#465 – Robert Rodriguez: Sin City, Desperado, El Mariachi, Alita, and Filmmaking

Robert Rodriguez is a legendary filmmaker and creator of Sin City, El Mariachi, Desperado, Spy Kids, Machete, From Dusk Till Dawn, Alita: Battle Angel, The Faculty, and his newest venture Brass Knuckle Films. Thank you for listening ❤ Check out our sponsors: https://lexfridman.com/sponsors/ep465-sc See below for timestamps, transcript, and to give feedback, submit questions, contact Lex, etc. Transcript: https://lexfridman.com/robert-rodriguez-transcript CONTACT LEX: Feedback - give feedback to Lex: https://lexfridman.com/survey AMA - submit questions, videos or call-in: https://lexfridman.com/ama Hiring - join our team: https://lexfridman.com/hiring Other - other ways to get in touch: https://lexfridman.com/contact EPISODE LINKS: Robert's X: https://x.com/rodriguez Robert's Instagram: https://instagram.com/rodriguez/ Brass Knuckle Films: https://brassknucklefilms.com/ Rebel without a Crew (book): https://amzn.to/3G7gtQJ Rebel without a Crew (audiobook): https://amzn.to/3Ri5wyc SPONSORS: To support this podcast, check out our sponsors & get discounts: Invideo AI: AI video generator. Go to https://invideo.io/i/lexpod Brain.fm: Music for focus. Go to https://brain.fm/lex NetSuite: Business management software. Go to http://netsuite.com/lex Shopify: Sell stuff online. Go to https://shopify.com/lex LMNT: Zero-sugar electrolyte drink mix. Go to https://drinkLMNT.com/lex OUTLINE: (00:00) - Introduction (10:04) - Explosions and having only one take (17:39) - Success and failure (26:28) - Filmmaking on a low budget (38:41) - El Mariachi (50:10) - Creativity (1:12:06) - Limitations (1:18:22) - Handling criticism (1:34:32) - Action films (1:45:53) - Quentin Tarantino (1:55:52) - Desperado (1:56:54) - Salma Hayek (2:01:40) - Danny Trejo (2:06:55) - Filming in Austin (2:13:05) - Editing (2:22:35) - Sound design (2:27:43) - Deadlines (2:31:14) - Alita: Battle Angel (2:39:36) - James Cameron (2:52:39) - Sin City (3:06:48) - Manifesting (3:18:12) - Memories and journaling (3:27:56) - Mortality PODCAST LINKS: - Podcast Website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast - Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr - Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 - RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ - Podcast Playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLrAXtmErZgOdP_8GztsuKi9nrraNbKKp4 - Clips Channel: https://www.youtube.com/lexclips

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#465 – Robert Rodriguez: Sin City, Desperado, El Mariachi, Alita, and Filmmaking Podcast Episode Description

Robert Rodriguez is a legendary filmmaker and creator of Sin City, El Mariachi, Desperado, Spy Kids, Machete, From Dusk Till Dawn, Alita: Battle Angel, The Faculty, and his newest venture Brass Knuckle Films.

Thank you for listening ❤ Check out our sponsors: https://lexfridman.com/sponsors/ep465-sc

See below for timestamps, transcript, and to give feedback, submit questions, contact Lex, etc.

Transcript:

Transcript for Robert Rodriguez: Sin City, Desperado, El Mariachi, Alita, and Filmmaking | Lex Fridman Podcast #465

CONTACT LEX:

Feedback – give feedback to Lex: https://lexfridman.com/survey

AMA – submit questions, videos or call-in: https://lexfridman.com/ama

Hiring – join our team: https://lexfridman.com/hiring

Other – other ways to get in touch: https://lexfridman.com/contact

EPISODE LINKS:

Robert’s X: https://x.com/rodriguez

Robert’s Instagram: https://instagram.com/rodriguez/

Brass Knuckle Films: https://brassknucklefilms.com/

Rebel without a Crew (book): https://amzn.to/3G7gtQJ

Rebel without a Crew (audiobook): https://amzn.to/3Ri5wyc

SPONSORS:

To support this podcast, check out our sponsors & get discounts:

Invideo AI: AI video generator.

Go to https://invideo.io/i/lexpod

Brain.fm: Music for focus.

Go to https://brain.fm/lex

NetSuite: Business management software.

Go to http://netsuite.com/lex

Shopify: Sell stuff online.

Go to https://shopify.com/lex

LMNT: Zero-sugar electrolyte drink mix.

Go to https://drinkLMNT.com/lex

OUTLINE:

(00:00) – Introduction

(10:04) – Explosions and having only one take

(17:39) – Success and failure

(26:28) – Filmmaking on a low budget

(38:41) – El Mariachi

(50:10) – Creativity

(1:12:06) – Limitations

(1:18:22) – Handling criticism

(1:34:32) – Action films

(1:45:53) – Quentin Tarantino

(1:55:52) – Desperado

(1:56:54) – Salma Hayek

(2:01:40) – Danny Trejo

(2:06:55) – Filming in Austin

(2:13:05) – Editing

(2:22:35) – Sound design

(2:27:43) – Deadlines

(2:31:14) – Alita: Battle Angel

(2:39:36) – James Cameron

(2:52:39) – Sin City

(3:06:48) – Manifesting

(3:18:12) – Memories and journaling

(3:27:56) – Mortality

PODCAST LINKS:

– Podcast Website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast

– Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr

– Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8

– RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/

– Podcast Playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLrAXtmErZgOdP_8GztsuKi9nrraNbKKp4

– Clips Channel: https://www.youtube.com/lexclips
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#465 – Robert Rodriguez: Sin City, Desperado, El Mariachi, Alita, and Filmmaking Podcast Episode Summary

In this podcast episode, the host engages in a conversation with filmmaker Robert Rodriguez, known for his innovative use of technology in filmmaking and his independent spirit. The discussion covers a range of topics, including the resilience and fragility of the economy, the psychological effects of trade policies, and the importance of creativity and adaptability in both business and personal endeavors.

Rodriguez shares insights into his creative process, emphasizing the importance of journaling to capture life’s moments and the value of maintaining a clear, open mindset to allow creativity to flow. He discusses the role of independent filmmakers in experimenting with new technologies, such as AI and video generation, to push the boundaries of storytelling. Rodriguez also highlights the significance of editing in filmmaking, likening it to cooking, where the right balance of elements is crucial.

The conversation touches on the challenges and rewards of independent filmmaking, with Rodriguez sharing anecdotes about his experiences and the lessons learned from working with actors and crew. He stresses the importance of being a supportive director and creating a safe environment for actors to perform their best.

Actionable insights from the episode include the encouragement to embrace creativity, take risks, and view challenges as opportunities for growth. Rodriguez advises listeners to keep a journal, be open to new ideas, and maintain a positive outlook even when plans fall apart. The overall message is one of resilience, creativity, and the power of storytelling to shape both art and life.

This summary was created automatically by Speak. Want to transcribe, analyze and summarize yourself? Sign up for Speak!

#465 – Robert Rodriguez: Sin City, Desperado, El Mariachi, Alita, and Filmmaking Podcast Episode Transcript (Unedited)

Speaker: 0
00:00

The following is a conversation with Robert Rodriguez, a legendary filmmaker and creator of Sana City, Al Mariachi, Desperado, Spy Kids, Machete from Dusk Tyler Dawn, Alita, Batalangel, The Faculty, and many more. Robert inspired a generation of independent filmmakers with his first film, El Mariachi, that he famously made for just $7,000.

Speaker: 0
00:25

On that film, in many since, he was not only the director. He was also the writer, producer, cinematographer, editor, visual effects supervisor, sound designer, composer, basically, the full stack of filmmaking. He has shown incredible versatility across genres, including action, horror, family films, and sci ai, with some epic collaborations with Quentin Tarantino, James Cameron, and many other legendary actors and filmmakers.

Speaker: 0
00:56

He has often operated at the technological cutting edge, pioneering using HD filmmaking, digital backlots, and three d tech. And always, through all of that, he’s been a champion of independent filmmaking, running his own studio here in Austin, Texas, which in many ways is very far away from Hollywood.

Speaker: 0
01:16

He’s building a new thing now called sana knuckle films, where he’s opening up the filmmaking process so that fans can be a part of it as he creates his next four action films. I’ll probably go hang out at his film studio a bunch as this is all coming to life. His work has inspired a very large number of people, including me, to be more creative in whatever pursuit you take on in life and have fun doing it.

Speaker: 0
01:46

And now a quick few second meh of the sponsor. Check them out in the description. It’s the best way to support this podcast. We got InVideo Ai for video generation, Bryden FM for focus, NetSuite for business, Shopify for ecommerce, and Element for hydration. Choose wisely, my friends.

Speaker: 0
02:05

I do try to make these ad reads interesting and personal, often related to stuff I’m reading or thinking about, but if you must skip them, please still check out the sponsors, sign up, buy whatever they’re selling. I enjoy their stuff. Maybe you will do. Also, if you want to get in touch with me for whatever reason, go to lexima.com/contact.

Speaker: 0
02:26

And now onto the full ad reads. Let’s go. This episode is brought to you by InVideoAI, a video generating app that allows you to create full length videos using just text prompts. Perhaps, obviously, NVIDIA is, the perfect sponsor for this conversation with Robert Robert Rodriguez.

Speaker: 0
02:47

He has been, for decades, the guy willing to use cutting edge technology, digital HD, VR, three d. And now we’re in a time and a space where it has not quite used by the big filmmakers because they’re not really sure how to leverage its power. And so I think it’s really the role of the independent filmmakers to start playing with the video generation.

Speaker: 0
03:10

Start playing five seconds, ten seconds at a ai, seeing what you can do in a storytelling art form. I do think it’s a skill. I’ve used in video a lot. There’s some aspect of it. You have to kind of nudge the system into that direction.

Speaker: 0
03:25

I mean, it really is like having two directors. And there’s things that humans are really good at, and there’s things that AI is really good vatsal. And the dance between the two is where the art form is. Anyway, you could, try NVIDIA AI for free, saving you lots of time and money you’d otherwise spend on the editing, animating, and other production costs. Go to nvidia.i0/lexpod.

Speaker: 0
03:45

That’s nvidia.i0/lexpod. This episode is also brought to you by Brain.fm, a platform that offers music specifically made for focus. I remember thinking that focus or the lack of focus was 100% the consequence of your mind and nothing else. That you should be able to shut off the world and deeply focus on a particular thought or line of thought or on nothingness or in your breath.

Speaker: 0
04:15

You know, like you do meh. You should be able to do that just with the power of your mind. And in some sense, I still believe that, but, I think there’s just some things that make it easier. I first discovered that I don’t know how long ago now, but listening to different kinds of noise, white noise, brown noise, and realizing, woah. Something is happening here.

Speaker: 0
04:39

The mind is just much more naturally, much quicker, much more efficiently able to achieve that state of focus where you shut off the rest of the world. And then so brain.fm takes it just to another level. There’s just so much variety for any working environment where you want to optimize the kinda audio landscape.

Speaker: 0
05:00

Increase your focus and try brain.fmpre for thirty days by going to brain.fm/lex. That’s brain.fm/lex for thirty days free. This episode is also brought to you by NetSuite, an all in one cloud business management system. Boy, are we really getting to understand the inner workings of, individual businesses and the interaction between those businesses within the supply chain meh and internationally now with the new evolving trade policy.

Speaker: 0
05:33

I probably have several conversations with the top leadership on this topic soon. The economy is both an incredibly resilient and a fragile system. Whenever you have these ai, big, giant hammer type policies, they can have, impact that reverberates not just through the direct consequences of those policies, but just second, third, fourth order effects.

Speaker: 0
06:00

Plus they create the psychological effects within human minds of uncertainty, of fear. And based on that, they make decisions which are often suboptimal for the economy. Sai you get to see the inner workings of businesses and how they function in response to those, almost like a immune system within each business to to see how can we ai, how can we turn a profit still.

Speaker: 0
06:26

And all of that comes into play, all the HR, all the inventory, all of that. I’m deeply grateful for the wisdom and the power of the market. We should be careful not to mess with it too much. Download the CFO’s Ai to AI and Machine Learning at netsuite.com/lex. That’s netsuite.com/lex.

Speaker: 0
06:46

This episode is also brought to you by Shopify, a platform designed for anyone to sell anywhere with a great looking online store. Speaking of capitalism, I’ve also been reading a large amount of literature on China to understand the culture, the peoples, the meh used by the government, all that to help me understand and speak through some of the propaganda of the western perspective.

Speaker: 0
07:11

Of course, there’s truth to it, the skepticism and the caution that the West has. But I think there’s a lot of interest at play here and a lot of warmongers that want to wage war instead of make peace. I do think that the economy and economic relationships and trading and buying and selling, all of that is a fundamentally peaceful action that protects us from escalating military conflict and otherwise.

Speaker: 0
07:39

I continue to hope we’re past all that military conflict. But, anyway, the thing I love about America is the companies, the huge number of entrepreneurs building stuff, creating stuff, dreaming, buying and selling from each other. I don’t know. That just fills me with hope that individuals can dream and have the power to bring that dream to a reality.

Speaker: 0
08:02

Anyway, sign up, for a $1 per month trial period at shopify.com/lex. That’s all lowercase. Go to shopify.com/lex to take your business to the next level today. This episode is brought to you by LMNT, my daily zero sugar and delicious electrolyte mix that I’m drinking now as I’m traveling in the middle of nowhere.

Speaker: 0
08:23

Barely know where I am. Barely know who I am. Barely know what time it is. I’ve been feeling lost and out of balance for many reasons. Hoping there’ll be a ai of some sort, some sort of little miracle that’ll help me find my way. This conversation with Robert was, an inspiring one.

Speaker: 0
08:45

He really did everything he’s done against all odds, fearless and bold. When shit goes wrong, he just figures it out. There’s something about him. Just being around in the energy of urgency, of creative excitement to just take on the problems of the day. You know? It’s not like excitement to create.

Speaker: 0
09:13

It’s excitement to take on the problems that will for sure come when you try to create. It’s a different angle. It’s a more honest one. It’s a more inspiring one, more energizing one. Yeah. Anyway, what we’re talking about, LMNT, watermelon salt. Get a sample pack for free with any purchase. Try it @drinkLMNT.comslashflex.

Speaker: 0
09:36

This is the Lex Fridman podcast. To support it, please check out our sponsors in the description. And now, dear friends, here’s Robert Rodriguez. Has there been a a time when there was, like, one take and you only have one take to get it right?

Speaker: 1
10:10

Oh, all the time where you’re just like or just you know how long it’ll take to reset, and you’re just but then you know what you you you gotta just work with what you got. You know, you gotta look work with your results.

Speaker: 0
10:20

You get nervous or no in that moment?

Speaker: 1
10:23

Oh, yeah. You’re you’re nervous going, like, just, I hope it goes off. Because then to fix it, I’ll have to go do a bunch of other steps, which we don’t have time for. But a lot of times, you know, I’ve just learned that if something happens, it’s just meant to be that way.

Speaker: 1
10:35

And, and I got used to doing things in one take and, and just living with it. It didn’t bother me. In one movie, it was even a low budget movie. They had, Rigged a car to implode, because I was gonna throw a guy at it. So we needed the car to implode and then we’re gonna throw him and marry it together. Right.

Speaker: 1
10:50

And, the stunt and the, the car guy goes, yeah, we’re gonna have three cars rigged three cars. Why you didn’t have to prove one case one doesn’t work and then we have a second, we have third one. We said, we don’t have all night to go shoot take after take. We’re doing just just carry one arya. And if it doesn’t work, we’ll figure it out.

Speaker: 1
11:06

If you don’t have time to do it again, sometimes it’s such a long setup. So So I go, no, I’m I’m good with just going, what it, in a grind house movie, they, they only had one take. So that’ll make it more authentic.

Speaker: 0
11:17

When it all goes to shit, when it fails, you just what’s the next thought. So I’ll tell you

Speaker: 1
11:22

two things happened on dust tyler done. First was, okay, you know how those explosions when somebody walks away in slow motion from an explosion that’s become kind ai, you know, that started with Desperado. Desperado is the first. If you look at all the montages, Desperado is the first.

Speaker: 0
11:36

That’s right. That is the meme. Doctor.

Speaker: 1
11:37

Because it was an accident. It was just supposed to be, it was just two grenades, not a nuclear bomb. He throws them over the ai. I just wanted like some body parts or, you know, something to fly up some shrapnel. It said, literally sai shrapnel. And my fixed guy was so ragged running so ragged.

Speaker: 1
11:49

We meh to there and I go, do you have any body parts and stuff we can throw up or or something you can shoot up? Pat, I didn’t realize it’s so high to get past that Second Floor. He’s like, no, I don’t. I can give you a fireball. I can give you a nice, you know, fireball with propane, but it burns away really quick. Like how fast? Ai that, but it’ll be big noise. You’re like, okay.

Speaker: 1
12:08

We’ll we’ll shoot it in slow motion sai it lasts a little longer because it just goes poof. So I told the actors, I know how big this fireball is gonna be, but just walk really fast and just look real determined and then just keep walking. Don’t stop and turn around because you might get your eyebrows singed. So they take off and boom, it goes and in slow motion, it looks great. Right?

Speaker: 1
12:27

I remember showing it to Jim Cameron before it came out and his hand went up ai, you know, nursing that before, you know, six months later, dust tyler dawn came out. So I, I, I liked how much it looked so much that in dust tyler dawn, I did it again. So those movies came out within six months of each other. That’s why it turned into a thing because people saw it. Ai crazy.

Speaker: 1
12:45

And so I thought, how about for the opening of George Clooney and Quentin walking out of the, sai station that we have the whole place just blowing up and they keep talking ai it’s not happening, you know, like take it another step further. So I’m not just doing the same thing. Okay. That one is like, okay, you’re gonna walk out and it’s all in one take.

Speaker: 1
13:05

So we’re only gonna do one take. We’re gonna blow the thing up. We’re gonna start with just, you know, some smaller explosions. And then when they’re further away and it’s safer, then we’ll do the big fireballs. Sai we’re going and you’re nervous because ai, if one of them trips up a line and you know, the pressure’s on them, it’s not just you that’s nervous.

Speaker: 1
13:21

You’re nervous for them. They’re the ones who gotta walk out, do that whole speech, get in the car and drive away. What if a car doesn’t start? What do you know? There’s a lot of things that could happen. Well, guess what happens? The thing you would not speak.

Speaker: 1
13:33

They go in, they come out, they start talking, shoot it. It’s perfect. Great. We can move on. And the camera guy ram, I don’t know what happened, but just like you had a little snafu here.

Speaker: 1
13:45

It goes, yeah, we have, we have an auto focus on the steady cam. Ai mean, we have a focus thing. Oh, it just went like this. No, I, I felt it go whack all the way out of focus and whack for a second back. Like, it just reset itself.

Speaker: 1
13:59

I don’t know why it did that, you know, because it’s radio controlled. And we can’t tell because we’re shooting film. Mhmm. You know? Sai we’re like, oh, shit.

Speaker: 1
14:05

Let’s watch the daily. Sure enough. Let’s see if we can get maybe I can scratch the film right there. No, it goes completely out of focus and back in focus within a second. Now we gotta reshoot it. So we had to wait till we’re back in that location.

Speaker: 1
14:18

We rigged it for two more takes just in case. So that thing that was supposed to be the one take is three takes. The other thing that happened was the front of the dust tyler Dawn bar. That same guy that did those explosions. He packed a bunch of explosives behind the actors.

Speaker: 1
14:35

When the actors come running out of the, of the bar at the end of the movie, and there’s an explosion through the door because all the vampires are blowing up. He didn’t just he put ai 10 times. Yeah. Sai it blew, you see it in the movie. You see this huge fireball going up.

Speaker: 1
14:51

And if you watch closely, you see it already start to catch the whole place on ai. The whole front of that, which is foam, catching on fire. And I cut just before you see that it’s on fire. And we, that was the first shot at that bar, because we weren’t gonna start shooting the other stuff till night.

Speaker: 1
15:08

So the first shot is that, and the set’s ruined burned to a crisp. The neon lights blew up. So we couldn’t even shoot. Cheech goes, Ai guess I’m not doing my speech tonight. And but right away, this is what this is what happens.

Speaker: 1
15:25

My first AD, Doug Arnakowski, comes over to me, and I go over to him. The guys came out with the fire hoses. The fire hoses weren’t even adding water. It was ai the thing was just scorching. The whole production design team was in tears because they had just spent weeks building this thing and it was up in smoke and charred.

Speaker: 1
15:43

I said, let’s just keep shooting. Let’s just keep shooting because it looks really kind of cool like this. Yeah. They’re gonna have to come repair it and we’ll have to come back, but it’s all black and charred. That’s why that whole scene with George Clooney and Cheech and that the building’s black. We didn’t go over there and touch that up.

Speaker: 1
15:59

That’s real flame that burned and it ended up looking great. So then the next week when we came back to shoot that other shot that didn’t work, we came back and they had repaired it and we shot all the night stuff, which is the majority of the stuff in front of it. So sometimes you gotta roll with it and then, and look to get the blessing you get because of this mistake.

Speaker: 1
16:17

You probably actually got a better take by doing it later with them. And then you had this incredible look for the end of the movie that looked apocalyptic. If it had looked just clean, you would’ve actually seen that it was kind of a foam set. This made it look better. So I kinda meh the universe push you where you’re supposed

Speaker: 0
16:32

to go.

Speaker: 1
16:33

With it. You gotta roll with it because you don’t know what the grand plan is. You have your plan. Just know it’s probably all gonna fall apart. It’s just like the movies. You come up with your plan of what you wanna accomplish. That’s like your script. Mhmm. Then you go scout your location and figure out what your project’s gonna be, you know, and you go try to make it as bulletproof as possible.

Speaker: 1
16:50

Then you go to do your project. And just like with our movies, you watch it all fall apart. You watch this thing blow up, you watch this thing not work. Everything just falls apart in front of your face. Then that’s when you roll up your sleeves and creatively figure out a way around it. You turn chicken shit into chicken salad.

Speaker: 1
17:06

And by the end you have a result that’s better than what you sought out, but that’s the process and that’s ai. And that’s watch, rinse, repeat the rest of your life. That’s what everything’s gonna be like. It’s just like a movie. Because when you think about it, you’re writing a story for a film. And you’re also writing the story of your life at the same time.

Speaker: 1
17:23

Like how, how are you gonna react to things? Well, how do you make your character react to things? You make him ai of superhuman. Why don’t you just make yourself that way? You’re writing your own story and you start really seeing the more you get into storytelling that life imitates art and art imitates life, but the process is also the same.

Speaker: 0
17:39

So you write the story, the script, and then you have it collide with the chaos of reality. And in that moment, when you said you see the chicken shit, like, you have to be able to keep your eyes open.

Speaker: 1
17:51

You have to do that. You have to do that.

Speaker: 0
17:53

Wait a minute. Okay. Stuff change. Discipline. Where’s the not to be cliche about it, but where’s the silver lining of this? Where’s the path to actually make something good out of this? And that’s a skill. Right? I call it, and it’s one of my favorite stories. I was doing one of these talks, and

Speaker: 1
18:07

Ai said, come talk about creativity. I go, I understand because a lot of people read my book, Rebels Had a Crew and told me, oh, it made me be a filmmaker. But a lot of people said it helped me start my own business because they just see how you can go be entrepreneurial like that and go where no one else is going.

Speaker: 1
18:20

And I’m giving all this talk about this kind of positive stuff. And this one woman goes, you’re real positive, but what do I tell myself when I just wasted a year and a half of my life doing something that didn’t work? And I was like, well, that’s a real negative way to ask that. Can you just rephrase the question a little more positively before I even attempt to answer it?

Speaker: 1
18:36

Because already her point of view is is exactly what you’re saying. She’s not looking at all. She’s just concentrating on what what didn’t follow her plan and not seeing the gift of everything else that’s there. So she goes very reluctant. It was so perfect.

Speaker: 1
18:51

I wish we had filmed it. She goes, I learned a good lesson the hard way. And I said, that still sucks. And I say, when you follow your instinct, like if you follow your own instinct to go start a business or go make this movie or whatever, it wasn’t someone saying, go over there and you’ll make a million dollars.

Speaker: 1
19:06

You know, it was your instinct and you fail. Sometimes the only way across the river is to slip on the first two rocks. You fail. You have to really sift through it’s like the silver lining, but I call it sift through the ashes of your failure, and you’ll find the key to your next success is in there.

Speaker: 1
19:22

But if you’re not looking for it, you don’t find it. I’m gonna tell you one. And I tell tyler the four ram story. I said, I made a movie called four rooms. Ai it’s didn’t make any money. Right.

Speaker: 1
19:32

When Quentin asked me, Hey, would you wanna make a movie with me and two, two other filmmakers? It’s an anthology. It’s on New Year’s Eve. It’s in a hotel. You have to use the billhop. We’re not gonna know what each other’s making. And we make it, we put it together. Meh hand went up right away, just instinctually.

Speaker: 1
19:46

Hey, that sounds meh, I’ll do that. I’ll go make that with you. Now, should I ask the audience? I like to throw it to the audience and her. Should I have not raised my hand that quick?

Speaker: 1
19:56

Shouldn’t I have done a little studying first or should I just go blind instinct or should you do instinct with some studying? Okay. Well, I could have gone and studied and I would’ve found that anthologies never work. Like even when it’s Coppola, Scorsese, Woody Allen, they bomb because people can’t quite rip their hand. What is this Ai Zone? I don’t wanna go see that.

Speaker: 1
20:16

But that’s not I still said, yeah, Ai, I, I think I should still go by instinct. So my instinct was to raise my hand. We go make that movie. Because I love short films. I made like bedhead and short films. And I thought, oh, here’s a way.

Speaker: 1
20:28

If this works, I can make short films in anthologies and I can have the best of both worlds.

Speaker: 0
20:32

And by the way, anthologies is when there’s multiple,

Speaker: 1
20:34

more than multiple one story,

Speaker: 0
20:35

multiple story. Yeah. One movie just like, sai if you did the research, you would know that very few people

Speaker: 1
20:40

ever got that to work. Yeah. The audience can’t quite wrap their end. And then it feels like the movie’s starting three times, you know? So I make that movie. It bombs. Now I could feel real bad about that, but if you really think about it, you go, well, ai did I sign up for it?

Speaker: 1
20:57

Did I raise my hand? Because I thought it was gonna go be this big financial success. No, I did it to work with my friends, to do something creative, to try something, but that’s still not good enough. I need to really sift through the ashes. And if I look through the ashes of that failure, I find two keys to my biggest successes in there.

Speaker: 1
21:13

While I was on the set, they said it has to be new years. So I thought I’m just gonna do like bedded. I’m gonna have two little kids that are running around in this room and we have to use the bellhop as a babysitter. Well, it’s new year’s, let’s dress everybody in tuxedos, because it’s new year’s. They’re all gonna go out, but the parents leave without them.

Speaker: 1
21:29

When I saw Antonio and his wife, I thought, wow, they look like a really cool international spy couple. What if they were spies? And these two little kids, one of them keeps falling asleep on the set. He’s so young. They barely tie their shoes. They don’t know parents are spies.

Speaker: 1
21:42

They have to go sai them. Okay. There’s five of those movies now. Ai. The other one was, I really love making short films.

Speaker: 1
21:50

I really want this anthology thing to work. What if it’s three stories, like a three extra director, not four, same director, not four different directors. I’m gonna try it again. Why on earth would I try it again? Well, because I had already done one and figured out how I could do it better.

Speaker: 1
22:06

And that’s Sana City. Those are by far two of my biggest successes that came directly from that failure. So I always say, follow your instinct. If it doesn’t work, just go ai the only way across the river is to slip on the first two rocks. So what is, where is the key in that, in the ashes of the failure? Because if I had an instinct, that means I was on the right track.

Speaker: 1
22:25

I didn’t get the result I want. That’s because the result might be something way bigger that I don’t have the vision for, and the universe is pushing me that way.

Speaker: 0
22:32

By the way, a lot of people that look back to four rooms sai a lot of creative genius in there. So you say it flopped.

Speaker: 1
22:38

It flopped financially.

Speaker: 0
22:39

Financially. Yeah. You know, there’s so many ways to measure success.

Speaker: 1
22:44

But like I said, like, I like, I would say, well, it was successful because, you know, even Roger sai, hey. You furnished my favorite room. You know? I was like, hey. That’s I could take that. But now that I think there’s something else still there. I keep sifting and it’s like, oh, yeah.

Speaker: 1
22:56

Two big successes came from that. That’s sai amazing lesson to have because it makes you feel better about failure. Think of, like, The Thing by John Carpenter. Mhmm. He put that movie out the same weekend as Meh. That thing bombed.

Speaker: 1
23:08

Critics were calling it pornography, you know, because of all the, all the weird special effects and audiences didn’t go either. And he thought he made a great movie. So, you know, it makes you question your instincts. Ai, ten years later turns out, oh, it’s a classic. So sometimes it takes the audience a while.

Speaker: 1
23:25

So if you have some kind of failure on something, you don’t let it knock you down. Just go, maybe in ten years, they’ll think it’s great. I’m just gonna commit to making a body of work, a body of work. Some will succeed. Some will overperform. Some will underperform. It’s not your job.

Speaker: 1
23:42

You just wanna be a creative person. Just ai. I tyler people, just create, stop thinking about movie per movie and worrying so much about each one or project to project. If you’re a business person, just commit to making a body of work like an artist would do. And you don’t, and you don’t know what the masterpieces are gonna be or which, you know, someone’s gonna come and say, oh, that, that one that bombed, I there is some really creative stuff in there and you and it’s not for you to decide.

Speaker: 1
24:06

You just go and do it.

Speaker: 0
24:07

And sometimes I think it takes some time to process the failure to make sense of it. Like, at least for me, don’t rush making sense of what didn’t work. What lessons do I take from it? How do I sift through the ashes, as you said? Yeah. Like, it takes time. You have to sleep on it a bunch of times.

Speaker: 1
24:26

It’s right there. And then sometimes you come back, revisit it, you know, later. Because you might not have had some information you have now that makes you look at it a lot differently. Like, when I did, I just, did the audiobook for Rebel Without a Crew, which

Speaker: 0
24:40

I had for that, by the way.

Speaker: 1
24:41

Sai hadn’t read it since I wrote it. Yeah. So I didn’t remember a lot of the details.

Speaker: 0
24:45

And you actually it’s voiced by you.

Speaker: 1
24:47

I voiced it. So I was reading it real time.

Speaker: 0
24:49

Yeah. I highly recommend people because you comment, you add additional commas to it. It’s great.

Speaker: 1
24:54

Most of the time Ai laughing. Because I I can’t believe how crazy that story is. I forgot a lot of details. And when you’re younger, you know, when you’re 21, 20 two, six months feels like six years. I didn’t realize how short that window was until I reread it and how impossible most that is.

Speaker: 1
25:07

But you see some places where a setup falls in my lap and then pays off immediately in a big way, like magic over and over again. It’s clear. I don’t know what I’m doing. It’s clear the universe is just pushing you places, so you can’t fight it. Because I remember I was really disappointed.

Speaker: 1
25:22

And it says in the, in the diary, I’m really bummed that I go home that Christmas, not having sold it to the Spanish home video market, which was my goal. I walked home penniless and I was like, Merry Christmas. Sai feel like a freaking failure. Good thing. I didn’t sell it then.

Speaker: 1
25:37

You know, with time you look back and you go, wow, I got an agent the next month. He wasn’t even gonna help me sell it. He said, if you can get 20,000 for it, take it. I chased those people down for those contracts, the Spanish market ram months, and they never answered me back.

Speaker: 1
25:54

And then Columbia ended up buying it for, like, 10 times as meh. And we made a re we released it and and did a sequel and did another sequel. If you look back in time, good thing. I didn’t get my way. My way had, had this for a vision and it needed to do that, which you would never know, you know, you don’t know that going through.

Speaker: 1
26:12

So just, if you don’t have the answer right away, or even in ten years, go, maybe it’s coming in twenty years. Don’t let anything slow you down. Just keep plowing forward, committing to making your thing happen. Don’t don’t get shook up by something that you might not have an answer for.

Speaker: 0
26:27

Yeah. Every aspect of your journey is super inspiring. We’ll talk about it. Let’s go to the beginning. Because there’s a few technical things that are are fascinating about your beginning. So you started making films when you were very young

Speaker: 1
26:37

Yeah.

Speaker: 0
26:38

With an old super eight camera, and you were editing on a VCR.

Speaker: 1
26:42

You see, I’ve met a lot of filmmakers who, you know, they start a certain way, but then they finish another way. They get to be big filmmakers and all that. I still do it that way. Like Sai still, I like doing things that way. I have a new company called ram knuckle films, where the audience can actually participate by investing in this movie and investors in these movies that are done the same way.

Speaker: 1
27:01

They’re action films ai we did with Mariachi, but 10 to 30,000,000. It doesn’t take a lot of money to start a billion dollar ai. You know, like John wick only cost 20,000,000. The first one. Second one was 40. Third 1 was 80.

Speaker: 1
27:14

Fourth 1 was a hundred because the audience kept growing and growing.

Speaker: 0
27:17

By the way, you you say, you know, 20,000,000, like, it’s not a lot of money. We should

Speaker: 1
27:21

for an action film.

Speaker: 0
27:22

Yeah. That’s right. But, also, we should say that El Mariachi, the the the film on which to book Rebel Without a Crew is $7,000 movie. So let’s put it all in context.

Speaker: 1
27:32

But, you know, you’re gonna you’re gonna hire bigger actors. You can get a big actor like a Keanu Reeves for a $20,000,000 movie. You know? I asked Jim. I said, Jim Cameron. I said, you know, like, Terminator cost 5,000,000. And he goes, I wish we had that much. He had less than 5,000,000 for that.

Speaker: 1
27:45

So you can start a billion dollar franchise using these meh. And, and with the audience investing, they get to make money on them. And what I’m sana say now about how I started, you see that DNA of how I give out, you know, I want people to know how I did things with rebel without a crew or with these methods that I started with.

Speaker: 1
28:04

You see, that’s how we kept going. Hollywood spends way too much. And when you can make stuff for less, your profit margin is much better. So when I first started, I didn’t have any money. So I still play like I don’t have money. So I had super eight.

Speaker: 1
28:18

My dad had a super eight camera, but I couldn’t afford it. I shot two roles that you had to get to, you had to buy the film, shoot two minutes. I shot two roles of that. It’s another same amount of money that it costs to buy it, whatever that was $12 or whatever to develop it. You get it. There’s no sound.

Speaker: 1
28:35

Most of the shit’s out of focus, you know, but then my dad who sold cookware had a VCR, one of the first VCRs home VCRs for the market that he would play his sales tapes to his salesman. And it came with a camera attached ai this cable you got coming out. Imagine if that had to go into your VCR for you to even see what it’s shooting. And it’s this old camera, manual focus, manual Ai and 12 foot cable.

Speaker: 1
29:00

And I would start making movies with that instead. Now I have for $8 I have a two hour erasable tape of sound and picture. So I got into digital basically really early. I was doing, which was really frowned upon back then. And, and continued to be all the way to when I was using it for real in the early two thousands before everyone realized, oh, that’s the future.

Speaker: 0
29:21

Yeah. That’s fascinating. Because you were a rebel in that way too using data.

Speaker: 1
29:24

Well, because of the means and the democratizing of that, the elite didn’t like that. You could just go make a movie like that, but I started practicing. And it’s much easier to practice when it doesn’t cost any money. Ai if you wanna be a rock star, ai. If you wanna learn how to play guitar really well, you’re not gonna just jump on stage and suddenly go to play. You have to practice till your fingers bleed.

Speaker: 1
29:45

Well, the same with movies, you gotta keep telling stories and cutting them together and you just can’t afford that on film. Nobody can with a two minute roll costing as much as a two hour tape. So I was moving all these, doing all these movies. First, I would cut in camera and that VCR, that old VCR had a really great pause button that they stopped making that when you hit pause, it stopped right there.

Speaker: 1
30:04

And it stopped with a clean-cut. It didn’t have all this color bars ai the later ones had. So I, that was my and it had an audio dub feature where you could add another second soundtrack to it. So if I have people talking, I could hit audio dub and add sound effects. So I could have two tracks on the same one.

Speaker: 1
30:22

So I, that was my filmmaking kit for a while until I needed to start doing real editing. And my dad bought a second VCR for his business because I stole his other one. And I found that if I hooked them together, I could play on one and use that pause button on the second. And this was the limitation.

Speaker: 1
30:41

This is what taught me how to edit in my head is that if I shot a bunch of footage, I needed to shoot very little footage so I could find it. Sometimes you shoot out of order. So when I cut it, I have to cut in linear order because if you push pause, it’s a nice clean-cut, but only it only holds for five minutes.

Speaker: 1
30:57

You have five minutes before the machine shuts off. So you gotta find your next shot within five minutes and do that. Otherwise, if you have to start the machine over it, we’re added all these color bars and it would be all screwed up. So I’d have to sit there and not move for like all day while I cut knowing what the next shot was.

Speaker: 1
31:14

And once I had it cut, I would then add some sound effects to it. Meh, because I have the audio dub function, but now if I sana add music, I take that tape, which has two tracks now into the first deck and put it into the VCR again, one generation of loss, but I have a little cassette tape player with the music and I do a Y splitter sai I can add the music and the you’re right.

Speaker: 1
31:37

Just like that. That’s like being resourceful with what you have. And I made award winning short films that way on video, there were some festivals that would allow video, not many, but they would always win. And they were always funny as, I stumbled upon ai kids that way. Like Sai wanted to make these action movies in my ai, but when you’re a teenager, you don’t know anybody who can come be your action star.

Speaker: 1
32:01

And if you just bring your high school buddies, well, they just look like high school kids. So I use my little brothers and sisters because I’m one of 10, their oldest.

Speaker: 0
32:10

Mhmm.

Speaker: 1
32:10

They’re just sitting around watching cartoons anyway. And I made them the action stars to like learn. And I found those things would be a winning formula. They’d win every festival I’d send them to. So bedhead was my first time using a film camera. It was a wind up film camera. I got in film school.

Speaker: 1
32:26

I went to film school for one semester and realized I already knew more than the film students because they, they taught you a whole other outdated way of doing it. So I thought I’m just gonna use that film camera to make a, a low budget movie, a definitive film version that I can send to all film festivals of these action kids, which is a precursor to Spy Kids.

Speaker: 1
32:45

Bet meh is a precursor to Spy Kids.

Speaker: 0
32:47

And we should say that bed head was an award winning short film that was probably a big sort of leap for you that probably opened the door to you to then and make all meh reactions

Speaker: 1
32:56

ai. Your your your brain especially because those video festivals, I I would win like a trip to New York and a director’s chair with a video of shorts that I would put in festivals. But I knew the film festival if I could get into film festivals, I could send that all over the world.

Speaker: 1
33:09

So I made that little short film, sent it and it was winning all the festivals. And I thought, wow, I made that with a ai camera film camera filming just one take each shot, just no slates, cause I’m the editor and that cost $800 and it was eight minutes. I bet I can make eighty minute movie for $8,000 if I’d use the same method.

Speaker: 1
33:36

So that movie Ai did six months later, I was making mariachi because it opened up my mind to that I could try it in a feature.

Speaker: 0
33:43

Can we actually pause on that? Because, I think, Badhead has a really great really unique story shah in a really unique way. I think what I’m trying to say is, like, it’s very important to write write the right script, write the right story.

Speaker: 1
33:58

Sai let me tell you the trick to that. Yeah. And mariachi is the same way. And this really helped people ai even Kevin Smith from tyler said, wow, Robert said when mariachi was success, I talked about how I did it. And I said, I, I, I looked at everything I had. What do I have?

Speaker: 1
34:13

We have a pit bull, we have a turtle, we’ve got a bus that Carlos, his cousin owns. His cousin is a brother has a brother-in-law has a bar and he owns a ranch. So the bad guy lives at the ranch. The fight scene’s gonna be in the bar. He’s gonna hit a bus sai one point he’s gonna, the girl’s gonna have a dog and a turtle’s gonna cross the road. It gives you all this production value.

Speaker: 1
34:33

So you write backwards. So for bedhead, I even did that with a camera. So I’ve been shooting video all this time. And one thing I wished I could do on video, I never could was slow motion or stop motion even. So when I got that crappy world war two camera, they gave us in film school, I mean Yeah. I was so ai.

Speaker: 1
34:49

Like, this is the camera I’ve been trying to get my hands on. I could have bought this for $50 at a bond shop. Mhmm. Old Bill and Al wind up. You couldn’t even see through the lens. You were seeing through, an approximation of the lens. But you could shoot slow motion.

Speaker: 1
35:02

I could do reverse photography if I filmed upside down. Mhmm. I could do because if I do a fast push into her, I’ll never get the focus in right. So I started with it in focus, went back, pulled backwards on a chair, and then reversed it, flipped it, and now it looks like it stops on a dime in focus.

Speaker: 1
35:21

Right?

Speaker: 0
35:21

The number of times I’ve seen you shoot backwards is incredible. Like, to achieve a certain feeling, a certain experience, a certain, certain effect, sometimes shooting in reverse plus the sound effect layer, you can create this reality that’s surreal Yeah. That then results in the story that you wanted. Like, you have you have to be functioning in some kind of different space time continuum.

Speaker: 1
35:46

Meh. It it can’t be time. Start putting it together. Right? Yeah. So I’ve got this different camera. Well, what now I go, like, Sai don’t I don’t wanna shoot the same kind of movie. If I got a camera now that can do that, I can do stop motion. So that’s why there’s an animated title sequence at the beginning.

Speaker: 1
35:59

Cause I go, wow, I I’m a cartoonist. If I set the camera up here, I can slow it down enough. It’s not, it’s not a frame by frame, but if I get it down ai two frames a second, I can just tap it and it’ll maybe get one frame up. So I did 300 drawings by hand for that opening title sequence.

Speaker: 0
36:16

Holy shit. That was that was you doing it by hand.

Speaker: 1
36:19

Yeah. So you watch that, and this is a throwaway title sequence, but I really sana this thing to win awards. Okay.

Speaker: 0
36:26

Hold on a second. Ai long does that take to draw? That that’s a lot. That’s meh lot

Speaker: 1
36:30

of work. I drew it I drew it over well, I was a daily cartoonist by then, so I was pretty fast, but still it’s that’s why it’s only penciled. It’s not inked, but it looks great. I mean, it’s the camera’s going around and all kinds of crazy stuff, but it’s just all fake by paper.

Speaker: 1
36:43

It took me all night to shoot it. Sai remember I walked into the film school the next day, you know, like, all sleepy, and I told one of the fellow students, you know, wow. I was up all night doing this animated title sequence, and he went, why are you putting so much work in this?

Speaker: 1
36:57

They’re not gonna they’re not gonna grade you any differently. And I was like, grades? You meh an a walking in here. I’m trying to get out of this town. I’m not doing this for fucking grades. Yeah.

Speaker: 1
37:06

I got I want people to see what I can do now, and I wanna see what I can do now with this. So a lot of the the story came from the limitations or actually the freedoms of that camera. I couldn’t have done that story on video. So when I saw, wow. Okay. I can do reverse photography. I can do stop motion. She has to have special powers.

Speaker: 1
37:26

Cause if she has special powers, then I can utilize, I can really milk this camera for all it can get. There’s one of my shots I love the most is where she’s standing there and the and the chair, she makes a chair come all the way up to her and it goes all the way up to her face.

Speaker: 1
37:42

Now Yeah. If I do that normally, where where would I even put the strings for that? Right. The bullet chair. Yeah. Yeah.

Speaker: 1
37:48

So let’s start here with the camera upside down. I have the strings in the back because you’re not gonna be looking at the back. And as it goes back, you pull it back. And then when you reverse it, it goes and it looks so good. You can’t spot the string.

Speaker: 1
38:01

If you look close, you see the strings are in the back, but your eyes are ai the way. Yeah. Ai right. Stuff like that. And then just her, like, getting the hose. And then I just do stop motion for the hose turning on, you know, the faucet.

Speaker: 1
38:11

That’s why I gave her special powers so that, and it made the story better. So sometimes the limitations you have with equipment or location, you can use it to make, you know, take chicken shit, turn it into chicken salad, take this camera that everyone was like, what’s this?

Speaker: 1
38:25

And I go, I can do so much with this, But I tell you today, I look at that camera. I can’t believe I ever made a movie with that thing. It’s so ridiculously primitive. I’m just like, how did I even think I could get anything done with this and it even exposed? And Mariachi the same way. You have to think about it.

Speaker: 1
38:42

I shot Mariachi on film and with a bar 16 millimeter camera. I didn’t know how to use it. I called up a place in Dallas that rented that kind of equipment. And I said, I have an ARRI sixteen Sai here. Two motor looking things.

Speaker: 1
38:57

One has a 24 Yeah. And one has a a bunch of numbers. Oh, that’s a variable speed motor. That means you can do different speed. I can shoot slow motion with this. Oh, wow. Do you have a torque motor? I don’t know. What is that?

Speaker: 1
39:08

Because is there something on the side of the magazine? Like, it does yeah. Now you can just look up on YouTube, and it shows you how to use it. Ai was doing it by phone that way. Yeah. And then I went and shot the movie right then.

Speaker: 0
39:18

Yeah.

Speaker: 1
39:19

And I didn’t know if any of it was exposing or if the film camera was working until I finished the whole movie. So imagine you have to go down to Mexico, shoot for two weeks, come back, send it off to a lab. You wanna talk about being nervous?

Speaker: 0
39:32

Yeah.

Speaker: 1
39:34

Just hoping something exposed. And when I saw it come back and the tape, you know, they transferred it to a tape so I could edit it deck to deck again. I was so relieved. Some things didn’t come out, but Ai, I can cut around that. Just like, oh yeah. Cause I’m doing everything ai right here. You’re doing everything.

Speaker: 1
39:50

Imagine if you forgot to stop down and it’s open all the way and one shot is blown out, you know, I’d have stuff like that because I’m moving fast and I’m doing it all the way.

Speaker: 0
39:57

Wait a minute. You shah, I mean, actually, the whole thing without knowing if some of the footage is damaged wrong.

Speaker: 1
40:03

Without any of it. That’s why I only did one take. So my idea was this.

Speaker: 0
40:08

How gangster is that? Wow.

Speaker: 1
40:10

It it was a test film.

Speaker: 0
40:12

Right. Right.

Speaker: 1
40:12

I thought it was I thought it was gonna be a test film. Yeah. It’s the only movie in history ever made where the filmmaker did not think anyone would see it and expect it and even set it up that way. I mean, why would I make an action movie for the Spanish market called basically the guitar player? Promises no action. No one’s gonna watch it.

Speaker: 1
40:31

But I thought if someone actually picks it up and has the balls to watch this thing, they’re gonna be surprised Sai put a lot of action in it. It was just to learn from, I just needed to make it for as little as possible, see how much I could sell it for. If I could double my money. Great. I can make another one and just get more practice.

Speaker: 1
40:45

It was just, I just so intrigued by this idea, because you’ve heard advice about screenwriting. I heard a revised back then that I thought was ridiculous. It sai, it’s gonna take you a long time to be a good screenwriter. So write three scripts and throw them away. The fourth script will be the good one.

Speaker: 1
41:00

I was like, it’s so hard to write a script. Who’s gonna write three full scripts knowing they throw them away. Wouldn’t it be better if you write three scripts and then shoot each one and be the cameraman, be the sound guy, be everything. Because that way you’re learning, not just ai. You’re learning how to make a movie. So that was my idea.

Speaker: 1
41:17

I’m gonna make three of these, hide it on Spanish video, but make money back. That’s like my own film school, paying me, paying me to learn. So the first one Ai thought, let me just shoot it one take each because my friend Carlos lives in Mexico. If we shoot two takes, most of the cost is to film. I’ve just doubled my budget. So let me just shoot one take.

Speaker: 1
41:38

Some of it’s gonna not come out, but I’m not gonna know what I’m not gonna shoot a safety one that doubles my, let me, let me sai. Some things might come out. I speak ai 70% of it to maybe be okay. But 30%, I might have to come reshoot, which is fine. I just drive back there and then I just reshoot just those shots. Right. So I just went, let’s shoot.

Speaker: 1
41:56

We stop, we come back, then I send it off to develop. Because we’re shooting two weeks consecutively to get film shipped back and forth from Mexico to see if it came out, you just couldn’t do it. I just had to, you know, double down on it, do it. One take every day. I remember one time I was telling the actor, man, I told you to run through that shot and you and you oh, let me do it again. No.

Speaker: 1
42:16

One take, dude. Just think about it next time. Do what I say. I didn’t think anyone was gonna see it. So you and because you don’t think anyone’s gonna see it, you end up doing something remarkable, which is, well, I’m just gonna make something for myself.

Speaker: 1
42:27

Because if I was making a movie that was gonna go to Sundance, I wouldn’t have made that movie. I would’ve thought, okay, I gotta get serious. But because I made this movie that sai just entertaining ai, like bedhead, it entertained audiences. So that ai is really important when you’re starting out or at any point in your life, be naive about what things sana, and just do something for yourself.

Speaker: 1
42:48

That taught me a very valuable lesson, because I didn’t want anybody to see it. I just thought one take, one take ai I got back home, a bunch of stuff didn’t come out, but I’m like, I’m not going back to Mexico for you. I’ll figure out a way to edit around it and make the movie shorter. And that’s just gonna be the movie. And then that’s the one that won won Sundance.

Speaker: 0
43:07

That was your first feature film. That’s the one you made for $7,000. You mentioned your friend Carlos as the star of the movie. Yeah. Everything in one take. And, you know, I highly recommend people go back and watch that movie. It’s it’s just sai incredible movie. It’s fun, and it’s it’s an action film, moves really fast.

Speaker: 1
43:24

Yeah.

Speaker: 0
43:24

The story is really interesting, so the script is really interesting. All the actors, you could tell, they all kinda stepped up and played their own

Speaker: 1
43:32

They weren’t actors. That’s right. Friends of ours, which is why and because, and this was the the magic of not having a crew. Yeah. They didn’t feel like they were making a movie. It’s like this. You know? We’re we’re just here.

Speaker: 0
43:45

Yeah.

Speaker: 1
43:46

Me with my one camera. In fact, the gal, Carlos said, I had this one girl. I forgot she’s in town. Maybe she would work. Cause we ai to get a soap star and she backed out. So we got this gal over and she goes, but I don’t know how to act. And I said, here, let’s watch. I wanna show you some on Mexican TV. A telenovela was on, and you see someone, ai know, all over over acting.

Speaker: 1
44:05

I said, that’s acting. Mhmm. I don’t want you to do that. I want you to just talk like you’re no longer.

Speaker: 0
44:11

Wait. That the love interest, the woman in that Yeah. That’s what you’re talking about?

Speaker: 1
44:15

Yeah. That’s what you’re talking about? Yeah. That’s what you’re talking about. She’s amazing. Amazing. But because I What? Sai I got a video of her. I said, I want you to just do this one line. Pretend like you’re just talking to your boyfriend.

Speaker: 0
44:23

Yeah.

Speaker: 1
44:24

And I showed her I showed her the video. That was cool because I couldn’t show her the film because we have to develop it. But I showed her a video test of herself doing it, and she saw herself doing it. She suddenly had the confidence. We went through her closet. This red dress you can wear in that, and everyone just brought their own clothes.

Speaker: 0
44:39

She really had, like, a sexuality attention, like, a romantic tension that was real. That was it’s an issue. It was a it was it was in part a great love story that, I mean, as as ridiculous as it is to sai. Yeah. And Yeah. In part, ai, a dramatic love story.

Speaker: 1
44:52

Yeah. The idea was that, you know, I thought a guitar player you know, really, usually, what I sana do was a road warrior. I said, I want a guy with a guitar case full of weapons, going from town to town ai Road Warrior, but I don’t have enough money for the first one to do that.

Speaker: 1
45:05

That’ll be the second movie I do. How about we do a Genesis story? How he became that ai? So let’s do Mad Max, basically, how he becomes that guy. So maybe he is a guitar player sai that you start writing it out. I was gonna show you my writing method.

Speaker: 1
45:18

I write on, on index cards and I carry one of these, a little packet of index cards. I keep one always in my bag. And I smile when I run across it. Cause I go, I’ve made a million dollars with one of these before. You know, it’s like, this is the key to your next success cards. Cause you know, when you go see a therapist, you’re not going to them for the answers.

Speaker: 1
45:40

You’re going to them for the questions. You got the answers inside, but you don’t have other questions. A lot of times we ask ourselves very unempowering questions. Like, why am I such a loser? You know, I can think of 10 answers right now, but if you could, but if you go, what three things can I do today vatsal not just change my life, but everyone around me Take steps to that?

Speaker: 1
45:57

Take out your cards and start writing them down. You won’t come up with three. You’ll come up with 15. I’m like, wow. Because you’re asking yourself and you’ll see them. So when I was doing that movie, I thought, okay, he’s a guitar player for real.

Speaker: 1
46:11

And he gets mixed up with a guy with a case. So how about he walks into a bar? So I write down that he walks into a bar, bar, trying to get work. Bartender looks at him. We don’t hire Myriad. She’s get the hell out of here.

Speaker: 1
46:25

So he leaves. After that whole scene explaining who he is and what his story is, then the shooter comes in with a guitar case full of weapons. He’s also dressed in black and he shoots the place up. Now shah was a short film. That’s how you’d start a short film, But this is a feature movie, so shah. I gotta figure out how to tell a feature.

Speaker: 1
46:43

I’m gonna need a few more cards before that. So I’m gonna need well, who’s this bad guy? How about he’s in jail? I’d read a story. It’s a crazy story about a guy who was in jail in Mexico, and he was running his drug business from the jail as protection.

Speaker: 1
46:58

He could walk out ai, but it was it was to keep have the cops be his enforcers, basically. So introduce that guy. He’s in jail making phone calls, and someone puts a hit on him. So we have action right away. There’s a hit on him.

Speaker: 1
47:11

He kills those guys because it’s his operation. He’s not in jail. All the cops are working for him. And he tells that guy on the phone, the main bad guy, I’m gonna come to town. I’m gonna kill all your guys and I’m gonna come kill you.

Speaker: 1
47:24

So then he gets in his truck and you see them bring him a guitar case full of weapons. He passes the mariachi on the way to town. And now it’s his story. The baton gets turned to mariachi. Mariachi’s doing a voiceover. It’s easy to shoot. We can do the voice later.

Speaker: 1
47:43

We don’t have to sing sound. There was even a scene when he walks into town where we saw these coconuts, a guy cutting coconuts. And we go, oh, let’s go film over there. So we filmed the guy giving him a coconut with a straw in it, and he walks out. I’m like, shit, man. You forgot to pay the guy. Well, let’s shoot that. No. There’s one take.

Speaker: 1
47:59

I’ll just put in the voice over that they give away free coconuts in this town. And for years, people in other countries would go, they really give away free coconuts? Like, no. It was because we forgot to show him pain, you know, little happy accents. So now look, you’re already building a movie.

Speaker: 1
48:12

So it’s ai, now he goes in the bar. Now he’s mixed up, and the bad guy says, find the guy with a guitar case full of weapons. Then he goes and meets the girl. So you just start your movie visually, you can start seeing your movie. And I’ve used this for business things.

Speaker: 1
48:27

I’ve used this for ideas, for manifesting stuff.

Speaker: 0
48:30

It’s brilliant. Are you doing this alone usually? Are you It’s

Speaker: 1
48:33

coming and it comes so fast. It’s like free association. Well, maybe I have the ending. Oh, I know I want his hand shot. He’s gonna get his hand shot because he’s a musician, and those ballads are always really tragic. So the girl has to die. The girl has to die because if it’s a if it’s gonna be a tragic song for a songbook, each movie should be ai a tragedy.

Speaker: 1
48:52

That’s gonna be over here. You know? You now you got the ending, and then you your brain starts filling in the rest because you’re asking yourself these prompt questions Mhmm. That you already have answers for ram a past life, from a vision you had that you don’t even know were there. This prompts it.

Speaker: 0
49:08

It’s kind of a puzzle that you’re figuring out. What happens if you get stuck? Like, this doesn’t make sense. Like, some aspect of the structure doesn’t make sense.

Speaker: 1
49:14

Ai just throw off parts. You live all there. You won’t. Yeah. You just start, you just start ai in the ones you do know.

Speaker: 0
49:19

Yeah.

Speaker: 1
49:20

Like, okay. I know, I know at some point she’s gonna betray him or he’s gonna think she does. She keeps trays him. Okay. That’s in the middle somewhere. The other ones will come.

Speaker: 0
49:32

Yeah. Those are all like crossroads for the story. Doesn’t that, like, how do you know she has to die? Can I, can you change your mind about that?

Speaker: 1
49:38

I can. Yeah. But for now Ai felt like if I really sana the story’s telling me now what it is. I I didn’t know I was gonna make a Genesis story. I wanted to do the Road Warrior guy, but the Road Warrior, he lost his family. So, really, to propel him to become a guy who has a guitar case full of weapons, he has to lose everything. So that he needs a ghost.

Speaker: 1
49:58

So this is a Genesis story of a character. Well, Bryden Wayne lost his parents. You could say, well, does the parents have to die? Well, no, but it’s not gonna propel him. Ai, it’s not gonna, it’s not gonna drive him like that thing. So it’s just kept it’s it’s just coming to me.

Speaker: 1
50:10

So this is my other trick, and this is the main thing you gotta learn about that. If you take any way, this isn’t me doing it. I totally believe that because when you start doing this, you go, where are these answers coming from? I’m asking the right question, but why, how come the answers just keep coming like this? I believe because I do so many different jobs.

Speaker: 1
50:30

I’ve learned this over the years. I meh when I was in 02/2002, I was like, how is it that I’m the production designer, the composer, which I don’t even know how to read or write music. And I’m writing orchestral score and I’m doing the editing and I’m doing the cinematography. I haven’t been trained for any of these.

Speaker: 1
50:48

I never went to school for these specifically. Must be something about creativity. So I went on Amazon it’s 02/2002. I look up creative books. Anything that has creativity in the title, I just ordered it. And I’ve got a bunch of books on creativity.

Speaker: 1
51:04

And I was reading them through one of them was, like, really speaking to me. Yeah. That’s that’s it. That’s the process. That’s it.

Speaker: 1
51:10

And then it says gels and mediums. And I’m like, oh, this is a book specifically about painting, but it applies to music, editing, cinematography, writing. It’s all the same. So that’s when I realized that creativity is 90% of any of those jobs. The technical part of setting up the cameras of writing a script in format or reading or writing music. That’s 10% of that.

Speaker: 1
51:36

How many musicians, you know, don’t read or write music and they’re fantastic. It’s because ai. What they do is creative. Now Ai believe that that same person, even if they only do music could literally jump from job to job creativity and do a superior job than most technicians.

Speaker: 0
51:53

And there’s also something to say there about the learning, the technical aspects of an art. You you collide with the, with the experts. What what happens is Ai I’ve experienced this a lot with, like, with with using cameras and so on. I don’t know shit about cameras. And then you roll in, and then there’s all the experts almost talking down to you Yeah. And telling you how things are supposed to be. Everything is wrong.

Speaker: 0
52:18

I talked to somebody about, like, soundproofing a room, and they said they gave me ai. They’re insane. And, like, the amount of effort is insane. And this the

Speaker: 1
52:27

the geometry telling you something.

Speaker: 0
52:29

The dynamics of this room are all wrong. I’m like, why can’t I just fucking hang up some curtains? Like, what it seems like that kills most of the echo. Like, I don’t I don’t understand. And they’re like, no. This is all wrong. Just the there’s corn the corners are gonna have some and I’m like, fuck it.

Speaker: 0
52:41

I’m just gonna try. I’m gonna see what it sounds like, a and b. Okay. Here’s audio with curtains. Here’s audio without curtains. Seems like this is fine.

Speaker: 0
52:49

And move on to the next thing. Ai I think that when you say creativity, some of that is being a rebel, like, not listening to the experts. Yeah.

Speaker: 1
52:58

Well, you’re going on your creativity, which is what is that? That’s ai an do you consider yourself a creative person? I think you play guitar. Yeah. Guitar, piano. Yeah. Ai. Piano? Okay. Do you could but would you call yourself a creative person?

Speaker: 0
53:10

Yeah. I think so. Good.

Speaker: 1
53:12

You should.

Speaker: 0
53:12

I I think that’s a positive.

Speaker: 1
53:13

Ai would just suggest to anybody is just own it. Own it. And just sai, I like, when I do so many different jobs, it sounds crazy when they would introduce me. Hey, Robert. He does this shah blah blah blah blah blah. And I was like, I get tired just hearing that list. But when I think about it, there’s really only one thing I do and I live a creative life.

Speaker: 1
53:29

And when you live a creative life, I mean, anything that has to do with creativity, whether it’s filming or piano or guitar or sculpting, or you can just, you can do it. You can take it on and do it because it teaches you more about your main job. I become a better director by doing all those jobs, because when somebody just does one job, they barely know that job.

Speaker: 1
53:46

You have to do more to learn about creativity. And this is the main thing I learned was that I’m writing music, you know, for an orchestra. And I’m like, how did I, I don’t even know what I’m doing. Why is that coming out? I don’t feel like I’m doing it.

Speaker: 1
53:59

I feel like I picked up the pen. I feel like I had the idea to do the cards, but then when everything just starts coming out so quickly, like that’s how fast I wrote that movie. I go, I fairly feel like something else has taken over. So this is what my belief is. And because I hear it in different realms.

Speaker: 1
54:17

Like you ask Keith Richards, how do you come up with these riffs? He goes, I don’t, I don’t, they’re, they’re floating around the sky and I pull them out first, you know, meh asked, asked, you know, Jimmy Vaughn, how do you play guitar? Those solos. He goes, it’s like a radio. You know, once you get a tune just ai, you can’t even believe what’s coming through.

Speaker: 1
54:30

So I believe I call it the creative spirit. There’s a spirit assigned to all of us. It’s creative. That doesn’t have hands. It needs you to pick up the pen, pull out the cards. And then when you start getting in a flow and you’re like, woah, it’s ai. It’s that’s that.

Speaker: 1
54:45

And if you can have that mindset, you take your ego out of it and go, all I need to do is be a good conduit for this thing, be a good pipe and it’s gonna come through. So you don’t ever have to get hung up on that question you had. Well, well, what happens when you can’t come up? It wasn’t me to begin with.

Speaker: 1
55:00

If it’s not coming out, it’s because I’m blocking it. Mhmm. And if I were to do this and I’m flowing, and if I were to say, wow, I just wrote 10 cards. I don’t know if I can write more. How did I do that? You just shut the pipe because your ego got in the way.

Speaker: 1
55:15

You just clogged it because it gets pissed off that you think it’s you. It’s not you. It’s like, dude, just open up, let me through, pick up the fucking pen. And I learned this in, when I was 19 when I had a daily cartoon strip. I had to draw a comic strip every day to get paid. And I would be like, Ai have to draw like one drawing, draw another drawing.

Speaker: 1
55:35

Then it’s like, okay, these kind of go together. It was a process, you know? And sometimes I just felt like I wish I could just envision it, Sit back. I’m gonna try that method. I went home and I would sit back and just try to get in my ai, try the sofa method.

Speaker: 1
55:49

I’m just gonna try to picture the comic strip. And then as soon as I got on, I think it’s funny, then I’ll just go draw that. Right. Done bryden in half hour. Why why why it’s three hours? I’d sit there and sit there and sit there. My deadline would be coming up. Got, like, thirty minutes.

Speaker: 1
56:01

I’m like, oh, shit. Gotta go sit and draw it out. And it’s like, oh, okay. Got this drawing. It’s kinda oh, this ai of goes with that.

Speaker: 1
56:06

If I make another drawing, I have my strip. That’s the only way to do it. If you don’t get up, the creative spirit, ain’t gonna come visit you if you’re doing this. Yeah. It needs your hands. Yeah.

Speaker: 1
56:16

And it’s not gonna fucking reward you for sitting there waiting for you have to jump in and do it. And people, when they say, oh, well, I’m not ready. How pissed off is that spirit? It’s waiting for you to feel like you’re ready. It’s not, you just start doing the action and it’s gonna come through and the ideas will come and the answers will come because it’s not you.

Speaker: 1
56:36

And if you can take your ego out of life, you’ll be blessed with this never ending flow of ideas because don’t take ownership for it and know that you’re if it’s not coming out, because you’re just clogging it because this thing’s got endless ideas.

Speaker: 0
56:48

And you give that same advice for for making films, which is, you know, don’t plan if you wanna be a filmmaker, don’t plan, like, the movie. Don’t think about making the movie. Just go in and start.

Speaker: 1
56:58

Yeah. I would meet a lot of people who introduce themselves as aspiring. I’m an aspiring filmmaker, and I wonder how what would you tell an aspiring filmmaker to stop aspiring? Because if you, if you call yourself that you are that, and you’re always gonna feel like you’re not ready and you don’t, you just jump in before you’re ready.

Speaker: 1
57:15

You don’t feel like you’re ready till I didn’t feel like I was ready to do mariachi till I was probably in my last few days of filming. You became ready as you went. You didn’t know all that stuff. I couldn’t have figured all that out in advance. When my kids worked with me on a project that we did similar, by the end, they realized they did an interview with my son who after just two weeks of doing one of those projects, you’re a different person.

Speaker: 1
57:35

He’s suddenly waxing philosophical about the creative process and going, I never knew how my dad did mariachi until we did this project together. And I realized he didn’t know either. He didn’t know how he was gonna do it. He figured it out day by day, every challenge that got thrown at him, he had to figure it out. And that’s the biggest lesson. Most people never start.

Speaker: 1
57:54

And that’s the biggest thing. Don’t wait till you’re ready or they’ll be on your tombstone here lies sai and so he was never ready and you don’t wanna be that guy jump in. No, it’s not you. You just gotta be the hands. And that that that relieves a lot of pressure from you, because then you don’t have to ever have to do anything, really. You just have to be the hands.

Speaker: 0
58:11

Can you talk through some of the hats, some of the many hats you wore with the El Mariachis? It that’s an interesting case study, and you’ve done the same thing over and over in completely different innovative ways in all the films, but El Mariachi is such a

Speaker: 1
58:24

radical leap for you. Ai was crazy. That was that thing’s held together with Scotch tape and rubber bands because of the camera I borrowed.

Speaker: 0
58:31

You directed. You did cinematography. You did the sound.

Speaker: 1
58:36

It’s better to just say what I didn’t do. I didn’t act in front of the camera. Everything else I did. Yeah. Everything else, I was the whole crew. Yeah. It’s just like you’re doing here Yeah. Except you’ve got sound recording Right. Ai onto the cameras. Right? Or do you have it to the system?

Speaker: 0
58:53

Separately, but it’s synced. I mean,

Speaker: 1
58:55

all the modern techs are have sync camera. Yep. So I had a camera that Yep. It was not it was not a sync camera. And the thing was it was so loud, I would have had to blimp the shit out of it if I didn’t have a blimp. And then I would have needed a sound ai.

Speaker: 0
59:08

Just to be clear, so people don’t understand this, you’re shooting basically no sound.

Speaker: 1
59:12

Because the camera sounds like this. It’s like it sounds like all your money is going away, first of all, so I would go like this. Action. You start running. Yeah. And I shoot my edit. Cut. Yep. You know, like, it’s still running. You know? Like, I’m I’m only using this part, and there’s no slates.

Speaker: 1
59:33

There’s no there’s there’s guys holding up their fingers at the beginning of a roll. Like, this is a real seven Yeah. For just a few frames so I know which reel it is. And then that ten minutes of film is just one shot after another. And I use almost every frame of those shots because I was cutting in the camera. Now after I shoot, like, let’s say you know, tell me your name. Lex.

Speaker: 1
59:54

What’s your last name? Friedman. Where do you live? Austin, Texas. I would do the whole scene, then I would get the sound, bring the mic in close like that.

Speaker: 1
01:00:02

Say it again. Lex.

Speaker: 0
01:00:05

Friedman. Austin, Texas.

Speaker: 1
01:00:07

That’ll probably sync. Now if you were going on and on, there’s a place where it’d go out of sync. I hate rubbery lips. So I would cut away to the dog or to, like, ai or to the girl. And then I cut back when you’re back in sync. And since these were non actors, they say everything the same way each time. Ai, shit.

Speaker: 1
01:00:25

They would say their line, just like they weren’t, they weren’t performing it to where they didn’t remember how they performed the thing before. They were just talking in their own rhythm. So a lot of the times it’s anytime you see anyone on camera talking, they’re in sync with themselves.

Speaker: 1
01:00:37

And as soon as it cuts away, they’re out of sync. And it created this really fast cutting style that I probably wouldn’t have had on such a low budget movie, but it was the only way to keep things in sync. So when I would shoot two people talking, I would make sure I’d film a couple shah of, like, the dog or a a a stuffed cat or something just so I’d have something to cut away to to get him back in sync.

Speaker: 0
01:00:55

That’s so

Speaker: 1
01:00:55

brilliant. Then it’s I call it it’s just resourceful. It’s just being very resourceful.

Speaker: 0
01:01:00

You allow it to get maybe a little bit out of sync ai.

Speaker: 1
01:01:02

I didn’t allow it, but I oh, yeah. I would let it if I just didn’t have a way to cut away.

Speaker: 0
01:01:06

Right.

Speaker: 1
01:01:06

And I would try to sync it as best I could.

Speaker: 0
01:01:08

But we as the audience, like, do you understand where the threshold is where we notice something?

Speaker: 1
01:01:14

Yeah.

Speaker: 0
01:01:14

Because Seems like you can get away with

Speaker: 1
01:01:15

a lot. You can get away with. I just don’t, I’m just particular about that. Okay. I just don’t like seeing a dub movie where it just feels canned. It makes you not believe in it anymore. So I just cut away where the lips are just way off. I just didn’t want any of that. I just felt like Ai wanted it to just be believable and they’re, they could be really believable if they’re in sync, but I didn’t shoot two takes of film or even two takes of audio or just one take.

Speaker: 1
01:01:41

We just went through the, and what’s cool is that because I just had them go through the whole scene again. So I would go ahead and record them, like, grabbing the bottle or any action they did opening the suitcase. I have all the sound effects too. I just had to sync it by hand. That’s a lot of work for me, but I got great sound that way.

Speaker: 1
01:01:57

Because if I had had a sync camera, the mic would have been so far, we wouldn’t have we would have had to go get new sound effects. But because the camera’s off, I could record everything close-up. So there was some blessing to that.

Speaker: 0
01:02:10

You, and Quentin Tarantino had a great conversation about a lot of topics, but one of them is how to bring out the best in the actors. Like, what in vatsal Mariachi, how do you bring out the best in these non actors? And then maybe what’s the thread that connects to your future work too?

Speaker: 1
01:02:26

What really helped for those non actors was that they just look across and, and it’s me filming. They didn’t feel like they’re, so they’re being so natural. And ai the guy who played the bad guy, I met him in the research hospital where I was sold my body to science. He was my bunk mate.

Speaker: 1
01:02:40

And I said, dude, you look kinda like Rutger Hauer. And then it’s like, we saw another movie. Man, you look like James Spader. Shit. You should be the bad guy in my movie. And it’d be cool to have you as the bad guy. He goes, but I don’t speak Spanish. Well, that’s okay.

Speaker: 1
01:02:49

I’ll ai. And I’ll teach you phonetically, and you’re gonna wear sunglasses. And if you look close, he’s holding the he’s holding the lines here and he’s looking at the lines like that and just smiling. So can’t believe he’s getting away with this. He’s smiling and he’s got the sunglasses on.

Speaker: 0
01:03:04

I read that somewhere in the pool, there’s a casino

Speaker: 1
01:03:06

in the pool. In the pool. He’s like this.

Speaker: 0
01:03:08

With the sunglasses on with an oh meh.

Speaker: 1
01:03:10

But, but he was doing it phonetically. And I tell you what, he was so great. That ai. Right?

Speaker: 0
01:03:15

Yeah. When we

Speaker: 1
01:03:16

do Desperado, I brought him back. Didn’t even have to do any dialogue. Watch that movie. When he shows up in the opening scene, when Desperado, he’s playing the guitar and the opening with the credits to tie it into the first movie, he shows up again. And all he has to do is light a cigarette and you see this.

Speaker: 0
01:03:33

Yeah.

Speaker: 1
01:03:34

Because he’s so nervous because now there’s a crew behind me. Now it’s real. Before it was just me and him, and didn’t feel like a real movie. So everyone gave a great performance. So how do you recreate that later on a big movie? It’s just building a rapport, making a safe zone for your actors.

Speaker: 1
01:03:49

Quentin once told me ai being, you know, we’re talking about directing us. Yeah. Sometimes being a great director is just being a great audience, You know, being a great audience for the because you’re you’re the you’re taking the place of the audience for the actor. They try something. And if you’re enjoying it, they know that the audience is gonna enjoy it.

Speaker: 1
01:04:03

Or if you’re you know, makes you ai, you know, so sometimes you just you don’t have to tell them a lot sometimes. And if you do have something very specific to tell them, they usually, you know, go with it. But I always just like to see what they do. And a lot of times they just are in the zone. Because again, they’re they’re getting that flow too. You create the right environment. Everyone’s getting this inspiration.

Speaker: 1
01:04:23

That’s all tied together that you never could have directed. It’s just like, you just create that space where we’re all gonna be open to it and it’s gonna drop in our lap and I’m gonna point it out when it does, because you may not feel like you know how to play this role meh.

Speaker: 1
01:04:37

But I say not knowing is the other half of the battle and the more important part part, that’s the part we’re gonna discover. And when it happens, I’m gonna point it out and it’s gonna be like magic and we’re just gonna go, okay, we’re accepting it and we do it. And it gets people in that kind of head space.

Speaker: 1
01:04:50

And then we’re all open to it, to where the character’s supposed to go, what the what it’s supposed to sound like instead of me being very, you know, manipulative to get a certain thing. Sai don’t know. It’s it’s just whenever it feels good.

Speaker: 0
01:05:01

Yeah. There’s such an intimate connection between the actor and the director. I’ve seen some of the behind the scenes footage with you. Mhmm. You are just a fan enjoying the scene when it’s done well. Yeah. But I think there’s an aspect if I were to put myself in the headspace of the actor. They want you as the audience, like, to earn that happiness.

Speaker: 0
01:05:16

You know? Oh, yeah. It’s when a director approves.

Speaker: 1
01:05:19

Yeah. Well, you’re a performer and you and there’s no other, you know, it’s not like a live show where you get the approval of the audience and you’re like, oh, wow. They they like that joke. Let me do more. You know, really the director is it. And a lot of times the director’s way behind a monitor somewhere.

Speaker: 1
01:05:31

That’s why I still like to operate the camera. Because when I’m operating the camera, it’s like this. We can have a hundred people here. We wouldn’t know because they go away. It’s just us. They just disappear when it’s the camera guy is the director and we’re going, let’s do that again.

Speaker: 1
01:05:44

Instead of again, there’s a shot in, I’m ram gliding, Sensity ai. I have my crew setting lights and I have, this great shot of Clive Owen where he’s holding down Benicio’s head in the toilet. You know, Benicio’s not there. It’s just sai close-up of him at this point. And I’m practicing my shot. I’m zooming in slow in his face.

Speaker: 1
01:06:00

I got and people are still walking behind him with a green screen setting ai. And I’m like, I’m rolling. We’re ready to go. We’re we’re getting this. I can already tell. We’re already in the moment. What you’re doing right now, just keep holding that look.

Speaker: 1
01:06:09

Now one jolt ai you’re like, he’s starting to fight back, but you don’t even flinch. Cut. Okay. Never mind. You guys can stop moving that sai.

Speaker: 1
01:06:16

We already

Speaker: 0
01:06:16

got shit.

Speaker: 1
01:06:17

Holy shit. It’s like that. Wow. Yeah. It’s like that because you’re so lucky.

Speaker: 0
01:06:21

Great scene, by the way.

Speaker: 1
01:06:22

Great. Right? And it was Oh, shit. Feel ai. It’s like, if I wait for these guys, this moment will be gone. And then another one was Mickey Rourke. You know, he had so much freaking dialogue. He he had just done this whole big dialogue scene. He had another one that said, let’s go ahead and start with a wide shot. Where are the two active? I’m the camera, you know, Mickey and Elijah are here.

Speaker: 1
01:06:41

Let’s get a two shot and we’ll come around on Mickey close-up. We don’t, we’ll turn Mickey around for the close-up, but let’s start with the wise thing. Get used to the lines. And most of it’s gonna be sold in the close-up. We sit down, Mickey starts delivering the take. I’m like, hold on, hold a second.

Speaker: 1
01:06:54

I brought my camera over zoom in, just adjust that ai real quick. Because I’m the DP. Because if I had another director of photography, they’d be like, oh no, no, we have to relight and all this stuff. It’s like, no, no, let’s just do this. This let’s go. He’s doing it right now. And I go, and that performance is just right then.

Speaker: 1
01:07:08

And so you can feel that when you’re, or also you’re operating and you’re the camera guy and you’re the DP. It’s like high-tech gorilla filmmaking. Yeah. We’re on a green screen, but it’s like all the crew needs are, you know, marching orders. Just put a light back there, hitting them harder.

Speaker: 1
01:07:26

Like that’s a, this is a five ks make that a 10 ks. It’s gotta be stronger. They don’t need to know that I’m gonna make that a lamp post later. They just need marching orders for the moment. So I can just kind of tell people, do this, do this, do that.

Speaker: 1
01:07:35

And then I know what I can accomplish with the actor and then everything else falls into place later, because I’m gonna put all that in later. You know, things, once you know how to do a lot of jobs like that, you can just move at the the speed of thought, which is where the actors love being creatively.

Speaker: 1
01:07:49

Because they, nobody knew what green screen was back then. They’re like, what is this again? So I explained it as well. It’s kind of like doing theater, but instead of a black curtain behind you with a prop, it’ll be a green curtain and you might just have a cup or just a steering wheel, but it’s just you and the other actors just like this and everything else will be painted in later.

Speaker: 1
01:08:08

We’re just talking, we’re locked in. If we stay locked in, we’ll look great when there’s rain coming down and we’re on a ship later. But but it’s comes down to this. Right? And the more it was so fun to do those ai of movies.

Speaker: 0
01:08:19

To this day, you try to be close to the action,

Speaker: 1
01:08:23

connected with the actor that’s performing. Ai a dance. You end up That’s so ai to hear. Doctor. I remember on, on dust till dawn, Michael parks in the opening scene, he’s talking about the two guys that are running around killing people just before he gets shot. And there’s a, I just start doing this slow zoom. I remember it was take eight, start doing this slow zoom on him.

Speaker: 1
01:08:42

And I’m like, I hope I get all the way up to where it stopped zooming when he finishes that speak, because there’s no sai way. And I don’t know how he’s gonna sai, but you’re just locked almost telepathically. And as he’s delivered, there’s no edits. He’s just going, yeah. They killed four rangers.

Speaker: 1
01:08:58

Two hostages. It’s just like, wow. And you’re just so pulled in. I’m just like, oh my god. And then it stopped.

Speaker: 1
01:09:06

It’s like I ran out of Zoom, right, as he finished that speech. So how can a director because there’s

Speaker: 0
01:09:10

a lot of great directors that stay in the

Speaker: 1
01:09:13

In the bag. I don’t know. It’s in the back of the battlefield. You know, they just trust that whatever they get from their crew, they just you accept it just like, you know, you would get a take to There’s

Speaker: 0
01:09:19

so much interest ai that connection.

Speaker: 1
01:09:21

That intimate connection because I could not be behind a monitor, even if I had communication with my cameraman. Okay. Now start zooming in. I you’re not gonna know. You have to feel it. You have to be in there. It’s like a dance. It’s like trying to do a dance with a partner and you’re across the ram.

Speaker: 1
01:09:35

You know, it’s like, no, you gotta be there up close, feeling the energy. And, and it’s the, the creative spirit’s whispering to you both, you know, it’s not your own idea. It’s, you’re capturing a moment that’s magic and there’s true magic that happens on a set. And that’s what brings you back.

Speaker: 1
01:09:50

Because you know, I didn’t direct that and they didn’t enact that. That came through us, and we just had the cameras rolling, and we captured a ghost.

Speaker: 0
01:09:58

It’s like Just like you said, though, you had the pen in hand, and you were Yeah. You were there.

Speaker: 1
01:10:01

It’s like that. It’s crazy. It’s crazy.

Speaker: 0
01:10:04

Alright. Your friendship with Tarantino is just fascinating. And just the whole ai of the history of movies and the the two of you collided and met is is just a fascinating part of the story. You first met him in, 1992 at the Toronto Film Festival. Can can you just talk about meeting Tarantino?

Speaker: 1
01:10:20

Yeah. We both had films at the same time with first films, Ai in Black, action violence. In fact, I had seen his movie already. My first film festival was a a few months before that, the Telluride Film Festival and the rest of our dogs was there, but Quentin couldn’t be there.

Speaker: 1
01:10:35

He was at Sundance earlier that year. And the guy who became my agent, he saw it and said, Hey, you’re gonna like this guy, Quentin Tarantino. I told him about you. You’re gonna meet him. He’s gonna be in Toronto. Oh, cool. Cool. Okay. And so I went ahead and saw his movie and Telluride.

Speaker: 1
01:10:47

And I was like, holy shit. This ai in black again, just like the Mariachis dressed in black and action. I said, oh, we’re gonna like each other’s movie. He’s gonna like my movie when he sees it. So then in Toronto, we meh, and, we met first on a because I knew I was gonna be doing a panel discussion with him.

Speaker: 1
01:11:01

They asked us to do a panel discussion about violence in movies in the nineties even though it was only ’92. Sai we’re on a panel together. That’s where I met him, and he’s like, hey. Hey, Robert. Your agent told me about you. And I was like, yeah. And I saw your movie, Reservoir Dogs.

Speaker: 1
01:11:15

And he goes, oh, well, you gotta come to my screen, and I’m gonna come see yours. So he came to Mariachi, and I videotaped the audience reactions because there were insane, insane reactions to it. But I have the first screening he saw of Mariachi sitting next to me laughing. He’s laughing at everything. He was just the best audience.

Speaker: 1
01:11:34

Ai have his recording of the first time meh saw a Mariachi.

Speaker: 0
01:11:36

Oh, no. Really?

Speaker: 1
01:11:37

Yeah. Because I taped it all.

Speaker: 0
01:11:38

So and

Speaker: 1
01:11:39

it’s he’s so loud because he’s right next to

Speaker: 0
01:11:40

me. Well, just like you, but even probably even more than you, he’s a fan. He watches he just loves movies.

Speaker: 1
01:11:48

He loves movies. In fact, Sai the the next time I heard him laugh that way was at the he’s at the old premiere for Kill Bill. We’re watching Kill Bill, and he’s laughing ai it’s somebody else’s movie. He still enjoys the movie. It’s so he loves what all the actors did. And it’s like, that’s the kind of energy you really love, but I’ll tell you what, what, what happened. I’m not a very shy person, you know, very shy.

Speaker: 1
01:12:09

I’d have to go talk. I’m sure Ai, like, you’re not an orator or anything, you know, just have to go do it. I thought, well, man, I’m gonna have to introduce my film and talk about it afterwards. I’m afraid of that. What am I gonna do?

Speaker: 1
01:12:20

I don’t, I don’t have to talk in front of more than five people before. So I went to see this other movie and it was good. And I was watching it and, and then the director comes up at the end and he goes, yeah, well, that was my movie. And, you know, Yeah, here’s the writer. And he’s like, oh man, I don’t like the movie anymore. This guy’s kind of a dick. Sai I cannot do that.

Speaker: 1
01:12:40

I’m gonna have to go be who they imagine made that movie. So I wrote out my whole intro. It was like a twenty minute intro, because no one had ever heard of anybody making a movie for no money, much less without a crew, much less, you know, the way I did it was just very new.

Speaker: 1
01:12:58

Nobody knew it was possible. So my whole intro is like, you’ll see the Columbia logo slapped in front. It’s probably cost more than the whole movie. And then I go through, this is how I made it with a wheelchair for a Dolly turtle. You know, I rode around things I had, I mentioned the turtle, the pit bull, the bus, the ranch, all that stuff. Right.

Speaker: 1
01:13:17

So then when they see the movie, in fact, I think my wife was in the audience. She said vatsal Sundance, people are laughing so much at your intro. They just wanted to hear a story like this sai badly. I heard someone next to me say, I’m gonna vote for his movie. They hadn’t even seen the movie meh. Just because the story was so good. They wanted that movie to be great. And when they see the turtle, big cheers.

Speaker: 1
01:13:37

When they see the pit bull, big cheers. When they see the school bus, cheers. But then when they see how we use it and he slams into it and falls in it, they freaking lose their minds because they know how I put it together. They know that the rubber bands and the popsicle sticks, cause I already set it up. And so that’s why that audience, I would just tape the reaction.

Speaker: 1
01:13:56

They’re so with it. The context is so key. Like you can watch Mariachi and go, Hey, yeah, this looks like a $7,000 movie, but if you know the story behind ai, suddenly, I was curious. I hadn’t seen it in a long time. I was watching it for the twentieth anniversary.

Speaker: 1
01:14:11

We did a screening and the first few shots come up and I’m like, oh yeah, well, it looks like a $7,000 movie. And then it just keeps going. And it’s in the once we’re in the jail cell and the shooting’s happening and I, and I realize, oh my God, we had these blanks that only fired one shot and it would jam.

Speaker: 1
01:14:27

So I had to show it going, use the sound effect, cut to the other guy, cut back to have another one go. I had to have to do these editing tricks to make it look like, and then repeat a few frames. So it goes, sai it looks like a machine gun, all these stuff that I’m start sweating as I’m watching it going.

Speaker: 1
01:14:43

I can’t believe I made this movie with that freaking camera. I don’t know how I did. I couldn’t even sai. I’m there with this long lens pulling my own focus. When I finally had to do a real movie, I was operating the camera on my first real movie with a crew, and I get the camera and a guy comes over and he focuses for you.

Speaker: 1
01:15:00

That’s your job. You focus? Ai. I had to do my own focusing on the last movie. I ai I was so hard.

Speaker: 1
01:15:07

You’re trying to focus on a guy while you’re filming. You don’t know where you arya. And it’s just I was couldn’t believe how much easier it is when you have a crew.

Speaker: 0
01:15:15

It’s extremely valuable to know that the pain of that, the the spectrum of creativity that’s allowed within that, even just the focusing. Yeah. Like, how focusing fucks up on older cameras, on newer cameras. What what are the different artifacts that come up just to know

Speaker: 1
01:15:30

Yeah.

Speaker: 0
01:15:30

The battlefield. In order to be a great general, you have to know how to be a soldier on the battlefield. Yeah.

Speaker: 1
01:15:35

Yeah. It’s good to know all that stuff, but, you know, it’s ai, at the end of the day, you could shoot something on a phone and if you have a great story, no one’s gonna even notice. Ai be, oh, we shot that on a phone. I didn’t notice. You know, so sometimes people get caught up on what kind of camera should I have?

Speaker: 1
01:15:47

It’s like, it’s not the camera. The tool, that’s just the tool. That’s just the pen. That’s just like, yeah, you can have different paint brushes, but you can go, I’m gonna I’m gonna limit my palette. I’m only gonna use a fan brush and a detail brush, and I’m gonna make a painting. Do you think that painting’s gonna suffer? No.

Speaker: 1
01:16:02

It’s gonna take on an identity that you wouldn’t have had if you had all the other tools. So sometimes the limitations help you because when you can do anything, you come it can be crippling. When I knew I could only use those things for mariachi, it’s like, alright. Well, it’s very it’s very simple now. Let me show you how cheapskate I was.

Speaker: 1
01:16:17

Like, I did not spend on anything. So when you see him walking around with a guitar case, it’s a shitty cardboard one, you know, like I got from home. I had to get a heavier one to put the guns in. So we borrowed one, but it had this material ripped off the top. So you could see the wood. It was just the wood on top. So it didn’t match the other one because it wasn’t all black.

Speaker: 1
01:16:38

And that was too cheap to paint it black. I didn’t sana spend money on paint. So you see that cardboard case, he puts it down And when he goes to open it, I cut to the other one. Once the wood is, is Yeah. Watch the edits. You’ll see it open. Now it’s a completely different case for the guns.

Speaker: 1
01:16:54

And when he goes to cut it, go ahead and close it, it cuts to the other one. And he goes, oh, that’s how I did that whole movie. Again, it was a practice. Ai not I don’t wanna waste any money on it. I don’t know if it’s gonna be even I won’t be able to make $5 from it.

Speaker: 0
01:17:07

Yeah. But the you you you’re one of the one of the few great directors where both the movie’s genius and the process of making it is creative genius. It’s, like, fun to watch both, to know of both.

Speaker: 1
01:17:19

You know what I believe? Right.

Speaker: 0
01:17:20

It’s ai it’s from somewhere else.

Speaker: 1
01:17:22

I have to say You’re just That thing is freaking I I didn’t get in its way. That’s basically what what helped. And and people say that, you know, don’t get in your own way. This is a little bit easier to understand. It’s ai, keep the pipe clear. Don’t block it with your ego. Don’t say you’re gonna be shocked, but don’t ever say, oh shit, how do I do that?

Speaker: 1
01:17:40

I don’t know if I can do that. You didn’t do it to begin with. Accept that it just came through you and try to get back into that head speak, especially when you go to make a second film or a third film or follow-up a success. That’s when artists get really crippled, because sometimes they start tiptoeing around as an artist going like, oh shah, now it’s my second film. My first one did really well.

Speaker: 1
01:17:58

They meh not like my second one so much. That’s not the head speak you were in when you made the first one, you weren’t hesitant like that. You were just, so try to keep that very naive. And and that’s why I say commit to a body of work because I know a lot of filmmakers get stuck on their second one and then go further because they get crippled by the success of the first one.

Speaker: 1
01:18:16

And they start asking, oh, shit. How did I do that? How can I do that again? And you get deeper and deeper in a hole you can’t get out of.

Speaker: 0
01:18:22

I think you’ve spoken about that filmmakers, especially early on in their journey, critics and the audience can destroy them. Meaning, like, it it creates too much of a burden, too much, just wear them down to where they’re almost scared to be creative. Can you just speak to that, how to ignore the critic?

Speaker: 1
01:18:40

I’ll tell you something that I my best advice I ever got early on. I was so fortunate from an unlikely place, because he’s such a, he sounded like Saloni Eastwood when he said it. It was funny when he said that, but I got, I did Desperado and had Antonio Banderas. I brought Antonio to be in it from Europe, big action movie.

Speaker: 1
01:19:02

And so Spielberg saw it and he said, Hey, I want you to do Zorro with Antonio. So we’re working on it for a while. I did, I was working on the pre production, got to work with Spielberg doing that. It ended up stalling me because the, there was ai two studios involved and Amblin was moving or it was some weird thing where but I got to work with him for about five months, you know.

Speaker: 1
01:19:21

And I started getting really nervous because it’s like, oh shah. You start thinking about even movies of his that people would say, oh, you know, Temple of Doom’s not as good as Raiders. Have you seen temple of doom? Ai been killed if I can do that movie. Yeah.

Speaker: 1
01:19:33

If I can make Zorro as good as that one, the one that people sai, it’s ai, people don’t know how good they had it with that guy. But I started thinking, I even said, man, I just rewatched temple of doom last night. I don’t know how I’m gonna do the Zora movie. Like, I’ve just never done anything like that. You start getting, you know, afraid because you go the second thing. He said, all right.

Speaker: 1
01:19:53

Just, just, just, you’re gonna do fine. But then I started thinking this guy at that time, you know, know the era, but this was like mid nineties. He was making the biggest, best movies of all. And people would shit all over this guy. They would throw so meh. They were so jealous.

Speaker: 1
01:20:10

Press audience, everyone was just, like, hits at him, just throwing rocks at him for everything. Speak? Yeah. You can’t imagine it now. You had to been at that time.

Speaker: 1
01:20:20

Now everyone has respect for him, but they made him run a fucking gauntlet. And they were like, Jurassic Park. Yeah. There’s you you can’t even imagine it now, but you should have seen the climate. It freaked me out because I’m like, maybe I should just stay under the radar where I’ve been, you know, not poke

Speaker: 0
01:20:36

my head out so much. Yeah.

Speaker: 1
01:20:38

Because this guy has a head out, and they’re unwarranted. Yeah. Just you can’t even fathom it now because you weren’t here at that time. It was crazy. You would never even think of him that way. I’ll I’m glad it changed because back then, it was just it made people not wanna be successful.

Speaker: 1
01:20:52

And Ai made me be worried, like, maybe I shouldn’t be go making a movie that has his name on it that’s gonna put my head out in a whole different realm of filmmaking at a studio level. Because if I make a even if I make a good movie, if I make a great movie, he’s making great movies and he’s getting this dog shit.

Speaker: 1
01:21:08

I don’t know if I could take it, you know? So I asked him because you don’t know how resilient you can be. So I said, Jim and pan, how do you do it? How do you, how do you, what do you do when people just throw rocks at you all day long? And he goes, oh, Robert. You just don’t blink.

Speaker: 1
01:21:27

And I was like, woah. Now I see how he got through it. Just don’t blink. Just ai, pah pah pah. You know what’s coming? Don’t blink.

Speaker: 1
01:21:38

And to him say it, it’s like a Saloni Eastwood line. Right? But it was like, you could see he was telling the truth and you could see that’s how he did it. He just avoided all criticism by just not blinking. It’s like, it’s designed to make you blink and you’re just not gonna blink because you’re committing to a body of work.

Speaker: 1
01:21:55

He just keeps cranking out movies, whatever he feels like doing, he does. And that was like the most power and it never bothered me again. I just like always kept that in mind. Sai tell that to my actors. I tell that people that story has traveled.

Speaker: 1
01:22:07

I even had some little actors who were like starting to get up in it. So I meh, tell you a couple of things. Some people have told me you’re never as good as people say you are, and you’re never as bad either. George Clooney told me, so remember that. And then the second one, Spielberg, don’t blink. Don’t blink.

Speaker: 0
01:22:25

But there has to be a kind of vision for yourself of what what what you’re reaching for, what you’re trying

Speaker: 1
01:22:32

to do. Again, yeah, sort of sort of, ai, I think if you just told me what would be my vision for the future, just committing to a body of work, which I’ve just kept doing. Like, that’s that’s about as far as you can see.

Speaker: 0
01:22:44

Do you have a sense? Do you have a vision of the body of work you’ll make in the next twenty years? Like Yeah. Or is it just this fall?

Speaker: 1
01:22:50

Yeah. Like, I wasn’t sure because you don’t always know what the you might not have the vision yet because you don’t have the information yet. So if you just commit to a body of work, you’ll start figuring out more reasons to keep doing that body of work. So when I turned 50, I was like, I guess I could just keep making movies. I mean, I guess that’s been good for me.

Speaker: 1
01:23:08

Ai guess I could just make more. I kind of done that already, but it’s always fun and it’s always new and I guess I could make but it wasn’t a lot of drive. Right? It’s like that’s not it’s ai, well, I guess I could just keep doing the you know, that’s not as much as Ai can’t wait to keep doing another season.

Speaker: 1
01:23:23

Yeah. Yeah. But I didn’t know how to get to that point. So I thought, you know what? I I got to this job so early.

Speaker: 1
01:23:29

I was in the early twenties. I bet there’s some other job out there that exists that I don’t even know about because I don’t know other jobs. So I looked up, you’re not gonna believe it, but I literally bought jobs for dummies.

Speaker: 0
01:23:40

Nice.

Speaker: 1
01:23:41

It was just like, I don’t even know what I do what basic jobs are even out there. Turn the page. Oh, yeah. Don’t want that job. Don’t want that job. Don’t want that job. I’m just going through. And it gets to filmmaker, and there’s a little ai, Brutality’s job. This icon is a guy like this. Literally, you look it up. It’s a, and it says, this is the best job ever.

Speaker: 1
01:23:58

You get to just be creative with your friends, sit back and watch the money roll in across the desk. And I said, but 99% of film students don’t get this job. So give up that dream. So I was like, oh, I guess I got the best job. But then I started working with my kids when we did, ai a TV show called Rebel Without a Crew based on that, where I found filmmakers who had only made a short film.

Speaker: 1
01:24:22

They hadn’t made a feature. I picked this diverse group of filmmakers, gave them $7,000 and we documented them making a feature two weeks ai I did. You can bring one person, like I had Carlos Gallardo, the producer and star of Ai. Bring Bring one person. You can be your cameraman, or you can be your sound guy, whatever, but it’s only that for the shoot, and you’d have to do the whole thing.

Speaker: 1
01:24:40

And I saw those guys. By the time they’re they’re like, I don’t know how we’re gonna make this movie. By the first week of shooting, they’re already talking about their next feature. They they became so confident because their idea of what impossible is drops really quick when you take it.

Speaker: 0
01:24:54

Anyone interested in, unlocking their creativities, not even just filmmaking, I highly recommend that shah, and I highly recommend the the ai of the follow on show, which is where you make red 11.

Speaker: 1
01:25:05

Meh. So that’s the one I did. So then it came time for me to do one. So I made a movie called red 11 based on my experiences in the medical hospital. Mhmm. But I’ll turn it into a sci fi thriller just to use that as so then I can use, like somebody getting stabbed in the ai.

Speaker: 1
01:25:18

So I can still gonna have more elements to show how you can do camera tricks and stuff with no money. And, and in the old days make it for less than $7,000 which I think were like $5,000 meh because we don’t had a lot of actors Ai wanted to pay. But the movie itself can make it for nothing. But I brought my son aboard as my number one, who hadn’t been working with me in a while.

Speaker: 1
01:25:37

I mean, he wrote Charcoal a L’Avargo when he was seven, but then he hadn’t really been at working on my crew. So he didn’t know how to operate the sound equipment, the separate sound system and all that. I didn’t show him until the day of filming. Cause I knew we’re documenting it would make a better tutorial.

Speaker: 1
01:25:50

So by getting them working on the movies together, they came to me super excited by end of the day, I thought for sure, oh, they’re gonna hate this. Even though it’s only two weeks, they’ve got other interests. They don’t wanna be filmmakers. I thought they were gonna be like, all right, I’m out of here after one day.

Speaker: 1
01:26:06

But instead he came to me and his brother who acted in it, Hey, my dad. The actor didn’t show up after the first day. The location didn’t match the script at all. We asked you how we were gonna solve the problems, and you’re like, I don’t know. Figure it out.

Speaker: 1
01:26:21

And we thought dad stumped for once. He’s is he stumped finally? But But then by the end of the day, his eyes were all white. We figured it out and went, oh, they don’t realize this is the creative process. Every day is like that.

Speaker: 1
01:26:33

And in life too, every day, you don’t know your machine’s gonna not work or you’re gonna get a flat tire or you’re gonna get fired that day. Sai life is very unpredictable, just like a movie set. So I realized I’m gonna make them all work on my movies now because it’s teaching them about life.

Speaker: 1
01:26:49

I’m teaching them very little about the filmmaker. It’s about life lessons, about how you take on something impossible, turn chicken shit to chicken salad and make it work. And that’s the straw and that’s life. That’s the process of life. So many people say, well, I’m not ready to make my projects.

Speaker: 1
01:27:04

Ai, you’re not ready for life either. You’re like this all day. You’re you’re dodging shit that’s going on. How come art has to be perfect? It’s ai, it should be the same. Life and art should be the same.

Speaker: 1
01:27:14

And I

Speaker: 0
01:27:14

think filmmaking in general is full of unpredictable things. And just

Speaker: 1
01:27:19

so many moments short little microcosm too. Within one project, you’ve got a whole blueprint for how you’re gonna solve ai, because you’ve just done it on a creative level.

Speaker: 0
01:27:27

I think of all the art forms of all the art mediums ai that, it just has so many different components.

Speaker: 1
01:27:31

A lot of components to it.

Speaker: 0
01:27:33

And so, like, there’s so many ways to fuck things up

Speaker: 1
01:27:35

Yeah.

Speaker: 0
01:27:35

To learn from But

Speaker: 1
01:27:37

any of the disciplines, if you add those to it, like Sai teach my actors to paint in between takes. We’ll go and we’ll I’ll take a picture of them in character. I show them a canvas. I show them paint. You don’t need to know how to paint. This is to show you the brush is gonna know where to go. You just gotta pick it up. Pick the colors you sana. Don’t matter how crazy they arya.

Speaker: 1
01:27:56

Whatever’s speaking to you. You lay it down. I’ll show you some of the pictures. You’re not gonna believe the masterworks these actors did ai in a day. They just start doing it. Lady Gaga had her fingernails in there, you know, Josh Brolin’s doing this thing.

Speaker: 1
01:28:08

Ai I take a picture of them in character, do a line drawing of it. We project it on top. And mostly it’s the painting coming through their line drawing with a little bit of their eyes painted in. You’re not gonna believe these things. They couldn’t believe it, but it teaches them that, that thing about that the creativity’s gonna come through.

Speaker: 1
01:28:22

So even though they’re already acting, they’re already being creative or already making a movie. Like you said, that’s already a really great creative endeavor. When we would sneak off and paint, you could tell it’s firing a whole other part of their brain. It was funny. I think, Josh Broads’ girlfriend sai, Josh, Hey, my girlfriend just said, she said his wife now, but tyler, are you guys doing drugs?

Speaker: 1
01:28:46

You leave the set and you come back and you’re all like, Ai saying, and I go, no, we’re painting, we’re painting. But that makes sense that you say that because it create, when you get your creativity ai is more powerful than any drug. And we would come back and, and he’d be on the set going, Is it bad that I’m still thinking about the painting?

Speaker: 1
01:29:02

And I was like, no, I think it’s good. I think it’s all good, but it’s, you can tell it’s opening a whole other part of the creative brain. So you can be doing acting in a movie. And the painting’s still gonna tap. It’s just how much untapped potential your creative brain has.

Speaker: 1
01:29:15

So the more you can do, the more you’re firing off and the more, and it was so cool. Like I remember we did one with Joseph Gordon Levitt was painting. We came in and the table was like this and they said, we have a problem. You want them to throw the cards out, the, the playing cards out, but it’s so slick.

Speaker: 1
01:29:30

They go sliding off the table and we both look at it and we both got the solution at the same time. Oh, just, just, just, have them, just have them throw them wherever they go. And then we’ll place them. And then digitally, it’s even better that he looks like he gets them all perfectly laid out to show what a card shark he is.

Speaker: 1
01:29:47

That’s that’s what we have to do. Because we’re not sana, we can’t, we’ll be here all day. We’re trying to get, if we’re gonna worry about where they go, just go bump, bump, bump, bump, bump, bump, and then we’ll place the cards down and everyone will pick them up. And then we’ll marry the two in post. You know?

Speaker: 1
01:30:02

You just you just come up with creative solutions better, easier because you were just solving crazy creative solutions in the other one. Like, what paint medium do I use? What ai of gel am I gonna use? So when you come back to your main job, which is filmmaking, you’re like, oh, I can figure this out in two seconds, you know?

Speaker: 1
01:30:18

So it helps you create a problem solve. So that’s basically working with my kids made me realize, oh, now I know exactly what I wanna do for the next ten years. I only wanna make movies with my kids because I’m mentoring them, but they’re teaching me shit because they were the age I was when I made Ai and Desperado.

Speaker: 1
01:30:31

And their, their ideas are really sharp. So the mentoring goes both ways and it’s like the greatest parenting you can do because you’re building a project together and in the same boat together, figuring it out. And it’s family ai, you’re like checking all the boxes. So I thought my filmmaking going forward is gonna be checking all the boxes in life.

Speaker: 1
01:30:49

So I’m not, not spending time with my family. We’re actually giving them lessons that they can go do anything they want in ai, because they’re gonna have different interests. But now it’s kind of like going to college and this college is like the best college, because it pays you to learn. You get to do these crazy skills.

Speaker: 1
01:31:04

Like my son is, you know, conducting the orchestra, the James Bond orchestra in London for the Ai Kids score and a score he wrote, because I can’t write at his level because he was always our best piano player. And they get, you get the charge out of working with them. And then, and by making a label, there’s a, there’s a weird phenomenon that happens.

Speaker: 1
01:31:25

If you guys wanna take your game to another level, I stumbled upon this ai. My sai, that was my counterpart on that movie racer. He was my sound guy. Like I said, came up with shah, but a lava growing these little, he became my writer, co writer, co producer. He had come to me and said, I, I wanna do VR type movie. And I said, oh, well, let me show you, as an example of creativity and manifesting.

Speaker: 1
01:31:50

I said, let me show you how it works. Let’s let’s make a company. We’ll make a company called double R. Double R productions, because we all have double R names, all the kids. So if anyone ever wants to do anything, we can use our company.

Speaker: 1
01:32:02

So let’s make a logo and I’ll make t shirts and notepads and stuff. Because once you have a company, you have now have to make things for that company. Just like the advice I gave to people, stop ai, make a business card that says ai, director, cinematographer. I did editor because then now you have to conform to that identity. So now if I create a label like double R, we’re gonna come up with ideas.

Speaker: 1
01:32:23

We’ll call up VR companies and say, Hey, we have a company, a VR company. Would you like us to make you a film for your, sell your headset? So, yeah, they gave us a budget. They, they, they’re dying for content. They gave us a budget.

Speaker: 1
01:32:35

We shot a twenty minute action movie called The Limit with Michelle Rodriguez and Norman Reedus, where you’re in an action movie with them. And it was killer. We, they made us a big double R logo animated logo. Later that year, we did Meh 11, sai logo. That movie went to director’s ai and Cannes.

Speaker: 1
01:32:52

Festivals were paying us to come talk about how we made that movie. That’s when we’re doing the cards, throwing the cards out because they wanted their audiences. They knew they would love that. So we could have had a whole gig just continuing to get paid, to go to the fed.

Speaker: 1
01:33:06

Usually you paid to meh, go to fed. You don’t get paid. That’s how, what a success that was. But then we had to make, we can be heroes. So we had to stop, but we can be heroes was a Netflix movie where where they asked me to make a spy kids type thing.

Speaker: 1
01:33:19

And so I thought, oh, okay, I’ll just do it with superheroes. That’s their, I wrote it with my kids based it on some of their personalities. It’s the most watched and rewatched movie in Netflix history. Like nothing in touch of it because kids just keep watching it over and over because there’s kids with super power. No one’s ever done that before.

Speaker: 1
01:33:36

And they can’t, they couldn’t believe it. Like I’d heard anecdotally, that’s how the ai kids, there were people said, oh, the kids watch it over and over on video. Well, you can’t keep track of that. You can’t on Netflix. Because their biggest thing is people completing a movie.

Speaker: 1
01:33:48

A lot of people don’t complete a movie, and it still counts as a view. They may watch five minutes and change the channel. So do you complete a movie? That’s really where they, you know, really value. Not only do they complete, but rewatch, rewatch, rewatch per household sai many times and nothing

Speaker: 0
01:34:02

could touch it. Wow.

Speaker: 1
01:34:03

That one has a double r logo as well. And my kids are like, dad, it really worked. I was like, I know better than I thought. I didn’t know. I didn’t know that me manifesting that company was gonna turn into that, and we’ve just keep making stuff. So I wanna do that with ram knuckle films now with the audience because it works.

Speaker: 1
01:34:21

So I said, as soon as you have a logo and a company, your brain starts coming up with all kinds of ideas. And it’s a filter. Like like I said, sometimes the freedom of limitations is all freeing. When I had to do four rooms and it’s like, we have to use one hotel room. Oh, well then there’s gonna be a dead body. There’s gonna be you can do a lot with limitations.

Speaker: 1
01:34:42

If they said you could use the whole city, it would’ve been harder to come up with something. But Ram Knuckle films has a filter, only action. Action movies, because that’s the stuff that there’s always an appetite for. If you ask Netflix right now, what do you need more of? They’ll say action, action, action.

Speaker: 1
01:34:57

We don’t have enough action. The last regime didn’t leave us enough action. We need action. They’ll pay a premium for an action film that we can make at a lower cost. A $20,000,000 action film is very cheap.

Speaker: 1
01:35:07

Studios don’t know how to make them that cheap. That’s why they’ll pay for an independent to go do it. And right now that’s the key is to be independent. Because a lot of studios that can’t even green light anything, because things are so expensive. They don’t wanna lose their ass, but they need action films.

Speaker: 1
01:35:20

So let’s make something that everybody needs. And let’s make it at a price and we’ll make it in my studio. Cause Ram my own studio and I can keep all the costs down. Cause we have all the costumes and props and sets from twenty five years of filmmaking to keep the cost down. And we’ll have the audience gets to invest.

Speaker: 1
01:35:37

It’s not crowdfunding or Kickstarter. You’re actually an investor. Anyone who puts money in can pitch their idea for an action film to me. And I’m gonna make one of the four films in that slate from one of those ai, because I want the audience to win. I want the audience to win and be a part of it. Because the audience is an afterthought in Hollywood. They make a movie. They show the audience the movie.

Speaker: 1
01:36:00

Go tell your friends now sai y’all spend money on our movie. Well, where’s your cut of that? So I want them to be successful. So if any of the movies in the slate do well, they make money off that one and then sequels or anything, but they’re all gonna do well because everyone needs an action movie, and we’re gonna keep the cost down.

Speaker: 0
01:36:15

Can I actually ask you just to focus in on action? You’ve created a lot of epic action films. What makes for a great action film?

Speaker: 1
01:36:24

It comes down to the character. You know, like if you think about what are the best action films, what are your favorite films? Like diehard. He’s a cop, so he is still capable, but he’s not Superman. The fact that he’s like in over his head and you’re rooting for him. That’s a great character, you know, John wick, he is Superman, but he’s ai. And now he’s pissed off, and he’s going back into a job. You know?

Speaker: 1
01:36:48

So the care it comes down to the character really being very important because the action will then have a character to it. I think

Speaker: 0
01:36:55

Leon the professional.

Speaker: 1
01:36:56

That’s what’s, like, that’s a character.

Speaker: 0
01:36:58

That’s all about character.

Speaker: 1
01:36:59

Now that when I say we’re gonna do action movies, I mean, movies that are really action first. Like, there’s some movies that are more dramas that have action.

Speaker: 0
01:37:06

Where’s the boundary? So John Wick is action.

Speaker: 1
01:37:08

That’s more action, but it has character in it, but it’s action driven.

Speaker: 0
01:37:12

What about, like, Predator?

Speaker: 1
01:37:14

Predator is a sci fi action film. So that’s kind of a hybrid, which I like. Yeah. But ai, it’s hard for the audience to know what they’re buying into. Right. Like, they focused a lot on the action in the trailer, you know, and then they felt there was some other worldly thing, but you didn’t really know.

Speaker: 1
01:37:27

But it’s a great movie.

Speaker: 0
01:37:28

So Ai Hard is a is a good example.

Speaker: 1
01:37:30

That was a good example ai I could think of right off where there was a character that really made the difference. And then everyone repeated that. You know, for a while, it was like under siege. I was like a regular guy who’s really actually has some training on a ship now.

Speaker: 1
01:37:42

Oh, and then on the bus, you got a cop. He’s a cop, but he’s not super cop. Yeah. So that’s why you root for him. You know, that became a, an element that people repeated a lot.

Speaker: 0
01:37:50

What about Taken?

Speaker: 1
01:37:51

That’s a great one. That’s a great character who is superhuman.

Speaker: 0
01:37:54

Yeah.

Speaker: 1
01:37:54

Who’s also retired, you know? So there’s like a superhero type character in an extraordinary circumstance. Like that’s now his daughter’s Taken. Ai. And then there’s ordinary people ai the Terminator. That’s a great character. Not the Terminator, he’s a villain, but Sarah Connor, who is a waitress, doesn’t think her life’s going anywhere.

Speaker: 1
01:38:13

And she finds out she’s the mother of the guy who’s gonna save the, the human race. And, she’s gotta train him, you know, suddenly she has to become someone else. Those are cool movies because it’s a genesis of a character and you see a character go from waitress to revolutionary. Step up. Yeah. What about mob movies?

Speaker: 0
01:38:31

I mean, some of them are, like, Godfather is really not about is not action.

Speaker: 1
01:38:34

Not an action movie. Ram that has some action. Right.

Speaker: 0
01:38:36

I mean, John Wick is a mob film in some sense. Goodfellas. I mean, there’s a lot of dynamic action, but there’s really not action first.

Speaker: 1
01:38:43

That’s really a character type piece.

Speaker: 0
01:38:45

Okay.

Speaker: 1
01:38:45

Great. Freaking amazing. And it feels like action by the way he does it. It’s just like that. It’s like fast paced, fast talking, fast moving. Ai, escape from New York is one of my favorites since I was a kid. Because every movie, you’ll notice this now that I tell you, even like a romantic comedy, there’s a timeline. Every movie has to have like a ticking clock.

Speaker: 1
01:39:04

So the audience knows this story is not just gonna take over a period of years. They’ll suddenly someone in the movie around twenty or thirty minutes in will say, we’ve gotta go find the groom before the wedding this weekend. You know, it’ll be just like that. Escape New York has the best example of a ticking time clock because he’s literally got bombs in his neck. Mhmm.

Speaker: 1
01:39:23

And he’s got a watch that shows him. He’s constantly clocking it how little time he is, and he gets you sai, like, oh my god, is he gonna make it? That’s, like, the best use of that. And no one’s ever topped that ticking time clock. All the other ones seem artificial in comparison. You know?

Speaker: 1
01:39:40

Like, aliens, you know, we gotta get off this planet now because this whole thing’s gonna blow up. You know? They’re ai, there’s a timeline. You’re it’s already urgent, but now there’s an extra timeline on it. Yeah. This is what happens.

Speaker: 0
01:39:52

You mean, as you’re talking, you’re just making me fall in love more and more with action films. I I sometimes you forget how much you love action

Speaker: 1
01:40:00

films. Good action film. Yeah. In fact, like the Terminator. Oh my god. The original Terminator just came out in April. I’ve been watching it again. It looks ai better than most movies look today, and that’s a $4,000,000 movie. It looks incredible. You can see every beat of sweat in this movie.

Speaker: 1
01:40:14

I was watching it again with somebody, a female, and there’s always a point when you’re watching that movie where she’ll turn and say, I love this movie. You know, a point that is, it’s a point where Michael bean tells her, I came across time for you, Sarah. I love you, which is, you know, I always have.

Speaker: 1
01:40:32

And you’re just like, oh my God, there’s like a real emotional love story there that he put into Titanic, that he put into Avatar. He figured out that thing that makes those movies work.

Speaker: 0
01:40:44

By the way, I should say that. I mean, there is an aspect of, El Mariachi that is a love story.

Speaker: 1
01:40:50

To me. Yeah. There was a love story.

Speaker: 0
01:40:51

Ai don’t know if you see it that way, but Sai ai when I Yeah. Just rewatched it, I was like A tragic love story. But Sai was, like, heartbroken that she’s dead.

Speaker: 1
01:40:59

I got heartbroken twice. Let me tell you the second time it happened. One, you’re making that and you go, okay. This is how it has to go. But then now you’re invested in this person and you go, oh man, she has to die. It’s gonna be really sad. In fact, the studio, even when they said they were gonna remake it, a good thing Ai put that ending on.

Speaker: 1
01:41:14

That’s the only reason they showed it to an audience. We were gonna remake it. They weren’t gonna put that movie out. They showed it and said, we need to show this movie to an audience because they might not like the fact that we killed a girl before we remake it. Alright. They showed it to an audience. The audience liked it the way it was. So they said, we’re gonna take this movie to some film festivals.

Speaker: 1
01:41:32

And I was like, no, not this movie. This is my practice movie. No one’s supposed to see this movie. Yep. And they go, no. No. That you got something.

Speaker: 1
01:41:40

No. No. Dude, dude, if I knew anyone was gonna see this, I ai shot it completely. Give me $2,000. I’ll go reshoot half of it.

Speaker: 1
01:41:46

Just knowing people are gonna see it, I want something. And the head of the studio was really smart. He said, you don’t know what you have here. Is there something real special? Let’s take, let’s take it to Telluride and see what happens. Telluride, Toronto did great. And like I said, and it won Sundance.

Speaker: 1
01:41:58

So now we had to put it out, but I was like, I would’ve said don’t show that movie. But they also questioned the ending and didn’t come into play because we ended up making Desperado. And the girl in Desperado doesn’t die. You know, we, we didn’t do that. We didn’t kill Sana, but that’s what needed to happen to Mariachi. I’m Quinton called me one ai.

Speaker: 1
01:42:15

People would always say like, oh, Reservoir Dogs, he, he borrowed from this movie, Hong Kong action film called, City on Ai. It’s about these guys, they’re all criminals and they kill each other, whatever. And, he said, Hey, they’re showing a double feature called East Looks West and West Looks East.

Speaker: 1
01:42:30

They’re showing Reservoir Dogs with City on Fire, the one they say I borrowed ram, and they’re showing Mariachi with a Hong Kong film called Run where they ripped off Mariachi. Like, they just took the whole story. It had two, you know, Chinese actors in Mexico with the guitar cases. One’s ai they just followed it beat by beat.

Speaker: 1
01:42:47

So we’re watching it, and it was ai scene by scene. They just they just rebated without even getting the rights or anything. It was so fun to watch. So we saw Maracci first, then we watched that one. And I’m like, what’s this big brothel scene, though? This isn’t my movie. This is oh, the bad guy.

Speaker: 1
01:43:01

Oh, there’s a scene in my movie where the bad guy has two girls in bed with him, and they figured that was a whorehouse, but it was just his apartment. Yeah. So they got this whorehouse. Sai they’re they’re reinterpreted it. And they have helicopter shots and all kinds of big thing. And the action was awesome.

Speaker: 0
01:43:15

Yeah. But

Speaker: 1
01:43:16

then and the girl’s really good. And then midway through the movie, I’m like, oh, shit. She’s gonna die because I killed her in mine. I don’t want her to die. I like this actress. It’s really great, and they have a really great love story. I go, well, I hope they change that part.

Speaker: 1
01:43:28

No. They kill her. So I, I felt bad ai. Because I sealed, I felt I sealed her fate. I sealed her fate because

Speaker: 0
01:43:36

Yeah.

Speaker: 1
01:43:37

Ai have a line in Speak Kids too. Cause I arya thinking when you create stuff, you start thinking, I wonder if that’s how our creator is. He’s like, oh shah. I just kind of threw that in a memo and now that whole town’s gonna get wiped out. Yeah. You know, I didn’t even think about the implications of that.

Speaker: 1
01:43:54

Because, there’s a line Ai was making a character that Steve Buscemi plays in Spy Kids two, and he’s a creator. He just wanted to make a little miniature zoo for kids. And then he saw it. Well, what if I put some together, like a lizard with a snake and it’s a slizard, or you have a spider monkey, which is like literally spider legs and a monkey top.

Speaker: 1
01:44:16

So he makes that. And then he thought, Hey, why don’t I make, make them a little bit bigger for kids that have big hands? And it got out of control and they turned into these huge creatures and now they’re trying to eat them. So he’s hiding and the kids find him hiding. And he says this one line that people keep coming. It’s on the internet a lot, this meme about this. Why is this blind, this movie? It’s so wild.

Speaker: 1
01:44:38

Sai thought I wanted Steve to come up to the camera and like, he’s just, he’s lost in his own creative world. And he says, I, I can’t even go outside because my own creations are gonna eat me. And he comes up to the camera and he goes, do you think God hides in heaven? Because he too lives in fear of what he created here on earth.

Speaker: 1
01:44:57

Ai like really just for a moment.

Speaker: 0
01:45:00

Yeah.

Speaker: 1
01:45:00

This thing. And it’s like, because you feel like that way when you’re, when you’re creating stuff, like you’re creating something and then now it’s taking on a life on its own. It’s like, oh no, now this character has to die. I didn’t want that. You know, this, this domino effect of creation.

Speaker: 1
01:45:12

And you start thinking, well, best must be what creation maybe he is hiding up there because look. He didn’t expect all this shit to happen, giving us free will and all that.

Speaker: 0
01:45:22

I mean, this particular context that, you are the creator of the story, and it, for

Speaker: 1
01:45:27

some reason, makes me feel good to know that you feel the pain of this character dying. Yeah. Absolutely. Because, like, if I’m I’m writing it, but if it’s not coming from me, I’m as surprised sometimes. And Quentin would say that, you know, he’d say, you just get two characters talking when I’m writing my script, and then suddenly they’re just talking to each other.

Speaker: 1
01:45:45

And I was like, what does that mean? And now now I know what that means. It’s like he just gave them ai, and now now the the dialogue’s coming through him.

Speaker: 0
01:45:53

Let me just ask you. You’re the perfect person to ask about the genius of Quentin Tarantino. What makes him speak? As a director, as a creative mind, what do you see in him that’s beautiful, that’s brilliant?

Speaker: 1
01:46:05

He he since I met him, he was just ai this brilliant, ball of energy. And, you know, like if you see him, I walk around his house and I’ll see like a few sheets of paper, all handwritten out. I’m like, what’s that? He goes, oh, that was something I was starting to write. And Sai, you know, not gonna finish.

Speaker: 1
01:46:26

I’m like, can I take these and go turn it into ai whole trilogy of films? You know, like what he throws away, all this mortal men would kill for. You meet people like that. I tell people, you know, your parents say, watch out who your peers are. You know, when you’re younger, that means one thing, but once you get older, surround yourself around people who, who swing much farther than you, you know, that’s just like, but that’s really true.

Speaker: 1
01:46:51

I mean, just by being around him and working with him, you get ai osmosis, you learn stuff. And it just ups your game because they’re just swing way beyond you. Jim Cameron was like that. So like, when I first met him, I was trying to impress the hell out of him, you know, because I was such a big fan and I was about to go do this Spirotto and I went, Hey, I just took a three day Steadicam course, because I can’t afford a Steadicam operator.

Speaker: 1
01:47:14

So I’m gonna operate Steadicam myself on this Spirotto. Now, if he was just my peer, he’d say, oh, I, I did the same thing. And I’m gonna do the same thing. That, that would be like hanging out with somebody of your ilk, but you don’t, you want somebody who’s above that. You know what he said? He goes, Ai bought a Steadicam, but not to operate it. I’m gonna take it apart and design a better one.

Speaker: 1
01:47:33

It’s like us mere mortals ai to learn how to operate the camera. He’s designing all new systems. That’s the guy you wanna hang out with, not someone who’s doing what you’re doing. So surround yourself by those kind of people. And that’s where you learn things like don’t blink, you know, like somebody who’s like really swinging for the fences and accomplishing so much. And Quentin was like that.

Speaker: 1
01:47:54

So I met him at the festivals. He saw Mariachi. He loved it. We came up, we talked and he said, you don’t like my next film I’m writing right now, Pulp Fiction. So Ai, I thought, man, I’m gonna put this ai.

Speaker: 1
01:48:05

He’s so he’s so fun. I’m gonna put him in, I’m gonna write him in my Desperado script, which I was writing. So that was before Pulp Fiction and all that. When I ai cast him, I didn’t know he was gonna go become such a household name. I just was drawn to his energy and I’d already written him in. And I met Steve Buscemi there ai I was like, I’m writing a character for Steve Buscemi.

Speaker: 1
01:48:22

But then I went back to the Sony lot where I was working on Desperado and Quintin and I ended up having offices right next to each other on the Sony lot. By accident, I didn’t even know that. I I just met him and I go back and he just because originally pulp fiction was for TriStar because Danny DeVito was a producer and he was gonna make it for TriStar.

Speaker: 1
01:48:38

So he was there writing Pulp Fiction and I was writing Desperado. So I’d go show him like storyboards from Desperado and he’d come act out scenes of Pulp Fiction. And we got to be really good friends that way. We’d go eat lunch at Versailles across the street, the Sony lot. And then Sony passed on Pulp Fiction.

Speaker: 1
01:48:55

It’s too weird, too long. $8,000,000 movie or 7,000,000. They’re like, ah, we’re gonna go make the next Pauley short movie instead. You know? Like, people don’t understand this thing.

Speaker: 1
01:49:05

And Miramax got it, and they’d just been bought by Disney. So they produced their first film was Pulp Fiction. I mean, so the, and then that thing went to Cannes and it was a whole thing. But what I loved about his story is that when he made Pulp Fiction, he had a director screening.

Speaker: 1
01:49:21

He showed it to some directors ai I wasn’t able to go. But anyway, I had dinner with him once and it was in my journal. Cause I keep a journal at two, at 02:40AM when, after he had, dropped, Ai dropped him off at his house. I said, oh, wait, how did your movie come out? You know, Pulp Fiction, he had just finished it.

Speaker: 1
01:49:35

And he went, nah, it’s still, still feels like a movie Quentin would make. It doesn’t feel like a real movie. And I was like, that’s fine. What does it mean? It feels, it feels like one of those movies I would make, like Reservoir Dogs. It doesn’t feel like a real movie.

Speaker: 1
01:49:49

And I was trying to be the supportive friend going, oh man, he was so excited about this movie. Now he’s bummed about it. And I was like, well, it should be different. It should be ai, he’s like, wouldn’t have it. Drove off. So I thought, oh, I guess that wasn’t the one.

Speaker: 1
01:50:02

So I went home and I called some of the directors that were at the screening and they go, yeah, this isn’t the one for him. It’s not, they had, none of them saw it. None of them saw it, but that, I know you’re like surprised. Yeah. But that happened with George Lucas too, with shah wars. Everybody saw that movie and was like, poor George. They showed it to all his director friends, poor George.

Speaker: 1
01:50:21

What do you just waste all this time with this for? Only Spielberg was the one who said it’s naive and it’s gonna do really good because it’s naive and kids will like it. But everyone else was like, what’s he doing? We’re artists. We’re making art films. What’s he doing this garbage for? Cause nobody knows. It shows no one knows anything.

Speaker: 1
01:50:36

Not even the filmmaker. When you’re being groundbreaking, you don’t know what groundbreaking is, not you or anyone around you, except maybe one or two people. So he sai, there was one person. Ai go, oh yeah, who is your Spielberg? He goes, Kathryn Bigelow.

Speaker: 1
01:50:47

Without a doubt, she’s the only one who said there’s something here. No one else was seeing, was saying that. And he said, in fact, because he remembered suddenly he’d forgotten the story, but if it wasn’t in my journal, I would’ve forgot it too. He goes, in fact, one of my friends, Simon said, Ai gonna sit you down and tell you all the things that are wrong with your movie, but I’ll wait till you get back from the Cannes film festival.

Speaker: 1
01:51:07

And he goes, and he wins the Palm door. Then his friend’s like, oh, what the hell do I know? I’ve only made one movie ai, so I never mind. I guess, I guess we were all wrong. So even he didn’t expect that at all. So that was a shah, you know, even to him. So think about that.

Speaker: 1
01:51:21

Yeah. That means what do you do commit to a body of work? Just do that. Cause you don’t know, you don’t know what’s gonna be a pulp fiction. What’s gonna be a Jackie Brown. What’s gonna be, you know, you don’t know. And they, and you ai to think they know, but they don’t know either.

Speaker: 1
01:51:34

They feel it ai I asked Jim Cameron. I said, do you see your movie really clearly? Like, can you see it like with, with hyper focus? Because it seems like that. And he goes, it’s like really far. It’s out of focus sai you work on it, you work on it. It starts coming.

Speaker: 1
01:51:47

I said, okay, good. So that’s, that’s normal. I thought maybe he had laser vision or something, but no, even him, he doesn’t really know, but he feels that he, he can make decisions and he understands what a creative drive is and how to just keep being relentless about it. But it’s not like they have all the proximity is huge. Proximity will change your ai.

Speaker: 1
01:52:11

Did for meh, just being around those ai, they didn’t teach me, Hey, I’m gonna teach you how to make a movie. Just being next to them, being in their world, just ups your game. You’re able to do things you weren’t able to do before you get ideas you didn’t get to do before. I ai. I’ll show you, one of my painting things.

Speaker: 1
01:52:29

You’re not gonna believe this freaking thing. I had a painter friend in Germany, Sebastian Krueger. He gives a workshop once a year. I ai I’m gonna go there and I meh I’ll learn more about directing by watching this guy paint than I will by watching another director. Cause that’s just now Ai know how creativity works. You’re gonna learn lessons outside of the box by doing that. And I tried to practice before going out there.

Speaker: 1
01:52:52

I was doing a Danny Trejo. I’ll show you the before and after. You’re not gonna freaking believe what you see, but this is how it, it really tells a story of how important proximity is. So I’m I do this painting. It’s like, sai, it’s fucking looks garbage. I’ll show you it looks like garbage. I’m not used.

Speaker: 1
01:53:08

I can’t do paintings that are just ai, see, I never should say Ai can’t cause you just cut your leg off, but I couldn’t at the time paint, just paint brush into paint and then write on the canvas like that without using some kind of medium, which this guy Sebastian Kruger would do.

Speaker: 1
01:53:24

So first Ai did a digital painting of Danny Trejo, like just to get the framing and all that.

Speaker: 0
01:53:29

I was ai.

Speaker: 1
01:53:29

So that’s just like, that’s like sana awake them tablet, but then I did it with paint and it’s like, ai, it’s all cruddy. And it’s too thick, the paint and it just looks that’s. And I just gave up right away. Ai, I was trying to pre practice sai I wouldn’t be a total buffoon there. Yeah.

Speaker: 1
01:53:43

Cause I was going the next week and I thought he’s using a different brush. Obviously he’s using a better paint. This stuff just is clogging up and it’s crap. I’m sure when I get there. So I get there and he’s doing a Mick Jagger. And he starts with a meh tone.

Speaker: 1
01:53:57

He starts blocking in the face with a little tiny drawing of where the face goes. He starts doing that. He starts adding some ai. There’s the photo, his reference. And he I’m like, why, why are you, why are you, concentrating so much on the cheek first? And he’s like, it’s different every time.

Speaker: 1
01:54:15

And I go, why do you what what paints are you using? And he’s like, those regular acrylic paint. What brushes do you have? Regular brushes. I’m like, how come mine doesn’t look like yours? Well, let me try what he’s doing. I mean, you start with a mid tone. I’m gonna do that Danny again.

Speaker: 1
01:54:30

Yeah. Start with a mid tone. I’ll start adding some ai. And I did that. And everybody kept coming over going ai, did you just do that?

Speaker: 1
01:54:38

And I was like, ai. I don’t know how, but it’s very cartoony still. He’s doing a very realistic Mick Jagger. Look how real that is. And you just watch it, and he doesn’t teach you anything. So he just starts painting.

Speaker: 1
01:54:54

So this is the photo he had as a reference, but then this is his painting. Ai? Yeah. And because I’m there, he’s not teaching you how to paint

Speaker: 0
01:55:02

through osmosis. You’re like learning somehow.

Speaker: 1
01:55:04

You’re seeing there isn’t a trick. Yeah. I thought he had a trick and that’s why I couldn’t get any further. He’s using the same brush and the same paint. Well, how come I can’t do that? And you go, you do it. Ai go, I’m gonna try and do something realistic. I’ve never done realistic before because I’m a cartoonist and everything. I was cartoony and that was just easier for me because Ai thought I would need too much training.

Speaker: 1
01:55:25

I did another Trejo. I started doing a realistic. I finished out just one section of his face and put the pen down because I did that. Shah the same day.

Speaker: 0
01:55:34

Nice.

Speaker: 1
01:55:35

I got out of my way because seeing him get out of his own way. I think that’s why sometimes people need to go to school for stuff like that. Because then now, well, I just did four years of school, so now I must know. Now you’ve given yourself permission, but you could give yourself permission right away, and it’s gonna come through.

Speaker: 0
01:55:52

And drawing Danny Theriault, of all people, it’s like there’s so much going on there. It’s like he’s so expressive.

Speaker: 1
01:55:57

He’s so he’s president.

Speaker: 0
01:55:58

Ai mean, you’ve worked with him a lot, and you’ve I mean, he’s one of those badass humans on the screen. You’ve created that. Can you just talk about what it’s like creating those characters?

Speaker: 1
01:56:10

What was exciting about Desperado is I went to go make it, and there were no Latin actors working in Hollywood because no one was creating roles for them. So I thought, wow, I gotta go create my own stars. We’ll bring Antonio from Europe because they kind of know his name from the automotive art movies.

Speaker: 1
01:56:24

And I saw him in tyler me up, tie me down when I was in the hospital, writing mariachi or watching TV while I was a patient. And there’s a scene where he like headbutts, Victoria Ablil, you know, he just gave us a headbutt. He goes, ai that. And I was like, woah, I bet that guy would wanna be in an action movie. He’s got something inside.

Speaker: 1
01:56:42

Sai I called him when we were doing Desperado and I said, would you ever consider doing an action? Oh meh, I’d love to do action. And he’s so I said, I got a movie for you. I got a movie for you. It was sequel to Mariachi.

Speaker: 1
01:56:53

And so Ai, I found in Mexico television, you know, doing she couldn’t get work in The US because of the the roles

Speaker: 0
01:57:02

in it. She’s a Ai. I mean, this is one of

Speaker: 1
01:57:03

the greatest, actually, in the world. One of the best stories. I was really determined to hire a real Latin, especially Hispanic, and then she’s Mexican actress to be the Mexican character. That’s like as authentic as you can get. And there was no one who was getting any jobs because no one was creating any.

Speaker: 1
01:57:19

So there was no one that had any movies under their name because there was no one. It was a whole systemic problem. Ai. This was 9493. So I was watching, a Paul Rodriguez show on Univision because he I was trying to practice my Spanish because I was having to do all these Spanish interviews because mariachi was in Spanish.

Speaker: 1
01:57:38

That was the only part I didn’t tell you. I didn’t speak Spanish when I made that movie. We didn’t grow up with it. So I never I left that part out of the Mariachi story because I thought people already didn’t believe I made the movie by myself. They knew I made it in a language I didn’t speak. I should have said it because it’d be even more inspiring.

Speaker: 1
01:57:53

Like, now you have no ai the English ai, basically. Oh, shit. I wrote the tyler.

Speaker: 0
01:58:00

Yeah.

Speaker: 1
01:58:00

What became the ai, and then we’d take it to the actors and the actor would translate it for me. And I, I was like, That is so inspiring. I’d be like,

Speaker: 0
01:58:09

holy shit.

Speaker: 1
01:58:09

I would try to speak Spanish and sai, like, let’s record. And they’d be looking at me ai, that means let’s meh. The record doesn’t mean record. That means now Ai know back then I didn’t know. So I’m watching Univision and then there’s Sana as a guest, and she’s a big soap star down there in Mexico. And she comes out. She’s beautiful. She’s funny.

Speaker: 1
01:58:30

Everyone’s laughing. She’s Sana, everyone that we know now. And shah starts talking about, you know, what I gather from what she’s saying that she’s having trouble finding any work in The US because of her accent. And then, Paul Rodriguez says, well, say something in English. And then she says, then she sounds just like she does now. And she, and he goes, that’s great.

Speaker: 1
01:58:48

She goes, I know, I know. And I went, I think this is the girl. So I called her in my office, and I videotaped our first meeting together. So I have that somewhere. Meh, that’s awesome. Telling me about and it’s Salma. It’s Salma. Yeah. It’s her with her energy, with her passion. It’s funny.

Speaker: 1
01:59:03

She became instant friends with my wife, you know, before they walked over, your wife and I are best friends. She already was like part of the family. She’s a godmother to my kids. And I thought I’m gonna help you. You’re gonna help me.

Speaker: 1
01:59:15

I need to have a Mexican actress in this, and you’re gonna be phenomenal. The studio didn’t see it. They were like, what? She hasn’t done ai. Why don’t you just hire somebody else who, you know, already has a name.

Speaker: 1
01:59:27

So if we just give her one movie, then she’ll be someone who’s in a movie and then you can keep casting. So I made a whole other movie with her in English called Road Racers. It was my second film for Showtime, really cool little rebel without a cause type movie. And she’s, and I gave her a role and that’s what we have an example of her doing English and they still were like, we need a screen test.

Speaker: 1
01:59:47

We need to have a screen test with a bunch of other actresses, you know? So I said, sure, let’s do that. So I went over to her house the night before before the screen test. And we worked on the scene, which is the best scene where she’s operating on his arm and they’ve got all this chemistry.

Speaker: 1
02:00:04

And I was just directing her through it, like completely down to when you pick up the water and you hand him the water, don’t scream, oh, hot water. Just be like hot water. And while he’s spitting it out and it’s gonna be a big dramatic action with like a very light delivery.

Speaker: 1
02:00:18

And so we got it down to a science. The next day we show up, Antonio does a scene where all the girls come in. He, does it with her clearly. They’ve got amazing chemistry. She just nails it. He’s great. He loves her too. Studio’s like, okay, you can hire reluctantly like that. Right.

Speaker: 1
02:00:39

But once they saw the footage come as we’re shooting and they saw it on the big screen, when they’re watching the dailies, then they were like, oh my God. And then they saw it. Then they saw what I saw when I met tyler. But they, it ai you, like you say, what do you do when people are like, Hey, why come you’re using these? Just know that not everyone’s gonna see it.

Speaker: 1
02:00:57

You may have the only vision, just keep going. There’s an instinct that tells you to keep going that way. You’ll get proved right or wrong, or maybe you’re slipping on the first two rocks or whatever, but follow your instinct because you can everyone’s gonna have an opinion.

Speaker: 1
02:01:11

And it is not necessarily the right one. And when you’re an independent filmmaker, you can make those decisions to change people’s careers that changes the world. And that’s why you wanna remain independent. That’s why what’s happening now in the industry is great because I have to make movies ai the way I started, which is what I’ve always liked to do, which is just doing it where we create our own destiny.

Speaker: 1
02:01:32

We go, hey, we’re gonna make a movie. We’re gonna make it for this budget so we can make it. And the story’s gonna be so character driven and cool. We’re gonna be able to get big actors to be in it because they’re gonna wanna be in it. So Danny Trejo, you asked me about Danny Trejo.

Speaker: 0
02:01:42

Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes.

Speaker: 1
02:01:43

K. Danny Trejo. We’re doing Desperado now. I’m casting all kinds of people. Now I have this character that I want to have a bunch of knives. He opens up his vest and has a bunch of knives. So bring me all the, the coolest looking, you know, Latin actors we can find. And before he even walked in, there’s a picture of him. He already looked like the guy, but he was younger. He always just played prison inmates.

Speaker: 1
02:02:04

It was a picture of him as an inmate in a prison. I wanna give him a cool role. You know, just wherever this actor is, he walks in and I see him, it’s Danny Trejo. He sits down and I had the prop knife already made. And I say, you need to have this in your hand and look like you sleep with it. Like, just practice flipping it around your hand.

Speaker: 1
02:02:22

And I gave it to him. You got the role. Just start practicing with that. He gets up and walks out. You don’t have to say anything because there’s no dialogue. He walks up. Meh get to the sai. He kept saying, put me in coach. Give me a line.

Speaker: 1
02:02:33

Give me a line. It’s like, no. No. You’re such a nice guy. You’re gonna blow the whole mistake.

Speaker: 1
02:02:37

I want this guy to feel like the most evil, scary guy of all, and you’re such a nice guy. I didn’t let him talk till dusk told not. But one thing I noticed was that the the town we’re shot in, the Mexican town, which is the same town I shot mariachi. We went back there because I wanted to pay back the city.

Speaker: 1
02:02:52

So we had this big movie there and, they didn’t really know Antonio because he was in European movies. Salma hadn’t come to the set yet, but they saw Danny Trejo there in his vest, looking like a Mexican icon. They would go like this. Everyone thought he was a shah. And I just know magnetism when I see it. And I went, this guy’s got something.

Speaker: 1
02:03:15

So I went to him and I said, I got a movie we’re gonna do someday. This was ’94. We didn’t make this movie for fifteen years. Machete. You’re gonna be Machete. I had, I had an idea for Machete then it wasn’t the same story.

Speaker: 1
02:03:29

I had seen a story, actually Mariachi, ai guy from the center, sent me this funny story. He said, Hey, look at this story that the USDA and FBI sometimes would hire a Mexican federali to come do a job for $25 that they didn’t want to get their own guys killed on. Ai said, that’s Machete, the guy that they pay. But he’s not doing it for the money.

Speaker: 1
02:03:50

It turns out he, he has to get this guy that escaped Mexico and that’s the twist. So that was the original story I had. I said, we’re gonna do this someday. And we talked about it for years and never did it. Never had got around to doing it.

Speaker: 1
02:04:01

So when I did Spy Kids, I put him in Spy Kids and I said, Hey, let’s pay tribute to that character we never got to make. And you’ll be uncle Machete. He’s a gadget guy, but he’s got a mysterious past. But then a few years later, Quintin and I were doing Grindhouse. And he’d already done Dustle Sana. You know, I was building my own Latin star system. Ai showed up in a bunch of my movies.

Speaker: 1
02:04:21

Cheech shows up in every movie. Danny shows up in me. I brought Cheech out of retirement, put him in my movie. I needed to create my own Latin star system because all my scripts, because when you write in your own voice, you’re gonna write probably somebody that’s Latin, you know?

Speaker: 1
02:04:32

So you need to have a star system that matches that so that you don’t have trouble casting and people are like, well, you can’t hire this person. So I built up my own star system. So Danny was one of my stars. So after we’re doing ai house, we had to do fake trailers for grind house.

Speaker: 1
02:04:46

And I told Quentin, I know what trailer I’m gonna do for the movie. I never had to make with Danny called Machete. That would be so fun to finally get that out of her system and doing a trailer is so fun. It’s two days of shooting. Just still being that resourceful guy, we asked this company that had a digital camera we wanted to use.

Speaker: 1
02:05:05

Can you let us, send it to us for a couple of days screen test? I mean, camera test. Instead of shooting a camera test, we shot the trailer. So we got a free camera, shot the trailer with him. And it’s just the money shah, him opening his vest full of machetes, you know, him aiming that gun, him in a waterfall with two gals.

Speaker: 1
02:05:20

And I just came up with this really funny tyler, and we shot it. People were screaming at the premier. You couldn’t even hear it. They just wanted that movie so badly because there was blaxploitation in the seventies. There was never blaxploitation. It felt like this should have existed, but it didn’t.

Speaker: 1
02:05:37

Meh Mexican superhero. Ai just never seen anything like that. You know? Now you know. But, like, even his mom calls him Machete. Like, he just became this ai.

Speaker: 1
02:05:44

And I bought two fifty movies that he’s been in. Machete is his most famous one. So for five years, ai years, people would come up to us and say, where’s machete? Why ai you where’s the when’s that movie coming out? And we’re like, it’s not a real movie, but when it looks real, we wanna see that movie.

Speaker: 1
02:06:04

So we finally made the movie because people had just asked for it. And I used, I wanted to, I was adamant about being resourceful again. All those shots that are in the trailer are really great. I gotta reverse engineer the trailer into a movie so that I can use that shot that’s in the tyler. Like this girl in the ai.

Speaker: 1
02:06:21

Why would this girl be in the waterfall? I thought of a really clever way that he gets the bad guy. Her hair’s kind of, her face is kind of covered by this hair. We’ll cast Lindsay Lohan there or the Sana will switch it out for Robert Bryden Niro. Well, I just reverse engineer it.

Speaker: 1
02:06:33

So every time there’s a shot in the trailer, it’s in the movie, but I shot all the footage around it to lead up to it. That’s another fun creative ai is to reverse engineer something you just did like this on the day. You just threw a bunch of cards out basically with that tyler, and now you gotta go make a movie using all those cards.

Speaker: 1
02:06:48

That’s like a creative exercise that I thought sai ai, so fun.

Speaker: 0
02:06:54

Yeah. That was beautiful. You’re you’re actually known in part. Maybe you can correct me, but to do pretty unexpected, surprising, kind of interesting casting. So Robert De Niro is an example of that, and that’s just a great role. The second aspect of that, I heard the story that you can just get an actor in and out in just a few days really fast.

Speaker: 0
02:07:12

The the the Robert Rodriguez experiences, they call it. How do you make that Like, can you just tell the story?

Speaker: 1
02:07:17

I’m the editor, I’m the cameraman, I’m the DP. And so when I call him and say, I I’ve got you as the villain in this whole movie, but I’m gonna, I swear I’m gonna shoot you on four days. You come down four days. In fact, there’s a scene where he’s in the hospital. He’s just smiling. He’s having such a good time ai he couldn’t believe it.

Speaker: 1
02:07:36

I said, guess what? When you wake up from your hotel room at the Steven f Austin, you just cross the hallway. That’s the sai. The room, the room next to yours, we’ve turned into the hospital set. So So you’re just gonna come laying there in your pajamas.

Speaker: 0
02:07:47

Really? That’s what you did?

Speaker: 1
02:07:48

Well, yeah, we had to save time. We only have four days. So everything had to be very thought out to be ai, boom, boom, boom. Let’s shoot the money, get them out of this. We don’t have to spend a lot of money on them.

Speaker: 0
02:07:56

Book a room ram a hotel set up to look like a hospital room.

Speaker: 1
02:07:59

Yeah. That’s their scent. I mean, it’s real. You don’t have to dress it, and it’s just right there. All you do is put, like, a little tube there, you know, ai, a for his IV, and then you have a couple of nurses, and it looks like Just genius. Hospital.

Speaker: 0
02:08:10

Resortsful. Resourceful.

Speaker: 1
02:08:12

Next door. But, I said, you ain’t gonna think about me when you’re on your next meh the fuckers movie. Yeah. And you’re on there for six months before they have you sitting in a trailer. I don’t like to do that. So, you know, I gave lady Gaga her first two movies because, after Machete, she said publicly, she sai, I saw machete and my song Americano should have been a machete.

Speaker: 1
02:08:32

I thought she saw machete. Yeah. So I called her up and I said, Hey, I’m making a sequel. And I would certainly use your music, but have you ever thought about acting? Because you’re an amazing performer.

Speaker: 1
02:08:40

I think you’d be, I’ve worked with a lot of actors who are also musicians, and they’re always great ai I already know how to be a persona, be on stage, be in front of a bunch of people, which most actors can’t do. And she said, actually, I studied acting before I became a singer. I said, well, you’ll never be able to be in a movie because you know what?

Speaker: 1
02:08:55

They don’t know how to shoot people out. They want six months of your ai, and you’ve got and you’re always on tour. But if you come be here, I have a part for you. I can shoot you out in half a day. This whole section of a movie, and I’ll shoot you a movie poster. It’s incredible. She’s like, okay. So she shows up.

Speaker: 1
02:09:10

I had all the sets, like a conveyor belt right next to each other. Shoot, shoot, shoot, shoot. She’s in the car. That’s why she had me do her music video for rain on me later. She said, well, she’s just going to Austin. Robert put me on a grease.

Speaker: 1
02:09:20

Sai was throughout that whole movie. I don’t know how we did that. It was half a day. She was there half a day. I did the same for Sana City too. I was like, I have a set here waiting for you. If you’re on tour in Houston, just ai into Austin.

Speaker: 1
02:09:32

I’ll shoot you out in half a day. You get to be in a scene with Joseph Gordon Levitt. Sure. She came down.

Speaker: 0
02:09:36

So wait. How do you take Robert De Niro? How do you take Lady Gaga and, like, solve the puzzle of all the scenes that have to be in? How do we shoot them quickly, efficiently, conveniently?

Speaker: 1
02:09:47

You have to edit your own movie. I, I have this saloni, a food analogy that works really well. Script is like your grocery list. Filming is like grocery shah, getting the best performance is getting the best beat, getting the best ingredients. Ai. Editing is like the cooking.

Speaker: 1
02:10:05

Too much of this and not enough that you fuck the whole thing up. Sai, so many filmmakers do not edit. Yeah. And they give it to some other guy who might look at all your ingredients and go, this is all great, but I’m gonna go make a fucking souffle.

Speaker: 0
02:10:18

Yeah.

Speaker: 1
02:10:18

And he makes something else. So ai doing that job, I mean, like I’ve worked on some big stuff and I realized finally after many years, because I’ve always edited, I realized this is why movies cost so much. It could be 150, two hundred people on the crew, but I swear not one of them knows how to edit, not one. So they’re getting the wrong stuff.

Speaker: 1
02:10:37

They’re having to reshoot shit. The editor is in a room somewhere useless, calling after the fact, We still need to get this close-up, or you gotta reshoot that because it doesn’t match because no one knows editing. So if you just know that you’re already miles ahead of 99% of Hollywood, but that’s just how I learned by accident.

Speaker: 1
02:10:57

So I kind of stumbled upon it, but, and I realized that’s what the problem is because across the board, I’m watching them going, that’s not gonna match. You guys are just spending money, sending crews out, shooting stuff for this. It’s just, it’s a clusterfuck. Let me show you.

Speaker: 1
02:11:11

And that’s how it’s Sin city, Bruce Willis, nine days. Woah. Britney Murphy’s in all three stories. One day, Vanessa Latoro, three days. It’s just like, you’re just shooting this stuff. Mickey Rourke is in a sequence with Meh Gerauer. We shot eight months apart.

Speaker: 1
02:11:27

I didn’t have Red Gerauer until I was doing Shah and Lava Girl. So I just shot Mickey acting with meh, and then I shah Red Ger acting with me, and then I just cut them together. Wow. What’s weird is, like, editing exercises arya ai, I used to do these editing exercises where I would tune my VCRs together, and I would cut my movies, but sometimes I would just cut a music video.

Speaker: 1
02:11:43

And I cut a music video once ai I was a big fan of Rudger Hauer and a big fan of Mickey Rourke. So I said, I wanna make it look like they’re in a movie together. So I cut this music video together, but in so it shows like lightning on Rudger and the Hitcher and then lightning on Mickey from Meh Fish, but Rumble Fish is black and white.

Speaker: 1
02:11:59

Mhmm. So I made the whole thing black and ai. And I was like 19. I was 19 years old when I did that. Wow.

Speaker: 1
02:12:04

And then years later, I’m making Sana City. I shot Mickey, not knowing who the other actor was gonna be until I cast him eight months later. And it was Rudger. I’m cutting them together to look like they’re in the same movie. And it’s in black and white. And I’m like, I’ve done this before.

Speaker: 1
02:12:16

Oh my God. I found that all video. It’s like, oh my God, I already made a movie then in black and white. That’s weird shah, right? Yeah.

Speaker: 1
02:12:24

That’s the magic of creativity. It’s like sometimes when you have a vision, it’s not clear, but it’s coming to you from the future. So you gotta just follow the voice, no matter what anyone says about your curtains, just follow the voice you got in your head because you don’t know.

Speaker: 1
02:12:39

And you’re not smart enough to know, and you don’t need to know, you just need to do, you just need to be the hands. So this is like what you can do with no time or money when you know all those jobs. It’s the benefit of knowing those jobs. Like I said, the more you know those jobs, the more you know your main job, which is being creative, but on the day thinking on your feet.

Speaker: 1
02:13:01

So I’m gonna show you this, this test. Okay. So for dust on the TV series, I would always shoot the, the first episode and the last episode of like a seven or eight episodes season. There’s three seasons. By the time we got to the third season, I was doing Alita.

Speaker: 1
02:13:16

So I couldn’t do the big finale episode and my actor who plays the George Cooney character, DJ Sana, he’s somebody who fucking wanted to be a ai, was writing. He wrote fight and flight is this movie that’s gonna come out with Josh Barnett. That’s his, he wrote it after doing this.

Speaker: 1
02:13:31

He was like, man, hearing you talk, you know what I got? This is what I love about you ai people. The, the feedback loop inspires you back. He said, man, hearing your talk for red 11 and the cards and, I’ve got a script that’s partially written. I’m just gonna sana, I’m gonna go crank it out in three d. I’m gonna cut off the phone in three d.

Speaker: 1
02:13:48

I’m gonna finish that thing in three fucking days. And he came back and he said, I finished this script and I read it. And I go, when you read it in three days? I go, well, I wrote something before, but it I just kept thinking I wasn’t ready. And then you told me the thing about not being ready. And you said that it really resonated. And I went and I finished it in three days.

Speaker: 1
02:14:03

I go, man, I’m gonna do that. I’m gonna go do the DJ method. I called the DJ method. I have a bunch of half baked ideas that I’m just gonna go turn off the phone and finish the thing in three days. And I’ll Ai fix it later, but those three days, it’s gonna be pure pipe. It’s just gonna be coming through because you’re just gonna be picking up the pen.

Speaker: 1
02:14:19

Sai, anyway, he went to he came to me with this idea. He said, oh, man. I was hoping you’d do the last episode of dust till dawn because I had this great idea for a scene. We’re in a zombie town, Western town. We have those ones, those guns where you have to pull the trigger, you know, the hammer back before you can fire.

Speaker: 1
02:14:34

So I thought, what if I have a gun that’s empty and I got bullets in the other hand and I bump into a zombie, the bullets go flying. I jump and I catch all the bullets and shoot the guy before I hit the ground. Okay. That’s kinda like a real cool, like desperado type thing, but dude, this is a seven day shoot for these episodes.

Speaker: 1
02:14:50

Everyone on the crew will have a different idea on how to do that. Stunt guy will put you on wires because you have to do all that action or the DP isn’t even operating the camera. It’s a camera guy. The director doesn’t know how to shoot. He’s not operating the camera. Your editor’s in a room somewhere. VFX guys aren’t there.

Speaker: 1
02:15:12

She’s not gonna be able to ask them how to do it, but Ai, in my own VFX, Ai came up with how we do all the shots sana city and all the ai movies. We need one guy to come do it. I’ll come do it for you. I’ll come do it because I’m already gonna be there because I have to shoot a second unit fight scene for the other actor who wanted a cool fight scene.

Speaker: 1
02:15:29

So I was already doing that. And when it comes to your scene, we’ll switch places because it’s gotta be done quick because you’ve got you gotta shoot it in twenty minutes because you got a ton of other shit you gotta shoot, and you’ll just never get it. You won’t even get it in a film schedule, you know, in a regular movie schedule. It’s just too crazy.

Speaker: 1
02:15:43

You need somebody with a vision to to do the whole thing. So this is what it would look like if you’re on the set. I’m gonna show you the footage and I’m gonna show you the the scene. I have to show it to you a couple ai because you’re not gonna believe what you’re about to see.

Speaker: 1
02:15:55

So if you were on the set, this is what it would look like. So I get there. They said, we’re ready for that scene. So I get over there to the set and I go, okay, where where are you coming out of? And he goes, this building.

Speaker: 1
02:16:06

Where are you getting the bullets from? That body. Okay. Bring that body closer. Okay. Stunt ai, bring a pad over.

Speaker: 1
02:16:13

I wanna see you just jump and start to twist as if you’re ai. I just wanna see how much airtime you can get to get any action there before you hit the path. He starts to jump. He barely starts jumping. He’s already hitting the path.

Speaker: 0
02:16:23

So I was like, okay.

Speaker: 1
02:16:23

That ain’t gonna work. You get out of here. DJ, you’re gonna do it. I have no idea how I’m gonna do this. I ai thought about it before, but now you’re there. So awesome. And now the options are very limited. Yeah. You’re very limited. Look at the sun.

Speaker: 1
02:16:34

You’re gonna see the sun not move. You see, that’s the point where the sun starts getting lost. I have to shoot this in twenty minutes. You’re gonna do three jumps and I’m gonna cut it to look like one jump. All the bullets are gonna miss. Only one’s gonna go in.

Speaker: 1
02:16:45

So here, just follow what I’m saying because we don’t have time. What cameras do we have? What’s on the a camera, a long lens. Oh, yeah. That’s my camera.

Speaker: 1
02:16:53

I’ll operate that. What’s on the B camera. Steady cam, leave it on steady ram. No chance, no time to fricking convert it. At one point I sana to lower it. So just flip it upside down. We’ll flop it later. Give me the main camera. Okay.

Speaker: 1
02:17:05

DJ, start running towards that bullets and grab it and pretend like you get shot out of your hand. I shoot it in a slow motion, but I’m showing you how it would look on the set. Okay. Now the bullets are flying and I’m gonna add those digitally and I’m gonna hold the bullets up to the light in each angle so that they know what it’s supposed to look like so they can match that.

Speaker: 1
02:17:20

Otherwise, it’ll look phony. Now, first jump, I just want you to commit to just jumping out and just look at the barrel. Just look at the barrel on your hands when you’re jumping, because that’ll look like you’re looking at the bullets. And just don’t even think about that you’re gonna catch a bullet. Don’t think about that you’re gonna start turning. Just stretch your body out. Get a really graphic look.

Speaker: 1
02:17:42

That how cool that looks. Yeah. And then the side view, it shah this at the same time. You can already tell it’s gonna look like bullets are missing. Right?

Speaker: 1
02:17:51

Mhmm. K. Now I need now I need this part, though. I need the part where he’s catching the bullet, this little window there. Mhmm.

Speaker: 1
02:18:00

How am I gonna do that? With a lens that long, it’s gonna be all out of focus. It’s not gonna be slow motion enough. He even knows meh. And he’s like, what the hell am I doing? So I just lay on the pad and rock up and down.

Speaker: 1
02:18:11

And as you’re coming down, that’ll look like you’re falling as I’m zooming in. Ugh. Cause I’m operating the camera and I’m cutting this in my head. Yeah. And I’m saying, just do it again. He’s like, wait, what is it rock up? And then as you go down, it’s Sana done.

Speaker: 1
02:18:26

You’ve caught a bullet one went in. Now saloni jump, when you do the next jump as if we just passed those other moments, you’ve caught a bullet already. So now you’re gonna snap it closed and start your turn. It’s all you’ll get before you hit the pad. Snap turn. Ai?

Speaker: 1
02:18:42

So like, okay, this is, I want the cameras to feel like they’re dropping with them. That’ll give you more of the sensation. So let’s actually lower that Steadicam shah, flip it upside down and get a low angle. Sai how ai at the sun’s right there. Hasn’t gone behind the building yet.

Speaker: 1
02:18:56

That, and then my camera, I lowered my camera down and I got vatsal. Ai. Okay. Now last jump. I bury a thin, I said, just bear me, bring me a thin mattress. Cause I want him to do all the stunts.

Speaker: 1
02:19:08

I don’t want a stunt guy because he does this himself. He just did it in three jumps, but the audience went, no, they’ll just be like, we believe that this guy could do anything. I want you just to finish ai turning and cocking the hammer back and firing before you hit the ground. I’ll give you two takes for that.

Speaker: 1
02:19:25

Almost gets it there. Then we do a second take. Boom. Now, now shah that one was probably a little better, even though you don’t really see it. I’ve gotta go do everything ai. I gotta cut it. I gotta add the sound effects myself.

Speaker: 1
02:19:37

I gotta put the music in myself because music guys would just end up filling it with music and ruin it. Yeah. Sound effects guys would just fill it full of sound effects and ruin it. I want all the sound to drop out. So as he’s jumping, all you hear is the wind. I mean, his jacket, the clinking of the bullets as they’re bouncing off.

Speaker: 1
02:19:52

So you have this breathless moment, no music, cut the music. And that moment you cut it so that you’re like, I wonder if he’s gonna make it. Ai. So I go home, I cut it before I even have the visual effects in. I just cut it that night. Ai I cut my own sound effects.

Speaker: 1
02:20:07

I cut my sound effects in. You can already tell it’s gonna work. You can already see, but even with the bullets not there, you can tell by the sound where they’re gonna be. It’s gonna work. I call them up, say, dude, this is gonna work great. So then I go to the effects guys and I go, okay.

Speaker: 1
02:20:20

There’s bullet in this frame and the next frame is here because I used to animate. And the next frame it’s there, then it hits the barrel and then it starts bouncing this way. I want it that clear sai we can follow that a bullet was supposed to go in and that it bounced way over there.

Speaker: 1
02:20:33

And then this bullet bounced way over there. And they they send it back and a bunch of bullets come down. Now ai, listen to this. I’m gonna show you again. I’m gonna draw it to you again. Just the sound will play ai there’s multiple bullets flying.

Speaker: 1
02:20:45

I don’t need to see all those bullets or their ai not gonna know where to go. So then they got it right. Brilliant. Yeah. And then check this out.

Speaker: 1
02:20:51

I’m gonna show it to you twice, because you ain’t gonna believe. Wow. It changes direction. Wow. Wow. Crazy. Well done.

Speaker: 1
02:21:18

You don’t even see that in a feature film, much less a TV show.

Speaker: 0
02:21:21

Done. Just as a director. Well done.

Speaker: 1
02:21:23

Oh, thank you. Here. Just one more ai, and I’ll show you something you didn’t notice both times.

Speaker: 0
02:21:47

That’s amazing. Just those decisions coming together perfectly.

Speaker: 1
02:21:50

Coming together. Really well done. And like this, you got you got minutes.

Speaker: 0
02:21:53

Just, moving the camera ai you decided to do really worked really well, the balancing of the mattress, whatever.

Speaker: 1
02:21:59

And it’s not like you have this whole plan figured out ahead. You’re literally in the moment. You’re it’s coming through you, but

Speaker: 0
02:22:04

you’re seeing it through. Ai?

Speaker: 1
02:22:05

And you’re I’m seeing it because I’ve done it enough. That’s why you really wanna learn all those jobs because it come, it comes to a moment like this, when the shit’s fucking hitting the fan, you gotta know how to pull it out. You could have gotten all those people together and they never would’ve figured that out. You had one person had to see it all the way through.

Speaker: 0
02:22:19

You’re seeing the bullet, how it’s gonna go in the in the result.

Speaker: 1
02:22:22

I’ve done enough times to know that if you don’t do it just right, you’re gonna you’re gonna lose the image. You’re not gonna know where to follow, and you’ll miss the point.

Speaker: 0
02:22:29

And I sai yeah. I love that you’re thinking about where the the eyes of the audience will go, and that’s ai, you, like, I, I feel like too many people might think about some more general, concept of a scene versus like the audience. Where’s their eye? Where’s their eye?

Speaker: 1
02:22:45

What you’re drawing, you’re drawing it through sound to picture. I’m gonna show you, If you notice without the sound, you don’t really see him click that thing backwards.

Speaker: 0
02:22:53

The sound is so sensory here.

Speaker: 1
02:22:55

Watch this. You you you don’t really

Speaker: 0
02:22:57

Right. I thought I saw it.

Speaker: 1
02:22:58

You you think you saw it, but you hear it, and so you feel like seeing it. But watch it. It’s actually he’s already finished. You don’t really see him do it. You know? But you swear you saw it in a close-up because the sound is in a close-up. I put the sound in a close-up. Now here’s another thing you didn’t notice. He hits this ground in the first shot. Watch.

Speaker: 1
02:23:15

One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight. You didn’t even notice it because I didn’t play the sound there. Mhmm. So if you don’t hear it, you don’t see it. And if you don’t see it, but you play a sound, you hear it, then you see it in your mind. Right?

Speaker: 1
02:23:29

So check that out now with the sound on, and you’ll see both those parts play completely different now. Right. Now you hear it. Right. Sai, like, I know you can get away with that because I know editing and I’m like, if I don’t play sai sound, I can go ahead and milk that shot as long as I want.

Speaker: 1
02:23:52

I’ll make him be in the air longer, even though he’s actually touching the ground by not playing the sound. And that comes ram, you said directing, but it’s not directing like, people can direct and say, this is what I sana, but to actually execute it, you need to be a craftsman.

Speaker: 1
02:24:06

And to be a craftsman, you have to learn all those crafts.

Speaker: 0
02:24:08

And not just with the visuals, but with the sound.

Speaker: 1
02:24:11

With the sound too. Sound is so important. Sound is half the picture. Sound is and if you cut sound, you realize how important sound is. I would learn so much by doing those movies, like Desperado action movies where you go, wow, the sound, I can add an extra sound effect of an extra punch he didn’t even throw.

Speaker: 1
02:24:27

And it sounds like he’s beating the shit out of this ai. You only need to see one or two hits, and you can hear five. You know, you know, you know where you can push your limits because you’ve done it. You’ve done it, and you’ve got the experience.

Speaker: 0
02:24:36

It’s so amazing that you can use sound to make a person believe they saw something that wasn’t actually there on the screen.

Speaker: 1
02:24:43

Yeah. Your brain fills it in.

Speaker: 0
02:24:45

That’s crazy.

Speaker: 1
02:24:45

And that’s why that’s so important because if you don’t know that, you’ll be on the set shooting 10 takes of that. Because you’re like, no, he didn’t. No. I I didn’t see him click it back. I didn’t see I didn’t and then see him click it back. It’s that’s really needed. I can do that with sound.

Speaker: 1
02:24:57

Let’s just go. Let’s just keep moving.

Speaker: 0
02:24:59

Oh, when you say sound close-up, was that so wait

Speaker: 1
02:25:01

Sai ai sound all the other sound dropped away and all you hear is like, the sound like, the mic’s right on that thing sai that you hear it so big in your ear that you swear it was in close-up too, but just the sound was close-up.

Speaker: 0
02:25:14

But how do you, ai. Just to give an insight into, like, that process of sound design, what are you, like, listening to the sound and just, like, experiencing the feeling that creates? And then you’re like, that’s just right?

Speaker: 1
02:25:27

In post a lot. So I have a whole library of sound effects from all my movies. So I can pull up like the gun sound we created for Bruce Willis and Sensity and use that and mix it with Antonio’s gun from Desperado. You know, I remember in four rooms, there’s a scene where the billhop goes into the hotel room, jams his key into it and clicks it.

Speaker: 1
02:25:47

And I used all gun sounds for the sound of the key instead of key sounds, because it wasn’t sound close-up enough. So you listen to it, you hear, you hear like, all these sounds from gun to do the key. It’s like ai conveys the sound better. You know, I’ll use different kinds of sounds that just have impact and put it somewhere ai when he hits the ground or sai I like playing with all that in post when I’m editing because it makes my editing job easier.

Speaker: 1
02:26:11

Sometimes it’s like, oh, the sound is covering me. I don’t, I don’t need to keep trying to massage this. The sound is actually selling it. And so I keep those sound effects into the final movie. So, it’s just all part necessary. It’s like it’s like being a chef.

Speaker: 1
02:26:23

You’re there cooking and you’re going ai, I know the recipe says this, but I think it really could use jalapenos and some extra pepper or maybe a little more sai. And it needs an acid of some kind, so I’m gonna add some lemon juice.

Speaker: 0
02:26:33

Yeah. You made me realize I’m not sure where I saw that, but you were you were talking about making sort of almost like home films for ai. And I think you mentioned how exciting you can make a very mundane scene by just adding song. Yeah. There was I think there was, like, a My

Speaker: 1
02:26:48

little kid for this car. Yeah. One of those little, and but I added a motor sound to it, and it’s ai, wow.

Speaker: 0
02:26:53

And it sounds realistic somehow. Like, I don’t And then we’re playing doing that.

Speaker: 1
02:26:57

And then we’re playing with these little cars, filming ourselves playing with the cars. But then I replace them with real car sounds. Yeah. And it just your brain links the reality of the real thing.

Speaker: 0
02:27:09

That’s crazy.

Speaker: 1
02:27:10

And you realize how unimportant the visual is and how important the sound is actually. Sound is everything. That’s what I was really lucky in Mariachi that my camera didn’t work for sound, because then I got really good sound that I would’ve gotten with a shitty mic out of frame because that’s the first telltale sign of a low budget movie is bad sound.

Speaker: 1
02:27:27

Bad sound right away. You can already hear all this hiss and all this ai was too arya, and you’re ai, low budget movie. Before your eyes even tell you, the sound gives it away. Isn’t that amazing?

Speaker: 0
02:27:37

The audio is first. Sound is first, really, even though it’s a visual medium. That’s so crazy. Just on the what’s the plan with the with the four action films? Like, what what what what are the next steps?

Speaker: 1
02:27:52

I’ll probably direct more than one because there’s already several that I wanna do, but I was I’m gonna direct at least one, but I’m producing all three, all four there at my studio.

Speaker: 0
02:27:59

It does draw you in.

Speaker: 1
02:28:00

It draws you in and it makes you go now think of ideas you never would’ve thought of for mainly because it has a filter. Well, now I I don’t have to think of all these ideas. I can only I actually have like that like me on that sai. There’s only very few things I can actually come up with that are just action driven first when they have a great character.

Speaker: 1
02:28:17

You’ll get to it a lot faster with a filter. That’s the beauty of a filter Is that now you’ve just shrunk your your arya, and now you can hit that target. And people are coming up with ideas because now they’ve got proximity, and they’ve got a reason to come up with the ai, and they’ve got a deadline, which is the best thing you can do is have a deadline.

Speaker: 1
02:28:35

Because when you have a deadline, you can freaking move mountains. You know, I had a Speak Kids in the theater every year, three years in a row, not being pre planned. Every year there was a Spy Kids. Now the third one was the biggest one, biggest cast, mostly green screen video game and the first digital three d movie ever.

Speaker: 1
02:28:53

So getting visual effects companies to make that we realized, oh, I shot it with two cameras. That means each effect shot has to be done twice from a different angle. So I went to the studio midway through that and said, there’s not gonna be a movie in the theaters in time. You’re gonna have to push the date back.

Speaker: 1
02:29:11

And they said, okay, we’ve never heard you panic. We’ll push the date back for you. They called back ten minutes later. I was like, oh, thank God. Because it’s really complicated. I ai know it was gonna be this complicated, but Ai, I wanted a challenge.

Speaker: 1
02:29:23

And they said McDonald’s will sue us for $20,000,000 If you move the date, you have to have a movie at the theater. We started shooting that movie in February. It was in three d in theaters by July. That’s the fastest saloni effects movie has ever been done.

Speaker: 0
02:29:40

That’s insane.

Speaker: 1
02:29:41

Because you had no choice. So deadline makes you do things and make decisions really quick. And it was the biggest of the three ai are good. And, it’s hard for us to self impose a deadline sometimes because we know it’s a bullshit deadline and your brain knows it’s bullshit, but why do deadlines work?

Speaker: 1
02:29:58

Because when the deadline’s coming up, what do you do?

Speaker: 0
02:30:03

You can’t you start you start to put the pen to the paper and it starts just flowing.

Speaker: 1
02:30:07

Right? You have no choice. You have to get out of the way and open the ai, and it just comes out and you’re shocked. You’re like, oh my God, I should do everything at the last minute. Well, no, you don’t have to. But if you just learn how to open that pipe earlier, you wouldn’t be in a rush, but you had to get out of your way because your deadline was up and you had to come up with it.

Speaker: 1
02:30:26

So many people are gonna come up with all these extra great ideas at the last minute. They’ve already, but I, I, it looks like everyone who’s already signing on because they didn’t, it’s cool. They don’t know when the deadline is. They keep bryden in saying, when is the deadline for this? And we say, well, when, when we close the funding in Meh, but we didn’t say when still.

Speaker: 1
02:30:43

So Ai think that gives them like a sense of a deadline, like shah. I, he, it might be May 1 or maybe Sai 2. So we better get my idea going. So I think that works in your favor because then you come up with stuff and you’re gonna feel so enriched by doing the idea that you’re not gonna care if it gets picked or not.

Speaker: 1
02:30:58

You’re gonna love this idea so much. It could turn into 10 other things you never even thought about. That’s the beauty of doing a project. Nothing ever goes to waste. So many ideas that were sitting around that I’d come up with and put a lot of time in are now like, oh, I can do these now.

Speaker: 1
02:31:12

I I have I know how to finish it now.

Speaker: 0
02:31:15

I have to ask you about Alita. So you’ve done so many incredibly innovative projects. This is one of them. It turned out to be this visual masterpiece. There’s a bunch of complexity, beautiful complexity about it in that it started out as a film that James Cameron was supposed to make. Yeah.

Speaker: 0
02:31:30

And then you started to collaborate with him on it, and then these two, I would say, brilliant directors, but with different styles like you were talking about. And so plus there’s the complexity of for people who haven’t seen it, you’re putting this artificial creation, this beautiful photorealistic artificial creation of a human being into a real world.

Speaker: 0
02:31:53

So you have to capture the the performance, not just the motion, but the performance of this actor. Yeah. Put them into this with the power of technology into the real world to convey all the emotion, the richness of the human face. Can Can you just speak to the process of bringing that world to life? Sure.

Speaker: 1
02:32:09

I mean, why not? I never would’ve attempted it if it wasn’t Jim, because Jim has has figured all this out. So just to get you again, remember, like I said, Hey, Ram, I’m operating sai steady cam. What do you think of that? Well, I’m designing a new system. That’s always how it is between him and I.

Speaker: 1
02:32:22

So when I went to show him Desperado, when it was done, he said, you, you might not wanna sit through, if you don’t wanna sit through it while I’m watching it, it’s fine. Do you wanna read any of my scriptments, my treatment treatment scripts, you know, called scriptments? Sai said, sure. He goes F Spider Man and I got Avatar.

Speaker: 1
02:32:37

So So this was in ’95. He was showing me the scriptman for Avatar, which there was no technology for that. He was already Wow. Doing stuff that didn’t exist.

Speaker: 0
02:32:50

Yeah.

Speaker: 1
02:32:51

And I was reading it going like, this is a great story. And he’s like, I don’t know how the fuck’s gonna do this. It’s impossible. It’s not even he’d just done, you know, Terminator two a few years before. It’s like that was the thing of the art. So Alita was gonna be the movie he did first to prepare for avatar. And so he had already done some prep work on it.

Speaker: 1
02:33:10

It was based on a manga. But before they did that, they just started doing some tests for avatar. And then as they got deeper into the test for avatar to prepare for Alita, they went, I guess we’re making avatar first. Sai Alita got kind of pushed to the side and they ended up doing it, which ended up becoming such a journey to make that movie, to get the technology, to build it, to make it.

Speaker: 1
02:33:31

Saloni remember visiting him on the set. I mean, I’ve known him so long. I was on the set of Titanic. That’s vatsal I’ve been around this guy. I was on the set of Titanic.

Speaker: 1
02:33:38

I was on the set with Sarah Connor and Arnold Schwarzenegger and Eddie Furlong for the three d ride he made for universal a few years later. So, I mean, I feel like I’ve been around him a lot of his career and to be able to visit the set, you know, of Arya and remember him showing me ai artwork they did very photorealistic.

Speaker: 1
02:34:00

And he goes, curious to see how photo real it’ll be when we’re finally done with this process, because you don’t get to see it till it’s almost done. And I was like, wow, he’s just shooting blind. He’s really talk about me shooting mariachi not seeing the footage. He’s making this whole movie not even knowing what the end result’s gonna look like at all because you’re not gonna know till you get there.

Speaker: 1
02:34:20

And when you get there, if you don’t like it, there’s not a lot you can do. So Ai just seen him do that and have that success really made it easier for me to do Alita because then it’s like, okay, we don’t know. Again, we don’t need to know. We know we’ll get there, but we don’t know how we’re gonna do it. We’re gonna start.

Speaker: 1
02:34:36

And anything that I would come up with on this movie and his team, because he had all his Weta people working on it. He had them all working on it too. I, I do a fast version of, of his process because there’s a lot of live action. Avatars, mostly CG. I have live action sets. You have to come to my studio because I still have the whole elitist city in my back lot.

Speaker: 0
02:34:56

Wait. Here, the troublemaker studio?

Speaker: 1
02:34:58

Yeah.

Speaker: 0
02:34:58

That’s where it was

Speaker: 1
02:34:59

Yeah. It was shot here. So when you go see my city, I built it very resourceful. This is weird. It looks just like the town from Arya. But it’s in my backyard. I’m like, it looks better than the town for Mariachi. Yeah. ai. It’s the biggest, largest standing set in the country because sets are always mowed down for the next movie, but I just kept it there.

Speaker: 1
02:35:17

So we could just shoot it all the time ram Mexico or South America or Europe or whatever. It’s seven streets, and we add it digitally above it. The the ceilings are 20 feet high. You gotta come see. You don’t believe that it’s here. It’s it’s unbelievable.

Speaker: 0
02:35:31

Where is it North Of Austin?

Speaker: 1
02:35:32

It’s where the old airport was. So it’s ai on 50 First Street, you know. It’s ai really close to town.

Speaker: 0
02:35:37

I would love to visit.

Speaker: 1
02:35:38

You gotta come sai. You’re not gonna believe it. All my props, all my stuff from all my movies. So the people who are, you know, in investing in brass knuckle, that’s why I say it’s like a Willy Wonka movie because they they’re gonna get to come check out all that stuff and, and, and be in proximity and see, oh, like me with that painter, it’s not a trick.

Speaker: 1
02:35:55

He’s just doing it. Ai, then you realize you can do it too. But, we thought let’s shoot mostly live action and we’ll just replace her, but we still have to figure her out. You have to cast the right actress. And when I saw Rosa Salazar, she was just amazing. She made me cry and audition tyler first time Ai was like, oh my God, this person has something.

Speaker: 1
02:36:13

If we can capture even a, a fourth of her facial expression, it’ll bring so much life and they got it one to one. And, it really helped Jim on the next avatar arya Weta because they got to bryden a bunch of things. That’s why vatsal, the second avatar wave water looks so much more refined than the first avatar because of that middle step of doing Alita.

Speaker: 1
02:36:36

It was training ground for them. Can you

Speaker: 0
02:36:38

actually educate me on the WETA process? Is this like a, a performance capture technology? What’s

Speaker: 1
02:36:43

the Yeah. We have her in a suit before capturing her body movements, but also vatsal capture. It’s performance capture of all her performance, all her emoting. And we have witness cameras around everywhere to pick up where she is and everything else is real and we’re just replacing her, but with someone even smaller in ai.

Speaker: 1
02:37:00

So you have to erase everything behind her. It’s like, like a bunch of technical things you need to do. But the idea is to whatever performance she gives, she’s such a great actress, is to capture all of that. Cause then this character that doesn’t even exist will feel very emotional and, and you have to, you have to be tied to it. You have to feel it’s heart.

Speaker: 1
02:37:18

And she was the heartbeat of it.

Speaker: 0
02:37:19

Sai she’s acting with all this?

Speaker: 1
02:37:20

Acting with all that, but it just disappear. You know, she’s not even, it’s like, it’s not even there. Like we don’t notice that this is here. It’s like that. She can just perform through it.

Speaker: 0
02:37:28

What was some interesting, unique, challenging things about you directing her performance in this in this ai of world?

Speaker: 1
02:37:35

I just I just knew she had to be her. It was gonna be just so easy with her. She’s just so great. She, everything was just so real and everything was just like, she’s that character. She becomes that character. Who’s seen this world for the first time. No special effects sana help you with that if the performance isn’t there. So it was all about getting the performance and casting the right actors.

Speaker: 1
02:37:54

That’s why you get Christophe Waltz there and you get Jennifer Connelly. You know, these masters are all on the sai, Marshall Ali, you know, you’ve got an amazing cast of people. And that’s really the heart, the heart of it, so that the technology ai goes away.

Speaker: 0
02:38:11

How hard is it to get the actors to act when, like, the full world is not around you?

Speaker: 1
02:38:18

We put so much of the world around them. Like, when you see the city, we put, like, a blue screen way in the back to just make the city keep going. But we built the sets there, the town, we built the real set. So everything was very tangible and real. And that way shah. Had to fit into that world and be as real as that, Because if it was all done in CG, well, ai now you can fudge everything, but if you put her in a real environment, that’s a real challenge.

Speaker: 1
02:38:41

And that really helps them on avatar because that whole place sai created an avatar. You could get away with a lot, but they wanted to commit to that kind of detail. And on the next avatar, that’s why it just feels like you’re really there. It’s just stunning. And you get there by having something to work on like this to, to take the technology to the next level.

Speaker: 1
02:38:59

So it was cool to be able to help, you know, knowing this should be helpful to him in his process and not just distracting him. But then also he liked that his arya had something else to work on besides just avatar to just work on something, you know, different to freshen up the perspective on things and methodology.

Speaker: 1
02:39:16

And so, yeah, that was a really exciting movie to work on. And then we got to shoot it here, a Jim Cameron movie here in Austin. That was the best having him here. And that my whole crew who’s worked with me twenty five, thirty years, everyone had an extra spring in their step because they’re like, we’re working on a Jim Cameron movie.

Speaker: 1
02:39:32

I mean, that’s just like a high bar of achievement for everybody, you know, working on it.

Speaker: 0
02:39:36

Since we talked about a few other directors, can you speak to the genius of James Cameron? Like, what what makes him special? You talked about some of the difference in your approach and his he’s created some of the most special movies ever also. What’s behind that? What would you say is interesting about the way his creative mind works?

Speaker: 1
02:39:54

I think any of those guys, George Lucas, you know, him, you know, John Lasseter when he did Pixar, it’s a mix of, and this was, I got really lucky. My first job was a Photoshop because my dad had a friend who owned a Photoshop and he sai, your summer job, and I was 16 Gore ram my friend, Mario.

Speaker: 1
02:40:10

So I go to Mario’s Photoshop and, you know, developing pictures or, you know, think you develop photos from film. And he said, here, take this camera home. Give me one of his cameras. Take this camera home and some film. I need you to learn how to use the camera so you can help me sell the cameras. Yeah.

Speaker: 1
02:40:25

So I went home and, you know, I have a bunch of siblings. So ai, well, the star’s a bedhead taking all these pictures of everybody. I take it back and he looks at the pictures when he develops, he’s like, woah, these are really creative. You’re a creative person. Sai when ai people tell you something yeah. That you don’t, you can’t unhear.

Speaker: 1
02:40:42

And he goes, that’s a gift, but you need to know now, now, and you need to become technical because most creative people need technicians. The technicians always need creative people because they’re not usually the same. You’re born with creativity. It’s against your nature to be technical, but you can learn if you apply yourself. And if you’re both technical and creative, you’ll be unstoppable. And I was like, unstoppable.

Speaker: 1
02:41:06

Wow. So here, I want you to learn zone ai, you know, like, I want you to learn this, this, the technical part of it. So that’s why I didn’t take a crew, Mariachi, because I knew if I’m just the creative person and I, I need a crew to go actually technically make the movie, I’ll always need something.

Speaker: 1
02:41:22

And when you wanna really change your life, you wanna get your, I need list down to little as possible. Because if you’re like, well, I wanna shoot my movie, but I need a cameraman and I need somebody who knows how to line it. Your, your, I need list keeps growing that’s further and further and further you will be from what you need to accomplish.

Speaker: 1
02:41:42

So I kind of went down there without any help. So that meh that script saloni where the guy sai, throw away three scripts. I said, no, I’m gonna write three scripts and then shoot each one. So I get better at you, each one of those jobs. So I can learn to be technical. My technical capability was so little. Like I’m literally calling the guy on the phone. How do I use this camera?

Speaker: 1
02:42:02

You know, that’s how little I knew about it, but I knew by doing the job, I would learn ai being both. That’s really the key. So Jim Cameron is like that. Jim Cameron, when you think of those guys, George Lucas, very technical and very creative. John Lasseter, very technical, but very creative. Pixar.

Speaker: 1
02:42:17

Jim Cameron, very technical, very creative. Putting those two things together is really what sets you apart from other technicians and other creative people. And it’s very, very powerful. And a lot of creative people, again, it’s against their nature to be technical. They don’t wanna do it. Make yourself do it. Read the manuals, take the lessons.

Speaker: 1
02:42:35

It frees you up because then you can go do, like, you know, I just showed you in that demo. You’re able to now be a technical person and creative, and then you’re unstoppable. He’s one of the best at it. And he just knows how to craft a story. He’s very analytical as well. Like we, we bounce off each other in a funny way. He goes, man, he came down to visit my studio before he did Alita.

Speaker: 1
02:42:57

And he went, you only surround yourself with people who are like you, Like, you exude creativity, you know, from every pore. Mhmm. And so does everyone at your studio. And I go, yeah. I don’t think I didn’t hire them that way on purpose, but I think if you’re not that way, you kind of know you don’t belong there and you kinda leave.

Speaker: 1
02:43:13

Yeah. And then I went to his studio, and there are a bunch of Jim Camerons there. They were like, oh my god. They’re all very technical.

Speaker: 0
02:43:20

Yeah.

Speaker: 1
02:43:21

You can’t get all ai fuzzy with the with the logic or the you can’t get you can’t get really creative with the physics or anything. They’re like, no. That’s not how it would work. It would be ai and they’re just, wow, super great at what they do. Bar is sky high, and they’re all like that.

Speaker: 1
02:43:38

Because, yeah, if you’re not part of if you’re not like that, you can’t hang with those guys. You can’t hang with him very long.

Speaker: 0
02:43:44

I heard a story where the guitar case being a rocket launcher, where to you, you create this surreal world where everything is possible. The magic feels real. And for James Cameron, he has to know how a guitar case would work that would actually be able to double as a rocket launcher.

Speaker: 1
02:43:57

When I show him the trailer for Grindhouse and he sees the machine gun laying all that, he just goes, woah. That’s unbridled filmmaking from the id. It makes sense only the second you’re watching it, not a second. I can’t remember the second you’re watching it. You believe it. Yeah.

Speaker: 1
02:44:10

But he’s, he’s really interesting in that he’s so prolific. I walked into his writing studio and it’d be ai on a one of the tables. Like, do you have those papers there? Imagine them that thick, that thick, that thick, all script scripts go, what are these? He goes, this is a whole, you know, space opera version of this movie. We’re not making that one. It’s like he’s cranking out all this stuff.

Speaker: 1
02:44:33

It’s like, again, can I take this and go make this? But, yeah, we bounced off each other because I loved his his analytical part of his brain. I’m not that analytical. I’m just kinda like, Hey, I’m really creative feeling. I’m like, woo, I’ll go this way. And then woo, I’ll go that way.

Speaker: 1
02:44:46

And he likes that about me, but I like, I, I, I sana be, Ai think about things too much. Like you think about things ai what makes a movie a billion dollar hit? What are the elements that you need? And I’m sana analyze that and I’m gonna make sure my movie does that. And he engineers a submarine that can break the world record.

Speaker: 1
02:45:08

He engineers a movie that can break the world record. You know, he’s like, he has that engineering mind, but the creative part, that’s very rare. So that’s very rare. And he’s capitalized on both. He had this submarine model, like this big on his desk, the one that he broke the world record before going and just seeing it and knowing him have kids and stuff and ai.

Speaker: 1
02:45:27

And I’m like, weren’t you afraid going down there with, you know, something could happen. It’s like, no, I wasn’t afraid. I sai like, why not? And he goes, because I designed the escape vehicle. Yeah. If it was any other Bozo, I’d be afraid. When he designed the escape that kind of confidence, that’s him.

Speaker: 1
02:45:45

He just knows if some other Bozo had designed the escape vehicle, I would be afraid. But total confidence because he did it.

Speaker: 0
02:45:51

The confidence of extreme confidence is brilliant.

Speaker: 1
02:45:55

Just to get you, like, excited about how creative this stuff is. So Desperado was the only movie on the Sony lot being edited digitally. Not only was I editing on a computer, I was editing in my house, which in 1994 was just unheard of. So I’m there in my house and they made me cut in LA because they were, because at first I told the studio Ai wanna edit Desperado myself because it’s important that I edit it.

Speaker: 1
02:46:16

And they go, no, you can’t. Why not? We never had a director edit his own movie here. So we don’t wanna set a precedent in case they thought it would give you too much power. Sai this is the power of precedent.

Speaker: 1
02:46:30

Ai said, well, you bought Arya. And I edited that. So I said, okay, but you’re gonna have to edit in a lace sai we can watch you. Because we don’t think you know what you’re doing. We saw the footage and the shots are really short. It’s too short. I was like, shots are too short.

Speaker: 1
02:46:45

Oh, because I was shooting my cuts, You know, like, they’re used to seeing footage of Antonio walks into the bar, and it’s gonna be a dialogue scene. They expect the whole thing done from a wide shot. I would shoot the wide shot. He walks in. Cut. Move the camera. Let’s get over here.

Speaker: 1
02:46:57

Because we wanted to because I’m not gonna use it for the rest of the scene. I know we’re gonna get into coverage because I’ve already cut it. It. So I was like, That’s interesting. So I cut the first scene. If you ever seen Desperado, the first scene is the best scene. Steve was telling the story.

Speaker: 1
02:47:07

He’s talking about the myth of the mariachi. He’s doing all these

Speaker: 0
02:47:09

crazy. Scene.

Speaker: 1
02:47:10

It’s crazy.

Speaker: 0
02:47:10

Ai scene.

Speaker: 1
02:47:11

So then they come over. I say, hey. You come see my first scene. So they come over to my house. They watch it. Okay. You know what you’re doing? They leave. But I was cutting Desperado in my house that I rented there, and then we shot Dust tyler Dawn at the same time. So I was cutting Desperado four rooms and Dust till Dawn ai. I’m the editor. I don’t have an editing team other than the ones who imported into the machine.

Speaker: 1
02:47:29

So Del Toro came over, Soderbergh came over. Can I borrow it for Schizopolis? Then no one had heard of somebody having an Avid in their living room. Jim comes over and he goes, I hear you have an Avid in your living room. And I go, yeah. Come check it out.

Speaker: 1
02:47:44

I’m just ai, I roll out of bed. It’s ai sounds unremarkable because this is what you do right now, but back in ’94, it was unheard of. I’m cutting three movies at the same time myself. I roll out of bed. I come here. I can cut Ai. I can cut Dustalone. He went, that’s it.

Speaker: 1
02:48:00

I hate working with editors. You know, when I was doing Terminator two, they wouldn’t even let me put the bad to the bone song in Terminator two because they didn’t think it would work. And I had to sneak into the edit room at night on the weekend to cut it in and then show them the next day.

Speaker: 1
02:48:12

It’s like, that’s your own movie. You can’t give that kind of power to people. He said, I I hate working with editors. I’m gonna I’m gonna do this. I’m gonna tear down a wall in my house. I’m gonna put it in an oven. I’m gonna cut my next movie.

Speaker: 0
02:48:22

Yeah.

Speaker: 1
02:48:22

And he did. He got an Oscar for editing Ai. He had two other editors, but now no one ever took him for a ride like that again. He edits on every movie. He has other editors, but he can go do his own cuts when he shows me ai footage. He’s showing me himself on his own machine.

Speaker: 1
02:48:35

And it’s like, again, it gives you all those tools to be able to really find your vision that you’re looking for because you can’t always explain it to somebody because you don’t always know yourself. It’s part of you kind of come up with it as you do the process.

Speaker: 0
02:48:49

Just a small tangent about the different software and the technologies involved. So you mentioned Avid as Premiere Pro.

Speaker: 1
02:48:54

Premiere was still in its early stages then. I think Soderbergh looked at it and it said, yeah, I can’t afford an Avid for this movie. I’m gonna go do it. So I ai he started cutting on Premiere, but, I’m sure it’s all better now. I just I’ve always used an Avid because I just always rent it back to the same production. I think Yeah.

Speaker: 1
02:49:08

I’ve just, I I don’t have to buy a new one, but there’s lots of good I’ve heard about all kinds of systems. I just use the same one.

Speaker: 0
02:49:14

Okay. I guess I’ve that’s the question I have for you is it’s just interesting for people. It’s very interesting to me. Just the the details you use avid. Like, what do you like? Meh multiple monitors, one monitor.

Speaker: 1
02:49:23

I have a couple monitors and then I’m one big monitor to watch it if I’m watching the scene back because the monitors are still a little wacky. I mean, if I were to design my own system, I’d probably design it differently. But I’m literally I’ve worked on that thing since ’94.

Speaker: 1
02:49:36

I still don’t know all the shortcuts and all that shit. I still use it like my tape deck, play, rewind, pause, and I can cut so fast with that. Just Ai don’t use the mouse for shortcuts. I’m just like.

Speaker: 0
02:49:46

So you found your way Yeah. Preferred way, the workflow of using it, and now you can sort of let go of the technical and then be creative once you have

Speaker: 1
02:49:55

Just be creative. It’s just a tool. It’s just a tool, and it’s ai, it doesn’t matter what system it is. It’s like, if you can get it to work for you, great. Like, there’s a lot of problems I have with it that I that I would I know are probably fixed on another system, but then they’ll have a whole other set of problems.

Speaker: 1
02:50:07

So it’s like, well, why bother with that? You know, there’s limitations, I think, that it has that would need to be fixed, but not for what I’m doing. I mean, I can still do what I need.

Speaker: 0
02:50:15

It feels like part of the artistry is every system has limitations, and you learn how to work around those limitations. I meh, it’s Oh, yeah.

Speaker: 1
02:50:23

Well, everything ai my first VCRs.

Speaker: 0
02:50:25

Like, those things

Speaker: 1
02:50:26

those things were I was always known for taking what little basic equipment and milking the shit out of it. Yeah. What it could pushing the boundaries of what it can do. And now it’s flipped. Now you’re working on a program and and you can spend ten years on this thing and you’re scratching the surface of what it’s capable of.

Speaker: 1
02:50:42

It’s totally flipped the other way. I’m not milking anything anymore. I’m I’m barely getting, you know, the smallest capability of it because I would have to spend a lot of time to figure out all the stuff that it can possibly do. And I’m sure it’s, it’s all great, fantastic stuff, but what a different world than when I grew up where it was like, okay, meh me splice these two sound things together.

Speaker: 1
02:51:02

And it was so hard to get it to do. Or people would be like, you got that movie out of that equipment? Well, now it’s the other way around. You know, it’s like all this equipment is great. So when people come to me and say, Ai, God, well, I’ve only got this camera.

Speaker: 1
02:51:14

I was like, That camera’s 10 times better than anything I had ram my first fifteen years of filmmaking. So you have no complaints. This is ai, you can just start now and just start making stuff.

Speaker: 0
02:51:25

I have a lot of friends who are huge fans of your, movies. So one of them asked me that I absolutely must ask you, do you know if there’s a sequel of Alita coming?

Speaker: 1
02:51:33

We’re working on it. We’re definitely working on it. Jim and I both wanna make it. That’s usually when we meet, we talk about it. I gave him something to read. You know, he’s a little busy with his Vatsal movie, but Ai gonna get I’m gonna see him again soon, and we’ll see where it’s at.

Speaker: 1
02:51:48

But we would love to make another one. We have ideas on how to do it because it was always built to be a trilogy. And, he sees that there’s a lot of love for it. It was just weird because it was Fox movie and then got bought by Disney, you know? And then they weren’t really making Fox movies because they had enough Disney they had enough work with their Disney movies, but now they’re starting to make some Fox movies.

Speaker: 1
02:52:07

Like, they did Deadpool, and some Fox movies are starting to get made. So time might be right for us to come back and do an Alita.

Speaker: 0
02:52:15

No. I hope you do soon. It’s, but it is I mean, you do so many different kinds of movies. That’s a whole different kind of puzzle. Right? Oh, yeah.

Speaker: 1
02:52:23

Yeah. But it’s not a bad one. It’s a good it’s a cool it’s one one of the few like, usually, I made kids family kids kids movies or r rated action horror movies. And that was the first time I got to do a PG 13 movie, which was kinda ai, it had a lot of action, but it was for our families could watch it too.

Speaker: 1
02:52:38

And it was kinda like the best of all worlds.

Speaker: 0
02:52:40

Have to ask you about sin city. One of my favorite films of all time. It was a visually stunning world. What are some maybe interesting detailed aspects about you creating that world?

Speaker: 1
02:52:52

This is why you just gotta follow your nose and then go do something. You know, Jim and I were both into three d early on. Like I visited his set for the Terminator three d ai. Dust tyler Dawn, I wanted to be three d. Actually, when they got to the bar, if you watched ram that point on, everything’s kind of set up for three, everything was shooting into the camera and all this, but the cameras they had for three d and film were those old shitty ones that were so bad that I went, okay, we can’t do it.

Speaker: 1
02:53:15

But I really wanted people to have to put on glasses when they got into the bar and it was gonna turn into a three d different movie. I got to do that on Ai Gets three d. So when I did Spy Gets three d, I thought, oh, if I get Jim’s cameras that he’s done for these underwater three d, you know, documentaries, I can make the first digital three d film for theaters.

Speaker: 1
02:53:37

And so I did, and it seemed like the easiest way was to utilize that when you put on the glasses, when you go into a game world. So there’s a green screen, and we shot all the actors on green screen for all the game stuff, and we could do lot of three d stuff coming at kids’ faces when they’re reaching.

Speaker: 1
02:53:51

My three d is, is not like the kind they have in theaters where it’s very polite. Mine’s like theme park three d, d where kids are doing like that, trying to grab. That’s why it was such a big hit. Nobody does three d like ai, but Sai, I wanted that. I wanted shit falling in people’s laps, you know?

Speaker: 1
02:54:05

So you remember, so you would go, okay, this is why I’m wearing glasses. Yeah. Ai wondering why. And when I went to go make my next movie, so this is how crazy is what we shot. Spy Kids three.

Speaker: 1
02:54:15

Remember I showed you how fast they came out. That was in the February, few months later, once upon a time, Mexico came out. Two number one movies, both were finishing trilogies of mine.

Speaker: 0
02:54:26

And

Speaker: 1
02:54:26

they, and each one starred Saloni, Danny Trejo, Cheech Meh. When I was editing those at the same time, you’d be like, woah, one movie they’re killing people. And the other ones are like with the kids going like, Hey family. So it was really, you know, fun. It was fun to it’s easier to do very different things than to do like two action movies or two family movies at the same time.

Speaker: 1
02:54:44

But I was like, okay, what’s my next movie gonna be? Oh shah. How crazy is this? Okay. So Antonio is on the set.

Speaker: 1
02:54:50

I’m gonna shoot him out in half a day for Ai sai three d, because he’s only in the last scenes on the green screen. Shoot him till lunch. Okay. Now go away. Put on your Desperado outfit because we owed some shots for Once Upon a Ai, Meh on the green screen.

Speaker: 1
02:55:03

He finished two trilogies in the same day. That’s gotta be a first if ever, no one’s ever finished two trilogies in the same day. And it’s just kismet, you know, it’s just how it happened. It happened that day was just luck or the universe or whatever, but I needed to get something new now.

Speaker: 1
02:55:19

So I was looking through my bookshelves of inspiration and I picked up my sana city books, which I’ve had. I used to be a cartoonist and I always loved how he drew that. Every time I’d see a different edition, I’d buy it, go home and go, oh, I already have this. I got like three copies of this already.

Speaker: 1
02:55:33

And he would just always grab me by the throat. And I liked that he was a writer director in a way, because he would not just wrote the comic, but he drew it too. A lot of times it’s a different writer or a different comic artist. He’s like a real, like a kinship, you know, this is someone who writes and directs his own thing. But I was looking at it and I went, oh, shah.

Speaker: 1
02:55:50

I know how to do this now. I just did it on the green screen. If I shoot this on green screen, the actors on green screen, I can make the backgrounds look just like this and I can contrast up the actors and I could get this very graphic look, which sometimes for a window, it’s just a white box.

Speaker: 1
02:56:04

Sai it’s even got a sliding scale for budget. If I run out of money, just put the actors in black and white, just put like a white dot behind them for a street light. And that looks just like the book. So I’m gonna bring the book to life. So I’ll show you how fast we go from development at troublemaker. It was October.

Speaker: 1
02:56:23

Once upon a time, Mexico had come out. I was like, oh shah, I know how to do this now. Sin City, I’m gonna do a test. Sai went to my green screen here in my studio. You’ll see my green screen where I shot all these movies.

Speaker: 1
02:56:35

And I shot, you know, my sister, myself, put it black and ai. Looks just like the comic, but it’s moving. So I, I call a, comic book artist friend of mine, Mike Allred, and I said, do you have Frank Miller’s number? And he goes, yeah, I do. Okay.

Speaker: 1
02:56:50

I’m gonna call him up. So I ai Frank Miller. Hey, sai, Robert Rodriguez. I have a ai. I sana show you for the city.

Speaker: 1
02:56:56

I’m gonna be in New York tomorrow. He’s like tomorrow. Okay. Yeah, sure. Come by the meh me at this bar. Okay. Book a flight for New York.

Speaker: 1
02:57:02

I didn’t have a flight. I fly up there. I have my laptop just like this.

Speaker: 0
02:57:06

Yeah. That’s good.

Speaker: 1
02:57:07

I go to the bar. I show him what looks like an image from his comic and it starts moving. And he’s like, wow, how did you do that? Ai said, I got my own studio and all this. And then I started telling, man, let’s make this movie because no one had the rights to it. He never gave the rights to a studio. A lot of comics, oh, Warner Brothers bought this a while back, you know, or then you gotta go through the studio.

Speaker: 1
02:57:29

He still owned his own rights. In fact, he’d gotten burned by Hollywood so many times as a screenwriter that that he said, fuck sana. I’m gonna go back and draw a comic that’s so raw that can never be made into a movie. So ai course I call him, Hey, let’s make a great movie. Ai I was like, show him how he can do it.

Speaker: 1
02:57:44

And I go, I know you don’t know me. And you’re not gonna you’re gonna have to earn I have to earn your trust for you to give me your baby, but we can make this right away. And he’s ai, he’s all excited for about two seconds. And then he goes, oh, no. Then we gotta write a script, and then the studio’s gonna have notes.

Speaker: 1
02:58:02

All that shit he’s been through before. Anyway, it’s not like that. I have a whole different setup. I got my own studio in Austin. This is how it’s gonna be. If you like this idea, I’m gonna you’re not gonna have to take any risk. Let me take all the risk.

Speaker: 1
02:58:13

I’m gonna go write the script myself next month. It’s gonna be unremarkable because I’m gonna write it right

Speaker: 0
02:58:19

out of your book.

Speaker: 1
02:58:19

I’m gonna just go do, I’m gonna edit through the stories down. I’m gonna just take stuff out. Really. I might add a few things to connect it, but I’ll write the script in December ai. No money involved. Then we’ll call some actor friends of mine. We’ll have them come to my green screen. We’ll shoot the opening scene as a test, but it’s also the opening scene. I’ll do the effects myself.

Speaker: 1
02:58:37

We’ll do the sound, do the music. I’ll do fake credits. We’ll watch it together. If you like what you see, we’ll make the movie. You give me the rights then. If you don’t like it, keep it. It’s a short film to show your friends. This be really cool. So he’s like, all right.

Speaker: 1
02:58:53

There’s nothing on him to do. It’s all on me. I write the script in December, January, Josh Arnett, Marley Shelton come down, fly Frank in. We’re shooting for ten hours on my green screen. We shoot that opening sequence. Incredible opening sequence.

Speaker: 1
02:59:07

Record his voiceover right then in my little voiceover booth, Marty Shelton comes up. Why did I hire him to kill me? I said, I I don’t know. Let’s go ask Frank. He’s right here. Let’s go ask Frank. I wanna know myself. So he tells her, and he’s like, I wanna do this movie.

Speaker: 1
02:59:21

He’s already I was like, I tell you, Frank, I used to be a cartoonist. It’s the same thing. You’re already a director. You’re just using a pen instead of a camera. The performances you get out of your paper actors are phenomenal.

Speaker: 1
02:59:32

The shots you do are, like, beyond any DP’s ever done. And the visual look, we’ve never seen that. I wanna just take this and make it move. I just want the comic to move. Any other studio would just go make it look like any gritty crime movie, and they would they would miss the point that it’s the visual is half of it.

Speaker: 1
02:59:48

I want it to look just like this because it would be the boldest movie anyone’s seen because that’s how it reads when I read the book. It’s like, if this was moving, it would be the most phenomenal movie. In fact, I asked him, do you ever feel like directing any, any of these short ones?

Speaker: 1
03:00:01

Ai thought about directing the big fat kill, maybe the short films. You should come direct that one. Shit. You should direct all of them with me because I’m really copying it right out of the book. You should direct it with me. All right. Let’s go.

Speaker: 1
03:00:09

So then, January. Okay. So remember Ai met him in November. I wrote it in December. January, we shoot the test. Took me a couple weeks to do the effects.

Speaker: 1
03:00:18

He loves it. I make a meeting with Bruce Willis, show it to Bruce Willis. What’s so cool about doing that opening scene is that any actor I show it to now, I show him the book, which is awesome. You’d be playing this character, but look at this test. Let me show you the book, what it looked like before I turned this test into a test.

Speaker: 1
03:00:35

Watches it, Josh Arnett, voiceover, music, titles come on, first name on the screen, Bruce Willis. And I go, hey. Look. You’re in the credits. You have to do it now. Manifesting it. Right?

Speaker: 1
03:00:47

He’s like

Speaker: 0
03:00:48

Yeah.

Speaker: 1
03:00:48

Shit, man. This is great. I’m in. He’s like wow. Go get everyone else from that. It was just easy to get. And we were filming the movie. So February, right, building the few little sets we had, like the bar. I told Frank, we don’t need to build a bar, but I’m gonna go ahead and build a bar so we have a place to go have script meetings.

Speaker: 1
03:01:07

If everything else will be green screen, we’ll build fake steps and things out of green. So we’re doing that and I’m casting the first one. We’re shooting the movie by March, beginning of March. And I remember because my son was born March 3 and I was in LA for his birth because I was also recording the orchestra for the score Ai wrote somehow in the past few months for Kill Bill two.

Speaker: 1
03:01:30

That’s how much stuff was going on.

Speaker: 0
03:01:33

Yeah. Yeah.

Speaker: 1
03:01:33

You know, that’s like when you just meh it flow, you’re just riding the wave. You’re not doing any of that. So that’s, what’s by staying in that like urgent, there’s always the, the deadlines are just pushing you to create stuff. And we shot the movie so fast America ai. Now, not only that Ai shot a whole other movie that year.

Speaker: 1
03:01:54

I shot the adventures of shark, poor sana girl with kids that came out two months after Sana City the next year, within less than a year, Sin City was out.

Speaker: 0
03:02:01

You’re shooting that in parallel with Sin City. That’s hilarious. Is that correct?

Speaker: 1
03:02:03

Yeah. Like sometimes we’d be shooting with the kids and in the afternoon, Rudiger Howard would come and some of the Sin City girls to finish, you know, shooting stuff that we needed to film. It was just insane how fast we had to move. I was doing it in my edit. I was editing. I just edited it.

Speaker: 1
03:02:16

And then I I would scan the, artwork into the, computer, and I would edit the storyboards with the sound effects, and and I would do the voice over. I would imitate Mickey, and I would imitate Bruce Mhmm. And lay out the how fast it was gonna move. And you were like, wow. So now we have a template with the real drawings and the lighting on how we’re gonna do it.

Speaker: 1
03:02:36

It’s funny because I I can do pretty good in Bruce Willis because I ai it’s for sai long. If you’re doing his voice over and he would hear my guide voice for the timing, he’d be like, is that me or is that you? Can’t tell. It’s like, oh, that one was meh. You could just do that. It’s like, what, man? It sounds like me. Me.

Speaker: 1
03:02:52

First of

Speaker: 0
03:02:53

all, why haven’t films like that been made?

Speaker: 1
03:02:56

Well, it’s a very specific look because it went to that comic. The first piece of music I wrote for that was the main title, and I called it descent. Ai I wanted the notes to descend because it felt like you were descending into this dark world, and you don’t come out to the end of the movie.

Speaker: 1
03:03:08

You’re just like in this world where all these layers of unreality, like water doesn’t photograph that way, snow doesn’t, but it’s there and you’re seeing it and you’re seeing the actors. So you’re just really, it’s like a dream world. Yeah. So I was really into it and I did tests for the most difficult shots first.

Speaker: 1
03:03:24

Ai, how do I get his his tape to glow in the dark, like in the comics, sai it’s still in the shadow. And I realized, oh, use fluorescent tape and a fluorescent ai. That way I can keep it. We can still key it. Like Sai started just doing my own visual effects like that early on.

Speaker: 1
03:03:39

Cause I knew technology was changing so fast that I would need to just know how to do it like a, like a magician shooting digital. Nobody wanted to touch digital back then. DPs were all afraid of digital. They didn’t wanna have to learn something new.

Speaker: 0
03:03:51

Sai Ai had

Speaker: 1
03:03:52

to DP it. So me photographing it, I’m like, sai fun to cut because Sai meh, to, to light, like you have to have that light out of frame right now, but I could bring the lights in right here as long as it was they’re not crossing it. I’m just gonna take it out of the green anyways. Sai could have the coolest ai on everybody. Cool edge lights.

Speaker: 1
03:04:10

You could have an edge light back here, an edge light back here, a fill light here. You’re not gonna erase him. I just take him out.

Speaker: 0
03:04:15

Can you educate me and people curious about this? Like, what is the power of light when you’re telling a story, when you’re creating a feeling and experience? Like, what’s the artistry of that?

Speaker: 1
03:04:26

Well, if you look at their drawings too, sometimes it’s the absence of light. Like, you would see That’s the this face, but then this would be completely black, but you would still see my ai. Yeah. Which is like impossible. Right? Yeah.

Speaker: 1
03:04:36

But you believe it when you see it because it’s there. So things like that were a lot of the tricks I tried first, because I ai that about it. It’s like you have a guy completely backlit, so there’s no light on his face. Yeah. But yet his glasses are glowing white. Yeah.

Speaker: 1
03:04:48

So we put fluorescent tape in there, hit that with a light, then we could turn it white later. The black and white really helps. And then just upping the contrast. Ai I mean, it’s just something that you have a feeling for, but you’re able to try it. In fact, when I took it to George Lucas, who George Lucas said this to me early on, because I was, we’re the only ai shooting digital.

Speaker: 1
03:05:06

He said, man, it’s so good. You live in Austin. That’s why I’m in Marin County. Because when you live outside of this box of LA, Hollywood, you think outside of the box automatically, you’re just gonna stumble upon innovations. And he was right.

Speaker: 1
03:05:19

It was like, yeah, why, why aren’t we shooting digital? Let’s shoot digital. Why aren’t we shooting digital three d? Let’s do that. Why don’t we just use green screen for the background?

Speaker: 1
03:05:27

You just start innovating because you’re away from anyone saying, Hey, you can’t do it that way, which they would say if I was in LA. So we just came up with a whole other method. So I took him to Sana City to check out the first, thing I was gonna show at Comic Con. He said, now this will really show people what digital is capable of.

Speaker: 1
03:05:43

This really shows how avant garde you can get with that shit that you can never have done that on film, you know? And so by me versing myself in that technology early, I was able to make a movie like ai. Then everyone had to play catch up, you know? So you should always just follow your that’s ai. Some people say don’t use those curtains. That’s not gonna work. Just blow past those ai, go innovate your own thing.

Speaker: 1
03:06:05

Because sometimes not knowing is better, you know, being too naive to to be like, don’t you know, you shouldn’t have been able to make that movie that way. People would, people would say like Ai. It’s like, how did you make movie for $7,000 Just, you know, that’s impossible. It’s like, why do you keep using that word?

Speaker: 1
03:06:21

Because it can’t be impossible if I did it because I’m not that smart. And it’s like saying, how did you get to the top of Mount Everest? It’s impossible. Well, I just kept walking. Sai ai realize it was kinda at a slope, but I didn’t really realize it was going up that high.

Speaker: 0
03:06:35

Yeah. You you you’ve talked about, like, a big part of your approach to filmmaking to life is manifesting, manifesting the reality you want. In fact, I should sort of meh. And I I’d love to ask you about manifesting, but I you asked me at the beginning of this conversation, do you consider yourself a creative person?

Speaker: 0
03:06:52

I should I should sort of reflect on that because I was very uncomfortable answering that.

Speaker: 1
03:06:57

Yeah. I noticed a little bit. And I was like, I’m gonna I’m gonna free you up so that you’re never uncomfortable again.

Speaker: 0
03:07:01

It’s scary to to say that about about yourself, though. Because you all There’s a lot of there’s a lot

Speaker: 1
03:07:06

of people who go, you’re not an artist. Artist. You’re not a creative. But no. You’re not saying I’m an artist. I’m saying I’m a creative person, but that’s an artist too, isn’t it? No. You artist isn’t necessarily a guy with the the French mustache and the funny hat. That’s not necessarily what art artists are regular people.

Speaker: 0
03:07:18

Yeah.

Speaker: 1
03:07:19

And regular people relate to art that’s imperfect. If you can make art that’s perfect, don’t wanna relate to it. So when you think about it like that, you go, well, I can make imperfect art. So, yeah, I’m an artist. And if you have doubt, you’re an artist. That’s an artist. Ai, real artists always wonder if they’re good enough. So you are an artist.

Speaker: 1
03:07:35

Just by the fact that you had uncomfortable saying it, you’re a real artist.

Speaker: 0
03:07:39

Yeah. And there’s some degree I don’t know if you could speak to this, but, you know, there’s a fear of creating shitty things. You know, I’ve I’ve created a lot of really shitty things in my life, and it always feels like that’s really important to do.

Speaker: 1
03:07:55

Okay. But you’re judging something that that you have no business judging.

Speaker: 0
03:07:58

Right.

Speaker: 1
03:07:59

Like, I have so many people. That’s why I like making movies on purpose that have less money and less ai. On purpose. Like, the biggest movie, it sai, all ai on Netflix is we can be heroes. I told them, I don’t wanna spend more than $50,000,000. I know you all wanna give me 80, but I wanna be a hero and come in at 50 because one, it’ll make it better.

Speaker: 1
03:08:17

And then two, you’ll you’ll make three of them instead of just one. I don’t wanna just go spend the farm. And I don’t know meh many filmmakers will do that. Don’t try to get as much money as they can, but when they’re spending less, it’s a win win situation and you have more creative freedom because they’re gonna leave you alone.

Speaker: 1
03:08:30

You can do whatever you want. Ai I, I like the creative limitations that come from less money. That’s why I like brass knuckle films. Like we’re gonna make them for less so that they are better. Not because they’re not to make them shitty.

Speaker: 1
03:08:41

So many people have come up to me and said, you know what part I love in your movie? And they’ll tell me some scene. And I’m like, oh, well, that’s because we ran out of sun and we had to ai do that jump with just him jumping on a pad three times or whatever it is. It’s something that you fumbled together. And that’s what they’re drawn to. They’re drawn to that imperfect thing.

Speaker: 1
03:09:00

And so I wouldn’t judge it because somebody’s, you know, if you called your movie shitty, that’s like John Carpenter saying, yeah, nobody liked the thing and Yeah. It’s a shitty movie and everyone hated it. So it must not be good. And then ten years later, it’s a masterpiece. So don’t judge it.

Speaker: 1
03:09:16

Because if you words that we use on ourselves are very powerful. So if you say, well, you know, I’m kind of an artist sometimes and I make a lot of shitty stuff. Well, that’s gonna, that’s gonna be your lot in life. You know, I I’m, I’m pretty good shape for a director. It’s not because I’m operating the camera because I work out. Right. But I always hated working out. I was not into sports. I was a filmmaker.

Speaker: 1
03:09:41

I was a cartoonist In high school, I was really tall. They would say, come work, come be in our team. We need it’s a small school. We need you. And I’m like, I don’t know how to play any of these things. I’m an artist.

Speaker: 1
03:09:50

There’s a line in the faculty that was my line to my coaches when they would say, you gotta come run with everybody. I would say, I don’t think a person should run unless he’s being chased. I get that to the, to the Ai Wood character, because that’s the guy Sai identified with. He’s there with this camera and that was me. So I hated it.

Speaker: 1
03:10:05

And then because I had, I was a cartoonist, you know, drawing like this for hours, four hours, my back would go up, like out for a month. It would just go out from being so tall and crunched over. And then when I started making movies, operating the camera and doing steady cam every year would go out to where I would need cortisone shots to get up again, if I’m filming or just be out for a month.

Speaker: 1
03:10:24

And on ai kids two, Ricardo Montalban had bad back surgery that, that went wrong and he was in a wheelchair. So he’s in a wheelchair and I’m in a walker. And he’s like, I’m 84. What’s your excuse? And I was like, I, I don’t know.

Speaker: 1
03:10:40

I just was operating steady. He goes, you have to work out Robert. You have to work out. And I was like, okay. Yeah. I know. I know.

Speaker: 1
03:10:46

And sai then I thought, okay, next year I’m working with Saloni, last Stallone, last Stallone. How do you get in shape? Because I need to get in shape. My back’s always going out. He goes, get the trainer. Anyone who ever saw in Hollywood got in shape, they had a trainer. Yeah.

Speaker: 1
03:10:59

Because even you, anybody, oh, I need a trainer. He has a trainer. Ai, oh, no. I need a trainer. I can’t train. It’s, like, well, shah.

Speaker: 1
03:11:05

If you can’t even train on your own, then what what do us mortal men have? So I got a trainer, and guess what happened? Hated it. I would feel sick when he’s coming tyler. Cause I hate sport. I hate working at it.

Speaker: 1
03:11:14

And then, some years of doing that, I just, I can’t stand it, but I know it’s good for my health. So the ai there. So if you can’t accomplish something in your life, it’s not a lack of desire. Like if you wanna be more creative, it’s not a lack of desire. It’s a lack of identity. Like you’re like the fact that you went, you were comfortable about saying creative it’s because there’s a lack of identity there.

Speaker: 1
03:11:36

You have lots of desire. Ai You gotta get the identity up and then suddenly you’re, you’re making, you’re making shit. So I, a friend of mine from Mexico, she comes over, I have to stop smoking. My doctor said I have to stop smoking for my health. So I have to, so I’m not smoking right now. So I’ve been smoking since I was eight years old. I said, well, you’re sana go back to smoking.

Speaker: 1
03:11:54

Cause he just told me your identity is a smoker. So right now you’re a smoker. Who’s not smoking. What’s sana happen eventually. You have to say I’m a nonsmoker, you know, like just that, that lesson I had forgotten. You have to say I’m a nonsmoker. I’m a nonsmoker.

Speaker: 1
03:12:09

What does a nonsmoker do? If you believe you’re a nonsmoker, you hate smoke. Start choking at the smell of smoke. Okay. I’ll try that.

Speaker: 1
03:12:15

She walks off and I go, shit. I forgot about my own I wonder where in my life I could apply that Working out. Of course. My God. I hate working out. No wonder I am so miserable. I’ll tell my trainer and anyone who will listen. I can’t stand working out. I don’t understand sports.

Speaker: 1
03:12:31

So that day Ai said, I’m an athlete. I’m an athlete. Yeah. That’s the last thing I would ever call myself all through my entire life. This was 2012.

Speaker: 1
03:12:41

I’m an athlete by the next day. Not only did my life completely change and it’s easier if it’s opposite day. Like if you’re just doing it by degrees, that’s bullshit. You gotta go complete opposite. Because if there’s like a donut, you know, if you say, well, I’m gonna only half of it. You gotta go. No. I’m gonna get an apple.

Speaker: 1
03:13:01

Opposite is much easier. Not only did I change my life working out, I didn’t ever needed a trainer. I ai not had a trainer since all those years. Because I’m an athlete. I’ll just do it. What does an athlete do? An athlete loves working out. An athlete will make time to work out. Yeah. And elite. Right.

Speaker: 1
03:13:17

I was, I would never be the person that would call themselves an athlete, but that’s how much it can change your life by changing your identity. So if you wanna be more creative, you’ve you’ve already got that in your that desire. You’ve got enough of that. You don’t need more desire. Yeah.

Speaker: 1
03:13:32

You need more identity. So you gotta say I’m a creative person with a straight face. With a straight face. So when I say, hey, are you gonna be a are you a creative person? You go, yeah. Because then if you say that, what do you do?

Speaker: 1
03:13:43

You’re gonna do more creative stuff because that’s what a creative person does.

Speaker: 0
03:13:46

It doesn’t make sense to me how manifesting works, but it does seem to work. Like, basically, visualizing visualizing a path towards a a certain kind of future. It, I guess everything around you, everything within you kind of makes way for that, makes way for the possibility of that. It’s weird.

Speaker: 1
03:14:02

It’s weird, but it it ai it’s a kind of a nice to know that you can do that, but you have to just have that conviction and just say, start with a label.

Speaker: 0
03:14:10

Yeah. The r. Yeah.

Speaker: 1
03:14:12

The double r or the label you just gave yourself.

Speaker: 0
03:14:14

Yeah.

Speaker: 1
03:14:14

Like Sai changed my label. My label was, I hate working out.

Speaker: 0
03:14:17

I’m an athlete.

Speaker: 1
03:14:18

I I’m an athlete. I’m not a non athlete anymore. I’m changing my label. And you get so inspired because now you know what to do because you can’t help but conform to your identity. You’re always gonna conform your ai. So just change your identity, and you’ll change your life. But and it’s not that hard. I didn’t have to go get hypnotized or anything.

Speaker: 1
03:14:34

It was literally I just told myself, if I could do that, go from a guy who doesn’t wanna work out, hates it, hates it. I had the desire. I was already hiring the guy. I lacked the identity. As soon as I ai my identity, boom.

Speaker: 0
03:14:47

Well, one of the things for me like that is probably music, just playing guitar.

Speaker: 1
03:14:51

Are you a musician?

Speaker: 0
03:14:52

Yeah. Musi

Speaker: 1
03:14:53

Yeah. Look at you. You’re fine.

Speaker: 0
03:14:55

I would definitely not I mean, I’m I’m going along with it now, but if we’re honestly if we’re just involved

Speaker: 1
03:15:00

with it, I wouldn’t have said it. But I heard you rip on fucking guitar.

Speaker: 0
03:15:03

And I’ve heard you play ai of amazing in all different ai of contexts.

Speaker: 1
03:15:07

Oh, but I I should be, like, freaking Santana by now because I’ve had a guitar in my hands since I was a kid, but since I’m not a full time musician, I don’t get to play it that often. So I’m not as good as I should be. But, you know, when you apply yourself to just rehearse for, you know, a couple shows, you book some shows.

Speaker: 1
03:15:24

Look at this. This is me just, like, playing our first arena show opening for George Lopez. That was crazy to be on the stages where your heroes that you saw them, and now you’re seeing what their point of view was. It blows your mind. You need to get sai on stage. You get on stage once, and you’ll see that it’s not as bad as you think.

Speaker: 0
03:15:42

You’re not you’re not, like, terrified because you’re playing pretty complicated things. I’ve seen you play live.

Speaker: 1
03:15:46

Yeah. And I meh up a bunch of tyler, because you don’t wanna focus on that. You just go ai, okay. I gotta do it. Because when you’re up there, it’s not that you’re, like, screaming nervous, but your hands will just won’t work anymore. Yeah. Something will happen. But that happens to everybody.

Speaker: 1
03:15:58

If you really watch even the best in their live performances, watch really close and you sai, they screw up a couple things, but you just wanna know because they just go right through it. That’s right. It’s ai, it’s about the live performance and that’s how you know it’s real. So Yeah.

Speaker: 1
03:16:10

Think if you can really just lean into it more, change really work on the identity part because you’ve got the desire. You wanna play guitar. But as soon as you say, yeah, but I can’t play live. You just chopped off your leg at the start of the race. You say, I I don’t know.

Speaker: 1
03:16:28

You just chopped off your other Yeah. You’re doing this to yourself. Yeah. You’re literally doing this to yourself. I’m not meh just you.

Speaker: 1
03:16:33

I mean, anybody who’s

Speaker: 0
03:16:34

just ai, who

Speaker: 1
03:16:35

who pauses, who hesitates. You don’t have to have doubts. Why would you have a doubt? Cause you know the process now it’s like, if I don’t know how to do something, I know how to figure it out. Like, I, I didn’t know how I was gonna do that scene with him jumping and flipping.

Speaker: 1
03:16:48

I didn’t know that, but do I have doubt that I’m gonna go in there and be able to do it? If you, if you say that you do you now you’re a doubtful That’s how powerful that is. But if you sai, no, I don’t have any doubt. Cause I know I’m gonna figure it out when I get there, somehow it’ll fall in my lap. I trust the process.

Speaker: 1
03:17:05

You don’t have to, you don’t have to know. So if you trust the process that you’ll figure it out.

Speaker: 0
03:17:10

But here’s the thing, like sometimes you fail and there’s audience. Yeah.

Speaker: 1
03:17:15

Then you get four rooms. Yeah. Yeah. And then what hap and then what happens? Ai. Don’t blink is the don’t blink. And then you go sift through the failure. Yeah, exactly. And you go, wait a minute. What did I get out of that?

Speaker: 0
03:17:23

Yeah. I’ve done that a bunch.

Speaker: 1
03:17:25

It’s great. Ai. What what’s the worst that can happen? You go on a stage and you bomb. It’s not gonna be the first stage. And it’s one of those you can talk about so that when you do the next one and it all sometimes they all go right. I’ve had a couple shows. We did we did a couple shows where we had video cameras set up for the second day. Listen.

Speaker: 1
03:17:42

Let’s not film the first day because we’re gonna be fighting and just ai our feet. Let’s film the second day. First day, it sai fucking flawless.

Speaker: 0
03:17:49

Of course. Flawless because no cameras. It’s just ai go.

Speaker: 1
03:17:53

Yeah. Second day, we’re we weren’t as into it as we had just done it. It felt like the second take, you know, just didn’t have the magic. And that’s the one that’s recorded. And we’re like, oh, kicking ourselves. We didn’t film both nights. We should have filmed both nights.

Speaker: 0
03:18:07

I love how much of a mess this human existence life is.

Speaker: 1
03:18:12

Yes.

Speaker: 0
03:18:13

You’ve talked about the importance of journaling because So important. Living is

Speaker: 1
03:18:17

Really?

Speaker: 0
03:18:18

The living. I love that phrase.

Speaker: 1
03:18:19

I came up with that because it’s like, wow. I see so many people who get after you for, like, filming a concert and they go ai in the moment. I’m like, dude, it’s counterintuitive. The moment goes by like this.

Speaker: 0
03:18:30

Yeah.

Speaker: 1
03:18:30

We’re we’re not gonna remember any of this. The fact that we taped it, thank God. Because later on, it’s gonna be a file photo of me remembering you. Three pound me computer. All I’m gonna have is a file photo of you maybe in a sai, and you picturing me in maybe a black t shirt

Speaker: 0
03:18:44

Mhmm.

Speaker: 1
03:18:44

And the metadata narrative is gonna sai, had a great talk about if we remember creativity. Yeah. Yeah. You know, like, their brain doesn’t remember. But when I pull up old home movies, Ai can show my kids that I just found, and they’re like, they don’t remember it. I don’t remember filming it.

Speaker: 1
03:19:01

And it’s like new adventures of it becomes iconic and it sticks in our head and all our jokes are based on old things that we used to do and sai, so ai living is reliving. So keeping a journal is very important. Cause I found that anything that passed fifteen years on ai like I’m reading someone else’s journal.

Speaker: 1
03:19:15

I’m like, I didn’t even know that’s where I got that guitar. I thought I bought that guitar. It was given to me. It’s like a $10,000 Santander. It was given to me my birthday by the studio that I made that movie. How did I not remember that? It’s like crazy what you don’t remember.

Speaker: 1
03:19:29

And it’s the brain is very it’s not a it’s not a very, you know, reliable computer. It’s it’s made out of freaking butter.

Speaker: 0
03:19:35

That’s a really profound idea that so much of our life is lived through replaying our memories. Yeah. And then watching stuff is, one of the ways to sort of refresh, give some more, you know, texture and details.

Speaker: 1
03:19:50

Makes it iconic. It makes it iconic in your life and part of your life. Otherwise it just went by. It went by Like I’ll ask people, ai, we just had a really fun, what did we do last week? What did we do last Wednesday? And they’re like, Ai can tell you because I wrote it down, but I’m not gonna remember.

Speaker: 1
03:20:03

And, and then when you see, when you go through your journal, like I go back and I find, wow, life changing thing happened Ai. Another life changing thing Sai didn’t know at the time tyler now Sai know that that really sana me on an even happened Saturday and another big freaking thing happened on Sunday.

Speaker: 1
03:20:21

Like they come in threes ai. You start being able to predict the future a little bit because you, you see the patterns and it’s pretty wild to, to do that. And it, I I’ve, I swear Ai talked to people, big group of people, 500 people. How many people here journal? Two hands, three hands. I couldn’t believe it.

Speaker: 1
03:20:38

It’s like, man, you ai, if there’s anything I sana impart on you is journaling. Your life is way more interesting than you think, because it’s not gonna feel like anything while it’s going by. But in retrospect, you look back. Like, I can just go through I keep a journal one file per year. So I started a new one in 2025.

Speaker: 1
03:20:56

If I sana look up, like I’m gonna do a director’s chair episode. Mhmm. I look up Michael Mann, Michael Mann, Michael Mann, all the conversations we had since study four that I wrote down that I felt and it’s like, oh my God, I can’t believe we said that. That’s how I knew about that thing with Quentin. I had forgotten about that story with Quentin saying, ah, Pulp Fiction.

Speaker: 1
03:21:11

Ai forgotten that because from the moment I asked him that question to the success at Cannes was very quick. So it was a lost moment in time where I had it recorded down to the time, down to the hour when I asked him that question, and he thought it wasn’t he he didn’t think that was the one for him.

Speaker: 0
03:21:27

Yeah. And there’s a I don’t know. When it when it’s private journaling, there’s an honesty. There’s an innocence that about, like, the dreams you have about the future, the conceptions you have about the future. I mean, that’s what this thing is journal is a journal.

Speaker: 1
03:21:40

It’s just a journal. It’s ai

Speaker: 0
03:21:42

But the profundity, like,

Speaker: 1
03:21:43

comes out of it. Crazy. Yeah. You didn’t and so much Ai figured it out then. I was I’m talking like a professor by the end of that. Like Ai have people come up to me and they’re asking me all these questions about stuff I wrote in there. And I’m like, I wrote that in that book.

Speaker: 1
03:21:56

Shit. I was smart back then. What happened? I can’t remember. I don’t remember half of that, but I think that it’s the same thing.

Speaker: 1
03:22:01

When you go to teach someone, your mouth opens and stuff comes out. I I’m always taping ai. Like when I go to give a talk, because that’s also the pipe working. Someone else is talking through you sometimes. So the act of sharing, that’s why I’ve always liked to share information because the feedback loop is insane. Like me inspiring Daisy DJ to go ai.

Speaker: 1
03:22:22

He writes the script in three days, comes back, tells me now I’m doing that method. And it’s like, wow, people come back with their version. And I love telling my kids stuff that I learned that I wish I could tell ai, but I can’t take a time machine. The closest thing is telling your kid because then they can take that information and process it.

Speaker: 1
03:22:40

So many times they’ve come back and said, wow, dad, the lesson you taught us about this is really, it’s really become big in our minds. Yeah. What was that? And they tell me, I’m like, I never told you that. They said, yeah, you told us, well, I told you maybe 10% of that. All the rest you added.

Speaker: 1
03:22:55

Oh, yeah. Well, we embellished it over. Ai, they they turned it into something else. And it’s like, wow, that’s so cool. But yeah, that thing about reliving, like that was one of my favorite ones is just, yeah, my mom turning 75 and not wanting to do anything for her 70 birthday.

Speaker: 1
03:23:10

I said, why not? She goes, the the whole family’s gonna, if you have 10 kids, they’re all gonna wanna do something for your 70 birthday. Nothing can top my 60. I was like, what are we doing on your fifth, sixty fifth? I didn’t even remember even. I’m the one who orchestrated it all.

Speaker: 1
03:23:21

She goes, oh, you flew everyone in from all over the country. You gave me a car. I gotta have a journal of that. So I’m sure I have video. I go back ten years. I see what tape I had it on. Find the tape, pop the tape in. Forgot about all this stuff.

Speaker: 1
03:23:37

So Ai cut together a ten minute version of it, showed it at her 70 birthday, Just watching the old one, everybody was like, oh my god. Look how young everybody was. Look how small the nieces and nephew were. She starts bawling as soon as she gets the key, the gift of the key in the video because she realizes now what it’s gonna mean that she’s gonna get this car.

Speaker: 1
03:23:58

And so it’s like, wow, let’s just play the old tapes. We don’t even have to do anything anymore. We bank sai much amazing stuff that we’ve all forgotten that, you know, my kids just love watching their old home movies. They, they hardly remember any of it, but even a VHS to them is virtual reality. Because compared to our memories, it is virtual reality.

Speaker: 1
03:24:22

They’re like leaning into the screen to see what’s around the corner and they’re remembering the place and the sounds. And they say, oh, we left the, we left the living room. It’s ai, we’re there. It’s like, wow. I was always afraid they would see this old footage and go, ah, the dog shit. What kind of camera was that?

Speaker: 1
03:24:38

This is the limitations of, you know, you put up one of those files on your screen. It’s like this big on your laptop now. That’s how low res shit was back then. But that didn’t matter. It’s ai, comparing our memories, that stuff, living is reliving.

Speaker: 1
03:24:50

Like, pull up that shoot as much as you can, take as many pictures, but write the journal because you’ll have a picture. Speak you’re not gonna know where it’s from. Even ten years from now, you wanna know what that picture’s from. You read the ai, you go, oh, that’s what that is. Oh my god.

Speaker: 1
03:25:02

You can piece together all these things that are important to you or that become more important with ai, actually. And, you know what’s important later compared to what’s been happening at the time.

Speaker: 0
03:25:12

To add on top of that, so journaling is a kinda raw or, like, home films is a raw projection of what’s going on in the moment. I think it’s also really powerful because I’ve I’ve I’ve done that. It’s to do a high effort description of where your life is for you just for yourself.

Speaker: 0
03:25:27

So sometimes generally it’s, like, low effort.

Speaker: 1
03:25:29

Yeah. Sometimes it’s just I just wanna mark that, you know, began this conversation. I had to go do something at five. I did that. Met somebody that I know last night, I met somebody that’s gonna be life changing. I’m gonna write a little bit more on that because I could just now I know. But I I’m gonna just record it so later if I look it up.

Speaker: 0
03:25:43

So one of the cool things you could do is, you know, like, for example, somebody, Jimmy and mister Beast does does these videos, which are great. Ai I think I think it’s a great exercise to do for yourself, which is a video he records, for himself that he doesn’t look at to be published twenty years from now.

Speaker: 0
03:25:59

This is a message to myself twenty years from now. Here’s where I hope you end up. You’re you’re basically a younger version of yourself speaking Mhmm. To an older version.

Speaker: 1
03:26:08

Yeah.

Speaker: 0
03:26:08

And then you get you know, time flies. And, like, you you get to a point where it’s like, holy shit. It has been ten years. It has been twenty years. You get to listen to a younger version of yourself. Like, you it would have been hilarious if you shot videos like that to yourself because ai was just, like, the incredible journey your career has been on. Right. Yeah.

Speaker: 0
03:26:26

And just to think about that, like, the delta, the difference between what your dreams were and where you ended up, usually, you outdo yourself in many ways. Sometimes you your life goes in a totally different trajectory vatsal, and the result is kinda funny. It’s a it’s a it’s a nice it’s a nice illustration of the nonlinearity of life.

Speaker: 1
03:26:49

I I would film stuff like that with my kids. I couldn’t do it, ai, like, I would film my kids saying, hey. Turn to the camera now and say, Hey, rebel, it’s me rebel fucking rebel in the future.

Speaker: 0
03:26:58

Yeah. So you have shah something like that.

Speaker: 1
03:27:00

Yeah. And then they’ll show them like, cool. It’s like that ten years later. And they they’re like, woah, to see it talking to them and saying, yeah. And, I would do this thing where I would film them watching it and then pan off. So that ten years later Ai could get, Hey, rebel him reacting pan off to the new rebel watching it. It’s just like ai going.

Speaker: 1
03:27:22

So I have one like that where it just keeps panning and they’re watching themselves within the movie, within the movie, within the movie. It’s like an ongoing project, you know, it’s just so fun to just play with memory and make you realize how fast time moves and to go. They go like, I kind of remember that, but I don’t remember being that ai.

Speaker: 0
03:27:42

Yeah. When I

Speaker: 1
03:27:43

had that memory, it’s like wild how time moves and it makes them feel meh more precious about how quick time moves and and how important every little moment is because you see the fragility of it too. You know?

Speaker: 0
03:27:55

Does it make you sad? Does it break your heart that, you know, the number of memories we get to create is ai, that this life ends? Eventually, the story is over?

Speaker: 1
03:28:06

I had this theory. If I wanna put this in a movie, I don’t think I’ve ever seen this before, because I was woke up from a dream and it was ai, trying to remember it, you know, you’re like, god, it’s so, so real. And if you don’t write it down right away, right, it ai of fades away, but you, while you’re dreaming it, it’s really real.

Speaker: 1
03:28:22

It’s like, you can almost see the walls. By the time I went to go tell somebody it’s like, shit, I forgot most of it. But I wonder if that’s what it’s like when you wake up in your consciousness after you ai, you wake up in your next consciousness getting ready to move into whatever your next body is.

Speaker: 1
03:28:38

And you’re like, wow. I was a filmmaker, had five kids. And oh, well, I’m gonna be a fish now. You know? It’s like, it’s like a dream.

Speaker: 1
03:28:49

It’s like ai gone that way. And it’s like, that’s what past lives are. They’re like distant memories, like a dream that’s faded away. That’s why you barely feel remnants of it. Do I feel sad about the when I tell people, they flip out when I tell them that. Yeah.

Speaker: 0
03:29:01

Like, I

Speaker: 1
03:29:02

ai, I want a character to be like that. Like, he’s dying. He’s like, I don’t wanna forget this dream. I don’t wanna forget. Don’t let me wake up. Don’t let me wake up.

Speaker: 0
03:29:10

But you forget, especially the moment you try to tell somebody. Yeah. They tell the next fish.

Speaker: 1
03:29:14

Yeah. The next sai is gonna be a fish next. But, yeah. Yeah. Ai, it feels like I’m almost sad about it, but then it just makes you even more double down to be precious about the life you’re in now.

Speaker: 0
03:29:25

What do you think

Speaker: 1
03:29:25

is the meaning? Meh record it. Record it.

Speaker: 0
03:29:27

What do you think is the meaning of this whole thing of life? Why are we here?

Speaker: 1
03:29:32

Why are we I mean, I really feel like, my kids and I were just talking about this last night. We were just blown away. We did this Astarian astrology. I think it was the oldest form of astrology. It just nails each person. And it’s like, yeah, because when you have a kid, you realize right away, this isn’t my kid. This is not my I’m just in charge of him.

Speaker: 1
03:29:54

It’s a completely different soul. He’s a different soul that ended up in my hands. It’s not there’s physical characteristics that get passed on because of just how biology works. Even sometimes posture and movement is the same, but the actual person is somebody else. And all the kids, I have five kids and I had nine brothers and sisters.

Speaker: 1
03:30:11

They’re all different. And you realize we made a pact in a past life to gather together. Because every time it’s like sai good. You were born in this family because you were given free reign to go find who you’re really supposed to be. And you, and you find out everyone is doing what they were supposed to be doing. But what’s cool, almost like this clarity you get by just saying it.

Speaker: 1
03:30:35

They now know that they were always supposed to be, like, this creative person or the and now they can double down on it because they know that’s who they were supposed to be. They don’t have to have any doubt anymore. They don’t have to wonder, well, am I supposed to be more business minded or can I be creative?

Speaker: 1
03:30:48

Isn’t that some kind of frivolous? Is that a real job? Can I do that? Now they realize, no, you’re supposed to be doing that for these, these, these, these reasons, and now they can double down. You can skip all that and just ai, I feel like I sana be that person. So I’m just gonna declare Ai am that person.

Speaker: 1
03:31:04

And as soon as you say it, you are that. And tomorrow your, your activities will conform to that. That’s how powerful that decision is. So when you walk out of here, it’s gonna be with a complete commitment. I’m a technical and creative person. Like my first boss, I’m unstoppable.

Speaker: 1
03:31:23

Because my boss told me that, and he was right. I became technical and creative, and you’re just unstoppable. You can just keep going and just go, I’m unstoppable. Doesn’t mean you’re gonna you’re gonna use your powers for bad, but you’ve just changed your life by just declaring that.

Speaker: 1
03:31:38

And I’m also a creative person who lives his life creatively. I’m gonna find creative ways to use that technology. If somebody says you’re not the same kind of artist I was expecting, that’s their own opinion. Don’t blink. Just keep going.

Speaker: 1
03:31:53

You know, all these things that you’ve learned that people were supposed to tell you along the way, they’re telling you for a reason, anytime you got pushed, like if you go back to your life at your really critical moments in your life, where you went that way instead of that way, there was probably somebody there who said something to you that kind of pushed you.

Speaker: 1
03:32:13

I, there was a, there was one guy when I was in high school, it was like senior year. I wrote a paper and I wasn’t a great writer at all. I wrote a paper for a Latin American studies class, gave it to the teacher. And, he said, wow, you you’re gonna be rich and famous in four years. Based on what I read, He’s like, really? Ai home like 17 or 18.

Speaker: 1
03:32:37

Four years later, I did mariachi and I went to him later at a reunion and I said, you called it. You said I was gonna be, why did you say that? And he, and he’s like, I said that. I ai understand. It looked like he would never say that to someone. You think he would own it Yeah. And say, oh, yeah. I ai. And I told you. No.

Speaker: 1
03:32:51

He was like, he looked like he didn’t even know who that was. And he was like, asking. I think like he never would’ve said that in a million years. So again, sometimes things come out of our mouth. That’s not us. It comes through us. So if you think of it that way, why are we here?

Speaker: 1
03:33:03

We’re here for a reason. We’re gonna get nudged saloni, listen to the ai, own who you’re supposed to be because you’re you are that person. Don’t let your human doubt get in the way. That’s like the guy closing the pipe. I don’t know if I’m really creative.

Speaker: 1
03:33:16

Sai don’t know if I’m really a businessman. And you’re just closing the pipe. You’re not gonna let it flow. Just be a good pipe. Just say, I just wanna be a I just wanna be a good ai. Clean, open. And then that’s when the magic happens.

Speaker: 0
03:33:29

And no matter what, don’t blink.

Speaker: 1
03:33:30

Don’t blink. Don’t matter how many that dude was getting so much shit thrown at him. I wish you knew that time period. Cause you wouldn’t, you would go like, yeah, that’s right.

Speaker: 0
03:33:38

It’s incredible.

Speaker: 1
03:33:39

It was unbelievable. I can’t even convey. And there was no internet and stuff back then. This was like literal press reviews, public. It was like, why are they targeting this guy? You know, they just did not ai he just had unprecedented success and was a really great guy and was making amazing shit.

Speaker: 1
03:33:57

So it was the the triple threat of make people jealous. You know? Pissed off.

Speaker: 0
03:34:03

Well, he’s one of the great artists of all time. So are you. It’s a huge honor to talk to you. Thank you for everything you’re doing in the world, for creating the world, and for inspiring millions of people to also be creators in the world, and for your new project that’s bringing people in.

Speaker: 0
03:34:18

Robert, as I told you, I’m a huge fan

Speaker: 1
03:34:19

of ai. It’s an

Speaker: 0
03:34:20

honor to talk to you, brother.

Speaker: 1
03:34:21

So great talking with you. Great questions. You’re gonna change your life.

Speaker: 0
03:34:24

Thank you, brother. Million dollars. Yeah. Ai there. Thank you for listening to this conversation with Robert Rodriguez to support this podcast. Please check out our sponsors in the description. And now let me leave you with some words from Alfred Hitchcock in feature films. The director is God. In documentary films, God is the director.

Speaker: 0
03:34:47

Thank you for listening and I hope to see you next time ai.

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