WTF with Marc Maron Podcast - Episode 776 - Roger Corman / G.J. Echternkamp
Episode Date: January 11, 2017Roger Corman made hundreds of films and gave huge opportunities to filmmakers who became the best Hollywood has to offer. Now, at 90 years old, Roger joins Marc to look back at his career of high conc...epts and low budgets. Plus, hear from a young director, G.J. Echternkamp, who just went through the full Corman experience while making Roger's latest film, Death Race 2050. Sign up here for WTF+ to get the full show archives and weekly bonus material! https://plus.acast.com/s/wtf-with-marc-maron-podcast. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's hockey season, and you can get anything you need delivered with Uber Eats.
Well, almost, almost anything.
So, no, you can't get an ice rink on Uber Eats.
But iced tea, ice cream, or just plain old ice?
Yes, we deliver those.
Gold tenders, no.
But chicken tenders, yes.
Because those are groceries, and we deliver those, too.
Along with your favorite restaurant food, alcohol, and other everyday essentials.
Order Uber Eats now.
For alcohol, you must be legal drinking age.
Please enjoy responsibly.
Product availability varies by region.
See app for details.
Calgary is an opportunity-rich city home to innovators, dreamers, disruptors, and problem
solvers.
The city's visionaries are turning heads around the globe across all sectors each and
every day.
They embody Calgary's DNA.
A city that's innovative, inclusive, and
creative. And they're helping put Calgary and our innovation ecosystem on the map as a place where
people come to solve some of the world's greatest challenges. Calgary's on the right path forward.
Take a closer look at how at calgaryeconomicdevelopment.com. Lock the gates! Whichever one you choose to be, I am Mark Maron. This is WTF. Thank you for being here.
Pretty big show today in terms of a lot of stuff.
My guest today is Roger Corman, the filmmaker and film producer and mythic being in the history of motion pictures.
Primarily known for his incredibly low budgets, his B-movies movies his horror movies his uh incredibly quick shooting schedule but but also for employing a great many of the
you know you know prominent people in show business both as actors and directors ron howard
uh jack nicholson francis ford cop Coppola, Peter Bogdanovich,
people I've had on the show.
He's just, Jonathan Demme, Joe Dante, Vincent Price, I threw him on at the end.
But anyways, Roger Corman has this film coming out.
It is Death Race 2050.
It's going to be available on DVD, Blu-ray, and on demand on January 17th.
But I just wanted the opportunity, because I got it, to talk to this guy, because so many of my guests have talked about him.
So that's coming up.
But we also have some support for that.
A little support act.
A dude that I worked with, G.J. Ekternkamp.
He's a director.
He directed Death Race 2050.
But I also have a relationship with him.
I'll explain it all to you in a second.
All right.
I'm just out of the gate.
I just want you to know there's a nice loaded show ahead with a couple of people about a specific thing.
And also some clips from previous guests
talking about the guests we have today exciting big show you know what i mean big production
and we did it under budget and in very quickly well not that quickly probably a little longer
than we usually take but uh that aside what's coming up uh on the show aside how's everyone doing are y'all right uh it was a very uh
powerful farewell speech by our president and then a very chaotic and disconcerting press
conference by our incoming president and uh i i don't uh i don't feel great. I feel the sort of irritating darkness of unpredictability persists,
wavers, comes and goes.
I'm not feeling a lot of hope.
I would say I'm probably feeling the exact opposite of hope.
But again, I am living my life and trying to do what I can to talk to people and to listen to people.
And it's just what I do.
And I got an email from someone that made me feel better for a few reasons.
Because sometimes, you know, I know that a lot of people enjoy this show.
I know I have a lot of types of people listening to the show show a lot of ages of people a lot of uh people from different political
points of view i i know that and i know what i'm trying to do here is a human show i know that
politics comes into it sometimes obviously yeah i got to talk about how i feel at the time
i'm in and out of a complete terror and fear but that's where i'm at now so like i to the other day like i do things
like i gotta go to the dentist so i went to the dentist to get my teeth cleaned and there's part
of me now that thinks like what's the point what's the point of your cleaning your teeth and i got
this uh this email wtf this subject line WTF makes for great high school lesson.
Dear Mark Maron, I've been a fan of yours for quite some time.
I've read your book, Attempting Normal.
I watch your show on IFC.
Oh, can I remind people or announce it for the first time? My show, Maron on IFC, season four,
will be on Netflix starting January 13th.
That's this Friday.
Oh, fucking thank God I remembered that.
Thank you.
That's just another reason I want to thank this fellow Matthew
for writing this letter.
Reminded me.
Tomorrow, Friday, Marin on IFC.
Season four, finally, on Netflix.
The reason I'm writing you this letter is because
you've helped me in more ways than one.
I'm a high school English teacher,
and I'm trying to teach my students
how to use persuasion in their writing
through rhetorical appeals.
Now, this is an aside.
This is Mark talking.
I don't even know what that means.
Believe it or not,
your podcast became a huge help to me.
I played the episode of WTF
where you interview President Obama for my students
and had them identify questions and answers
and explain whether they used pathos, ethos, or logos.
Again, I'm interjecting here.
I would not be able to identify any of those.
But look, it's not on me how I'm interpreted.
Back to the letter.
Your amazing interview skills, whether you realize it or not, helped me show my students
how important it is to appeal to someone's emotions when speaking and writing.
That can go either way.
Although many of my students didn't know who you were when I told them you interviewed famous people in the comfort of your own garage,
they realized how down to earth you might be and were extremely engaged.
You may not see this as a major success, but unless you've ever taught high school,
you probably don't realize that
getting a teenager interested in anything other than snapchat is no easy task thanks to you mark
my students will be able to write more persuasively through the art of rhetoric than ever before
yeah that just doesn't ring as a good thing to me but i'm glad i i helped the kids somehow
i'm going to give them an assignment to write their own letters to either president obama or
president-elect donald trump not only have you helped give these an assignment to write their own letters to either President Obama or President-elect Donald Trump.
Not only have you helped give these kids confidence to use pathos and vigor in their writing, but you've evened the playing field in a way.
If the leader of the free world is willing to go to a man's garage for an interview, the average citizen could certainly get a letter answered.
The WTF podcast has humanized so many people who we often put on pedestals rock stars
movie stars even the president of the united states thank you for giving young people a clear
view of the top and how it might not actually be that hard to reach thanks for everything matt
that that was nice you know i i a lot of people used a podcast for sermons, teaching. Look, I am glad to know that it can be used in proactive ways and that it is of comfort to you.
I am happy to know that.
As a matter of fact, it's one of the few things that I'm genuinely in my soul happy about.
And I had no idea that it would transpire.
And I had no idea that it would transpire.
If you want to listen to that podcast with President Obama, I can still say that for another week or so.
It's always available.
It's not behind a paywall.
It's free.
It's right there at the front of WTFpod.com.
And that might be a little painful for you now.
It might be something you want to be nostalgic about or check in with but it's there for free
forever or as long as everything lasts now that see that that why'd i have to you know you know
what i mean it's gonna be okay so let me explain this um i talked to you a little bit at the
beginning about roger corman's uh history with young filmmakers and uh you know
he really is credited by a lot of great people in this industry as being the one that gave them
amazing opportunities bogdanovich coppola jonathan demi james cameron and you know as i said before
we've had guys on the show talk about what it was like to get their shot their first shot at
filmmaking with roger bogdanovich talked about it
and so did ron howard and joe dante who actually have similar stories and i'm gonna gonna give you
a little bit of those stories now uh this is ron howard from episode 754 of wtf and joe dante
from episode 720 and these are uh these two guys obviously huge directors talking about their experiences
with Roger Corman I did eat my dust at the same time I was doing happy days and the shootest so
I kind of just wedged it in there it's on the weekends I'd go be in this out to you know the
saga speedway or something and be in this this this crazy movie so eat my dust worked yeah and
I and he said okay let, let's develop a script.
I went in and pitched
all kinds of
arty ideas
and a sci-fi thing.
Yeah.
And he said,
Ron, those are
very interesting ideas
and I really enjoy
having an actor
tell me the stories.
Yeah.
He said,
however,
when we were testing titles
for Eat My Dust,
there was a title
that came in
a very close second.
Grand Theft
Auto.
If you can fashion a car crash comedy starring yourself, of course, that we can correctly
entitle Grand Theft Auto, I'd probably make that picture.
Yeah.
My dad and I had an outline like 24 hours later.
We had a script a week later.
It was the fastest green light I've gotten in my entire career.
I learned so much.
You did?
Yeah, yeah.
Because you directed it. Well, I directed it it and he was a great teacher. How so? Well, first, a lot of
mechanical things about just managing your day. He also forced the young directors to diagram,
shot list, and really thoroughly prep. So that was all really important. To save money. Yeah.
Yeah. To save money, to be efficient. Yeah. And he said, you know i i i will you know i'll be there
the first day but if and if you stay on schedule that's the only time you'll see me yeah but if
you're struggling you'll see a hell of a lot of me right he also told me another story we were
doing this car crash it wasn't a story it was a it was a an edict we're doing the this finale
demolition derby uh scene the Saugus Speedway.
And it's supposed to be this big riot
and this kind of mad, mad world kind of crazy thing.
And I'm only allowed 47 extras.
And I kept saying, God, I just don't know how to,
I can put them in a pie shape
and try to stretch out the frame.
But I don't know, you know,
and they just kept saying, go in and ask Roger.
Go in and ask Roger, you can get more.
So I went in and I said, Roger,
a hundred would be helpful.
75 would even work.
But 47, I don't know how to make this big.
I kept arguing with him, arguing.
Because the movie was going pretty well.
And finally, he put his hand on my shoulder and smiled.
He's a tall guy.
And he said, Ron, let me explain this to you.
If you do a good job for me on the rest of this picture, you'll never have to work for me again.
But you've only got 47 extras.
And I never did work for Roger again.
But I gave him a cameo in Apollo 13 later, which is a lot of his directors like Jonathan Demme and others. They did.
Yeah.
Put him in the movie.
Yeah.
Yeah.
When you start working for this man who has had such a profound influence on so many filmmakers.
No, on me.
I was probably the biggest fan.
John and I were probably the biggest fans.
Before going to the...
That Roger ever hired.
So you knew his movies.
Oh, we knew his movies, yeah.
You liked that world of movies.
Yes, they were.
He made those Edgar Allan Poe movies with Vincent Price.
And he made The Wild Angels.
He made The Trip.
I mean, these were movies that were au courant at the time.
Uh-huh.
The rubric at New World was that if you made a picture that wasn't terrible,
you were probably worth looking at.
Okay.
Because it was generally expected that movies...
By the big business.
Yeah, expected the movies wouldn't be any good.
Right.
And so if somebody showed any glimmer of talent,
and they knew that you could make it cheaply because you had to already,
so they would get interested.
And Roger knew that. And Roger knew that. And Roger would say, you know, if you make two already so they would they would you get interested and roger
knew that and roger knew that and roger would say you know if you make two pictures for me and
they're successful you never have to work for me again which i i think he said to ron howard i
think when he was making grand theft auto corman is a profound presence and impact on people's
lives and careers in a very specific way so now i want to you know i want you to hear this
conversation i had with gj
uh ectern camp who is a guy i know because he directed frank and cindy he cast me as his real
father who has since passed in the movie frank and cindy with over platt and renee russo which
was a um fictionalized version of uh of a documentary he got sort of famous for.
So out of nowhere, he found out that I was interviewing Roger
because his mother works for Roger now.
And he told me he directed Death Race 2050.
So I said, well, come over.
He lives down the street.
So we talked about it.
And it's interesting that his experience working with Roger Corman
is not unlike any director's experience who started with Roger Corman at any period in history had working for Roger Corman.
So this is me and G.J. Ekternkamp talking about working with Roger Corman on the new film Death Race 2050.
Hi, it's Terry O'Reilly, host of Under the Influence.
Recently, we created an episode on cannabis marketing.
With cannabis legalization, it's a brand new challenging marketing category.
And I want to let you know we've produced a special bonus podcast episode where I talk to an actual cannabis producer.
where I talked to an actual cannabis producer.
I wanted to know how a producer becomes licensed,
how a cannabis company competes with big corporations,
how a cannabis company markets its products in such a highly regulated category,
and what the term dignified consumption actually means.
I think you'll find the answers interesting and surprising.
Hear it now on Under the Influence with Terry O'Reilly.
This bonus episode is brought to you by the Ontario Cannabis Store and ACAS Creative.
Death is in our air.
This year's most anticipated series, FX's Shogun, only on Disney+.
We live and we die. We control nothing beyond that.
An epic saga based on the global best-selling novel by James Clavel.
To show your true heart is to risk your life.
When I die here, you'll never leave Japan alive.
FX's Shogun, a new original series, streaming February 27thth exclusively on disney plus 18 plus subscription
required t's and c's apply
so gj yes you and i go back yes because uh you know you you directed me in a movie. You cast me in the film Frank and Cindy based on the documentary that you made called Frank and Cindy about your mom and your stepdad-ish.
Were they married?
I have no idea.
They say they were, but I don't really believe them.
And I played your real dad, this desert rat who lived in a trailer.
Yep.
And I didn't have you on at that time because I didn't know what the hell it was going to
be like, you know?
And you had no idea whether it was going to be released.
There was a lot of ifs and maybes.
Yeah.
But I ended up watching it and I talked about it on the show.
I liked the movie and I liked the doc, but I thought the movie was good.
And I ran into Renee Russo recently and she had a good time doing it.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah. And that was your first feature right sort of i actually did a movie
a feature before that for roger corman actually so okay so death race 2050 yes is your second
is your third feature film yeah and your second for Correct. Who we're going to be talking to later.
Yeah.
So what was the first Roger Corman film you did?
Jesus.
Well, so my mom from Frankincense, Cindy.
If anyone who's seen the movie, she's got this massive feeling of guilt because she
feels like she failed me as a mother because she wasn't there for me.
Yeah.
And I, you know, so she kept saying, I'm going to hook you up.
I'm going to help you out. I'm going to help you out.
I'm going to get a job.
I'm working for a producer.
And you'll see.
You'll see.
And at the time, I was like, Mom, chill.
I'm good.
I'm fine.
I'm doing it on my own.
You don't have to put this pressure on yourself.
But so she calls me one day, and she's like, I got this job working at this company called
New Horizons.
And I'm like, I've never heard of them.
And in my mind, it's like, OK, so she's answering phones at some production company.
They're not going to hire her kid to make a film.
It's bananas. Yeah. So then she calls me like her kid to make a film. Like, it's bananas.
So then she calls me like a month later and she's like, I don't know this guy I'm working
for.
His name's Roger Corman.
I think he's a legend.
You ever hear of him?
And I was like, wait, you actually got a job working for the one guy that would hire someone
off the streets to make a movie.
Like, Cindy, you did it.
So she laid low for a couple of years, you know, and tried to build like a, you know,
tried to gain
trust and then sort of folded me into the conversation well you know my son's a filmmaker
you know blah blah so he threw me this project out of nowhere the first one the first one he was like
i made 12 vietnam action movies in the late 80s and we all shot them in the philippines and this
was back when like straight to dv DVD war movies were still a thing.
I don't know if it was coming off the heels of Platoon or whatever, but they would make
these movies and they had like Jan Michael Vincent in them.
Sure.
And like the guy who played the bad guy from Karate Kid.
It was like these kind of terrible movies.
And in each one, they would recycle the same action from the previous one.
So they would always blow up the same train.
They'd always blow up the same helicopter.
They just cut, you know, you'd have your new hero, he'd shoot he'd shoot and then you know you'd cut to the same shot of the helicopter now but roger corman
is legendary in that he's made these sort of b to c level movies yeah for decades i mean since
like the late 60s i think right yeah i mean if not earlier 50s probably i think yeah and he uh
i mean i guess I guess the legend is
is that so many people started,
or at least worked with him,
both actors and directors.
Martin Scorsese, Jack Nicholson,
Francis Ford Coppola, Ron Howard.
They all started.
Joe Dante.
Joe Dante.
I think Jonathan Demme.
Jonathan Demme, that's right.
He did Caged Heat.
Yeah.
Like there was, it was sort of like,
when I talked to Ron Howard and you talked to Joe Dante, it was sort of this hands on strange extension of film school where you're afforded the recycle all of the best action moments from these
films I made in the eighties and intercut them. And so I was like, that sounds awful. I'd love
to try it. What was your experience with him? That time? So that time it was awesome because
I think it was such a crazy idea. And I think he didn't really have much faith in it. He gave me
like a hundred grand and he set me out and was like go do this thing and then i didn't hear from him like he just let
me go shoot it i spent all this time intercutting this all these action scenes um my mom submits it
to sundance i would never have submitted this to sundance thanks mom it gets in it gets in it's
the first corman movie to ever go to Sundance. Really?
Because it was so crazy.
Like it was literally almost a tribute to his style of filmmaking.
Did it hold together?
How did you do it?
How did you approach it?
What was the new footage?
The new footage, so I came up with the idea in order to recycle the most amount of footage
that they were in a video game.
From Vietnam era.
From Vietnam.
They were in a Call of Duty style video game.
Yeah.
So they could die and come back and I could still use even the same clips
I had already used.
Right.
That was the idea.
That was the device.
That was the device.
They were stuck in a video game?
It was sci-fi?
Yeah, they were like self-aware characters
in a video game who are going through.
So they kind of start off real gung-ho
and then they start to realize like,
why do we keep shooting the same guy?
Like, what's the meaning of this?
Oh, so it's sort of a comedy, a satire.
Yeah, it's like a satire.
But he didn't really know that.
Because see, the thing about Roger is he doesn't really make satire.
He doesn't intend his movies to be tongue in cheek.
Yeah.
You know, he thought it was going to be a straightforward gung-ho action film.
And he pretty much, I don't even think he ever watched it.
Right.
I came and told him it was a Sundance.
He was like, cool, great.
You know, will I make a big sale?
Uh-huh.
So we go and I get slaughtered.
I don't think the whole point was he didn't want to tell anyone it was stock footage
because he wanted it to sell for a ton of money.
So I had to like pretend it was this legitimate film the whole time.
All of the video game nerds go to see it and they're like,
this movie is fucking terrible.
What the hell is wrong with this director?
And it wasn't until after the fact that I could be like,
well, you know, it was stock footage.
He wanted everyone to think it was a hard-hitting action-packed million dollar film
and try to sell it for as much money as what was it called virtually heroes so the reviews were
terrible i got went to sundance i was so excited and then i left like with my tail between my legs
i'm like i'm an awful filmmaker but they let it in why'd they let it in because it was stock footage
and it was a funny idea
conceptually i think it was a really cool idea so you think that the board at sundance was in on it
but the people the the bloggers were not and what was the response of roger after the fact
he he wanted all this he wanted a ton of money up front and all the deals that they were offering
him at sundance were all like sort of back in Netflix, Amazon. And I think for him,
he,
he would just was like,
ah,
that was a disappointment.
I didn't make any money off of that.
He didn't sell it.
He just,
it's just sitting on a shelf.
So what was your sense of him?
What,
you know,
as I head into this conversation with him,
uh,
so he just,
he doesn't care.
He just like what,
what,
what,
what was your,
what,
what was your sense of him that he just wants to make money?
No, he's a very interesting guy.
He must be self-aware of the fact of who he is.
Yes, he, so when he talks about his oeuvre, and you'll see this, he's very humble about it.
He'll be like, eh, I don't know, maybe I've made one or two good films.
I guess those Edgar Allan Poe ones are all right.
I don't know.
I'm not, like, super proud of it, the stuff I've made. But he didn't direct any? No, he directed a lot of movies
back in the day. He hasn't in a long time. But his kind of thing, when you see Roger get excited,
so this is like how he makes a film or how he's been doing it, I think lately, I'm not sure,
I can't speak to the past, but he would, you know, I would be in his office all the time and he'd
kind of come, he'd bring you in there and be like it turns out there's a tank an abandoned tank that is sitting in a field can you write an entire script around
a tank that doesn't move and then he's jazzed because he's like i've got an opportunity to get
high production value by spending the least amount of money and that's when he gets the most excited
in his mind he found a tank somewhere he found a tank he found an abandoned amusement park he's got
you know stock footage he can use he found a school in nevada film school where the entire
class the film class would work for free and be the crew it's like for him it's just i think it's
a matter of the opportunity to do something bigger for less money and then he's jazzed like when they
when sundance was you know toasting him and doing the panel he's like yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah
whatever i don't care really where's the free food yeah right it isn't to say
that i don't think he cares about cinema i think he does but i i think for him the most exciting
thing is seeing how much he can get for for little i think that's what appeals to him the most you
know so now you get brought in now so they call me up they call me up and this is a big franchise
for corman the death race franchise yeah so they call me a- I remember Death Race 2000.
Yeah, actually, I rather like it.
I mean, it's-
David Carradine, right?
David Carradine.
And it wasn't supposed to be a comedy.
David Carradine and Sylvester Stallone were in it.
And originally, it was supposed to be a serious racing film, because again, that's what Roger
does.
Yeah, serious film.
Serious film.
Well, like serious in the sense of like action, titties, you know, whatever.
But he didn't want it to be raw.
Yeah.
But Paul Bartel, the director, is the one who was...
Isn't he famous now?
Bartel?
He's dead.
Right.
But didn't he do Eating Raoul?
Eating Raoul, yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
So, yeah.
So, he was the one trying to make it into comedy.
Apparently, they fought and fought and fought.
About Death Race.
About Death Race 2000 because Roger didn't want it to be a comedy and you know i think
he was like you know i don't do tongue-in-cheek when you try to do tongue-in-cheek on purpose
a la sharknado it sucks right he doesn't he didn't want to do that but the good thing was
the film managed i think to be a good a satire that worked and the film became probably roger's
most famous and most beloved projects
right yeah and so i think after the fact he came around to appreciating it but all the stories i've
heard when he went into it he did not want it to be a comedy and was not happy with the with the
results but paul knew it all the time yeah but paul paul knew what he was doing but roger was
different with this project with death race 2000 this was a legacy thing for him.
You know, like he had sold the rights to Death Race to Universal.
They made the Jason Statham remake in the 2000s,
which were back to actually Roger's original vision.
They were like hardcore serious action movies.
Yeah.
And I think, and I don't know who approached who.
It was something like somebody at Universal or Roger was like,
Mad Max Hunger Games, Death Race.
Yeah, right.
They made that connection.
And this was his opportunity to produce his own Death Race movie in the Roger Corman style.
And so he was very hands-on in the beginning.
I was talking to him every single day.
We were going over this outline.
He had me write this outline that was supposed to be four pages so many times.
It ended up being like 25 pages long.
Did he make money for the big remakes big remakes yeah okay yeah he did he's got a lot of properties that
he franchises off for these remakes yeah even though he might not direct them or even produce
them he still gets money he owns them he owns the rights to yeah all right so you're working with
roger on the script he has you do outlines he had me do and he had all these ideas he was like one
of the characters should be a terrorist called Tammy.
Tammy the terrorist.
There should be a robotic car and the driver of the car should have sex with the car.
Yeah.
What else?
So he had all these kind of ideas he wanted me to incorporate.
And so I took as many of the ideas as he could.
And my friend and I wrote the script for it.
And he was pretty hands on during the casting process. Did process you like the script i think we took it too far like in the beginning
there was like there was like the idea that i had had which was this idea kind of the basic
central premise for me of the script was this idea that jobs aren't going to exist anymore at some
point yeah and so i had this idea that you know like wealthy people used humans for sort of like as human furniture, and that was the best job you could get.
Right.
So it's like in the chairman's palace, who was basically Donald Trump.
And two years ago when we wrote it, we never thought he'd become president.
So it seemed really funny at the time.
With McDowell.
Yeah.
Malcolm McDowell, like a great actor.
Yeah.
So the idea was in the chairman's office, the chairman of United Corporations of America,
there would be all these sort of what I called secret servant agents.
And they would be doing these menial tasks.
Yeah, I saw that.
You know, like, it's a living, you know.
Toothbrushing the bottom of his shoe.
Toothbrushing the bottom of his shoe.
And then I was going to have him sitting on a throne of naked women, you know.
Yeah.
I was trying to go as far as I could, but he called me and was like, the throne of naked
women is not good.
I was like, okay, I'll dial it back.
But the funny thing is, is like right out of the gate,
I've watched a bit of the movie,
you know, it plays as a satire.
There's no way, especially now,
and it seemed like it was sort of a hybrid
of this kind of action futuristic movie and idiocracy.
Yes, yes.
Yeah.
It's definitely a satire.
I don't want it to be like, here's the thing. I mean, there's so many things I could say about this,
but. Go ahead. Okay. Well, first of all, Universal is the one that ultimately commissioned this,
right? And they wanted, because they have both franchises are running. There's the Death Race
franchise. The Statham one is still going. They're making another one. It's called Death Race 4.
And it's coming out, I think next, sometime this sometime this year yeah so they wanted to be very clear that they were differentiating the comedy satire version from their
non-comedy more expensive better action version right so they were so the fight kind of happened
all over again where roger again was kind of pushing to really market the film in his traditional way
as this blowout mad max blockbuster action film yeah so he cut this trailer and it was like all
explosions and you know and they said it he said it this trailer and it was like all explosions and, you know,
and he said it's universal
and they're like,
no, no, no,
we want to make people aware
this is a comedy
because, I mean,
hell, if you go into it
and you don't know it's a comedy,
you're going to think
it's the worst action movie
you've ever seen.
It's going to be virtually
Heroes all over again for me,
you know?
I don't want that.
So Roger wanted to shoot in Lima
and I could not think
of a worse place
to shoot a racing movie
on Earth. Like, I mean... Why? Why did he want to shoot in Lima. And I could not think of a worse place to shoot a racing movie on earth.
Why?
Why did he want to shoot there?
I think originally he planned on shooting in Ireland.
There was a studio in Ireland, but then it was winter and he wanted to shoot right away.
And they couldn't shoot in the snow.
And then his friend, who was a producer in Lima, who happened to be the director of Anaconda, a guy named Lucho. I was like, shoot it in Lima.
You know, we got it all here.
Lima's the shit.
Yeah.
But the problem is, is that you can't close the streets down.
Like it's this, you know, if you've been to Peru, it's like just these endless sort of
shanty towns.
And I mean, it's like there's people everywhere.
There's building.
I mean, there's an old part that's nicer, but most of it's sort of like this very chaotic environment
Yeah, you know and there's no system in place where you can say everyone get off the streets the cops come
They're right on their motorcycles everyone clears out
Yeah
You could not shoot a scene in this movie without there being at least 30 people standing on the sidewalk and the whole point of
This movie is that you're supposed to be hitting pedestrians for points
So there can't be people around right because otherwise you'd be hitting them. So ultimately, for every time they drove the cars, there was maybe a split
second where you didn't see people standing in the background. And so I had to edit all of these
racing scenes out of these split seconds where it looked like they were on empty streets.
Corman loves a challenge.
And the cars were made out of styrofoam that was pasted onto old Volkswagen bodies.
So they stripped down these Volkswagens and they put like, imagine like the styrofoam that comes like in an Amazon package or something.
And they piled up the styrofoam and they shaved it down and then coat it in plexiglass.
So the cars basically were constantly falling apart.
You couldn't really run them over 20 miles an hour because as soon as they hit the ground, like the entire front end would just pop off.
So in a lot of ways, the action was very much like Virtually Heroes because it was like,
I was almost as if it was editing it like it was stock footage. You know, I was like,
here's the footage. How do I tell the story out of it? Rather than, you know, here's the story,
let's go shoot it. And so it was like one of the cars exploded at one point.
We were like two weeks into shooting and one of them caught on fire and just like burnt to a crisp within seconds.
And then I had to rewrite the whole scripts to not have the car anymore.
But now you have the benefit of CGI, right?
Yeah, but they hadn't budgeted for CGI.
You know, Roger didn't really see the need for it because he thought that we
were going to go down there and have this amazing pulse but just for for crowd shots for the arena
shots so yeah so like on the last day and this was kind of sad malcolm mcdowell comes out for
his big final scene and you know he's the president he's the chairman he's standing on the podium
and they've got they've built these huge rafters on each side and like they're setting up setting up setting up the day is getting longer and longer
and longer malcolm's like sitting in his car with the air conditioning on because it's like 10 000
degrees finally we bring them out there and they send down the extras and no joke there was 15
people there was like these humongous bleachers and just i mean a person like every 20 feet sitting
from the other person i was like where is the rest of the people? And they're like, I don't know. They didn't show up.
And so he's like, this is my big scene. I'm like, look, I don't know. I'm sorry. It wasn't me. I
don't know what happened. Oh my God. And then we were able to painstakingly create a crowd in there,
you know, after the fact, I mean, Roger was pissed. We had to spend more money, but like,
yeah. So there were ways we could trick the camera.
There was a few times we were able to create a CGI car.
We could afford to do it, like, twice.
So we did it, like, twice.
Well, it definitely feels raw,
but it also has that weird feeling of those 70s movies
where, you know, you don't really know most of the actors
and they're clearly, you know, people that want to be acting.
And some of them are better than others, they all hold their own yeah and then you got malcolm who i have
to assume i don't know but you know uh what was this big movie not clockwork orange uh lucky man
is it lucky yeah that and you know he's been another stuff since that you know he was very
recognizable very you know efficient and good actor.
Can play heavy, can play a lot of different things.
I have to assume that working with him in this context is not his brightest hour.
No, he was on vacation.
Oh, he was?
It was like, yeah.
Not a lot of heavy lifting.
No, he was like, he called me up and we talked about it.
He's like, this is fun. This is a big big stupid bad guy role you know how'd you get him uh i think they sent
they they were trying to find people to play this role but i think the script was like too
fucked up and no one wanted to touch it yeah but i think it actually appealed to him yeah
you know caligula yeah yeah and he calls me up and he's like yeah this is just you know this is
fun chew the scenery go to lima stay in a nice hotel, check out the beach, hang out.
You know, I think for him, I think he doesn't need to prove anything to anybody that he's a good actor.
So he doesn't mind doing the occasional bit of garbage if it's like a fun experience.
And that was the vibe I got from him.
I've met a lot of famous people.
And he didn't have that weird, like, I'm going to be polite, but keep you at a distance thing.
Yeah.
And he was inviting everybody to have drinks at his place every night.
Oh, good.
Yeah.
So you had a good time.
Yeah, yeah, he did.
And I was always apologizing for how, like, shitty everything was.
But I'm really interested to see what happens because here's the thing, I guess.
And this is the thing that's so interesting to me about this movie.
It's like there are movies now that are low budget and good.
Yeah.
You can make a good low
budget movie with the technology how much money do you have i have no idea whatever roger says
he spent he probably spent less we're in lima so i don't know the value of anything down there but
how did you knew when you were going over you knew that there was a limit well i knew that universal
was going to buy the film from him for two million dollars. So anything he didn't spend, he gets to keep.
Right.
So does he spend $2 million?
I don't think so.
Right.
So who knows how much.
If you ask him, he'll be like, oh, I spent $5 million on it.
So Universal is $2 million all in.
All in.
And then whatever he saves is his own money, right?
But the thing is, you can make a good horror movie on a low budget.
You can make a good drama on a low budget. You can't really make a good horror movie on a low budget. You can make a good drama on a low budget.
You can't really make a good action movie on a low budget.
So what those movies have become have become these movies like Sharknado,
where it's just intentionally awful.
And the only reason why people watch it is because the acting's bad,
the writing's bad, the effects are bad.
There isn't really that middle ground anymore like the 70s cult movies
where there's no money, but the people are sincerely trying the best they can.
Right.
They're trying to write good dialogue. They're trying to hire good actors.
Right.
I went into it. I was like, I'm not going to hire bad actors that we're going to laugh at. I'm going
to try to hire actors that are actually good. And so it's like, I don't know if this movie
has a place in this world anymore. I don't know if it makes sense anymore to try to do a sincere low-budget action movie.
I guess you're going to find out.
I'm going to find out, and I can tell you right now,
it's split.
It's like half the people are like,
what is this piece of shit, worst movie I've ever seen?
And the other are like, well, excuse me,
you don't understand.
It's based on Death Race 2000, which is, you know, so...
Which is already kind of bad, in a good way.
Right.
Yeah.
And what did you take away from the experience?
I mean, you took the opportunity. You knew what you were getting into to some degree. I did know, yeah, I did Yeah. What did you take away from the experience? I mean, you took the opportunity.
You knew what you were getting into
to some degree.
I did know.
Yeah,
I did know.
What did you take away?
I mean,
did you build some,
some new muscles,
get some new tools
for operating
in adverse situations
that weren't emotional
like your family?
I definitely had to solve
a lot of problems
very quickly.
Well,
I guess,
you know,
it was the first time I've ever directed anything like action, you know.
So it was action-like.
And there were some action moments that were cool.
They did blow a lot of shit up.
In Peru, they didn't have a lot of gore, but they had a lot of, they could blow anything up at any time.
You know, right now, Universal wants me to do another
movie another straight to video movie
and this is one that's all about vehicular
manslaughter again and it's
kind of a tough call for me because it's like I did Frank and Cindy
which was sort of a real film with real
actors you know like pretty serious
straightforward kind of story
and then I did Death Race and now it's like
do I go down this rabbit hole of doing
these like stupid like B movies that are fun or do I hold out to and now it's like, do I go down this rabbit hole of doing these like stupid, like B movies that are fun?
Or do I hold out to do something that's more artistically interesting to me?
I don't think I can afford to hold out for the artistically interesting thing, you know?
Do something that you could get paid for.
They'll pay me.
It's just not a lot.
What, Universal?
Yeah, it's not a lot.
It's not living the dream.
If I'm going to sell out, I'd rather be like selling out.
Yeah, but are you really selling out?
No, no, it's just...
It seems like with directing, especially that, you know, if you do eventually do something
good, they forgive your training.
Yeah, but I've also heard that if you do tons of straight to video stuff, you're seen as
like a straight to video guy.
No one will take you seriously as a legitimate director.
But then again, this is the thing people don't realize.
It's like when you choose to do a movie, I'm not sitting on a fucking savings account full of money where I can
sit around for seven years and wait for the perfect thing to come along. If I direct this
movie, I mean, to do your dream project, my dream project, I might direct the movie because I need
to feed myself and pay my rent, you know, and it may or may not be good. I mean, look, I've done
the Roger thing twice. And it's a lot of stress. You get blamed for the lack lack of resources people don't know what goes into making a film right they don't know they assume
that every decision on screen is something that you wanted to be there they don't understand how
many compromises and how many things go wrong so it's like I don't know if I can keep beating
myself up trying to make something as good as I can when the when the best you can accomplish is
a c-plus anyway you know right you can't really promote a movie by saying this is the best we can do exactly and that's i've done it twice now i'd rather just you know i'd rather
feel like i'm going into something with all the resources and think about roger if he feels like
you're confident he knows he's giving you too much money uh-huh yeah right if you're like yeah i
think it's going to be great this kid's not freaked out he's not freaked out enough what did i do wrong
all right good talking to you right
well i tell you uh talking to gj it's definitely a hands-on flying by the seat of your pants uh
improvising type of situation when you work at the budget with the amount of time
and the uh what's allotted
what's given to you it's interesting he talks about these styrofoam cars because roger in the
interview you'll hear says something about uh the um what's the word i want to use the uh inventiveness
of james cameron when he worked for him but uh so that was me and gj eckern camp all right here we go we're going to go through it
as best i can being familiar with his work but not i i you know i i know who roger corman is
but you know the guy's done over he's been involved with like like 200 or more films
but i wanted to do it i wanted to get the overview i wanted to get into it and he's uh
90 years old sharp as a tack
with an amazing memory some good stories in here a very interesting and unique uh certainly at the
time he was doing an approach to to filmmaking so this is me and roger corman
so thank you for coming, Mr. Corman.
Oh, call me Roger.
Roger Corman.
Everybody knows your name.
Everybody knows who you are.
Everybody in the world knows who you are.
And I was trying to do some research on you,
but we don't have time to go through every movie.
Oh, I've got all day.
I'm okay.
I think that would take probably a week.
We'd have to set up a tent week we'd have to set up a
tent i'd have to set up the room for you uh what what sort of interests me initially was that at
some point what because you didn't choose to be it was not your your goal as a young man to be a
movie director initially right initially right So you went into another profession.
Right. What happened was my father was an engineer. Yeah. And I thought I would be an
engineer. Did you know what that entailed? Well, he was a civil engineer. So I knew what his branch
of engineering entailed. I went into electrical and industrial. And what happened, I was writing for the Stanford Daily,
the school I was going to.
Good school.
Yeah, and with a fairly good football team, as a matter of fact.
That's what I hear.
That's what I hear.
Surprisingly enough.
And I found out that the film critics for the Daily
got free passes to the theaters in Palo Alto.
And I thought, well, I could be a film critic.
So I wrote a couple of reviews, and they took me on.
And then I started to really take the films more seriously.
Up until then, it was entertainment.
Well, what compelled you to do that?
I mean, seriously, in what way?
Do you remember what your first reviews were?
I remember one of the first was a Western by John Ford.
It might have been My Darling Clementine.
And now that I had to write about it, I had to analyze it.
I had to think about it.
And I started to realize, okay, this is a shoot-em-up Western.
But there are a number of thoughts behind this. I started to realize, okay, this is a shoot-em-up Western. Sure.
But there are a number of thoughts behind this.
Yeah.
And there is what we later came to call a subtext.
Yes.
There's, I never heard of the word.
Right.
There was a subtext there.
Sure.
And also, I was aware, thinking more of the photography,
it was a time when most films were made in color, but there were still a number of black
and white.
Yeah.
It was a very crisp black and white shot on location.
And I think it was in his usual place, Monument Valley in Utah.
Utah, yeah.
And I started to think about all of those things, and I became fascinated by all the
aspects of filmmaking.
Yeah, because there was a lot there, and it was probably a lot more than, or at least
more exciting than electrical engineering.
It was clearly more exciting.
Also, you didn't have to solve any equations.
That's right.
But everything was hands-on.
You did have to solve some equations as you grew to learn budget, length of time shooting.
You know, there were those equations.
Yes.
What you just said is right because it makes me think I really was solving equations.
Of course you were.
And it seemed like that the outcome was always the shortest possible and the cheapest possible.
Yes.
But you did take a job.
possible and the cheapest possible yes but you did take a job like it was there there was it was there a moment where you started your job and you were like no yes uh i tried to get into the motion
picture business and at that time as an engineer uh no just uh anything i couldn't get a job
anywhere and i finally thought okay this isn't gonna work out yeah i uh got a job anywhere. And I finally thought, okay, this isn't going to work out.
I got a job at U.S. Electrical Motors.
And I started on Monday.
Yeah.
And on Thursday, I went into the office of somebody there.
And I said, this is not working out.
I have to quit.
Four days in.
Four days in. And the guy said, Roger, this is Thursday.
Work through Friday.
Yeah.
Think about it over the weekend and make your decision Monday.
Right.
And I said, you know, I really cannot come back tomorrow.
And so I figure, okay, four years to get a degree.
I work four days.
That seems fair.
That's a reasonable equation.
It's perfect for you. Short. You know, you did it work four days. That seems fair. That's a reasonable equation. It's perfect for you.
Short.
You know, you did it in four days.
Right.
You wrapped it.
Yeah.
So, but you must have, like, I imagine those four days just gave you a sort of a long,
like, in that moment, you realize that this would be my life.
It must be one of those jobs where once you engage with it, you realize, like, it's not
going to get any better than this this is it exactly i was in this kind of dirty factory
and i just looked around and i thought i was thinking just what you said yeah i gotta spend
my life in these crummy a crummy factory uh and so forth uh you probably saw the one or two old
guys that look like exactly that they've been there for 40, 50 years.
Yeah.
No, can't do it.
And then what did you do?
Did you, you went back to school or no?
No, I still wandered around trying to get something.
And finally.
Up by Stanford.
No, I finally got a job as a messenger.
I would say that the entire Stanford engineering class, I was the failure of the class.
I got the worst possible job. Well, it's good to be good at something.
Right. So I knew how to ride a bike and that was my job. I rode a bike around the lot delivering
messages. Which studio? This was Fox. And you grew up here in LA.
Right. So you were familiar with it all.
Fox. And you grew up here in LA. Yeah, right. So you were familiar with it all.
Yeah, actually that may have been
part of my thinking because I grew
up and a lot of kids
I went to school with, their parents
were in films. So
maybe there was something in the unconscious
somewhere, who knows what. Sure, it was
a local industry. Yeah. I mean it is
if any, at a very basic
level it is what this town makes.
Yes. And so did you know any, when you, you know, if any, at a very basic level, it is what this town makes. Yes.
And so did you know any, when you were in school, like, did you know any kids of big actors and directors?
No, but one executive, I remember we were playing one day and a bunch of us, and we, at that time, all the studios had back lots.
Sure.
Where they had big buildings or a Western set or something like that.
On a Saturday, we climbed the wall of the back lot at Fox, as a matter of fact, and we're just wandering around playing.
And the cop of the security chased us and we got away from him.
And one of the guys, his name is Peter Frank.
Peter said,
what are we doing?
My father's a vice president here.
We could just walk in.
There must have been that moment
where the cop came up
and you thought,
that's not a real cop.
Right.
So you did,
so you had sort of a fascination with it.
Yes.
And you're running around the lot,
you're delivering stuff.
So how do you move from
that to, uh, on, you know, inward into the business at that time? Um, production was six
days a week and the studio offices were open five days a week. So, so I volunteered to work for
nothing on Saturday. I, if I could work on a set and just sort of be a gopher on the set.
And they said yes.
And that brought me attention to some people, which is actually part of my plan.
Right.
But at that time, so this was still the studio system was still in place.
They were churning out movies, some successful, some not successful, but all of them saw the
screen.
Yes.
So, I mean, that must have had some impact on you you know in terms of your
output that that you know there were plenty of movies that were made that nobody knows about
that weren't big hits it was the business and you know if it ran uh for a little while or it just
everything got out and they were making hundreds of films a year that is one of the major changes
in motion pictures i think of motion pictures as an art and a business.
And from the business standpoint, any picture when I started that had any minor degree of
merit got a full theatrical release.
Today, because of the $100 and $200 million pictures and one thing and another, the low-budget pictures are frozen out of distribution.
Every now and then, one does come in.
But essentially, it's DVD and then on to streaming, Netflix, whatever the multiple platforms are.
That, I think, is one of the worst things that has happened.
But it's a result of the business.
You just have to face it.
Right, but there are also fewer screens.
You know, like the notion of going to the movies
sort of started to diminish a bit years ago,
you know, when video came out, right?
So, you know, and it seems like a lot of people
on your side of the business started to think in terms of, well, we'll accommodate these new delivery systems.
Yes, exactly.
So, but at that time, it seemed in terms of art that, you know, the studios were not that concerned with art.
It happened occasionally.
And then I guess you get people like Thalberg, wherever he was, that started to elevate the medium.
So there was some intellectual and creative merit to some things.
And they obviously engaged a lot of smart and creative people. But they weren't in the business of making art.
It just seemed like if it happened, well, great.
Yes, exactly.
I remember on one of the pole pictures, Vincent Price and I were sitting around
while they were lighting the set,
and he had just done an interview,
and he had talked,
and I thought what he said
really described what we were doing.
He said, I told the interviewer,
we are craftsmen.
We are working as craftsmen,
and if occasionally the craft
rises to the level of art, that's great, but essentially we're craftsmen, and if occasionally the craft rises to the level of art, that's great.
But essentially, we're craftsmen.
And also entertainers.
Yes, exactly.
So you're on set as a messenger, and you're getting the hang of things.
So how do you eventually begin to get the confidence and the skill set to start making movies?
Where did that start?
They offered me a job as a story analyst,
which is a fancy way of just saying reader.
Script reader.
Yeah.
Okay.
And so I was reading these scripts,
and the story editor, after a couple of months,
called me and said,
Roger, you have never given a good review
to anything you've ever read.
You've knocked everything we've given you.
Yeah.
And I said, that's because I'm the youngest guy.
You give me all the rotten stuff.
Give me something that's decent, and I'll give it a decent review.
How did you judge, though?
It was funny that when you talked about reviewing the John Ford film,
your first impulse was, well, you knew it was a shoot-em-up.
Right, yes.
Which seems to be something that you carried with you on some level.
Yeah, exactly.
So when you're looking at these scripts as a young man, you know, how were you judging them? Was it story?
I had always been a big reader.
Yeah.
And simply I had not, you know, I studied a few classes in English in school.
But it was simply the background as a reader.
I would say, I don't believe this plot.
The characters are not consistent.
Yeah.
Things like that.
Right.
There was just a judgment from my own reading of books.
Right.
And so you just brought in there and you upset the old guys.
Yeah.
Like, what are we going to do?
Did they make any of those movies that you knocked down?
No.
When I said no, they figured if this kid doesn't think it's any good.
Can't sell it.
It'll go no further.
Actually, that was part of the idea.
Yeah.
And we use it in my little company.
We use the same thing.
Any script that comes in, somebody reads it, they have the right to turn it down cold and nobody ever looks at it.
Uh-huh.
They then recommend it.
And actually, we're not that big.
If they recommend it, then I read it.
Yeah. If they recommend it, then I read it. So I will read only the scripts or treatments or books or whatever that has been recommended by somebody on our staff.
Are they usually younger people?
Yes, they're always because we were a very young company.
Since I'm not young anymore, some of us have grown older, and I make a point, really,
of bringing guys and girls straight out of college because I don't reflect anymore the
youthful culture. And I want these people to come in who do reflect that culture. So we have sort of an age gap in the company where I and my wife who works with me and a number of other people are older.
And then we've 2050, for Universal.
And he cut that trailer and found music in a new and fast-paced way.
And he was far better equipped to find the music than I was because it was contemporary music.
And trailers are very important to your business.
Yeah.
Because Joe Dante cut trailers for you.
Joe Dante, together with Alan Arkish, they were our two greatest trailer editors.
Joe was famous for the, you may have heard the story, Joe was famous for the exploding
helicopter shot.
Uh-huh.
Yeah. And also for losing the reel helicopter shot. Uh-huh. Yeah.
And also for losing the reel in a manhole.
Yes.
Right.
But, you know, what's interesting is that with younger people now is that, you know,
you're fortunate in your stature in the business is that I would imagine a lot of people that
are interested in doing movies, they see you as a rites of passage.
That if they could just get under your tutelage for a couple of years or in the operation they could at least put that on their resume that they were cormand
that they they they've been trained they've been through the system that actually has been uh
heavily responsible for what success we've had so many young uh guys and girls come to us, not only from here, from around the world.
Right.
For instance, one time, I know the film school in Poland is Woj.
Yeah.
I visited it, and there must have been, and this was when it was under the communist regime,
there must have been a note attached to a bulletin board uh saying when you graduate sneak out of
the iron curtain and go see roger we had three consecutive cameramen who had come out of the
woge film school and done exactly that and i think two of them became academy award winners really
yeah well we i mean we'll talk about that a little bit in terms of the people that were
under your, I don't know if it's, if you, your mentorship, but you certainly gave them
opportunities.
Yes, that was, the thing was, they had the ability.
I mean, it was their ability.
If they had never met me, they, I believe they still would have been successful.
It might've taken them a little longer.
I may have taught them a little bit, but what I really did, I gave them the opportunity.
To work under extreme circumstances.
Yes.
With little money and little time.
Yes.
An example of that is Jim Cameron, who, when he did Titanic, it was the most expensive
movie ever made.
Right. Then he broke his own record.
I think Titanic was $100 million.
He broke his own record at $200 million with Avatar.
But when he was designing spaceships and special effects for us,
I remember there was one picture in which I was at the—
our office is in Brentwood, and our studio is in Venice.
And I would be down at Venice looking at the sets as they were proceeding.
And the night before we were shooting, I was going over the set of this spaceship with Jim.
And there was one wall in the spaceship that was a flat wall.
And I said, Jim, the ship looks great.
I said, but I really have always liked articulation of the surface.
I like to break up this wall.
Can you do anything to give us texture and make it look more technical?
He said, it'll be done when we start tomorrow morning.
I came in the next morning.
The wall looked great with all kinds of protuberances and
gauges and instruments. And I said, Jim, what did you do, Jim? He said, I went to McDonald's
and I bought a lot of cartons, hamburger cartons, one thing and another. I glued them to the wall
and then I painted them. I spent most of the night doing this.
I painted them and drew things on them and everything.
And I said, well, it's great.
And he said, I know we're a little bit over budget.
I knew we didn't have a lot of money, but I was able to do this yeah for 12 dollars yeah it's the same talent
that lakes makes him able to do a 200 million dollar picture that looks like a 400 million
dollar picture those are amazing numbers well that's good for him good for him did you tell
him the 12 bucks was coming out of his pocket no No, I thought I'd picked that out. Okay, good for you.
So when you got in, though, you wanted to, you didn't have this, did you have the business sense or did you just want to direct pictures?
I wasn't even that much aware of what everybody did.
I soon realized the various differences.
And actually, I thought of being a writer.
And what I started was I sold a script.
Yeah.
And just as when I was a messenger who said I'd do this other job for nothing, I said to the producer, it was a low-budget picture.
What was it?
It was a picture I called The House in the Sea.
Yeah.
It was a picture.
I called it the house in the sea.
Yeah.
Because the climax was the gunfight in a flooded house at the Salton Sea.
I'd been vacationing at the Salton Sea and saw that the sea was rising.
Yeah. And a lot of old vacation houses were abandoned and were flooded by the sea.
Yeah.
And I thought that would be a great location.
So it was a chase across the desert and a gunfight in this flooded house.
And I called it the house in the sea.
It came out as Highway Dragnet because Dragnet was a successful TV show.
And I said to the producer when I sold him the script,
I will work for nothing
if I can be your assistant
and if I can have
an associate producer credit.
And he said, yes, why not?
Sure.
So therefore,
what I was doing,
because I was already aware
that credits were important.
Yeah.
When the picture was finished,
I was able to say,
I am, it's up there on the screen,
I am a writer-producer.
The fact that it was an associate producer,
still, you know, you fudge these words.
It's your name.
Yeah, and we fudge these words a little bit.
Oh, yeah.
And it was as a writer-producer
that I was able to raise a little money,
actually $12,000,
and make my first film.
Which was?
Which, again, they changed the title.
This was, as usual, as we all know, when the atomic bomb goes off, the radiation creates
a monster.
Sure.
And the monster is Mort Sahl.
Yeah.
Once said, when I came into a club where he was giving a performance,
as I came in the door, he looked at me and he said,
Hey, Roger, there's a question I always wanted to ask you.
How come we know that radiation creates monsters,
but why do these monsters always hate the Golden Gate Bridge?
He did that in front of you? Yeah. Yeah. Why has it got to be the Golden Gate Bridge. He did that in front of you?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Why has it got to be the Golden Gate Bridge?
That was his question, not mine.
But anyway, so I created this, and I made this little picture, and I called it, It Stalked
the Ocean Floor.
Uh-huh.
And I sold it, and it was successful.
That's what really got me started.
And they changed the title to Monster from the Ocean Floor on the basis it stalked the ocean floor was too arty.
Now, I didn't see anything arty about it stalked the ocean floor at all, but I figured they gave me the check.
Okay.
Well, they were thinking poetically.
That's right.
That could be a state of mind.
That is true.
Everybody is creative.
Yeah, yeah.
Poetically.
That's right. That could be a state of mind.
That is true.
Everybody is creative.
Yeah, yeah.
So right from the get-go, you were gravitating towards these spectacular movies that were
science fiction or horror or at least sort of like something you couldn't deny.
You know, like this is a monster movie.
And was that because you had a certain passion for that or it represented something to you philosophically or just because it was money?
All of the above.
Also, I love science fiction.
I was a big reader of science fiction.
Yeah, who are your guys?
Well, I liked a couple of them.
Asimov particularly, I thought, was very good.
What was it about science fiction that compelled you?
It was very good. What was it about science fiction that compelled you? It was very, the imagination.
And again, what I was talking about earlier,
the thought behind it.
Science fiction gave you an opportunity
to do something fantastic and interesting,
other worlds and so forth.
But there would be a thought, a concept behind it.
For instance, at a later date,
when I was involved with some Russian science fiction films,
I realized that the Russians,
we were making low-budget science fiction films.
The Russians were making big, beautiful science fiction films.
What year are we talking?
This was the 1960s.
Right.
Right at the beginning of the 60s.
Which films?
Do you remember?
I remember.
I've forgotten the Russian titles,
but the first one was Battle Beyond the Sun,
was the first one,
and Voyage of a planet of storms or something.
Anyway, what happened, I was in my, I found out that what they were doing, because science
fiction was popular, the writers, the producers, and the directors were using science fiction
to make comments on Russian society that they could not do directly.
But anyway, I bought these things, and I thought they were so much better than ours that I
could do very well.
But if we had anti-American propaganda, they had the worst.
We had anti-Russian propaganda.
Yeah.
They had the worst anti-American propaganda you could think
of. And I was talking to the head of distribution at Mossville in Moscow, and I said, and I didn't
know, I wanted to phrase this carefully because I didn't want to offend him. I said, you know,
there are some sequences in these pictures that might not play well in the United States.
And he laughed.
Yeah.
And he said, we know.
You're going to cut them out.
And Francis Coppola's first job was cutting the anti-American propaganda out of Russian science fiction films.
That you were releasing here.
Yes.
That was Francis's job? That he come out of UCLA and you've films that you were releasing here yes right that was
francis's job that he come out of ucla and you've got him working for you yes and you just dropped
some reels on him and said you know see where it is you know i don't know where all of it is
but take out the anti-american propaganda exactly what i did i called the ucla uh film school. And I said, who are your best graduates
who's graduating in editing?
And they sent two guys over,
and it was Francis and Jack Hill.
And I chose Francis to do the job,
but I ended up having Jack Hill direct.
So both Francis and Jack ended up directing for us.
And Francis gave you roles in a couple of his movies, or at least one, right?
You were a senator.
You were on a committee.
Yes.
What it was was this.
I was on the Senate Crime Committee.
Godfather II.
In Godfather II.
And as I looked around and everybody else on the committee looked around,
every one of us was a writer, producer director and we thought why not actors how come there
isn't there was one actor who was a running role yeah in the picture right
everybody else guy from Nevada yes that's right the senator yeah about but
everybody else is a writer producer director and Francis took us all to
lunch the first day.
And Bill Bowers, who's a good comedy writer,
asked the question we all wanted to ask.
How did you pick us?
And I still remember what Francis said.
Francis said he'd been watching a Senate committee on television.
And he said, all of the senators spoke intelligently.
They knew what they were doing.
And we sort of sat up as a clear compliment.
And he said, they all look good.
They all looked senatorial.
We sat up a little more.
And then he said, and they were all a little awkward on camera, which, of course, took
away some of the praise.
And then I thought thought that is brilliant
casting sure he knew that we knew our way around the set yes we were writer producer directors
but we'd always been behind the camera so our knowledge carried us when we were before the camera, but also since we'd never been before the camera before, we were a little awkward.
Of course.
Right.
Naturally.
Yes.
Right.
You're not movie stars.
Yes.
You're behind the camera for a reason.
Yes.
Let the actors do that.
Yes.
Exactly.
Well, that is genius.
And that's a sensitivity.
Like, you know, he had an amazing sort of sensitivity to every
element in a frame that guy yes he he uh he has been at various times writer director producer
cameraman assistant director uh this is partially when he was working with me also grip and uh
various other he he has the most thorough grounding of anybody i know
because he did every job there was to do when he was working with me and he had a lot of manic
energy right right tremendous energy and he's really bright and talented now when you see
somebody like him come into your fold when you take him out of ucla do you have is there part
of your brain that goes like well this guy's not going to hang around long.
He's really got something. Yes.
I
take people who I think
are talented and good
and can work
the way up. For instance, Francis started
by cutting Russian films.
Then he became an editor.
Then he was
an assistant director. And then he went from director. And each. Then he was an assistant director.
And then he went from director.
And each job, he was brilliant.
And he went from that to being a director.
And I assume that they are going to, what we say, graduate.
They will be with us maybe a couple of years.
And they will go on to other things.
I remember on Grand Theft Auto,
it was Ron Howard's first picture as the director.
There was one scene where he wanted more extras.
And I said...
Oh, yeah, he told you this story.
He told you this story.
Go ahead, you go.
Let's hear your side of it.
Okay, my side is simply this.
I said, Ron, there's just no more money.
You're going to have to go with fewer extras.
But if you do a good job on this picture, you're never going to work for me again.
Yeah, Joe Dante said something along the lines of that.
You'll do two pictures and then you're out.
Well, that was the idea.
We expect them.
I mentioned that Stanford has a pretty good football team.
If you graduate from Stanford or any university, you are expected to move on and do something.
So I would say we are loosely like a university. Well, you were also running a very exciting business in the sense that you don't do it
in the normal way.
You have a lot going on at all times.
There's deals everywhere.
There's a lot of different angles that you're working.
So I imagine for somebody who, not unlike yourself, walked into an engineering firm
and said, I'm not going to sit at that desk for 50 years, coming the roger corman operation you're like well there's never going to be a dull
moment here exactly right so i mean that's it that's exciting and i imagine it was exciting for
you so let's talk about then like going back in terms of like working with because you were there
at the you know towards the end of the studio system, and you started making movies and producing movies towards the end of the studio system.
And you did these handful of movies with Vincent Price, which became elevated by film intellectuals around the world.
the bit that I read that you were sort of poised as somebody that was doing something,
not only an independent film, but, you know, something vital for film in general at that time after those Poe movies.
Now, what I wanted to know outside of, you know, working with some of those older actors from that time is that, you know, was there a point where you had to really decide which direction you wanted to go with how you were making film?
Because it seems that to continue to gain the respect of film intellectuals, you don't really necessarily make money.
Did you have that moment or was it a fluke that you got this recognition?
I had that moment.
I was getting a little bit of recognition. As a matter of fact, what was it a fluke that you got this recognition? I had that moment. I was getting a little bit of recognition.
As a matter of fact, what was it?
It was sort of a funny reputation.
Penelope Houston, who was the editor of Sight and Sound, the British film magazine, wrote,
Roger Corman has become, if not the darling of the critics, at least their mascot.
So it was that kind of recognition. But what
happened was I had certain theories about Poe, particularly that he was working with the
unconscious mind. And I felt the unconscious mind gets its information from the eyes, ears,
and so forth, but doesn't see the world directly. I want to shoot everything except maybe an occasional shot outside.
I want to shoot everything in a studio where I can create an artificial world for Poe.
And I remember A.F. wanted me to do another Poe picture.
And I said, essentially, I've done it.
I'm starting to repeat myself.
I want to go exactly in the opposite direction.
I want to get out of the studio.
I want to get into the streets.
And I want to photograph what is going on now.
Now, this was the 60s, which was the beginning of the chaotic 60s, the counterculture.
How old were you?
I was in my 30s.
So you felt it?
Yeah, I felt it.
I was sort of the one of the older of the young guys.
But you also, like in the 50s, you tapped into teen culture.
You understood that rock and roll was a vital thing, that there was something unleashed
in the culture that made people nervous.
And it seems that at least in one or two pictures, you kind of had that as a backdrop that there was this new teen craze that was making the middle class and older people uncomfortable.
Yes.
And you kind of liked that juice.
Yes.
So when the 60s happened, I imagine it was a far bigger disruption.
Exactly. And I felt it was a far bigger disruption. Exactly.
And I felt what was happening was important.
And so AAP said, okay, what would you like to do?
Because we've been successful.
We'll back you in something.
The Hells Angels were getting a lot of notoriety for their violence, the motorcycles.
This is mid-60s, not the late 60s right this was around
64 65 right so it's before the major catharsis right that you helped happen and I felt that
behind all of all of this yeah they did represent something I felt this is kind of a revolution of the lower working class.
The guys who knew they weren't going anywhere in our society, so they created their own society.
It's happening now.
Yeah.
As a matter of fact, the similarities between the 60s and what is happening now are truly amazing.
Yeah?
How so exactly?
Well, I think there is what there was in the 60s.
There was a growing distrust of the government,
a growing distrust of the institutions,
a belief, for instance, you can say Bernie Sanders on one side,
Donald Trump on another.
Representing working class anger.
Yeah.
Yeah.
They were both at the extremes of the left and right.
Yeah.
But they were both tapping in to this discontent with the establishment as is.
And that was a major thought of the 60s, at least the way I interpreted it.
Sure.
And I think that's it.
So I felt the angels represented a working class revolt.
And the film did incredibly well.
Which film was this?
This was the Wild Angels.
Yeah.
My first Hell's Angels picture.
Yeah.
It was actually the opening night film
of the Venice Film Festival,
which nobody thought we were going to do
with this little 15-day picture.
And the State Department protested
that it was not a portrayal,
a true portrayal of all American life.
And I was delighted.
I thought I could not have gotten better publicity
than the State Department attacking my film.
You tapped in.
You were a threat.
Yeah.
They considered it to be that.
Well, yeah, and that kept evolving throughout the 60s.
Yeah.
And then it did so well, AAP said, do you have any ideas for another one?
And I started to think about other things going on, and I thought, if the angels represent this working class uh counter culture yeah uh LSD
was becoming a big thing but it was more a middle class uh and upper class thing the uh
right the working guys weren't doing right because Leary was running around with Owsley
turning on bands and rich people, small parties,
thinking that this is going to free our minds.
Yeah.
He'd been a professor at Harvard.
Right. And he represented a different level of society.
So I said,
I want to do LSD.
And I did the trip
with an interesting group of people.
I'll tell you their names
and you know how they went on. The script was written
by Jack Nicholson, who was a very good writer. If he had not been such a good actor, he would
have had a career as a writer. But you worked with him on The Raven. Was he in The Raven?
Yes, right. And he was a young man. It must have been one of his first few pictures.
Yeah. Now, not unlike Coppola, I imagine, did you sense that there was a talent in him that
was above and beyond most people?
Yes.
As a matter of fact, the question was, and he mentioned it one time, we did, I don't
know, I don't know how many films together.
And he said, how come you're the only guy who's hiring me?
I said, I'm the only guy.
Who knows how good you're the only guy who's hiring me? I said, I'm the only guy. Who knows how good you are?
But they will find out, and they did,
and they found out in a strange way.
He wrote The Trip.
The Trip, yeah.
The Trip starred Peter Fonda and Dennis Hopper.
Now, from-
This is years before Easy Rider.
This is 60, what, seven?
Right.
And The Trip, again, did very well. This is 60, what, seven? And the trip, again, did very well.
Bruce Dern, too, right?
Bruce Dern was in it.
The picture was successful,
and it was the only American film that year
invited to the Cannes Film Festival.
So suddenly we were hitting film festivals.
We were hitting a nerve, is what it was.
So as a result of that, we had essentially Peter, Dennis, Jack, and so forth.
And Peter and Dennis came to me with this idea for Easy Rider.
Yeah.
And it was all set up.
They wanted me to executive produce it.
Right.
Because they didn't know about that. writer yeah and it was all set up they wanted me to executive produce it right uh because they
didn't know uh about that but the idea was peter and dennis were going to write it and then uh
dennis would direct it right peter would be the producer yeah i would be the executive producer. It was all set to go.
And in a meeting at American International,
Dennis had not a good reputation,
but he had worked perfectly with me.
What was his reputation?
His reputation was a little bit wild and not dependable and so forth.
But with me, he was a 100% professional.
We had an excellent relationship. You probably gave him more freedom than other people wanted to yes and also he
understood that he was not working for a major studio yeah he was working with another young guy
with a limited amount of money and we were oh this is a key thing. We were all in it together. Yeah. And he responded to that.
But the executive of AIP still knew his reputation and said they wanted to write,
if he fell behind schedule by more than a day, to replace him.
And I could see the expression on Peter and Dennis' face.
Knowing their lifestyle, they they were like this might happen
and they left and I stayed and I said you have made really a bad statement because I know these
guys I'm going to be working with them they're not going to they might fall back a little bit
right but um everything is going to be all right uh as a result the picture went somewhere else and but
the what the interesting thing to me is that you know the trip was years before uh easy rider yeah
like two or three years yes and and it was you know ahead of the curve and in the fact that it
was where'd it go they went to venice or con which one so so that you know the europeans knew with both of those pictures
that you discussed that you were on the pulse of a really a new american cinema which is talked
about by uh by coppola lucas scorsese all those guys that you know what what i was getting at
before was interesting to me is that you know you were kind of you know making your bones as the
studio system was falling apart and you were using these old actors that were willing to work because they weren't working anymore.
Like Vincent and Karloff and I guess Basil Rathbone.
And all these people that were popular in the 30s and the 40s were still around and you were using them.
And you sort of kind of utilized the end of that system and then kind of were on the pulse just by nature of you know going outside
of poe into the streets and tapping into what was going on with these young directors and this
became mainstream but years later yes the studios finally i wasn't the only one but obviously there
were many guys yeah this john cassavetes uh a number of uh in Hollywood. But I didn't think Cassavetes was looking to make money.
I think, you know, Cassavetes had a vision, but he was a real auteur that was going to let the people come to him eventually, which they did.
But there were a whole group of us, and it really was a movement.
And it was a movement away from the studios.
It was a movement of anti-establishment, as it were, and it was with young people.
Now, many of them went on to be studio stars.
I mean, Coppola, Scorsese, Jonathan Demme, Ron Howard.
Jonathan Demme was with you too, right?
Yeah.
How many pictures he do with you?
He did, well, he started as a writer.
Right.
And he wrote a couple of pictures, and then he directed, I think, three pictures, and then he went on.
Well, Bogdanovich is interesting because he really sets out to set himself apart from that, even though he was around at that time, that he sees himself as somebody that respected the old ways and that he wasn't looking to be anti-establishment and And it was interesting, the story he told me about you was around Target,
which was that you had Karloff contracted for two days,
and he had all this old footage that he had written a script around,
but he needed Karloff for five days,
and he said that he might be the only one that got you to shill out a little more money
to keep Boris Karloff.
Oh, that's correct.
I did.
But you're right when you say Peter.
Every one of these guys had great knowledge of film.
But Peter had a specific respect and admiration, particularly for the films of the 30s.
Right.
So he was less of the counter-revolutionary.
He was more thinking of adapting and bringing up to date the great films of particularly the 30s.
Yeah, yeah.
He's a real intellect and an interesting guy.
Stubborn guy, but very, you know, articulate.
I enjoy talking to him.
And Joe Dante, too, was here.
But he said that he was probably one of the few guys that worked for you that was a complete fan of all Roger Coyle.
He wanted to take the legacy of the B movie and the Grindhouse film and just continue on with it.
And he was such a huge fan of yours.
And he kind of worked within that genre and maybe
elevated it a little bit, but you were really his template for how he saw film.
Well, eventually the major studios realized what we were doing and did big, I remember
when Jaws came out, the critic for the New York Times wrote, what is Jaws but a big-budget Roger Corman film?
He was right, except one other thing.
It was not only a big budget, it was a better film.
And Jaws was instrumental in taking what I and other people were doing
and making them big-budget films.
And it's today.
It holds today.
I mean, the fact that Fast and the Furious was like a movie you made in the 50s, right?
I sold that title to Universal.
Neither Universal or I or Neil Moritz, with whom I had lunch and who's a good guy who
produced it, who said they wanted to buy the title.
who's a good guy who produced it,
who said they wanted to buy the title,
none of us had any idea how valuable that title was going to be.
It's a huge franchise for them.
No, I didn't.
I thought I just sold the title.
Sure, I know, yeah.
You can't predict everything.
No, I know, but it was like,
I don't know that people know that that was your title.
It was sort of an extension
in terms of concept of the Death Race movies a little bit yes the idea of a picture built around
a certain amount of characterization and fast cars and car crashes but it was instrumental in
the original death race and the new death Race 2050 and the Fast and the Furious
that there was attention paid to the characters. So it wasn't just cars. You were looking at people
and they represent, Death Race represents a certain concept of a future society. And the
Fast and the Furious, at least in the first few, really did portray a kind of youth society.
It's become more and more stunt oriented.
But there were real thoughts behind the Fast and the Furious.
Sure.
And I mean, it seems like you thought, you know, philosophically through a lot of these things that, you know, especially the game changers and certainly in the 60s and then early on with the post stuff that got a lot of credit and then you know but
how do you feel that you know even star wars to some degree star wars jaws that they are you know
the biggest budget of movies now outside of comic book movies the ones that are huge box office
are really extensions of of of the uber you created. What you said is pretty much right.
The only thing I would say, it wasn't just me.
It was me and a number of other people.
But you picked the two films.
When I saw Jaws, I thought, this is going to be a problem for us
because they're making big-bud budget versions of what we're doing.
And Star Wars, when I saw that,
matter of fact, I went back to Battle Beyond the Sun,
the Russian film,
but I had done that type of film also.
And I thought with Jaws and Star Wars,
we are all in trouble.
So, okay, so what was your solution?
The solution was first to make a couple of films in a similar style. But the long term, it was a way to move immediately. The longer term was to do films that had a certain surface,
such as Death Race, an action picture.
And underneath it, the idea of killing pedestrians,
because Death Race is how fast you can drive
and how many pedestrians you can kill.
The killing of pedestrians came in after the first draft.
The first draft was just straight cars hitting each other.
And I thought there's something missing here.
And I started thinking of the role of violence in society
and the way violence is used to entertain and sedate,
to a certain extent extent the lower classes, going back to the gladiatorial
games, bread and circuses for the Romans.
And my thought was, how can I integrate the public into the picture?
And the idea came to me.
Kill him.
Kill him.
Exactly.
Exactly. Exactly.
But I think it's interesting that you saw in light of the extreme success of these box office movies that cost millions of dollars, which I think it seems like a lot of your career was you were driven by doing the opposite of that.
Actually, yes.
the opposite of that actually yes in other words there's no way there's no way to do a low budget version of a 200 million dollar but you you had no it's seemingly no desire you know as a producer
for you know you know 50 60 years now to to even you know you know step up to that crap table yeah
i didn't have i financed my own pictures because it gives me complete control
and i simply don't have that much money but theoretically at some point you could have
tried to get that much money i probably could have but these films are years in development
yeah that's what's called a develop a development hell sure and you like the immediacy of like let's go where are we going exactly we got a
broken boat let's go shoot there make me a script it takes place on a broken boat and maybe we can
do two films there yes but it's just it's really interesting to me that you knew your market and
that you knew that once the jaws happened all this stuff happened that you weren't necessarily
you didn't have the the wherewithal or the desire to change how you produce movies
and how and what you spent on movies that there seemed to be a compulsion uh within you that
that may have been partially business but also you seem to like the challenge of of bringing these
movies way under budget doing them quickly and i think because of that you get this rawness that
you know i think is is mocked sometimes but it does, there is immediacy to it.
You feel it.
And also, there's a radical thought to the films.
I felt we really have to be radical.
We have to be different.
We can't just say we're doing an ordinary film there has to be something different
that separates it from other films because you can solve a problem with money yeah or you can
think about it right now your your your awareness of of of marketing to the people that may have
liked you know gladiator fights.
I'm thinking also of professional wrestling
and the working class in terms of whatever disenfranchisement
that they may feel, that you saw that as your audience.
And did you feel that you sacrificed anything
by focusing on that audience?
Was that a money thing?
I guess the question is that fighting the way the picture is being made financially,
because at some point you had an experience where you realized that they're spending too much money.
This is stupid.
We can do this for a lot cheaper.
Did you ever think, outside of you were obviously creating your own style of production and direction and process,
that you were diminishing what you may have done um there's a possibility uh i sometimes think that some of the films we did earlier uh were better because we were more original
because what what we did then and never have anything i wanted to do i would do
right so i could take a chance on a death race right on a target right or something like that
today the market is so poor for low budget films the only way to really guarantee them is to have them pre-sold. For instance, Death Race 2050 is pre-sold to Universal,
which means I can't be quite as radical because I must satisfy the distributor or something.
But it's interesting when you talk about professional wrestling. uh martial arts was first coming in yeah um i hired don the dragon wilson
who was the world's champion i wanted to get uh i wanted to do a kickboxing film but i since i
didn't have any money for stars i got the way to have stars is to get a real champion. So we brought a number of champions in.
Yeah.
You have never seen a worse audition in your life.
These guys were so terrible as actors.
But Don was kind of okay.
And so I said to Don,
I'm going to assign you, you can do Blood Fist, which was a film,
but I'm also enrolling you in an acting school.
Yeah.
And you're going to take a lot of lessons fast.
And Don became fairly good.
And we talk about all of this and the thing of taking advantage.
We went with my staff to see one of Don's fights.
And on the preliminary schedule, there were two women kickboxers.
Yeah.
And the next day, we were meeting.
Yeah.
And people were saying, okay, when do we do the woman kickboxer film?
Right.
And maybe I chickened out or something.
I said, we're not going to do it.
You know, I really didn't like that.
I just didn't like to see these women beating each other up.
But now women are beating each other up.
I think this is also a change in the culture
and in the environment where the violence is real.
The level of violence is rising, not only here, but around the world.
Yeah.
I don't know if it's good.
It's bad.
Yeah.
But I don't know, you know, where do you, do you, when you think of making violent movies,
do you, do you see that as hopefully sating those impulses?
Not really.
It would be nice to say that I put violence in my films in order to eliminate violence in society.
But that is not necessarily a true statement.
You want to get people worked up.
Yeah, yeah.
So with New World, you were sort of on the cutting edge of bringing a lot of foreign films into this country.
Yes.
And that was done, but it was sort of piecemeal.
And it seemed like that was an agenda of New World.
It wasn't originally an agenda.
New World started out making the types of films, because I was backing this thing with my own money,
the types of films that I felt had been successful.
We brought them up to date.
For instance, our first film was the student nurses who get involved in a certain amount
of counterculture.
And it is a slightly radical, but frankly, exploitation film.
It was very successful. We then did a woman in prison picture, which introduced our great
star, a black girl, Pam Greer, who was very big at that time. And Pam did a number of films for us.
And there was maybe a little thought about behind the women in prison, but these were pictures
to make money and to get my company started.
Yeah.
Now, we really grew to the point
where we might have been
the biggest independent at that time.
And I had always loved the work of the auteurs,
Bergman, Fellini, Truffaut, Kurosawa, and so forth.
And I felt they were not being well distributed in the United States.
The majors are brilliant distributors,
but they're brilliant distributors for a certain kind of film.
And when they would distribute one of these films,
they didn't really do it right.
And the other distributors who are distributing them were little companies
That were really sort of a fish in Otto's right who didn't have the power
We now we had the really the power. I know I'm
overstating a power we had a little bit of power to force
slightly films into theaters and get the right terms, the right bookings and so forth.
And I felt we can help these films get an audience.
Yeah.
I simply wanted to expand the range of New World, but also I wanted people to see these
films.
Introduce the-
Yeah.
It wasn't charity.
I didn't plan to lose money.
No, no.
Of course not.
But you were introducing the work of Bergman and kurosawa to a much bigger audience yes and
and it worked yeah and uh i think there was one period of something like six or seven years
where we won more academy awards for best foreign film than all the other companies combined so you
were actually producing these films?
Well, we were co-producing,
which wasn't much.
For instance, we did a picture,
Fitzcarraldo with Werner Herzog.
I talked to him.
He talked to you, I know.
It's great.
It was a strange,
again, I don't want to waste your time.
I'll make it very fast.
I put up a certain amount of money
for the American rights
and I was co-producer. I put up a certain amount of money for the American rights,
and I was co-producer.
Once more, the co-producer was sort of a friendly gesture.
But a credit.
And a credit, right?
A credit, yes.
I read the script and gave him a few notes, and that was it. The original cast was Jason Robards, Mick Jagger, and Claudia Cardinelli.
And I put up my money on that basis.
On Fitzcarraldo.
Yeah, on Fitzcarraldo.
But weirdly enough, when we talked, I had shot on the Amazon.
And on the entire multi-thousand length of the Amazon, I had picked one town, Iquitos, in Peru,
near the head borders of the Amazon.
Berner, I said, where are you going to shoot, Berner?
He said, I've scouted.
I'm going to Iquitos.
This is incredible.
What did you shoot there?
Fire on the Amazon,
the first picture that Sandra Bullock starred in.
Oh, wow.
Yeah.
Anyway, so they were shooting.
Jason got ill and had to go back to New York.
I know Jason.
I've worked with him.
And his doctor said that he couldn't go back to Brazil.
In my own mind, I know Akitos, I know the Amazon,
and I think Jason was saying, I'm not going back there.
Not with Werner.
Right.
So they lost Jason.
Meanwhile, Mick Jagger had a stop date
because he was going on a concert tour.
Sure.
So they lost Mick Jagger. Right. And the whole picture collapsed.
And Berner came to town,
and he asked me to have lunch with him,
and we had lunch.
He said, great news.
I've rewritten the picture,
and I've combined Jason's and Mick's part
into one, and Klaus Kinski is going to play
that, and that's such great news. My German partner is giving me more money. And I said,
Werner, replacing Jason and Mick with Klaus Kinski, maybe big news in Germany.
It is not big news in the United States.
And I will not give you more money, but I'll stay with the original deal.
And he said, okay.
And so we made the picture starring Klaus Kinski.
And Kinski was actually very good.
Not only very good, he was brilliant in the film.
Yeah, I just re-watched it.
It's amazing.
But I think you did, it wasn't charity,
but you did do an amazing thing for the film community of the United States
by introducing us all to some of these movies.
And what we did, the way you distribute those films is pretty standard.
You open in New York and Los Angeles to get the reviews. And then you play
the other major cities and you always play the college towns. Because as an audience,
for instance, if you play San Francisco, you will also play Berkeley and Palo Alto.
If you play Boston, you're going to play Cambridge and so forth. So we did that.
We went through the complete distribution of the picture, and it was fall.
And I knew from our other films that played in drive-ins that drive-ins had difficulty booking films in the fall because the weather was turning back.
And I got the idea of,
why don't we take Bergman's picture and put it in the drive-in?
In the fall?
People said,
an Ingmar Bergman picture in the drive-in?
And the drive-in owner said,
why not?
We're not doing any business now anyway.
We're going to be closing for the season
in a couple of weeks.
Yeah.
And we were all waiting to see what would happen.
We did average business.
Nobody was more delighted to do average business than we were,
and I got a letter from Bergman thanking me
for bringing his film to an audience he had never anticipated.
That's amazing.
Which one?
Cries and Whispers.
Oh, my God. At the drive-in.? Cries and Whispers. Oh, my God.
At the drive-in.
Right.
We did average business.
Nothing wrong with that.
Well, average business in the fall at a drive-in.
I imagine with that title, there was other things going on in that car.
That may well be.
Yeah, got to keep warm.
Well, what is your business model now, primarily?
The business model now is very difficult.
These are the toughest times I've ever seen
for medium-budget and low-budget films.
Because as I said, when I started,
we got full theatrical distribution.
Then, as that started to fade,
the first year of HBO,
we were their number one subscribe number one suppliers
we were into the cable business then in the 70s is this was yes 70s yes late 70s early 80s and
then home and as they started to move to major BAM's home video came up, which became, of course, DVD.
Now we're seeing DVD start to fade.
And previously, each time one method of distribution has faded,
another one has come up.
I see nothing coming up.
I've actually been on panel discussions on this
in which I predicted that the Internet will be the new medium.
It will come up to replace.
The problem is it's doing it, but there's very little money in it.
So it's not replacing in a monetary situation.
Just an access situation.
Yes.
So these are
very difficult times.
So I guess
the final question is
now in, you know,
having talked to,
we didn't even talk
about Scorsese,
he produced a couple
of his films, right?
Yes.
The first Hollywood film
he made was
Boxcar Bertha.
Yeah.
I had made a picture called Bloody Mama about the Ma Barker gang.
Yeah.
Which was a southern farm woman in the Depression.
Sure.
Who was dispossessed of her farm.
And she and her sons went on a crime spree.
Yeah.
Shelly Winters played Ma Barker. Ma Barker. Yeah. Shelly Winters played...
Ma Barker.
Ma Barker.
Yeah.
And AIP wanted me to make another one,
but I had started New World,
and I said, well, I've got my own company.
I'm not going to direct for you guys,
but I'll produce it.
So I produced it.
I developed a script.
I just looked around,
and I remembered having met Marty and talked with him.
And I thought, again, here is a very bright young guy.
He had made a black and white underground film in New York,
but that was the only thing he had done.
So I asked him if he'd like to shoot this film in Arkansas,
and he said yes.
And there was a certain amount of criticism.
They said, he's a New York boy.
He doesn't know anything about Arkansas.
I said, that may be true, but he's a good director.
A good director can make anything.
Now, you may specialize,
Vincent Minnelli specialized in dance films,
but he was a good director.
He could have directed anything.
Yeah.
So I said, I'm going with Marty
just because he's a good director.
Yeah.
And he was.
Bach's Carbertha was an excellent film.
And is that the last film he made for you?
Yes, he just made the one film.
So, and which films did Demi make for you?
He did a woman in prison picture called Cage Seat.
Oh, and here's another.
I've known a number of directors who've taken a job to do a little picture.
And they said, well, it's a crummy little film.
I'll just toss it off because I need the money.
Right.
I've known other guys,
and Jonathan Demme is an example,
when I said,
here is a woman's prison picture, he said,
I will make the best woman's prison picture ever made.
The guys who said,
I will toss this off,
are no longer in the film business.
But the guys like Jonathan, who said, I will take this off are no longer in the film business right but the guys like jonathan who
said i will take this commercial thing yeah but i will do the best i can with it yeah they're the
ones who've been successful yeah now when you look back at uh you know your entire career
and you have all these guys that speak highly of you Jonathan puts you in one of his movies you were in Philadelphia as well that do you feel do
you feel that you have made this amazing contribution to film I've made a
contribution I don't know but it's amazing but just by having these guys
who respect you and giving them the opportunity yeah it's been very it's
been very good but as I may have said, they were all good filmmakers.
They would have been successful if they'd never met me.
All I can say is I found them.
Maybe I taught them a little bit.
But basically, I gave them the opportunity.
Right, and that's a big deal.
And that's very humble.
And it was great talking to you.
Very good, Mark.
Thank you.
Bye. Thank you. Bye.
Thank you.
Wow.
That guy, I mean, I can only hope not only to live to 90, sometimes I think that,
and I hope all of us have nice long lives,
but to be that clear and to be that uh cogent and on top of it it was
just a great talking to him and i thought it was a pretty thorough conversation i enjoyed it also
my show marin season four on netflix starting tomorrow january 13th and uh go to wtfpod.com
slash tour for all my upcoming dates and all those places. Starting in Tallahassee.
And a lot of dates coming up.
Throughout February and March.
Alright.
Sorry.
No guitar playing here.
Because my finger's not ready yet.
And I don't want to do.
The three finger guitar playing.
It's good for me for practice.
But I don't.
You know.
It's already dicey.
Alright.
Okay.
Oh God. Boomer lives. I don't practice, but I don't... You know, it's already dicey. All right? Okay.
Oh, God.
Boomer lives! We'll be right back. those. Goal tenders, no. But chicken tenders, yes. Because those are groceries, and we deliver those too. Along with your favorite restaurant food, alcohol,
and other everyday essentials. Order Uber Eats now. For alcohol, you must
be legal drinking age. Please enjoy responsibly. Product availability varies by region.
See app for details. It's a night for the whole family. Be a part of Kids Night when the
Toronto Rock take on the Colorado Mammoth at a special 5 p.m. start time on
Saturday, March 9th
at First Ontario Centre in Hamilton.
The first 5,000 fans in attendance
will get a Dan Dawson bobblehead
courtesy of Backley Construction.
Punch your ticket to Kids Night on Saturday, March 9th
at 5 p.m. in Rock City at torontorock.com.