A Slam-Bang Master
With a House of Om
By JAMIE DIAMOND
LOS ANGELES - When Michael Bay began directing music videos, he
scouted a modern house in Bel Air as a possible site to use as background
for the hard rock band Aerosmith. "I
was in my 20's and I remember opening the door and saying, 'Man, I'd love
to own a house like this some day,' " he said.
Today, Mr. Bay, 39, owns that two-story, 10,000-square-foot, five-bedroom
house, so high on a hill that he can see the Pacific Ocean and the
city. "I liked the clean lines, and the scale of the house," Mr.
Bay said. "But the owners' art was a little too colorful for
me."
That from the director responsible for frenetic, pyrotechnic machine-gun-paced
action films like "Bad Boys," "Armageddon" and "Pearl
Harbor."
Gym-trim and tall, with longish hair the color of wet sand, Mr.
Bay seemed relaxed at his home one morning earlier this month, having
only just put the final crash and bang into his film, "Bad Boys
II," which opens tomorrow. (Relaxed? He clarified: "This
is me being tired.")
He walked past the paper lanterns, candles and willow branches in
his sisal-carpeted Japanese-inspired living room, opened the door
to the pool, and greeted Mason, his 250-pound English mastiff. "Go
get your toy," Mr. Bay commanded, tossing a red ball into the
pool. "Go swimming, go on, buddy. Jump!"
The dog — who has received no formal acting training, and
yet, thanks to his close relationship with the director, appears
in two pivotal scenes in "Bad Boys II" — looked balefully
at Mr. Bay, looked at the ball, made some kind of mental calculation,
and then heaved himself into the water.
Short of plowing his Ferrari 575 Maranello into the kitchen, this
may be as close as Mr. Bay comes to staging action scenes at home.
But a mastiff jumping into a swimming pool is barely a drip of condensation
on a glass of iced tea compared with Mr. Bay's trademark ultramacho
films, which display enough firepower to, in the case of "Armageddon," blow
up an asteroid headed for earth. In the new movie, he sends a Humvee
careering down a hillside in Cuba, leveling an entire shantytown;
the characters are caught in a field of land mines, blow up a drug
dealer's $40 million retreat, destroy more than 20 cars in a chase
scene, and, in another chase scene, run over cadavers falling out
the back of a hearse.
Instead of creating a place that is flashy, loud and full of eye-popping
colors, Mr. Bay, with the help of a friend's mother, Merle Mullin,
has made a subdued and serenely decorated home. His chef, Lisa Renta,
said it feels "like a spa."
Jerry Bruckheimer, the producer of all five of Mr. Bay's films,
said: "He gets so much adrenaline at work that when he gets
home, he's exhausted. The hyperspeedy way he works — they call
it Bayos, as in chaos — is different than the way he is personally."
When Mr. Bay bought the one-acre property four years ago for $5
million (he also has a home in Montecito, high above Santa Barbara),
the owners' art was gone, but the house had a dated, 1980's feel. "It
was old modern," Mr. Bay said. "The floors were bleached
wood or carpeted, the walls were white, and there was a sense of
volume but not of contrast."
He put in dark floors (some wood, some concrete), natural sisal
instead of carpet, and did the walls in Italian plaster, which he
painted in muted earth tones. "New modern is Asian and rock
and a sense of nature," he said. "It's mixing up different
woods and textures, and, to break up the monolithic feeling of the
house, it's using big dark Japanese pieces."
Mr. Bay in short: big action, big dog, big Helmut Newton picture
book, big furniture.
Mr. Bay demurs. "Believe it or not, with the scale of the rooms,
if you had regular-size couches, they'd disappear," he said.
On a tour of the house, Mr. Bay pointed out a work in progress,
a fireplace in the den, and offered up a picture ripped from a magazine
to show the look he was going for. "I read home décor
magazines all the time," said Mr. Bay, whose movie, "The
Rock," was about a plot to destroy San Francisco with nerve-gas-bearing
rockets launched from Alcatraz. "It's the way to stay hip and
it helps me when I think of sets."
Upstairs, he opened the door to a Dorian Gray room. "This is
what the whole house used to look like," he said. The room screams
80's: beige wallpaper, beige wall-to-wall carpet and a beige bed.
Who sleeps here? Mason, the mastiff. Extravagant as his films are,
Mr. Bay is not one to redo a bedroom for a dog. (Grace, a second
English mastiff, sleeps downstairs, "for security purposes," he
said.)
Mr. Bay sleeps in a soothing light-filled room. Silky white curtains
flutter next to a minimalist daybed. This, more than any other room,
seems like a movie set — although not from any of Mr. Bay's
movies. "Compared to the rest of the house, the starkness here
is masculine," he said. "But the curtains are definitely
feminine, and so are the silly hearts on the bed." He was referring
to the heart-shape, red satin pillows filled with lavender on his
large bed.
His eyes shifted sideways, as if he were embarrassed. "There's
always a problem with girlfriends who come over," he said and
then stopped.
"Well, I had a girlfriend a few years ago who brought over
too much feminine stuff," he said. "The girlfriend I have
now is much more design-oriented. She wouldn't want floral curtains."
His girlfriend of the last several years, Lisa Dergan, 32, who announces
scores on a Fox Sports cable channel, studied interior design at
San Diego State University. She was then asked to do the interior
decoration for the Chili's restaurants in the West. (She had once
been a waitress at Chili's and had made an impression.) Ms. Dergan
went on to become Playboy's Miss July 1998.
Mr. Bay was raised in Westwood, a few miles down the hill, in a
traditional colonial-style house. He responded to things visually
from an early age, winning a national award for photography when
he was a senior at Crossroads, a private school in Santa Monica.
But he never considered himself part of the artsy crowd, which he
defines as intellectuals who hang out at revival theaters.
He was not above throwing eggs at passing cars. "But the worst
thing we'd do is throw a wet Nerf football at a car so the driver
would think he'd hit an animal or something," he said. "And
the sound of screeching brakes!"
"It was terrible," he said, hardly seeming to mean it.
He joined a fraternity at Wesleyan, where he majored in film and
played baseball. He attended film school at Art Center in Pasadena,
and then turned his soul over to commerce. His project for his graduate
degree was a mock-Coke commercial, shot aboard the battleship Missouri
with hundreds of student extras.
The rock videos followed that, and his explosive and visceral shooting
style, as well as his offbeat sense of humor, won him jobs directing
real commercials for Coke, Miller beer and milk. "When I started,
commercials were done by old guys in their 50's," he said. "It
was an old-boys' network. We took a lot of work away from those people."
He was 30 when he directed "Bad Boys," a high-octane,
irreverent cop-couple confection with Martin Lawrence and Will Smith.
While the film had a budget of $23 million, it earned $140 million
in theaters and that success was the first of his souped-up popcorn
movies, which have very little character development but very muscular
box office returns.
Having established himself, Mr. Bay may now qualify as a member
of the old-boy network. But that term upsets him. "I still raise
the bar by the way I shoot action and work the camera," he said. "And
if you are not on your game in this business, they spit you out so
fast. It's ruthless. Ruthless. I am on my game because they pay me
to be on my game. And I deliver." For the six months he was
in Miami shooting "Bad Boys II," which cost more than $100
million to make, he said, "I wasn't even a consumer. I bought
one polo shirt."
Poor Mr. Bay. He has been criticized for having the sensibilities
of an adolescent. "I make movies for teenage boys," he
said. "Oh, dear, what a crime."
Mr. Bruckheimer points out that Mr. Bay has never made a movie that
failed. Yet "Bad Boys II" is not going to expand his reputation. "I
knew the movie was going to do nothing for my career," Mr. Bay
said. "And to tell the truth, shooting action bores me now.
But the audience has grown to like what I do and expect visually
stimulating excitement. Staying in that genre is me being safe."
Maybe that explains the house.
Adrenaline junkies like Mr. Bay have discovered a legal way to block
out hard-to-handle feelings, and charge $8 a pop for it. But even
though he loves fast cars, lives in a $5 million house and dates
a Miss July, he insists he does not live in the fast lane. "I've
never gambled," he said. "I've never sky-dived. I did get
to fly in an F-16, but only for 15 minutes."
His serious and well-thought-out house would seem to belie his wind-up-toy
movies. Mr. Bay may now be ready to grow up creatively. If only he
could figure out how. |