DKTM_Shane Black_V3 Mix_033125
Last modified 12:05 AM, April 01, 127.73 MB, 55 min.
From script to screen. Every film is brought to life by visionary, creatives and executives all sharing one mission to captivate the audience, hosted by award-winning movie strategist Kevin Goetz. Our podcast Don't Kill The Messenger offers a filmmaking masterclass through intimate conversations with Hollywood's most influential voices. And now your host, Kevin Goetz.
You know I'm too old for this shit. I'm just kidding. That is a classic line from Danny Glover's character in Lethal Weapon, the 1987 film written by none other than today's guest, one of the top 10 highest paid screenwriters in Hollywood as of 2024. Shane Black redefined action films with witty dialogue, dark humor, and unforgettable characters. From Lethal Weapon to the nice guys. Kiss, kiss, bang, bang, and Iron Man. Three. His work has helped shape modern filmmaking and has influenced a generation of writers beyond screenwriting. He's also made his mark as a director and I am thrilled to have him here today. Shane, my friend, welcome to the show.
Thank you. And having seen just the pantheon of guests that you've had, I'm honored to be here. I mean, this is a big deal, this show.
Well, that's incredibly kind of you. I wanna start with the fact that we saw each other about 12 hours ago. <laugh>. Yes. It's <laugh>, right? Yeah. We were at a test screening again. We'll, we'll talk about that later in the program. But I do wanna say that I think that was, I'm gonna say a turning point for you in terms of your relationship with test screenings and the screening process. Would that be fair to say?
Yes. Although, I will also say that I'm blessed just to be in a test creating, 'cause I've been around a long time. And the fact that I have been afforded the opportunity to sit there, you know, it's hard to break in. So getting a movie made Minor Miracle, sitting with you, looking at the movie and it going pretty well is a blessing. He's
Being modest.
No listeners. No, I, I have to be, I have to stress that this business isn't about being, it's about being weird and screwed up and going through ups and downs. And then finally just admitting that you're still here is enough to carry the
Day. Well, what I have learned about you in this latest process, 'cause we have actually met a couple of times that's right before on other movies. And actually I was at the original Lethal Weapon screenings. Oh, by the way. But Joe Farrell at the time was working on them in Katherine Porer. I was working at the company, so I didn't actually physically do the focus group, but I was there. You started in Pittsburgh?
Yes.
Outside of Pittsburgh,
In the suburbs. I was in Lower Burl. And then Mount Lebanon,
My roommate from college who's like my brother, Joe Brunetti, he was at the dormant section of Pittsburgh.
Right. Right next to Mount Lebanon.
There's a bunch of other folks like Jimmy Miller, this other, in our business. Who?
Michael Keat? Mm-hmm.
Yeah. Yeah. We used to hang out at the dormant pool. There was a public pool. He was on Texas Avenue. Do you know Texas Avenue? I can't
Remember.
<laugh>. When did you move to Fullerton? Right.
We moved to Fullerton like 1975.
Oh. So we're about the same age. He's one year older than us, by the way. I'll just throw that in as a, so you had kind of a love of books and things because your father, he had a printing business. He
Did. And he designed the forms for like, if you're applying for a job or if this is your inventory, if you're doing a menu for your new restaurant, he would design and print those. Now here's the good news. He designed the stuff, but he didn't own the presses. So when desktop publishing came in, all of a sudden all those people that invested in those giant machines, it's just dead pig weight sitting in their warehouses. So my father, I think, got out just in time. 'cause the internet and desktop publishing changed everything. So as far as me, what he left me as a legacy was not the printing aspect of it. It was a bookshelf down in our living room. And he used to read a lot of Detective Tough guy stories. My dad was a football player as a prototypical tough guy.
Married to your mom?
Yes. But my God, throughout my life, I loved the man. I, we had a great relationship, especially towards the end of his life. I was always scared of him because he was tough and I felt I wasn't so, but I would read these books of his, like the Mickey Spillane and the Shell Scott, the detective who ended up, I moved to California, ended up living right near where Shell, Scott, the fictional detective lived. I'm like, oh my God, this is like come full circle. And I became fascinated with tough guy literature as a way of putting myself up against these sorts of fearless people and facing what to me would be, uh, I was a coward.
<laugh>. Do you have one sibling? A brother?
I have two brothers.
Oh, two the sister.
By now
There's four of you.
Yep.
Your parents still around?
My mom is still around. My dad passed over in 2002. Oh, that's a while ago. It is a while, but it never goes away.
My dad died this past July. Oh. I, he was a Marine. And so I, I sort of can understand. I wasn't scared of him though.
<laugh>? Well, I was scared of his opinion of me. I know. Not that he would do anything to me, but just that I didn't date in high school. And I'm sure he was like, what's wrong with a kid? Yeah.
He must be gay.
Yeah, possibly. I mean, during lunch I was so socially inept that I would just sit under a tree reading a paperback while everyone else is frater. Nice. You
Were that odd kid.
I was odd. Yeah. I was good at journalism and I won a couple awards in high school. I just knew how to distill things down to the words that were necessary to get a point across quickly. Now, journalism is screwed because I was taught that you tell the news, first paragraph, the most important thing, and then it's the inverted pyramid. You get to the details, but now they bury the most important part halfway through. So you read, did you have friends in high school and
Stuff? Like, did you have like a group? It sounds like you were kind of a loner.
I was in some ways, but oddly, I was of necessity a chameleon. So I had friends at chess club and journalism club. I was on the football team. I did play football, and I did it to please my father, Robert Anderson. The playwright said a death of a parent. It ends your ability to interact with them, but it does not end the relationship.
Oh boy. That's true. He saw at least some of your success.
Some of it. Yeah.
Well, I mean, lethal weapon. What did he think about you as a fancy Hollywood writer who had made headlines for having the largest script sale in the history of, at that time of Hollywood?
I think he was very pleased. But I will say this in his honor, is that he loved all his kids equally. And he just, he said to me a week before he died, he said, what did I do to get such great kids?
Oh wow.
So that's beautiful.
Irishman.
Yes. My grandfather's name was Shanahan. Ah. And I'm Shane. I have a brother Sean and Sister Shannon. And oddly Terrance <laugh>
Looking at engineer. Gary. You think Irish <laugh>? Yeah. Good Jewish boys. <laugh>, James Shannon. Yeah. In Maya. Mle and Shlomo. And yeah. You know, unfortunately <laugh>,
You know, I would've rather, in some ways had that because with the Irish background came an alcoholic gene, which later expressed itself in my life. So
How about your siblings?
They're good.
It's random that Gene, it's not every family. If they have a parent who's an alcoholic,
It skips. Oh,
Could skip. Right?
Yeah. The truth is though, that looking back, man, I was alcoholic from the day I was born. The type of thinking I had
Absolutely
Was alcoholic.
Absolutely. I understand that completely. Yeah. Not that I'm an alcoholic, but that I have other ailments, if you will, or other challenges that I have to overcome. OCD being one of them,
I was hospitalized. I was in a mental institution for three months in high school because of OCD. It was overpowering. I was paralyzed.
Why do we connect so much <laugh>? I'm sort of understanding it now. I'm not kidding you.
Yeah,
Because we do, there's something about us isn't there, that has a vibe that
You're very confident, you're very accomplished, but you're also very honest about being an oddball. And I'm the same way. I, I tell audiences if I speak at a school or to students, I say, just lean into being weird. Just screw it. You have the option of being ashamed or of leaning in and embracing something that even though it's embarrassing for you now, will pay off
Later. I kind of say it a little differently. I never saw myself as an oddball.
Okay. I
Saw myself as an original <laugh>.
Well see, you were already evolved into that place.
Yeah, no, seriously that because I was an entertainer. I was a performer when I was a kid, and I started really young and became a professional pretty young. So I had a confidence of course. But I was teased endlessly and dare I say bullied endlessly.
Yes.
Because I was different. My very dear friend who has been a guest on the show, Sharon Stone said it on an Oprah Winfrey special.
Sure.
She said that when she was like 10 years old, she was on the playground reading her book against a tree. And this group of popular girls came over to her and the head of the pack came over and walked up to her and she thought, oh my gosh, they're gonna befriend me. And what she did is slapped her across the frigging face and it left a hand print. And years later when she was thinking about that and the effect that had, I think I said to her, oh, I know what she was doing. She tried to slap the different out of you. Right. And that's what people did to me too. They tried to slap the different outta me. And it wasn't gonna happen. Others succumb. There may be a more dramatic result.
Well, there's a baseline of insecurity where you feel like they're confirming what you already knew. Like there's something wrong. Something guilt is, you did something wrong. Shame is you are something wrong. And it sounds like you had managed to cope with this in a way that led you to say, you know what? I'm not gonna back down. Whereas so many other people, you got it destroyed by bullying. That's
Exactly right. I let it feed the drive.
Yeah.
I'll show you. You small minded motherfuckers. You know, I will show you. I will succeed. And then you get to a point when you become a fully formed adult where it doesn't effing matter anymore.
Oh my God. Yeah. Right.
I, I'm, I'm shocked to this day when I see adults like dodging or lying. Even as I'm in a program of recovery, I'm a recovering alcoholic. And I knew from an early age, you know, someone offers me a drink. No, thanks. I'm an alcoholic. You know, you, you can say that. My dad used to do that, even though he wasn't an alcoholic, he would just say it. So he didn't have to deal with his friends who were obsessed with drinking. You mean he didn't want to drink? Just didn't want to. Yeah, he didn't want to. And you know, I want to, I've always wanted to. Yeah. But I've learned that there's so little shame. You know, what's wrong with saying, I don't drink, I'm an alcoholic.
It's very healthy what we just did.
Yeah.
We as 60 plus year old men can have a real authentic conversation in front of many thousands of folks who are listening.
Yeah.
And to say to them, Hey, it's cool to be authentic and to be who you are. And we're all flawed humans.
Oh, it's powerful.
Powerful. To own it. Yeah. And by the way, your characters are like that. I wanna start getting into some of the <laugh>. No. Because we could talk for hours just about our own psyche.
Sure.
You write such interesting characters that your characters are flawed. You are working on a character right now played by Mark Wahlberg, the character of Parker. He's a crook, he's a serial, lifelong gangster, if you will. Right. He murders people, but he's kind of got a heart of gold. And he's got an honor and an honor code. And I find that just truly interesting.
Well, yeah, his code is very pragmatic. It's walking the line. If you're gonna show someone be a sociopath, it's interesting to a point. But like for instance, without giving anything away about the film, there were scenes we wrote initially where he would be leaving and he would go back to try to save this woman. But that wouldn't have worked in the movie unless the woman said something like, oh, I have this thing with your fingerprints on it. 'cause then you get to wonder, did he go back to save her 'cause he has a heart of gold, or did he go back to get his fingerprints from
Her? Oh.
So that's the idea, is to keep that ambiguity alive so you're not just leaning into either one.
What do you do when you approach a script? I guess it would be different if it's a original idea coming from your head, or if it's a work for hire that you're brought on to do. And I know you do both and you've been, as I said in the beginning, one of the most successful writers. And also rewriter in Hollywood history.
Truly. Uh, okay. Yes. Well, you have
Been,
No, there's been money involved in that regard. Yes. I've been very lucky, very blessed. And it's because I am lucky enough to be skewed and even perhaps mentally challenged in the perfect kind of way, which is once I get ahold of something, I can't let go of it. I hesitate to commit to a writing job because it plagues me once I get into it. I hate You're
Obsessed with it.
Yeah. I can't sleep. 'cause I'm just turning a negative into a positive, turning an obsession and an inability to stop thinking about something into a healthy way of doing the same thing.
It's great. So you are creating a character, you're writing a script. Are you thinking about the story first? Are you thinking about the plot? Are you thinking about the characters? How do you begin? Where does the germ come from?
Well, my nightmare is to have a really amazing plot that you've acquired either from a book or in your own, but not have a character inhabit it yet. Because you know you've got this great plot, but you, you haven't done the real work yet. The real work is finding a character who you can actually sort of feel comes from something that it's a DNA, that you feel in your bones, that you sort of translate to an attitude of life that you, in some ways share with this character in other ways. It could be completely different. Because if you write a script, let's say about an old guy who's curmudgeonly and a young guy who's optimistic, and they always fight. I it is psychology. It's a part of you fighting, another part of you. You have both viewpoints. You're just allowing the battle
Lethal weapon, for example. Did that start as an idea of two buddies? You almost started a whole new genre.
Well, that was a spec script, but it was inspired and equally informed by previous successes, which I think are equally deserving. Such as dirty, hairy, and 48 hours, which redefined everything. 48 hours especially. That's the one that changed everything. Then I came along and sort of did my own 48 hours with a different spin on it. But my God.
Well, that was a comedy.
Yeah. And Lethal Weapon had a little bit more in the first one anyway. A little more sort of attempt to portray a melancholy character. But that's the fun. There was a grit and an integrity to early seventies cop movies. It was rough. And it wasn't rough because it was engineered. It's just unconsciously the way you did it back then.
But did you see the thing as like, I'm gonna write now my own version of a dirty, like what inspired you to write it?
Lethal Weapon to me is an urban western. And instead of the old gun slinger who's become sort of useless and outmoded, you had the Vietnam veteran who comes back from having these horrible experiences as branded a baby killer and yelled at and excluded. And they view him as a monster. Mel Gibson's carries essentially a Frankenstein kept in a cage who lives by himself. And meanwhile, society has this illusion in America that we sort of live in a gentrified bubble that can never be, once again, the, you know, war is somewhere else. Violence is somewhere else. We're able to relax. And he knows the war is, he knows evil never sleeps. So
Mm.
He just sits by himself and is reviled for the knowledge that everyone else wishes weren't true. He knows the thing. And so then when something happens and violence intrudes on this, otherwise sort of beautific, they take a kid, they kidnap someone, they come to him and say, oh shit, we gotta go to the Frankenstein now. So they come to the Old Gun slinger and they say, look, we rev vied you, we called you a baby killer, but we kind of need you <laugh>. Because he knew all along the war's not over. They still hate him, but they need his skills. And so that's just a Western temple.
How'd you come up with the name Leo Goetz. Oh, that's my name. Yeah, it is. Did I inspire that <laugh>, by the way? My name is G-O-E-T-Z and I think it's GETZ. How'd you come up with Gtz? It's,
It's a great event. Wasn't wasn't mine.
Oh, <laugh>
Goetz was Jeff Bones. I had a character similar named something else. I can't remember what I named him, who was just a sort of babbling guy in Lethal Weapon two. And when Jeff Bom came in and sort of took over that movie
In part two,
Yeah, I had written a draft of it. It was a lot darker. And in the end, in fact, yeah, you killed the character at the end. Right? Yeah. They didn't like that Warner Brothers thought that was sort of sending away the bread truck. It's
Like, of course.
And to some extent, of course they're right. Yeah. But I thought that if you're gonna extend it to a sequel, you have to sort of make it feel like it was intended.
Mm-hmm <affirmative>.
And the way to do that is to say, well, this relationship, he established Danny Glover bought him some borrowed time that he never knew he deserved or was entitled to, that he was able to be a part of the human race again. And not just this sort of reviled killer, but in the end, in order to save that family, he had to say, well, I had a good run. But that was borrowed time.
Yeah.
And now I, and at the end, he dies. And it feels almost like you planned the whole thing from the beginning.
Wow. You talk about being a chameleon, when I see that kid reading that book against the tree in the playground, or wherever it was, high school quad. Yeah. In the quad. Yeah. I know you acted, and then you went into film and theater. You were on the chess team. And what's your light motif? Is it curiosity?
Well, first off, it was escape. It was full flight from reality. What I would prefer it is, is that it's the ability to act counterintuitively. In other words, to not just be ruled by the knee jerk response. For instance, there was a self-defense expert that I love who was on TikTok, and he said, say to me, what the fuck are you looking at? What the fuck are you looking at? That, that shirt? Oh, I, I mean, I, I, you know, I, I, my girlfriend was gonna buy, I, I, where did you get that? 'cause she wants a birth. I, I love your shirt. Just diffuse it. And he goes, oh, really? Yeah. No, you complimented his shirt.
In other words, don't go with who wants to walk around. Like, what the fuck are you looking at? 'cause it's a false conference. It's a false belligerence. Yeah, you do. Or just for instance, kiss, kiss, bang bang. A few people have seen this film without giving too much away. There's a scene where I remember in my head how the traditional cliche is that they're interrogating a suspect. And the cop puts one bullet in a gun and spins. He goes, I'm not telling you. He spins it, slaps it, and pulls the trigger click. And he goes, okay, okay. Don't do that again. Yeah, it's in the warehouse. I'll take you there. But I thought, what if that first trigger pull was a, and he's dead. He's like, fuck. That's the cliche. Overturned. Another thing I like to do is, you know, this is a Hitchcock principle, which he says, don't have a bomb. Just explode and shock everyone.
Mm-hmm <affirmative>.
Show the bomb under the table. And then they talk about baseball, and you tick tick and you see the bomb and you see them talking. It's like, get outta there. I love that. But I love it too, when the bomb just goes off. I love it when someone's just talking and they turn a key
And Right. Rather than, oh, you know, they're gonna get out even though it's tense. But they have to cut that blue wire, known the red, know the blue, and then it just goes
Off. Yeah. Words
Before it even has time to debate whether you do the blue or the red. I love that. So every actor has a sort of super objective for the whole piece and an objective in a scene. So I'm playing Shane Black. What's my super objective?
I'd say the super objective in the characters that I tend to like is that there's sort of an obliviousness to what's expected. A disdain for fitting in, and the desire to figure out what it is in people that gets them off the ground after they've been knocked down. So much of the characters that I'm drawn to are just downtrodden people who've taken a few hits and who just can't get back up.
And what is it that gets them off the couch? What is it that awakens in them? That spark, which is dwindled, but it's never quite extinguished. How do you take a dwindling spark and find the thing in the character that suddenly brings them back to themselves, even if it's an ability they can't control. Like a, a detective ability. And the nice guys, here's a guy who tried to drown his talent with alcohol, try to ignore it, tried to sub subjugate himself and be humiliated. But he can't help being a good detective. It's still in there. And so when it starts to come out, all you have to do is feed it. You're describing yourself <laugh>.
Well, maybe, maybe not. But that's the kind of character I like. It may be the same question, but it may not be. Okay. What is your
Superpower? My superpower. Which is, it's very obvious in terms of people say, wow, what an original idea or what a, no, it's not. It's been done a hundred times, but it's been done in books that you didn't read. Because Hollywood only reads magazines and Hollywood only watches movies. But my superpower of having read a book a week since I was eight years old, I have access in my head, is this library of things that seem new to people. But I'm like, no, it's not new. I've read a hundred books like that.
But you haven't seen theater, you said, in a long time. Yeah. Are you a, and I'm not being funny when I ask this. Are you a movie fan?
I'm a huge movie fan, but I also was raised, I think you benefit from the theatrical tradition. There is something very powerful about this notion of the British stage actor and the tradition, the feel of honor, integrity, and just commitment where the stage and the theater becomes a church. You leave your problems at the door.
That's why I revere the theater and theater trained actors. And it's truly understanding the craft of it, isn't it?
Yeah.
It's kind of like why, I guess I, as a dancer, I chose ballet as opposed to tap because I felt the sort of technique and the purest nature of that discipline. Of that discipline exactly. Turned me on. And it was something that created structure in my life. When I think about the number of classes I went to and getting out when I didn't wanna go, and I had to do that. And you suddenly begin to understand, oh, that feeds into my business acumen today.
Yeah. And
How I run my business and how I demand this, and I want this. And it's a very interesting kind of correlation.
That's why I'm forever grateful to my father who pushed me. You know? I thought, well, he wants me to be tougher than I am. And it's kind of, at the time I was afraid I was just working myself to the bonus to try to be tough enough to get him to accept me in a way. Although he always did. I just never knew it. But the point is, as a result, I showed up when I didn't want to. I went and lifted weights when I felt tired. I ran when I didn't want to. And today, even in the program of recovery, I go to meetings when I don't want to. I just make my feet move.
That's that Mel Robbins book who just wrote Let Them, yeah. I'm reading it right now. Has also started doing the Ted Talk of 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, and 5, 4, 3, 2, 1 is an activation technique to get you to do some kind of action.
Right.
And you don't think about it, you just do it. And it really can change your life. It does.
David Milch said the same thing. He said, look, if you think about going to the gym, you're never gonna go. So what you do is the minute it occurs, you get in your car, you open the door, you just get in right from the house, you walk to your car, get in, push the pedal, you're driving, go to the gym, you run inside to pick up a weight. And now you're the man.
One of my best friends, Jordan Baker Kilner said she was told, go out to the mailbox to get the mail and keep walking <laugh>. And just, then you'll start your walk around the block for two miles.
We live like kings. Someone said this recently on an interview, I forget who said, look at the technology. Look at what we have in our, a hot shower. A working toilet was to, we live like kings nowadays, and yet we're lazy. So we have to find ways to trick ourselves.
Absolutely. Absolutely. When we come back, we're gonna talk to you, Shane, about the people you've worked with, the movies you've done, and get more into the logistics, the mechanics of what it takes to be a successful writer director. We'll be back in a moment. Listeners. The Motion Picture Television Fund is a nonprofit charitable organization that supports working and retired members of the entertainment community. This wonderfully run organization offers assistance for living and aging with dignity and purpose in the areas of health and social services, including temporary financial assistance, case management, and residential living. And has been a crucial lifeline to thousands during and beyond the strikes. To learn more, visit mpt f.com. Please join me in helping others in our industry during times of need. There are so many ways to offer support and get involved. Thank you. We are back with the incredibly talented and prolific writer, director and actor, Shane Black. And I'd like to do something that I've done with some of my guests, and I think it's kind of fun and I hope you like it. <laugh>. Well, it's kind of a speed round because you've worked with some very interesting folks. People, many of whom I've worked with.
Okay.
And so I'd like to get your first word or phrase that comes to mind about when I mention their names. Okay. Mm-hmm <affirmative>. Richard Donner.
Big Heart.
Yeah. Dick Donner. Boy, I
Love that guy. Yeah. Just felt the need to include everyone. He would have a birthday party for one of the key grips or something. He was just always aware of the people around him. Tony Scott, meticulous and easygoing. The most re amazing combination. The the easiest guy to work with I've ever worked with.
Just fun. When I had an article, the LA Times did a story on me years ago, and this delivery came. And it was Tony who drew a picture of him with a cigar and a baseball cap. And he writes like a bubble. And it says, pretty cool, dude. Yeah. It was just so sweet and so wonderfully
Spirited. Yeah. In Hollywood there are people you don't wanna work with. But Tony was, he even came up to me at one point after the movie and said, Hey, that scene, I I, I'm sorry we didn't quite get it. 'cause I thought your script was better than the scene we got there. What
Shit, you don't have to say that. When he died, it was one of those, where were you moments? Yeah. You know, like I remember hearing it and not believing it because it was so random and I still miss him. I've told Ridley the same sort of thing.
The producer on our latest film, Jules Dailey, who worked with Tony for years, and you can see her still tear up. I mean, it's just one of those things. He was in my thinking at least a force for good, calm, peace and tolerance in an industry that was very much about bullies. Joel Silver <laugh> out of his
Mind, but delightful. He always scared me. And to me, he always was. When I pictured Hollywood producer, he was the Hollywood producer. Do you know what I mean? The look, the feel, the energy, the whole thing. And I really never knew Joel very well. He is a historian
Of Hollywood. And so he grew up as a 10-year-old trying to meet Zanac. It was in his blood. He also, in high school, was the first one to say, you know this William Shatner guy? I bet Star Trek. Is it sort of becoming a phenomenon? So he booked William Shatner to his high school thinking, oh, this is gonna be a failure. Showed up. There's a line like a mile long. And it was one of the first people to start the Trek phenomenon. That's incredible. Because he just had, he had the foresight. The foresight. And he was a producer in high school. He was producing a show that got all this attention for having been this remarkable discovery
Of the popular. He really was a formidable producer. And I hope still is
Making movies. He still is. And here's the thing, Joel may be flamboyant, he may be controversial at times, but the reason I keep coming back to him is that he had actual skill. He had actual, in the edit room, made everything better because he understood the movie I was trying to make. We had similar sensibility. We're on the same wavelength as far as this kind of thriller is concerned.
You went to him on Lethal Weapon?
Lethal Weapon. We were put together by
Agents. Was that how you got together?
Yes. He had just done a film called Commando, which did very well. So, and we just clicked instantly back then. He'd say, we need to rewrite this. I said, yeah, gimme a minute. I'll go and rewrite it. Read it to him. He go, okay. Yeah. And we just walked back and forth to each other's offices, much like the group I came up with of friends who lived in the same house and just always swap scripts back and forth. Joel was another one of those. There was a point where you didn't think of it as a business. You thought of it as having fun with people that are on your same wavelength. And then pretty soon you start to meet people. Oh, I get it. This is a business. This is tough. But I didn't know that for a while. 'cause Joel smoothed that transition. He made it more like a friend.
Isn't there a story where you were actually acting in a movie and he asked you to polish a scene or something? I know I was a jerk.
He said, Hey, we have this predator thing. We're gonna go down to Mexico and film this. If you're an actor in it, maybe you can help out with the writing a little bit if we get in trouble or if we need some character work. So I went down to Mexico and didn't write a thing. Oh, you didn't? No. He said, but you got to be in it. Yeah. I said, it's fine.
Still get those 10 cent residual checks.
I do. As a matter of fact, I think one recently was actually for more like 30 bucks. The reassurances that someone out there remarkably is still paying attention that it's on someone's records book somewhere in their computer. I love it. Honorable people.
<laugh>. Well, <laugh> because there's plenty of things. No, there's that. I wonder, wait a minute. I remember I did that. I haven't heard
People have to checking bludgeon into it. But yes, there are groups like the WGA and the DGA that say, no, no, no. Guys, look, we know you want to do some creative accounting here, but we're gonna hold your feet to the fire. And to some extent, the big one was, of course, coming to America where they claimed it made no money and stuff like that. That was
A great lawsuit, wasn't it?
Yeah. Art
Buckwald. Art Buckwald. Let me take you back to your roots before we continue our game.
Sure.
To being a student, graduating.
Yeah.
Kind of being a broke guy, doing survival jobs like I did now. Oh hell yeah. Again, we share this, I sold typewriter ribbons for three days. <laugh> worked in video store. I sold sofas. I catered, used to serve Michael Milken, his lunch at DBL. Those were my survival jobs. Yeah. Until I got as an actor, because I came out to do theater. And so my residuals ran out and I had to get that first job again.
Yeah.
And until that first job, I did what I had to do. Which you did too.
Yeah.
And then you sell your first spec script, which was Lethal Weapon, was it not?
Yes, that was the first one to sell. Okay. Yeah.
Like what did you get for that? How much did they pay you for that
$250,000? Which
At the time, what does a kid
Yeah.
Do with $250,000?
Well, at the time I remember thinking just, oh shit. I, because I was a Kelly girl, I worked for Kelly Employment, so I would go type things and file file things. So adorable. You were, I just
Wanna, I, I wanted to picture cheeks for a minute because he looks like a dude right now. He's got his sneakers, his baseball cap on his sweatshirt. And he's saying, I was a Kelly girl. Well, and I know what, you remember what a Kelly girl was? Gary?
Yeah. You have to tell your viewers, there was a Kelly girl was someone who you hired on a rotating basis. You just called the organization and they'd say, oh, we'll send you someone for a few
Days. Yeah. Yeah.
Kelly Services was the name of the company. But I would come to do a temp job and they'd like my work and I'd stay for three or four weeks working, typing, and just doing odd jobs. I did not like doing that. I would rather be doing what I'm doing now. But you have to have smart feet and you need money.
So you banked it. Yeah. Yeah, I did. What was the most reckless thing you did with your early money with that newfound cash? I would get things from my parents. Oh my God. I think we're twins. <laugh>, do you know when I was seven years old? I've never told anyone this. I lived in Brooklyn and I lived two blocks away from the main, what they called 86th Street in Bensonhurst.
Okay.
And 86th street was where you had the deli and the bank and the Ebinger's bakery. And you had Tolan. And Tolan was the, what is now a target. It was a five and dime.
Okay. If you remember, I love Five and Dimes.
I love them. And this almost makes me emotional when I say the story because I'd go in there, if I got a little bit of money, maybe a dollar or two, I'd go in there and I'd buy like a plate for my mom.
Right.
And then I'd get a little more and I'd buy another plate. And I think about it now. And I, why did I do that? I guess I did it because I wanted her to have things.
Yeah. You want your parents, maybe there's a selfishness in it for me of wanting to be proud of me. But also it's continuity. It's, you've grown up with these people, why not help? I mean, it just, it seems like the natural next step. Why would you sever ize and
Say, but I'm seven or eight years old and I'm thinking like, why?
To make her happy. Happy because, exactly. And there's also,
I must have sensed that she wasn't getting enough,
Or that she was unhappy for some reason. Exactly. Flirting with depression and something you thought as a kid. Yeah. You could do the dance and cheer her
Up. See folks that were writing a screenplay right now. Right. We were writing a character. We were developing a character. Absolutely true. And by the way, I was really happy later in life when I began to get more success to give them the down payment for their home. And then of course, ultimately my mom passed and to take care of my father, because basically he lived long and he ran outta money. So I had to take care of him. It was an honor.
It is an honor, and it's a necessity and it's self rewarding. It's the best money you'll ever spend. And I have to add, as a caveat, when I was doing my Kelly work, I had to take six months off even from that, to write a script. And I didn't have enough money. And my parents said, look, you want to try this? We'll pay your rent for six months while you go do that. And I'm sure they thought, let him get it out of his system. Let him try these little stories of his and, you know, but just let him take a stab at it and then he can get back to a real job. And I was able do, in six months the thing that would then set me up. You
Had a degree.
Yeah. From UCLA in theater. Yeah. You might as well be a poet. That's the sort of financial side of that. But the screenwriting thing paid off. And my God, their beneficence in their, you know, even if they didn't think necessarily that it was a lock that I'd succeed, they gave me the shot. They took six months outta their money. And so how can you not then say, well this is a bond. But the thing is they never asked either.
Yeah, absolutely.
They would never come to me and say, Hey, since you've got this money, we need this. My father was, and my mother too. So proud. Too
Proud. I love that. But you also know that there, I'm sure were people in your life who do come to you often. And it's a tough situation. I remember reading one of Oprah's books. Yeah. And she said that there was a time when she just had to say enough because she was writing check after check after check and things, and taking care of people. And it gets to the point where enough is never enough.
And there's also a point along the way, it was in my twenties, where you realize that you're not lending money. These are donations. You're never getting it back.
Oh. The only time I've ever lost relationships in my life was when I lent money. So I learned that I think in my thirties, that, um, I give money. I don't lend it. And never, if you expect it back, you'll probably never get it back. And they'll be bad feelings.
Yeah. Well, two people surprised me. One was a woman who established a business and found me five years later and handed me the money back. And I was like, oh, I forgot about it. And the other was someone who I worked with in recovery who I thought, well, he's off. He's, I'm never gonna. And five years later he said, I've been saving a little bit every week. And here it is. Oh. So, wow. Yeah. Life is short. You wanna be able to look in the mirror. A hundred percent. Yeah. Anyway, let's go back to our fun game, Kevin Feige. Kevin is a pro, the reason he's a pro is like, I watched these, some of these Warner Brothers cartoon characters of comic book movies fail because the execs didn't understand them. They were like, we think that this is a great move for our company.
But they didn't read comic books. And Kevin, this is the early, like number 50 through 75, fantastic. Four back in 1972, they had this happen. Now we might do that. But then the time travel arc that they did 10 years later, good. Holy shit. I mean, this guy knows everything about his craft. I mean, he's so, there's no one more capable and there's a certain arrogance in sort of shepherding an entire universe. But at the same time, no one was more suited for it. So I was, you know, someone who basically takes over and runs things. My alcoholic side says, Hey wait, I want to, but then I go, look, trust the machine. This guy runs it and this guy does the machine better than anybody. Which leads me to Robert Downey Jr. Yeah.
Downey Jr. Lightning in a bottle. Lightning in a bottle is a guy who, once you get a movie going, sometimes you have a good script, but you lack the magic man. So you have an actress says, I'll say the lines, Donny was like, I'll say the lines and then I'll give you more. And sometimes it would be something off track that you didn't expect. But I'll tell you what, when you've got a magic man like that, you find that like 30% of your movie is now elevated with stuff that wasn't there when you wrote it. And you just go, you just, okay, I'll take credit for that.
For those of you who don't or have never seen Chaplain.
Yeah.
It's a masterclass in acting.
Yes.
Dickie Attenborough directed it. I worked on, I remember years ago. He's exquisite in that movie. And he's such a gifted, gifted, talented actor. Now I wanna ask you, how terrified <laugh> were you the night before the first day of shooting Ironman three? You're inheriting probably now the biggest franchise.
Not terrified because you do a lot of work beforehand and you work with the actor and you have a magic man. I'd seen Iron Man wanting to, you
Felt confident.
Oh yeah. I mean, too stupid. I live a day at a time. I don't project into, I try to stay in the now and in the now you're insanely ignorant of what can go wrong. What
Compelled you to direct from the start? Like, why did you wanna do kiss, kiss, bang bang?
Well, I'll tell you, it's because number one, I'd see little things in the movies that I'd written or go that wasn't supposed to play that way. And my own arrogance like, ah, Jesus, that wasn't supposed to play that way. That plays in a wonderer or that's a long, ah, don't break that down into three shots. They just ruin the rhythm of it. And so, even though I generally liked the movies, I thought, I'm running scenes in my head in a slightly different way. I said, I wanna try that. Number two. And most important I think is that when you write something, you turn it over and it goes, Hey, we'll take it from here. And they make a movie and you're back at square one on page one with the same terrifying blank space. And you have to start all over again. And so you, you do all this work only to give it away and be exactly where you started. And that's all uphill again. Wow. There's no second step. When you direct, you get to move to the next level. You get to be social, you get to get up at three in the morning and
You like that.
Oh, I, yeah. But most of what I love about directing isn't on set. Someone once said that filming a movie is shopping. It's like when you go to the store and you get your tomatoes, it's, it's getting the ingredients and then the editing room was everything. That's where you cook.
Always my favorite part of the process.
Yeah.
Love the editing room and love great editors and have respect. I've had guests here who are pretty well-known editors, love editors. I think that it's extraordinary to have that skill and they can make or break your movie.
Yeah.
But why haven't you directed more? Because you are so good at it. I mean, I watch you in a post-mortem meetings. Yeah. After the screening. And just the way you hear notes, the way you embrace an idea, you don't get defensive. Maybe you did, but you don't now.
Well, you stay teachable and you try to live not in the problem with the solution. So if someone presents a problem, their solution may not be right. They may jump to stuff, what if you did more of this? But you ignore that and you listen to they had a problem. I don't think they've correctly identified why it doesn't work there. But the fact that they had a problem means, okay, so I'll flag that and now I have to come up with a solution. May not be theirs, but I'll come back to them and say, isn't this what you really want?
When I give notes about what the audience is saying, I try not to ever do that. Yeah. But sometimes by example I'll say, I think what they're saying is they wanna see something like this. But just to spark the discussion.
Yeah.
Walter Hill,
Old school Walter, is the sort of rough, tough. You expect him to walk out the door of the sound stage and go off with his biker gang. You know, even now he's a little older. But he just is, he's very supportive.
You have a very close relationship with him.
I adore the man. Yeah. I mean, and he's the one who I say, when I say 48 hours was the real culprit behind reshaping the buddy movie. I mean Yeah. Don't blame it on lethal weapon. Walter Hill was in there doing it before me. He's the real, yeah. He's
Really insane. <laugh>
William Goldman Goldman empathetic genius, just rabbi, everyone thinks of him as a rabbi because he just gives back. And he has this endless wealth of ac crude, cynical knowledge, tempered with this unbelievable optimism despite all the cynical things he points out.
Exactly.
He says it can be better.
You and I both talked about this before we went on air, but we mentioned that at the Carlisle Hotel, he lived in the entire floor at the top and the elevator would open and he would greet you.
Yeah.
You also told me something very interesting about the phone book.
Yeah. He was in the New York phone book and he insisted on it. So he'd go, William Gold, my favorite writer, he can't be in the, and you would open the book in the nineties and you call him and go, hello. And it's him.
It's incredible. Yeah. Did you ever hold his Oscars? No, I did. I saw it. I I've seen it. Two of them for Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kitten. Of course. One's for all the president's men, all the president's men. Yeah. Very good. And they actually weigh a little differently, non-sequitur. I was in New York last week and I went to visit my dear friend Maria Cooper, who's Gary Cooper's daughter. Mm-hmm <affirmative>. Maria Cooper Janis. I saw three Oscars sitting there on her shelf.
Mm-hmm <affirmative>.
And she said, pick 'em up. And I said, well, somebody told me if you hold Oscars, you'll never get one <laugh>. She said, oh, bullshit. So I up the Oscars and won because it was during the war, probably Sergeant York. Yeah. He won for High Noon also. And then he won a lifetime achievement award was so heavy. I could only picture a smaller woman actress being handed this. 'cause some of those women were tiny. And this thing weighed must have been 12 pounds. Mm-hmm <affirmative>. I kid you not, it was so heavy because they made it with a heavier metal.
Yeah.
'cause of the war. Anyway, just thought it was interesting. You're like, Joel, you're a historian. You know what it is. I'm a bit starstruck still, but of people that have done the work
Yeah.
That have paid their dues. I'm very big on that. And I revere age and experience. And in fact, I will pay dearly for it because I will tend to go out of my way to hire people who are smarter than I am, often older than I am. And have great experience that can't be taught like it has to be learned.
I agree. And there are people who say they can codify genius. I mean, there are authors like Sid Field who wrote a book on screenwriting and it's very good in its depiction of what constitutes a structured screenplay. But you could also make a screenplay that touches every single one of those points and holds together Exactly like that structure. And it's awful.
What's the quintessential book for you for the young filmmaker
Audience? Ology. Oh, audience ology. Yes. It's, it's good about talking, you know how moviegoers perceive films and you're very good at finding out not just what their impressions are, but what underlies the impression. You know, you sort of, you get at what the problem is, not what they say it is.
Exactly. And I'll tell you, that has to do with my acting craft.
Yes.
And that was getting to the truth of a character relentlessly.
Yeah.
Pursuing the truth. So what da, da da happens, so what blah, blah, that happens. So what?
Yeah.
And you have to dig and dig and dig and dig.
Yeah.
And that is how I think I have been approaching the work that I've done for years with filmmakers, is to understand what's really going on underneath what the audience is saying. It's not just the written words, but what's the implicit response? What's sort of the,
What's the underlying note? Yes. Beneath the note. And studio executives are guilty of it as well. They will say, we want this fixed. And you go, do you really? Because I think what you're really saying is there's a problem here. But I bet you if you change this, especially, what are some of the greatest classic movies of all time that have sad endings? Like Old Yeller Gunga Din the sadness is what makes them great. Right. But the instant response on the studio, well that's downer at the end.
I don't think that I ever really experience, it's a downer at the end. I experience it's not satisfying. Ah. Because that's a good one. That really is a difference. And there's many filmmakers who will do a downer ending, but it doesn't benefit the overall piece. And I think probably they were telling you that in Lethal Weapon too. Yeah, of course. It was a cash play. They wanted to continue the franchise, but at the same time, was it really necessary? They didn't think so. Yeah, I suppose.
And yeah, there, there are some movies. That might
Be a shitty example,
But Well, no, no, no. It's, it's, well he tried my best to justify it, but they were probably right in the end. I remember a Burt Reynolds movie that was affected for me hustle. And you go through this whole movie where he solves this crime and takes down the bad guys at the end, he's on the phone with his girlfriend and the guy walks into the convenience store to rob it and shoots him dead. He just, and I thought, okay, this is the seventies, man. The protagonist dies randomly at the on the brink of happiness. I would venture to say that was probably your favorite decade of movies, <laugh>. Yeah,
I'm right about
That. Yes. From bullet through 48 hours,
There's that inclusive period of grit. Is there a movie this year that you remember or recently that you remember that you really respected? Or a filmmaker?
A film that I was shocked by, but respected was Midsummer.
Oh,
I just saw it in horror movie. Yeah. There were a lot of very innovative horror movies happening now. And I think part of it is people see we can spend not a lot and make a ton. It's the one low budget sort of area that is sort of open to all comers. And you just have to be clever. You have to do a dance. When I was a kid, when college, the newest thing you could think of was the scene where the girl goes in the bathroom and there's a shower curtain. She goes, oh, the killer's in there. And she walks up suspense and she goes, pulls her aside, nobody there. And she turns and he's right in their face. That was new back then.
I can't teach that. I talk to people like, you gotta do that thing where the refrigerator door opens, closes it, there's no one there. Opens it again. Close it again. The killer's there.
It's a dance though. That's right. 'cause once you become aware of it, now you go, oh, we saw that. So you have to now you have to have her pull the shirt, shower, curtain. The guy's not there when she turns around and then she walks out and now he's there. So anything to tweak this, to make a dance with the audience who are in some cases very sort of slow and lazy, but in other cases infinitely perceptive when it comes to tricks or being tricked. Totally. So you're dancing with them in a horror movie.
Let me ask you about women, because I've mentioned every one of my names and I purposely didn't mention Gina Davis and Susan Downey.
Yeah.
For example, who's producing your latest movie who I know you've had very strong connections with, but I didn't mention women. And you're somehow influences and so forth in your life have largely been male.
They have, but I'm also was accused of being a mama's boy. Who accused you of that? Well, my psychiatrist, number one who said, you've tried to protect your mother your whole life, didn't you? That kind of thing. I didn't want to go to school 'cause I had to stay with mom, make sure was okay. So I'd weep and cry when they tried to drag me out to go to school. I just felt like mom needed protecting. Wow.
And
Yeah, it was some quirk in my own head or some phobia I developed. But I am so drawn to the notion of doing a female-centric movie where I actually try to think through different eyes. The problem is today you really can't because if you do a female driven movie that's in any way controversial and you direct it as a male, you'll get shafted. I couldn't have done promising young woman where she gets that was so bluey
Fabulous. Wasn't that
It was a fabulous movie, but there's some scenes that are hard to take. And if a male had directed it, wouldd Very true. Be branded.
Likely. Very true.
Yeah.
And particularly somebody who has the musculature, I guess, of you as a filmmaker, as a writer and a director, a very testosterone driven stuff.
Right. And they'll think I was just doing a stunt.
But yet, I feel based on our conversation, that you have a tremendous love for women.
I have a tremendous feminine side, like I said, who wants to go through life saying, what the fuck are you looking at? You know, it's like, that's just happy life. So the idea of women sort of being a sobering and ultimately more tolerant and intelligent force in life is probably closer to the truth. Yeah, I'm
Glad we said that. 'cause I can't believe that people weren't listening to the names of the people and going, where are the women? Yeah. Yeah. No, absolutely. Before we break, 'cause we could talk for hours, literally, because we have such a common language, play Dirty is your latest
Yes.
Movie for Amazon. Can you just give us a couple of lines on why you did that movie and what it means to you?
Well, one of my favorite writers has always been Donald Westlake, and he did this remarkable thing where he would do a series of comic crime novels about a guy named Dortmund. And they movie The Hot Rock was based on those, for instance, but then he would also do this darker thing. He'd put on a different hat and write about this professional thief named Parker. And they were the gold standard that other mystery writers would point to and go, yeah, well, we're good, but really the king is gonna be this guy Westlake. And he never achieved James Patterson popularity, but he was very prolific and movies were made from his stuff. And among mystery writers, he's the king. And so the Parker Books finally came out as a potential rights availability. And so we had to, there's just no question we had to do. When did you first read that series? Oh, 12 years old.
Incredible.
Yeah. No, I've known Westlake's stuff my entire life and my addiction to mystery novels. I mean, that's what I mean when they say the superpower is having read a thousand books that other people are potentially unaware of. And you say this and they go, oh, that's so new. And you go, I, yeah, no, it's not. But Donald Westlake did the Parker series, and if anything, we may be guilty of putting a little dortmund in the Parker world, but I've always loved Westlake.
Well, Shane Black, what I've learned in this interview is how deep you are, how curious you are, how chameleonlike you are, and somebody that I just want to hang with because
Oh, well, that's sweet. He's so deep. No, and you're, you're just a fascinating guy. And you also correctly interpret that curiosity trumps fear, and that's when life is best. You can be afraid of something or you can replace it with curiosity. I'll tell you one story before we go, please. I think it's a true story. It's been described to me as true as that John Caius was walking in the park from New Central Park with his friends like Ben Gza, Peter, whoever. And as they're walking, a guy comes out from the trees with a gun and says, Hey, gimme your money. He goes, what? He goes, gimme your money. He said, well, look what I don't, I don't know. I, we got a few bucks. We're just going to get some ice cream. We're, he goes, no, no. You're an actor. I've seen you on tv.
Give me your money. John Kave said, what? Oh my God, you didn't wake up this morning and say, I'm gonna have a gun in my hand this afternoon. He said, well, you must have what kind of day you must have had? He says, you know what I, I don't know what you're doing or where it comes from, but I'm fascinated. Would you like to go get some ice cream with us? And the guy's like, what? Okay. And they went and all had ice cream together, and that's when curiosity trumps fear. Now, it doesn't always work if some guy comes at you with a knife. If, hey, you wanna go to the movies, it's probably not gonna work. But the fact
That there's something probably not so threatening about the guy, and yet pathetic in a way,
But caves of saying humanity, he said, I wanna know more. This'll be useful to me. So that's, I think the basis for all writing is just replacing that fear of being found out as a imposter or the fear of failing with a curiosity. Then when it kicks in, you go, oh, I'm not worried about the fear anymore.
Fascinating. Well, you are just a treasure. Thank you so much.
Thank you, Kevin. I'm honored to be here.
To our listeners, I hope you enjoyed our interview today. I encourage you to watch many of the films discussed. For more filmmaking and audience testing stories, I invite you to check out my book audience at Amazon or through my website@kevingoetzthree.com. You can also follow me on my social media next time on Don't Kill the Messenger. I'll welcome former studio executive and marketing guru, Tony Sella. Until then, I'm Kevin Goetz and to you, our listeners, I appreciate you being part of the movie making process. Your opinions matter. I.
No other services available for this file.