the truth of the scene.
And he's a master at that.
He's the best.
I've heard you say that sometimes you get a little caught up in doing an homage that you lose sight of the characters.
You lose sight of what your main job is.
Yes.
Which is servicing the story and servicing the emotion.
Yes.
Yeah.
Yes. Yeah, you can – nowadays there are so many films being made that are sort of reboots or sequels to what we've known or what we grew up with.
There's a lot of that in our pop culture right now.
So it can be easy to say, well, every time this thing is on screen, I must play the thing that played on screen with it 25 years ago. And I think that's harmful
because that's not doing what's right for the story.
That's doing what's right for pop culture.
And you're not paying attention to the actual.
And so the thing I try to do,
and the hardest thing is to do,
is to really focus on the story.
What is happening in the story?
And if it works out to you, something like that, great.
But don't do it just because it was.
You better have – you have to earn those moments because they were earned when they were originally written back in whatever movie franchise you want to talk about.
They didn't just use them whenever they wanted.
They used it when they needed it.
And nowadays, the tendency is just use it everywhere. And I really dislike that. And I want to kind of, you know, just at
least for me, make sure I pay attention to what's happening story-wise. So if I do that, it earns it.
Let me ask you an example, because you obviously, you admire very much Jerry Goldsmith's Planet of
the Apes soundtrack. Oh, yeah. And now you get a Planet of the Apes assignment from Matt Reeves.
And do you have to sit and smack yourself on the hand and say,
don't just go down the homage to Jerry Goldsmith.
Oh, I absolutely have to do that.
Because what you need to understand about me and Planet of the Apes
is that I was obsessed as a kid with Planet of the Apes.
I knew that about you.
To the point that when I was probably 10 years old, 11 years old, or 9 years old,
I would go to the store with my dad.
There was a Pathmark grocery store down the street from us, and I would go there with him.
Now, they had a tiled, a sort of linoleum tiled floor, and they were about 12 inches across.
And if you put your foot on one and then skip the tile and then put your foot on the other,
your legs were wide enough apart where you looked like an ape walking, you know,
in the way that they did in the movies.
So I would follow my dad as he was shopping and getting things around the store walking like an ape.
So that's how obsessed I was.
And I still have all my Planet of the Ape action figures and the treehouse and all of those things.
So flash forward all these years, working on that, yes, I definitely wanted to sort of have an echo of what Jerry did for that very first one especially.
But I didn't want it to become about that homage you know because again that's
where you make the mistake and that's when you start you know losing sight of what music is a
really powerful weapon in storytelling and when i got my first job with brad bird working on the
incredibles he called me up to say all right you're you're hired. You got the job. He goes, but it's going to be the hardest job you've ever had.
And I said, okay, I'm up for it.
I'm ready.
And he said, now, listen, what I mean is your music could ruin my movie.
And I'm like –
It's a nice how do you do.
Yeah.
I'm like, well, this is a great way to start a relationship.
And I said, well, I, and he cut me off. He says, no, what I mean, man,
is that if you're thinking one thing and I'm thinking another, and we go in separate directions,
we're going to ruin this. He goes, so you and I have to be hand in hand the whole way with the
storytelling. So whatever you're doing has to support what I'm trying to do with the story.
And it was a very, you know, you know, at the time I thought it was a little aggressive to start out that way, but looking back, he was absolutely right. And it forced me to always
really be careful and think about what I'm doing musically, because I could easily get the audience
thinking something that they shouldn't be thinking and then derail the whole thing.
And then the next thing you know, Gilbert's wondering, why are they playing funny music
behind this scene? You've taken Gilbert out of the movie.
You brought up Johnny Quest to him, didn't you?
Wasn't that the point where you guys came together on it?
When we first met up at Pixar, I went up there and I met with him and I'm at this great studio.
And I, you know, I wanted this film so badly.
But Brad didn't know me from anything.
Your first feature, we should point out.
Yeah, it was my first feature that was going to be
in a movie theater.
So I met with him
and he's like, okay, so Will, what did you like as a kid?
And I started going into a lot
of animation because I loved animation.
And I mentioned Johnny Quest and he's like
full stop right there.
He was like, Johnny Quest, that was
my favorite. And we went into this crazy deep dive about Johnny Quest and Hoyt Curtin
and all different episodes and all the storylines we liked and all the, you know.
And it was a real bonding moment because I feel like he knew that, okay,
he's on the same boat that I'm on.
You know, he loves the things that I love.
And we have been, you know, we get along great ever since.
It's just so much fun working with him.
Now, are you a tremendous fan of when they're making a sequel
and they take the original composition and do a rap version of it?
What do you mean, like the Addams Family rap?
Oh, there's been so many.
I sort of like that song.
Well, yeah, no, it's not my favorite.
It's not my favorite.
But you know what?
They got to do what the kids are into these days.
You know, what are the kids like?
That's what we should do.
It's what the kids like, you know?
And it's always such a weird marketing thing.
Actually, that comes into an interesting conversation about end credit
songs. It used to be that you would get a
great end credit suite
of the music that you had in the film.
It's very rare now that
you get that. Now it goes
right to a song because
they want to have something to sell.
They want to have something to sell
and if you can get someone to write a song
and slap it on the end of a film, it'll sell. They want to have something to sell, and if you can get someone to write a song and slap it on the end of a
film, it'll sell.
We actually had, on Mission
Impossible, I remember we were
planning on doing this end credit suite, and
word came down, no, no, no, Kanye's
going to write a song for it. And I was
like, um, what?
Mission Impossible 3.
I was like, really?
Sometimes you get someone who's like a big fan of a franchise or something
and they go, I want to write a song. But this was like, I remember
the music supervisor telling me, no man, it's art meets commerce.
It's going to be great. And I'm like, art and commerce are never
great when they meet. It's always terrible when they meet.
That's how Prince ends up in a Batman movie.
Exactly.
Right.
Nothing against Prince.
Nothing against Prince because he's amazing.
Right.
But that's exactly right.
Right.
Yes.
And then when Prince came out with that album, Music Influence.
Yes.
Inspired by.
Yes.
And I still go, what the fuck does that
mean? It doesn't mean anything. You really
think Prince was sitting there looking at
Frank Miller comics
and going, oh, this is inspiring me to
write this? No, it was John
Peters saying, how can we sell
10 zillion albums? Exactly.
Exactly. And you know what?
They make money, and because they make money, they keep
doing it, and it is, you know.
What do you think of the creative choice to use the pop soundtrack for the Guardians of the Galaxy series?
Well, that worked great because that was tied to the story.
Yes.
It was organic.
Organic.
It came out of the story.
It came out of the fact that his mother made him this mixtape.
Right, the mixtape.
So I thought that's brilliant.
That works great.
And I'm always happy to see that because I'm not against pop songs in movies or anything like that.
It's just about use it in the right way.
It also sets it apart from the rest of the Marvel Universe.
It makes the Guardians movies their own thing.
Yep.
And it never feels forced.
It always just works.
What annoys me in movies, and it
gets back to the
Mission Impossible theme,
when they go, oh, we'll
play this and that'll be the
laugh. Yes, exactly.
Yeah, it's true. One of the Naked Gun
movies, you use it or something?
I don't know. It sounds... I know what you're talking about.
They'll play the Rocky theme
or Mission... Bill Conti gets a check. I don't know. It sounds – I know what you're talking about. They'll play the Rocky theme. Oh, but the –
You just mentioned one of my favorite –
Bill Conti gets a check, so.
I'm just saying you made one of – you just mentioned one of my favorite movies, The Naked Gun.
Yeah, we had David Zucker in here.
Oh, my God.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
We love him too.
But, yeah, it is annoying.
They can just license anything, you know.
And sometimes you get approval over that and sometimes you don't. I remember, you know, the video game Medal of Honor that I did years ago.
There were times when people wanted to license it to use for their political campaigns.
And I would be like, no.
Thankfully, I get to say yes or no to that.
And I'm like, no, it's not meant for that.
It shouldn't be used for that.
Or like there was an ad campaign for how to not waste food.
And it was a national ad that the government was doing.
And they wanted to use the music from Up.
And, of course, we were like, sure, use that because that's a good thing.
So sometimes you have control over it.
Sometimes you don't.
Good cause.
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Can we play a little bit of the Incredibles, Mike?
Yeah.
A little bit of the, what do you call it, the main theme, the closing theme?
We'll call it whatever you want to call it.
The Incredibles theme?
Yeah, sure.
And maybe you can, and we won't play much of it.
We have about two, three minutes of it queued up.
But I thought maybe you could talk us through some of it.
Yeah, I should actually send you right now. I can send you a link to the uh elastic girls then brand new theme oh something really
cool that's really fun if you want to see something like that all right i'm just shared
the file with you tell me if you uh got it there it goes talk us through some of the what was going through your head, some of the influences, some of the –
Well, it was interesting.
On the second one – well, the first one was all about sort of capturing this idea of a spy movie vibe that John Barry sort of invented in his day who did it brilliantly.
But you also had people like Henry Mancini and Hoyt Curtin, like we talked about.
And so there's a lot of influences, I think, that go into that original incredible score.
And it's very much, as I said earlier, a love letter to all those guys whose music I loved
growing up.
And when it came time to do the second one 14 years later I was sort of I was I was
telling Brad let's not make this movie come on Brad let's not do it let's go do something new
forget it we did that one it worked we got lucky you know people like it and what if we screw this
one up what if we do something and you know uh and we got into a huge like back and forth argument
about this one night at dinner.
I lost, of course, and it's out.
And honestly, I'm super happy to have done it because I think all the fears I had of not being able to match expectations of what we did before sort of went away when I realized, look, I learned a lot in 14 years. Now, honestly, I still have a lot to learn,
and I hope I continue to learn as I go.
But I also learned a lot.
And jumping into this movie was a much easier process for me
than it was to start the last one.
The last one was all out of fear.
Sure, it was your first gig.
Yeah, this one for me, I was nervous about would people like it or not, but I had way more fun writing than I did on the last one.
And I was able to just sort of naturally go into all my influences that I loved without referencing, without listening or going back.
I'm just like I want the feeling of this.
It was more about that feeling I had when I watched Johnny Quest or when I watched The Pink Panther or when I watched James Bond.
It was all about that.
So the new one was great.
And I also got to write – I always had wanted to write a theme for Elastigirl.
But there really was no room for it in the last movie.
And so on this film, she's a real big part of the story.
She is the center of the story.
Holly Hunter's character.
Yeah, Holly Hunter.
And so I was like, great. So one of the first
things I sat down to do was write, I'm writing
a theme for Elastigirl.
And yeah, so that's that thing
I just sent over. Here we go. ¶¶
¶¶ So.
Wow.
It's fun, right?
I mean, it was just such a blast to do. And anytime you can work with someone playing congas and bongos, that's the best.
That, like, brings back.
Brings me back, too.
Every secret agent movie I ever saw.
Yeah.
But that's the trick, isn't it?
A little homage to, I heard a little, correct me if I'm wrong,
a little bit of Henry Mancini's Peter Gunn.
Oh, yeah, with the dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun.
Yeah, it's definitely all sort of like a part of me.
So when it comes out, like you're just listening to years of influences
that I had growing up.
It's the synthesis, right.
But it has to be original, too.
It has to work on its own merits.
Yes, exactly.
While paying homage to all of these people.
Yeah, it can't rely on that stuff.
It needs to kind of be able to stand on its own two feet.
And the players that I get to work with are off the charts, crazy talented.
You know, like that cue that you just heard, we probably only recorded that three times, you know, and they had never seen it before.
So there's no rehearsal.
You just throw music in front of them and they play it.
Yeah, these are the masters.
They're amazing.
And the bass player on that is a gentleman named Abe Laboriel who played with Henry Mancini.
In fact, Abe was brought over to play in film scores and play on pop records and stuff by Henry Mancini.
Incredible.
He was born in Mexico City, and Henry Mancini found him somehow and brought him in.
And at his first session that Abe was having, his first Hollywood session, you know, and he was nervous as anything.
And so Abe is there with his bass.
This is years ago.
And he's looking at the sheet music.
Henry Mancini is on the stand.
And he counts off and they start playing and they're recording.
And Abe is diligently playing what's on the page, paying what's on the page.
And then Henry stops everything in the middle of the queue.
It's like, hold on, hold on a second.
He goes, Abe, what the hell are you doing back there?
And Abe was like, oh, God, what did I do?
And he goes, well, I'm just playing what you wrote.
And he goes, I didn't bring you here to play what I fucking wrote.
Just do your thing.
That's great.
Because Abe is one of the most creative
bass players you'll ever hear.
And man, he was on the first
Incredibles. He's been on
everything I've ever done. And even
when it's not necessarily a
bass type score, I still love
having him on there because he always adds
something creative and
beautiful to the music.
How cool is that? This crosses generations.
Yeah.
And we've talked about studio musicians.
Yes.
And how they're like these unsung heroes because a lot of how we remember our favorite songs.
Like the Wrecking Crew.
Yeah.
Exactly.
It's stuff they created.
Stuff that they made up.
Yes, exactly. We've got to created. Stuff that they made up. Yes, exactly.
We've got to get Hal Blaine on this show.
Well, we could do – I know so many of these guys,
and that would be actually a fun show to bring in a bunch of the guys that are –
and it's mostly the rhythm guys that really –
a violin player can't really go off chart.
Like they've got – because there's 24 of them,
and if one of them is deciding, I'm going to improvise on this, it's not going to work.
Most of the instruments in the orchestra sort of have to stick to what's written for them.
But the rhythm guys are the ones that you really want to give some room to.
You don't want to, and unless there's something specific,
I will write moments of specificity.
How do you say that?
Specificity.
That's it.
Say it like that.
I'll write very specific things for moments.
But in between, you want to just let them do their thing.
And they'll always add just this incredible layer of magic to what you have.
When you're sitting there, you're saying, okay, I got to make this sound.
It's got to work in its own right,
but it's going to be a little bit reminiscent of this, a little bit.
And you say, I need a bongo because there's a bongo in the Mission Impossible theme.
There was a bongo on all of those old RCA lounge records that I had growing up, you know, all of that stuff, which I love dearly.
Which influenced those guys.
Oh, man.
And so you have people like Alex Acuna, who was the original drummer from Weather Report.
He's in my orchestra.
He plays on all of my things.
And they are just the most, I mean, just incredible people you'll ever meet.
And they just have fun.
They have so much fun.
And that's important to me, that we all have fun at the sessions.
A lot of sessions are very sort of tense and serious.
And ours are completely off.
Yeah, I've seen you conducting in costumes and masks and things.
It happens.
Yeah.
Didn't Jerry Goldsmith conduct in an ape mask?
He did.
That's the rumor.
No, he did.
Actually, there's a great photo of it hanging.
He put the ape mask on to conduct Planet of the Apes score. he did. Actually, there's a great photo of it hanging. Put the ape mask on to conduct Planet of the Apes score.
It did.
There's a great picture outside the Fox scoring stage where he is wearing the mask,
and a few of the players are also wearing ape masks, and he's conducting.
Fantastic.
Pretty funny.
Yep.
And is there ever going to be a law passed in movies and TV where you can no longer use the hallelujah chorus
i i would sign that bill i'll sign that bill yes let's send it let's send it onto the or a record
or a needle being pulled off a record in a trailer yes yes, yes. The worst. Walking on sunshine.
Well, we don't want to prevent these people
from being paid
for the royalties.
There's that.
Royalties.
I just thought,
speaking of The Incredibles,
I just thought of an example
of a moment
where somebody
has their own theme,
or we're calling it a motif.
Yeah.
When the French villain
first shows up,
what is his character's name?
Bon Voyage.
Bon Voyage.
Bon Voyage.
You go to a little bit of accordion.
Yes.
I know.
I know.
I'm so ashamed.
Which is a great little wrinkle.
It's a great example.
And Randy Newman comes from a family.
Yes, he does.
Oh, yeah. Sure. I heard he does come from a family. Yes, he does. Oh, yeah.
Sure.
I heard he does come from a family.
Yeah.
A mother, a father.
Yeah, it was pretty amazing.
He's got it all.
A family of legendary composers.
Yeah, and I think it was Alfred Newman who wrote...
Da-da-da-da.
Yes.
Da-da-da-da. Da-da-da-da. Da-da-da-da. who wrote... And then Star Wars starts.
That's how I remember.
Weren't you asked to compose something similar?
I did a 100th anniversary thing for Paramount.
Yep.
We did a new logo for them.
How cool.
And then we also did that Newman 20th Century Fox fanfare.
I redid it for the last Planet of the Apes,
and it's all like, it's just very Planet of the Apey.
It's just very, It's so strange.
Do you have that one?
I was going to send you that too because that's
pretty funny. Send it to us and we'll
play it at the end. I want to give a shout out to your
sister, Maria, who's sitting there. We're
looking at Mike on Skype. He's in LA.
And because Maria
was instrumental... Hello, Maria.
Even though she doesn't remember meeting me
back in the 80s, I'm not insulted.
Is this on?
Yeah, hold on one second.
Yeah.
Hello.
Hi, Maria.
And we want to give you a shout out for being instrumental in setting up and arranging Michael's 50th birthday celebration.
Yeah, that was a weighted event.
I know, yeah.
She produced that whole concert.
Now, you can imagine what that's like when you have how many directors? Yeah, there was a weighted event. I know, yeah. She produced that whole concert. Now, you can imagine what that's like when you have how many directors?
Yeah, there was eight directors.
Eight directors there that were going to be.
I got to direct the directors.
Yes.
Oh, nice.
What an ego trip.
And you said you were just, so it was JJ, it was Pete Docter, Matt Reeves.
Matt Reeves, Barry Bedwards, Colin Trevorrow.
Right. Colin. Eric Edwards. Colin Trevorrow. Right.
Yep.
But actually one of the greatest things that we had there was the great Gonzo.
You know, the Gonzo from the Muppet Show.
I know you're a Muppet guy.
Oh, my God.
From way back.
I love the Muppets so much.
And I had to get a poodle.
Yes.
A live poodle.
Because we came up with this skit that we were doing when Gonzo comes in and interrupts what I'm conducting and just to say happy birthday.
But, of course, he's interrupting everything.
And it is – oh, we have it here.
Here, send it back.
Send it to that email address.
And so she had to go and find a poodle, a live poodle.
It was a very cute –
In London.
Yes. In London. On short notice. a live poodle. It was a very cute poodle. In London. Yes.
In London.
On short notice.
And it all worked.
It was hilarious.
But then Gonzo sang one of my favorite songs in the world.
The whole concert was all my music except for this one bit, which was where Gonzo sang,
I'm going to go back there someday, written by Paul Williams, who, of course, has been here.
Come on, Paul. He's been here. Come on, Paul.
He's been here.
Paul's the greatest, right?
We're going to send you a clip of Gilbert singing the Rainbow Connection with Paul.
Oh, okay.
Hey, at my 60th birthday party, you can come and sing that.
There you go, Bill.
You've been warned, Mike.
Why are there so many songs about rainbows.
It's so beautiful.
And what's on the other side.
Are there tissues here?
I'm crying.
I need.
But I'm sorry I cut off your Paul Williams story.
Oh, no, no, no.
Your favorite song.
It was just, and he played it there,
and we had the orchestra play along with it,
and it was just such an emotional moment.
And just to have him do that live on stage where I'm on stage at the Albert Hall with Gonzo.
Well, you sang with him.
And I sang with him.
So it was such a – probably one of my favorite moments in life.
What a thrill and what an honor to have all of these people show up and have this orchestra.
Yeah.
Legendary orchestra playing your compositions.
It was fun.
It was fun.
It was an insane evening.
We had 10 stormtroopers, too.
And 10 stormtroopers.
They did.
They introduced Rogue One.
None of them could pee, exactly.
One movie I've spoken about before as far as great theme music for a mess of a film, and that was the original Casino Royale.
Oh, the Burt Baggerock.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
The music is amazing.
That opening theme music, you can't get better.
I mean, the movie's horrible.
Yeah, it's not so great, but the music's awesome.
And, I mean, that happens a lot, right?
I mean, not every movie can be great, and it's hard.
But, you know, a lot of times, a lot of the movies out of the 60s,
there's a lot of probably bad movies, but that you love the music to.
Absolutely.
And what I love about that time period, there was such crazy experimentation you know experimentation going on you could do jazz
orchestra and no one even thought no blinked an eye by the time that i was doing the incredibles
no one was doing it and there was even question as questions as if is this going to be popular
are people going to understand this kind of music anymore you know i remember one time working on a
television show where i wanted to do a jazz score for it.
It was an I won't name the network and I won't name the show.
But for the pilot, it didn't last very long.
It only lasted seven or eight episodes, I think.
But for the pilot, I wrote this jazz score with I had a jazz bucket player, like those guys down in the subway that you see with their playing the buckets.
That was sort of the drum set for it, and everything was really jazzy.
And one of the studio execs said, you can't do jazz in TV.
People don't understand jazz.
You can't use jazz in a television show.
And I'm like, literally this was the comment. And the score got thrown out.
And I ended up not scoring the show, thankfully, because it just would have been a nightmare.
But I remember thinking, are you kidding?
So every time you try to do something different in this town, there's someone there to slap you down and tell you why you shouldn't.
No, we can't be different.
It must all be the same or else we won't make any money.
People only will eat the same thing over and over again.
Well, the thing about The Incredibles is you almost think you're watching a period film
because the music is so reminiscent of that stuff, of the 60s stuff.
There's a little bossa nova in there.
I watched it last night and the scene where Bob is kind of getting his mojo back.
Yes, yeah. and you're playing you're playing i mean i'm almost feeling like i'm listening to
sergio mendez in the brazil 66 and i know this because i know you so long i know you're this
comes from listening to your father's records in the basement yes i love that stuff so much and
you're just pouring everything in there yeah and i'm watching it with my wife and she says it's like we're watching a retro superhero movie yes set in 1962 or 63 and the design element and the design as well everything there it all
works together when you're looking at it and you're just like wow it's it is a a big throwback
and i i love it for that but there's not many you don't get that many chances to do things like that
in this town tell tell gilbert too too, and he'll get off on this.
You scored, and was this for, I think for JJ, for Cloverfield,
you did a tribute to Japanese monster movies?
Yes, I did.
I did.
I did.
I love Godzilla movies and, you know.
We do, too.
Godzilla versus Rodan.
Destroy all the monsters.
Exactly.
I love those things so much. And Godzilla died recently. Rodan. Destroy all monsters. Exactly. I love those things so much.
And Godzilla died recently.
I forget.
Well, he'd been sick.
Yeah, he was the guy who was Godzilla.
Oh, you're right.
Yes.
Yeah, the guy in the costume.
Yeah.
He died.
Two years ago.
Yeah, yes.
But as a kid growing up, I mean, I grew up outside of Philadelphia,
so they had this thing, Creature Double Feature, on Saturdays. And we would watch, me and my brother Anthony, that's where we were at 1 p.m., whenever it started, that's where we were watching it. And so much of it were films like that. But that's where I also found my love of Ray Harryhausen, you know, and Willis O'Brien and all those guys.
I know you like that stuff. Man, did I love stop motion,
and I loved anything that had to do with a guy in a suit
smashing a city.
I was in for that.
I was like, I am all in.
In fact, I was telling you, Frank, about the short film that I just—
Oh, you just did with Pat?
With Pat.
With Pat, right.
And the film is literally about a guy that does that.
Oh, that's hilarious.
And it is...
You guys are completely cut out of the same cloth,
so you must have been simpatico.
Oh, no, no.
We're good friends, but he was not happy with me
because the suit was like...
Like I explained the Stormtrooper suit,
this suit was even worse
because it was like 300 degrees in the suit
he had to wear so but cast patten as a as a guy who puts on a monster suit and steps on cities
yes fantastic and and i heard willis o back to do the claude raines lost world
you know in color and sound and everything and he was excited about what he would do
and they wound up using the name willis o'brien but having that shitty footage of actual lizards.
Yes, and they would glue the horns and different things.
Yes, I know.
I remember watching those as a kid and not liking them.
And sometimes they would poke the lizard to make it move.
You could tell.
Or they'd throw them at each other so they could fight.
Yes! Oh, can fight. Yes.
Oh, my God.
Incredible.
I always thought that was the worst cheat in the world when they had lizards.
Did you ever, one of my favorite movies is a movie called Valley of the Gwangi.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, sure.
And the dinosaur's like a blue color.
Yes, it is.
But the cowboys, when they're going after trying to rope him,
it's such a great scene.
And the score for that film is amazing as well.
That's a lot of fun, that movie.
Oh, I love it.
Since we mentioned Royal Albert Hall,
I want you to tell your story of who came into the studio
while you were recording in London?
Not long ago.
I think you were.
Well, I was lucky enough to work on something with Paul McCartney a few years back.
And I was helping to arrange a song that he had written.
And we recorded it here in LA.
And we kind of became friends through that.
And so when I was recording Dr. Strange at the Albert Hall,
I mean at Abbey Road, Abbey Road,
I was at Abbey Road recording Dr. Strange and I said,
maybe I'll just call him and see if he wants to come over.
I don't know if he's in town or not.
And I did and he was like, yeah, I'll come over.
I'll be around tomorrow.
Are you going to be there?
I said, sure.
So he came over.
And just sitting in the room with Paul while we're recording Doctor Strange.
Now, one of the things we were recording that day was this really sort of Beatles-esque version of the Doctor Strange theme.
And he's sitting there listening to it and he goes, sounds very Walrus.
And I was like, yeah, it does.
I said, look, you guys invented everything.
We have no choice but to copy what you did.
And he's just – what I love about him is he'll come in.
He'll say hi to the musicians.
He's just – he'll tell you tons of stories about his time working there.
It's so beautiful because he just loves music so much,
and he just loves the creation of music.
He respects the musicians, and he has wonderful stories about George Martin,
who did such brilliant work for the Beatles as well.
And he's just truly a guy who loves what he does.
And he's one of those guys, like Scorsese, knows every kind of film.
He knows music.
He's an absolute student.
He knows music, yes.
Absolutely.
Any reference you pull out.
I mean, he probably can have a conversation about Neil Hefti and Franz Waxman.
Oh, absolutely.
He's obsessed with it in the way that we are obsessed with movies and everything that we talk about.
Absolutely.
And it all comes from a really honest place. I'm sure. notes and play the notes that are there. But they had an instinct for music that no one else had.
And I think in part because they weren't classically trained, they were able to break the rules
in ways that guys who are classically trained are afraid to do.
So they would do chord progressions that you would never hear anyone else.
And simply because they didn't know any better.
And yet they were still creating something that no one had ever heard before.
So they were breaking rules by the fact they didn't really have the training that everyone
else did.
And so I don't think that's anything to be ashamed of or anything to put down.
I think the creation of music can happen in millions of different ways.
It doesn't only have to happen in the way that somebody who's classically trained feels like it should happen.
They did okay.
They did okay.
I think they changed the world in my opinion.
Yeah.
Tell us about how you're working with the importance of music education and how much you do for that cause and how important it is.
I'm on the board of a group called Education Through Music because they're – in Los Angeles, as with many other places in the country, they are – when a school is in financial trouble, the first thing they'll do is kill the arts.
They will just lose the arts.
They will never lose the science or the math or the history or the things that you, but they'll
happily take off the fourth wheel, which is the arts, you know, and cars can't run without four
wheels, you know, and they don't, there's an under, there's this, there's this feeling that
the arts are not as important as science, math and history and everything else. I think they are all equally important.
And a child needs the education of all of those things in order to be a well-rounded individual.
They don't have to go into music, but learning music can help you with math.
Learning math can help you with music.
And learning music gets your imagination going.
It gets your brain working in ways. There are tons of studies that talk about
developmentally
how music can help
a child as they're growing up.
So, I mean, I can go on forever about it,
but this group that we're
involved with... You just tell how our listeners
can contribute or donate or
get involved. Yeah, if you go to...
If you look up education through music, and I believe the website is etmla.org, I would imagine.
And what we do is schools that have had their music programs removed due to financial difficulties, we put a new music program in.
We hire teachers to go and continue the music programs for the kids. We help them get
instruments, we help them learn, and we create an environment where they can, you know, stay after
school and learn music as opposed to going home and doing nothing. You know, they can actually
continue their arts education, which I think is so important. So important.
That's admirable work, Mike.
Yeah. We will return to Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast after this.
Before we let you get out of here, you've got a life to get onto.
You've got two movies opening.
Did you get the Fox thing?
We're going to play it.
Oh, there it is.
Frank has it now, so let's pop that in.
You can play it now, whenever you want.
Fantastic.
That had like a jungle beat to it. I was almost King Kong presents.
Exactly, yes.
If King Kong were writing music, there it would be.
And at the end, I was reminded of when you would go to the movies in the 80s, I guess it was,
and the Dolby thing would come up.
Yes.
Do you remember that?
Yep.
Yes, it was.
And the Dolby thing would come up.
Yes. Do you remember that?
Yep.
It would just build a crescendo and tell you that you were watching a movie in Dolby sound.
What a joy it must be to do that kind of stuff.
It was so fun.
It was so fun.
You know, I'm sure they're rolling over in their grave.
But, you know, it was neat to do.
There's so much we could go into.
We've hit the 90-minute mark, and we're going to let you and Maria get out of here.
But come back sometime and tell us about working with Albert Brooks.
Oh, okay.
Yes, that'll take another 90 minutes.
Well, he's a hero.
Absolutely.
We want to know about when you were interviewed by William Shatner.
Okay.
When I got my own planet from William Shatner.
He gave me my own planet.
But there's so much
we have to save something
for another show.
I had questions for you
from listeners
that I didn't get to.
One guy says,
Rob Martinez, though,
does say,
please tell Michael
the score for Ratatouille
is perfection.
Oh, well, thank you, Rob.
I appreciate it.
But I'm quickly going to tell,
and I told this to Gilbert, too, today, and he got a kick out of it.
I'm quickly going to tell the Speed Racer story.
Yeah, please do.
You and I met at night, even though your sister doesn't remember me.
You and I met, I think, 1988, 87, something.
I may have the year wrong.
And we were hanging out in New Jersey.
I knew you were obsessed with Planet of the Apes then, by the way.
I think you told me.
Jersey. I knew you were obsessed with Planet of the Apes then, by the way. I think you told me.
But you, out of the blue one day, you said to me, God, man, I'd loved nothing more than to write a Speed Racer movie. And I said, wow, that's interesting. There should be a Speed Racer
movie, Mike. And who do you see in this? And you said? Well, I said Johnny Depp and Winona Ryder.
Right. I thought that would be perfect. And you were live action.
You were working in Disney publicity at the time.
Probably you were doing that internship.
Yep.
And Michael and I met back in film school days.
And years later, how many years later?
Well, what year did that come out?
2006?
2008?
Right.
My son is also here.
He's telling me. Oh, your son's there too.
Yes, yes.
The Wachowski brothers decide, or
Wachowski brothers, how do they pronounce it?
The Wachowskis. Wachowskis decide they're going to
make a Speed Racer movie. Yep.
And you score it. They called me
and I was like, are you kidding me?
All these years I had wanted
to make it. I remember even contacting
the people who own the rights to it,
which was Broadway Video.
Remember there's this place?
Is that Lorne Michaels' company, Broadway Video?
Was it?
Maybe.
Maybe.
I don't know.
And I could not get the rights to it.
I was nobody.
I didn't know what the hell I was doing, and here I am writing letters to all these people.
I want the rights to this.
Maybe I could have made it on Super eight, you know, film. I had nothing else, but, uh, but yeah, that's actually one of the,
one of the, um, most fun things I ever got to do was write the score for that movie. The Wachowskis
are, uh, some of the nicest and smartest, um, people you will ever meet in your life.
Did you say when you got the call, you guys, I really, I spent the last 15 years dreaming
of a Speed Racer movie?
Well, they quickly learned what a nut I was about Speed Racer.
You know, I look at some of those episodes to this day and I could look at it and say,
if you filmed that episode using this animated episode as a storyboard, it would be brilliant.
They were so well laid out and the stories were so economically told and they were great.
I just loved it.
I grew up with it and loved it so much.
Us too.
Yeah.
Yep.
Us too.
You know a guy you got to meet.
Do you know Kirk Hammett from Metallica?
No, I don't.
He was on the show with us.
Yeah.
Total monster kid. He is on the show with us. Yeah? Total monster kid.
He is a monster kid.
Yeah.
He used to build Aurora models and then set them on fire.
Oh, yeah.
I used to do that, too.
And I know you did the same.
Absolutely.
All the time.
All the time.
Destroy stuff after you built it.
When someone first suggested him, I was thinking, I don't give a fuck about Metallica.
And then he said, he's a big Monster fan.
And then you're like, he's in.
Yeah, exactly.
We had him here almost as long as you.
We had him here 90 minutes remote from Hawaii.
I don't think, we talked about Metallica for about four minutes.
That's great.
The entire episode was about Universal Horror Classics
and the Monster Times.
And what was it? Forrest Ackerman's Famous Monsters
of Filmland? Yes, I actually went
to his house. I visited
that house. You went to the Ackerman mansion?
I did. Yes, I did.
It was amazing. Great memory of going through.
I was just talking with a friend about that. It was really
amazing. We were just wondering. I wonder
where all that stuff ended up. We were wondering about with a friend about that. It was really amazing. We were just wondering. I wonder where all that stuff ended up.
We were wondering about it too.
He sold some of it.
Some sold.
I think a lot of stuff got stolen from his collection.
Oh, probably.
The Basil Gagos paintings or Gogos paintings, a lot of them,
because Kirk has a lot of disposable income, obviously.
He bought them.
He bought a lot of the stuff from Forrest.
You could probably, I don't know if you're a collector of that stuff.
I'll go knock on his door.
Or may I just steal them?
We'll hook you up.
I just got a thing.
Who is it?
I forget.
Who composed the Get Smart thing?
Oh, that was, hold on.
Our researcher here is quickly.
I want to say, not Vic Mizzi.
Yeah, it's a great one.
John Burlingham.
Well, I should know this off the top of my head.
I know, I should too.
I'm embarrassed.
Do you love the Munsters theme, too?
Oh, yeah.
Was that Vic Mizzi?
No, Vic Mizzi did The Addams Family.
Wait.
Oh, Vic Mizzi did The Addams Family.
I met him.
You know that?
I met him, too.
He was a friar.
Yeah, I met him not long before he passed away.
Yeah, great guy.
Let's see.
Irving Sathmary. Yeah, Sathmary. Yeah, that is Bill Dana's see. Irving Sathmary.
Yeah, Sathmary.
Yeah.
That is Bill Dana's brother.
That is great.
Bill Dana's a comedian.
That's his real name.
Yes.
And then what's his name?
Mel Brooks directed that, didn't he?
He created it.
Him and Buck Henry.
He created it.
Him and Buck Henry did that.
Did he direct it?
I wonder who directed the pilot.
That's some great music.
Oh, and it's some great television just overall.
That's amazing television.
Did Hoyt Curtin do the Jetsons theme too?
Because that's a great one.
Yes, I believe he did actually.
Yep.
Yeah, Hoyt did.
Hoyt was a big Hanna-Barbera guy.
Right.
He did a lot of stuff for them.
That's another story you'll have to tell us next time.
That's the other thing we've got to tell too.
We've also got to talk about Scott Bradley, the unsung hero of animation music who did all the Tom and Jerry's.
You know, Carl Stalin gets all the attention, and I love Carl, but Scott Bradley was also really amazing.
And we have to talk about Joe Barbera because you worked on the last incarnation of Tom and Jerry.
I did.
I worked on the last thing that he worked on, yeah, which was amazing.
Well, you've got another reason to come back and talk to us again.
Anytime.
I'm happy to do this.
This is what I do anyway
when I just sit around with my friends.
We're honored.
Why not?
Will you send me the script
that I gave you in 1988?
I've got to get back into the shed
and find it.
So, yes, I'll do my best.
And say hi to your folks for me.
Absolutely, I will.
And one more question yes yes counselor let the
guy go he's got children do you agree with quincy jones that marlon brando
fucked richard pryor in the end oh stop now
well uh quincy jones has met a lot of people in his time.
I would imagine if he's saying it, I don't know.
The question is, who did that to Quincy Jones that he's so upset
that he's going around telling everyone else?
Exactly.
Gilbert's dying out on that story for the last six weeks.
So quickly plugs, your website,
michaeljacino.com.
Yes.
Incredibles 2 opens tomorrow
as we are recording this.
And then Jurassic World
is next week,
I think,
talking about monsters.
There you go.
Yes.
And if you're into
dinosaurs that eat people,
you'll love Jurassic World.
And what else
is coming down the line?
I'm going to be doing a film
with an old friend of mine,
Drew Goddard, who wrote The Martian and
wrote and directed Cabin in the Woods.
It's called Bad Times at the
El Royale. It has Jeff Bridges,
Jon Hamm, and there's a lot of great
actors in it. So I'm going to be doing
that next. Heist movie?
Yeah, it's kind of a noir-ish sort of...
Check out the trailer, Bad Times at the El Royale. It really
looks cool. You'll love it. You'll dig it. Frank, did he send us something else
to go out on? You can go out on whatever you want.
We're going to go out on... Well, you had the old Incredibles things lined up.
Might as well go there. We're going to do that. And next time, we'll talk about all that stuff.
Excellent. Happy to do it. Come to New York and we'll do it in person. We're going to do that. And next time, we'll talk about all that stuff. Excellent. Come to New York
and we'll do it in person.
Yeah, that would be fun.
I would love to.
Next time,
I'll force myself upon you.
And then Quincy Jones
will go telling stories
about it.
Mike, this was a kick.
Thanks for having me.
It was really great.
This has been Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast
with my co-host Frank Santopadre
and reading a phonetically spelled out...
I spelled it out for him phonetically.
I didn't want to happen when you got your Oscar.
Michael G. Aquino.
Beautiful.
Not Giacchino, as they said at the Academy Awards.
Well, it's funny.
It could go either way.
If you ask my grandfather, it was Giacchino.
Oh, really?
If you ask my brother John, it goes by Giacchino.
I heard.
There's a rift in the family.
I heard Marlon Brando and Richard Pryor could go either way.
Hey, give our love to Patton.
We'll give your love to Richard Kind, who's a big fan, who just wrote me an email about you.
Let's bring him in next time, too.
Let's do one.
We'll do a Pixar episode. I would love it. That would be too. Let's do one. We'll do a Pixar episode.
I would love it.
That would be great.
Let's do it.
Absolutely.
We'll do it next time.
Thanks, buddy.
All right.
We'll talk to you soon.
Thanks again. © BF-WATCH TV 2021