“MY FILMMAKING EDUCATION CONSISTED OF FINDING OUT WHAT FILMMAKERS I LIKED WERE WATCHING, THEN SEEING THOSE FILMS. I LEARNED THE TECHNICAL STUFF FROM BOOKS AND MAGS, AND WITH THE NEW TECHNOLOGY YOU CAN WATCH ENTIRE MOVIES ACCOMPANIED BY COMMENTARY FROM THE DIRECTOR. YOU CAN LEARN MORE FROM JOHN STURGES' AUDIO TRACK ON THE 'BAD DAY AT BLACK ROCK' LASERDISC THAN YOU CAN IN 4 YEARS OF FILM SCHOOL. FILM SCHOOL IS A COMPLETE CON, BECAUSE THE INFORMATION IS THERE IF YOU WANT IT.” P.T. Anderson
“WHAT AN INSPIRING RABBIT HOLE CINEPHILIA IS. HATS OFF TO MAKING THE WORLD BETTER.” “THANKS FOR YOUR GENEROSITY, GOOD SPIRIT, ONE-OF-A-KIND SITE & EXPERIENCE FOR FILM LOVERS & STORYTELLERS. BRAVO!!” “CINEPHILIA & BEYOND, HOSTED BY @LaFamiliaFilm, “THANK YOU AND PLEASE “CONGRATULATIONS ON YOUR TUMBLR. GOES INMEDIATLY UP TO MY FAVOURITE SITES EVER.” “HANDS DOWN THE BEST CINEMA BLOG ON THE NET.” “WE AGREE W/ MARK SANDERSON: @LaFamiliaFilm's CINEPHILIA & BEYOND SITE IS “I HAVE NO IDEA WERE YOU FIND THIS STUFF EVERY DAY BUT @LaFamiliaFilm's CINEPHILIA & BEYOND IS A GREAT SITE!!” “THE BEST SITE FOR FILM MATERIALS NO ONE ELSE IN “LOVE THE SITE, KEEP IT COMING!” “I'M ADDICTED TO YOUR SITE. SMART. INCREDIBLY COOL AND FILM GEEK PARADISE. KEEP IT UP!” “THIS IS THE SINGLE GREATEST TUMBLR EVER! THANK YOU FOR THE TIME/ENERGY IT TAKES TO KEEP IT UP AND RUNNING.” “YOUR TUMBLER IS INSANE! LOOK FOR MANY MENTIONS OF IT IN MY UPCOMING LETTER COLUMNS. THANKS!” “SMILED TO SEE MATT REEVES' QUOTE ON CINEPHILIA; REP'D HIM & PRODUCED HIS 1ST CO-WRITTEN SCRIPT (UNDER SIEGE SEQUEL) GREAT GUY” “PROBABLY THE BEST TUMBLR, FILMMAKING-WISE.” “I HAVE LITERALLY BEEN ON @LaFamiliaFilm TUMBLER CINEPHILIA BEYOND FOR THE PAST 27HRS #GreatestFilmSchoolEver”
“JUST WANTED TO TELL YOU WHAT A TERRIFIC SITE YOU HAVE...”
Matt Reeves
Sebastian Gutierrez
Gary W. Goldstein
IS A MUST-VISIT SITE FOR
ANY SCREENWRITER AND
MOVIE LOVER.”
Scott Myers
KEEP SOURCING & FWDG INSPIRATION & DIRECTION.”
Ted Hope
Nacho Vigalondo
Mark Sanderson
A MUST-VISIT FOR SCREENWRITERS (& FILM FANS).”
Amazon Studios
Don Winslow
THE WORLD HAS UNCOVERED!”
Shane Salerno
Chuck Hogan
Richard Shepard
Josh Boone
Brian Michael Bendis
Gary W. Goldstein
Mentorless
Randall Thorne
loading tweets…

Extending the language of film sometimes starts with just trying to show one true thing. If there is one...
The more we hear about Paul Thomas Anderson (is it too much to call him ‘The Master’ at this point?) adapting Thomas Pynchon’s soft-boiled noir...
Robert De Niro photographed on the set of The Godfather Part II by Steve Schapiro
Bernardo Bertolucci, Jean-Luc Godard and Pier Paolo Pasolini at a meeting for the film Love and Anger, 1969.
When it comes to matters of love, it’s often platonic devotion that proves the most intimate and carries the most weight in one’s life. It’s the...
All material for educational purposes only. Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976. Any copyright material mirrored on this site is intended for private personal study. This is a non-commercial site and no charge is made for any materials. Copyright owners may, if they wish, request to have material removed. Please contact me: Email Cinephilia and Beyond . Effector Theme by Pixel Union.
Powered by Tumblr
“In Tarantino’s breathless audio commentary, he actually expounds on this. The writer states that Romance was his most ‘commercial’ script in the sense of not being overly esoteric and playing to better known aspects of popular culture. As noted, Quentin had creative differences with the director, most specifically on the ending. The theatrical ending, while not exactly feel-good, does play out in what may be thought of as stereotypical ‘Hollywood’ audience pleasing fashion. The writer defends Scott’s finale based on it being a personal choice and not a concession to popular tastes. Tarantino openly states this is not the ‘True Romance’ he would have made but finds the ending consistent with the overall ‘fairytale’ feel Scott brought to his adaptation.”
Dennis Hopper on shooting the scene with Christopher Walken in True Romance:
Everywhere I go, all over the world, I was just in China making a film, I was just in South Africa making a film, I made a film last year in Germany – and everywhere I go they talk about this scene. We shot this in one day, Chris Walken and I. It was a wonderful wonderful creative day. When I first came in in the morning I saw that they were lit to do Chris Walken’s part first. They had three cameras and they had lit the trailer that way. And Tony came up to me, Tony Scott the director, and he said, “I just talked to Chris and Chris has a problem going first. He’d like you to go first. Do you mind that?” And I said, “As an actor, I don’t mind, but as a director, I’d go crazy. How do you feel about it? You’ve got a 2 1/2 hour lighting job to do here to turn it around.” Tony said, “It doesn’t bother me at all.” So I said, “Well, it’s fine with me.” So he re-lit the scene. It took about 2 1/2 hours to turn it around, put the three cameras on me. Tony Scott, a terrific director, one of the best I’ve ever worked with. Morgan Creek put a lot of money into promotion of this movie but it wasn’t successful when it was first released, financially. Artistically it was. I was never at a preview that didn’t have wonderful cards, 90% approval rating.
A lot of people think this scene was improvised but this was one of those rare scenes in a movie that Tarantino wrote, you have 3 pages of dialogue from one person, 3 pages of dialogue from the other – the only improvisation was, “You know, you’re all part eggplant” and he said, “You’re a cantaloupe” – those are the only improvised words, the rest of it is word for word what Tarantino wrote. I remember what my teacher Lee Strasberg said: If you watch people on a sound stage or in a radio booth where you can’t hear what they’re saying, you can tell whether they’re acting or not just by the way they’re behaving. And it looks like Chris and I are living and not acting here. Just before we shot the scene, Tony said, “Now, I’ve got this one gimmick where I’m gonna put the gun right up to your head and he can fire it because they’ve fixed the blanks so they won’t come out and you’ll see flame coming out the sides, but everything will be great.” I said, “I don’t really trust that.” He said, “Let me show you, I’ll do it to myself.” So he shot himself in the forehead. Blood started dripping down his face and he said, “Oh. Maybe I won’t do it that way.” He sent me a nice little card and he wrote on it, “If you ever need a stuntman …” and there was a picture of him with the bleeding on his forehead. Tony Scott couldn’t have been more wonderful to work with.
From the special edition of “True Romance”, selective commentaries special features.
Source: sheilaomalley.com
13 Notes/ Hide
Recent comments
Blog comments powered by Disqus