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In
Love And War
By Christine Spines
Photographs
by Sam Jones May 2001
With
his summer epic Pearl Harbor, Michael Bay has faithfully
re-created the date which will live in infamy÷and made a
film that may last from here to eternity.
Ben Affleck was shocked to discover that punishment, of
the stand-up-and-take-it-like-a-man variety, was precisely
the thing he needed most. He didnât realize this
until he did a weeklong stint in U.S. Army boot camp last
year. ãItâs the first day, and this dude, Sergeant Donnelly,
marches up, looking like he is straight out of Full Metal
Jacket, with the Smokey the Bear hat and the ramrod-straight
posture,ä says Affleck, slouched over a cup of tea (heâs
recovering from the flu) and swathed in Goldâs Gym sweats.
ãHe immediately starts yelling at me: ÎSit up! You look
at me when Iâm talking to you!â It had been quite some time
since I had been shouted at, and there is something about
it that will make you do a lot of things not to get
yelled at again.ä
There are few remaining proving grounds for an actor to
feel like a man÷a ãreal man,ä in the Ernest HemingwayöRobert
Mitch um sense of the phrase÷outside of the U.S. Army and,
well, a Michael BayöJerry Bruckheimer movie set. So Affleck
and a group of his male costars÷Josh Hartnett (The Virgin
Suicides), Ewen Bremner (Trainspotting), William
Lee Scott (Gone in Sixty Seconds), Michael Shannon
(Jesusâ Son), and Matthew Davis (Tigerland)÷were
given a double dose of Y-chromosome fortification when Bay
sent them off to a bona fide military training camp to prepare
for Pearl Harbor. ãThey put us in with real soldiers
training for war,ä says Affleck, whose animated storytelling
is a cross between a post-traumatic stress flashback and
macho one-upmanship. ãThis was active military, not some
wimpy Private Ryan boot camp.ä It was a week of pain
and humiliation that he now considers, only half-jokingly,
ãthe crowning achievement of my life.ä
The actors soon realized that they had no special status
with the officers who were training them. ãBy the second
day, I thought, ÎThese guys think Iâm just one of the soldiers.
And that sucks,â ä Affleck recalls. ãI didnât want to make
my bed. I didnât want to clean my gun. And I didnât want
to take my toothbrush to the fucking floor in the bathroom.ä
Beyond such indignities, the physical demands were so rigorous
that Bremner, a slender Scotsman whose preöboot camp workouts
consisted of the occasional yoga class, collapsed from exhaustion
on the last day. ãI was hallucinating, I couldnât walk properly,
and my temperature was going bananas,ä he says. ãThey were
sending someone to check on me every 15 minutes as I slept,
to see if I was still breathing.ä Sergeant Donnelly told
Bremner he was taking him to the hospital, but the actor
refused. ãEwen was like, ÎI want to finish the mission,
sir,â ä Affleck says. ãYou could tell they were thinking,
ÎThis kid has balls.â ä Bremner survived and was
honored by the officers with a plaque sporting two grenades
hanging from a rope÷the coveted Brass Balls Award. ãIf it
hadnât been for him, I donât think people would have stuck
together the way they did,ä Scott says.
ãIf
the insurance company had known what we were doing with
these guys, I think they would have canceled [the training],ä
says Bay, who adds that his intention was simply to help
his cast be all that they can be. But the boot campâs most
lasting benefit may have been that the actors arrived on
the Pearl Harbor set inured to any amount of yelling,
screaming, or leadership by degradation. In other words,
they were well prepared to tackle an epic directed by the
demanding and tempestuous Bay. ãAfterward I had every confidence
that weâd handle Michael and everything else on the movie
fine,ä says Affleck, who did his first tour of Bay duty
on 1998âs Armageddon, an experience he found ãvery
traumatizing.ä No one was more surprised than Affleck himself
when he re-upped for Pearl Harbor. ãMichael is famously
hard on people,ä he says. ãHe is hard on himself and he
is hard on the movie. And being with him is kind of like
water-skiing behind a freight train: You just hold on, and
if you get in the way, youâre going to get run over.ä
Michael
Bay is a bomb about to explode. Hatched from the belly of
a WWII Jap anese plane, he is plummeting through the air
above Pearl Harbor, headed for the battleship USS Arizona.
The chaos of war whizzes by, and then he makes devastating
impact with the ship. He crashes through steel decks and
sailors sleeping in their bunks, until he lands in the Arizonaâs
ammunition hold, which is stacked floor-to-ceiling with
torpedoes, bombs, and explosives. Kabloom!
Two years ago, Bay was jolted from sleep at four in the
morning after this dream, and he started sketching and scribbling
notes for an attack sequence featuring something audiences
have never seen before: the bombâs-eye-view shot. Bay had
been researching Pearl Harbor ever since Todd Garner, then
a Disney executive, suggested that the Date Which Will Live
in Infamy might be fertile ground for the action director,
whose rŽsumŽ of high-octane popcorn flicks also includes
Bad Boys and The Rock. Bay immediately became
possessed by the giant helpings of tragedy, drama, patriotism,
and explosions inherent in the event. But he also knew that,
for the first time, he would be responsible for the sanctity
of history. As the catalyst for U.S. involvement in World
War II, the attack on Pearl Harbor is considered by many
to be the pivotal moment in 20th-century American history.
The two-hour bomb raid, which started at 7:55 a.m. on December
7, 1941, killed nearly 2,500 people and demolished four
battleships. More profoundly, it represented a collective
loss of innocence for America and reminded us of our vulnerability.
ãThere was something about Pearl Harbor that was so heroic,
so American,ä Bay says. ãTalking to the survivors, you get
these amazing stories about guys who would give their lives
for this country at the drop of a hat.ä
Pearl
Harbor, which was written by Oscar-nominated screenwriter
Randall Wallace (Braveheart), is built around a love
triangle involving a pair of boyhood best friends (Affleck
and Hartnett) who become fighter pilots, fall for the same
woman (Kate Beckinsale), and join forces to retaliate against
the Japanese. The attack itself is the movieâs centerpiece
and will include depictions of the fate of the Arizona
(which was blown to bits within five minutes) and the USS
Oklahoma, which capsized÷or ãturned turtleä÷by pivoting
on one end and slapping down in the water. Bay imagined
all this being punctuated by death-defying air sequences,
with a swarm of 200 Japanese planes descending upon the
flame-engulfed Hawaiian harbor. But the movieâs defining
shot, the reason Bay felt he could add his signature to
the attack sequence, came to him in that dream. ãI had the
whole movie in my head before the script was written,ä he
says. ãMy whole thing was, if I canât do this attack totally
realistically, then I donât want to do it. But getting there,
I thought I was going to kill myself.ä
The scope of the project turned Pearl Harbor into
the most expensive movie ever green-lighted by one studio.
And convincing Disney to fork over the $135 million was
a battle in itself for Bay and his longtime pro ducer, Bruckheimer.
As one of the most commercially successful filmmaking teams
in the industry, they were fully justified in expecting
to get a blank check for a patriotic war picture of this
size. But their journey to production, Bruckheimer says,
ãwas the hardest thing Iâve gone through in my 30-year career.ä
When the original budget estimate came in at a whopping
$180 million, Bay began to worry. ãI didnât want to do a
movie that cost that much,ä he says. ãI kept winnowing the
budget down, and it started to get tough around $160 million.ä
That was the first time Bay quit the project, frustrated
by his line producerâs inability to cut costs. Ever the
enabler, Bruckheimer stepped in as a buffer. ãI told him
to make it happen,ä the producer says. ãI always told Michael
we were going to make this movie, no matter what.ä Later,
Disneyâs then-chairman, Joe Roth, had the deal all but sealed
when he agreed to green-light the film at $145 million,
if Bay and Bruckheimer deferred their fees until the movie
made its money back at the box office. But that agreement
disintegrated when Roth resigned soon thereafter. ãWhen
Joe left, everything fell apart, and [Disney chairman-CEO]
Michael Eisner said, ÎWeâre not gonna make it unless you
lose another $10 million,â ä Bay recalls. ãAnd thatâs when
I quit again. I said to Jerry, ÎWhat do they want from me?
Iâve made $892 million for the studio. Iâm doing the movie
for free.â ä
Bruckheimer
and bay persevered nonetheless, shaving costs by striking
unprecedented deals with key crew members, who deferred
their fees as well. ãI think Iâm the one that started the
deferral process,ä says special-effects coordinator John
Frazier (The Perfect Storm). ãOf any project Iâve
done, I wanted to see this one get made. I just said, ÎPay
me when you get the money.â ä Affleck, who can command as
much as $10 million per picture, was paid $250,000 and stands
to make a good bit more, depending on how well the movie
does; Beckinsale (Brokedown Palace) made $200,000,
and Hartnett took home a modest $150,000.
Still, Bay quit the project one last time after he approached
Eisner with a $136 million budget and the Disney chief held
firm at $135 million. ãHe was making a statement,ä Bay says.
Feeling that he wasnât having much of an impact on the practical
world, the director turned to the spiritual. ãI had my house
Feng-Shuiâd,ä he recalls. ãThese two women come to my house
looking like ghostbusters, and one asked me what was going
on in my life. I told them that my movie was stagnating,
and she looked right over my bed, where Iâve got this giant
Paris clock from 1890, and said, ÎThatâs why youâre stagnating÷the
clockâs not running. Either motorize it or get rid of it.â
So she took it out of there, and literally a week later,
things started to turn around again. I swear to God. At
first I was like, ÎWhat the fuck is Feng Shui?â I couldnât
even spell it. But I tried it, and it happened.ä
He whittled the costs down to $135 million, plus a standard
cushion for overages, and began production five months later
with his budget (and his furniture) properly aligned. But
throughout the six-month shoot, he had anything but a Zen
attitude. ãFor people who havenât worked with Michael, I
usually just say, ÎHeâs the guy who runs around and screams
and yells and is crazy,â ä says director of photography
John Schwartzman (Armageddon, EDtv), who has
known Bay since they were both teenagers. ãItâs just his
style. Itâs never personal and itâs not malicious. Heâs
just a very hyper guy.ä
Five weeks were set aside to shoot the massive attack sequence
on location in Hawaii. Special-effects guru Frazier was
asked to engineer the biggest series of explosions in film
history, simu lating the demolition of 17 ships. Meanwhile,
Bruckheimer and Bay persuaded the U.S. Navy to give them
access to its ãmothballä fleet of about 50 vessels anchored
in Pearl Harbor. But before Frazier could light a fuse to
2,500 gallons of diesel fuel to re-create the Arizonaâs
fiery demise, he had to contend with Hawaiiâs myriad environmental
groups. Several months and a million dollars in legal fees
later, the production promised to take extensive measures
to protect the natural habitat and wildlife. As a result,
hours before each explosion, Frazier would send divers into
the harbor in search of turtles and whales that might be
harmed in the blast. Then heâd send his crew members into
the nearby bird sanctuary to protect the eggs from predators.
ãThe biggest fear was that the noise would scare the mother
bird away,ä Frazier says. ãSo we decided to just collect
the eggs and slip them back into the nest when we were done.ä
In stark contrast to these delicate maneuvers, ãthis film
was the most dangerous shit Iâve done,ä says Cuba Gooding
Jr., who plays Dorie Miller, a real-life Navy cook aboard
the USS West Virginia who became a hero when he fired
an antiaircraft gun at enemy planes. ãThe first time I grabbed
the gun, they said, ÎThis ship here is going to completely
disintegrate while youâre firing.â And I said, ÎYou mean
digitally?â And when they said action, most of the crew
was behind tarps, and there were things raining down, burning
my skin and ears. I remember seeing flames and explosions
across the water and thinking, ÎWhat have I got myself into?â
ä
Amid the daily firestorms, low-flying formations of nine
WWII-era Japanese fighter planes, called zeros, had everyone
on the ground saying their Hail Marys. ãEach time the planes
flew by,ä Gooding recalls, ãthe tip of the wing was literally
four feet from the tip of my gun.ä Bay also stationed a
group of actors in a tower and asked the pilots to fly ãas
close as they felt comfortable.ä The pilotsâ comfort zone,
however, never seemed wide enough for the men in the tower.
ãI had to calm down a couple of guys who got really nervous,ä
says Tom Sizemore, who plays a mechanic who helps the heroes
get airborne for their counteroffensive. ãOne asked me what
would happen if the plane crashed into the tower. And I
said, ÎWe would all die. But itâs not going to happen.â
ä
Sizemore was wrong, sort of. One of the planes did later
crash into an empty field after grazing a palm tree. But,
amazingly, no one was seriously injured. ãI was sweating,
because one of my guys used a forklift to lift the plane
off the guy,ä Frazier says. ãWhen we pulled him out, he
was covered in soot and gasoline, and he looked really messed
up.ä The pilot was fine, except for a broken pinkie. But
the real shock came two weeks later, when he turned up on
the set. ãI looked at him, and the guy was 70 years old,ä
Frazier says. ãI thought, ÎIâve been standing here for two
weeks with this guy flying ten feet over my head? He shouldnât
be driving, let alone flying.â ä The production had
agreed to let some of the antique-plane owners fly in the
film in exchange for the use of their aircraft. Luckily,
there were no other major accidents.
Bay had another close call during one of the filmâs most
ambitious and costly sequences. He had spent months plotting
how to create an ultra-realistic shot of the rollover and
sinking of the 600-feet-long battleship Oklahoma.
After brainstorming with Frazier and Indus trial Light +
Magic digital-effects supervisor Eric Brevig, they decided
to build the first 200 feet of the ship, to scale, inside
the giant tank in Mexico in which Titanic was shot.
Frazier designed the worldâs biggest gimbal to rotate the
700,000-pound structure so that it could belly flop onto
the water. ãWe had 200 stuntmen on top of the ship, and
then we picked it up 25 feet in the air and rolled it over,ä
Frazier recalls. ãIn the process, we crushed a lifeboat.ä
Once the live-action sequences were filmed, ILM digitally
grafted the remaining 400 feet of the ship onto each frame.
ãWe werenât sure that we could pull it off,ä says Brevig,
whose crew built a replica ship that was one-twentieth the
size of the original. ãWe copied it digitally and exaggerated
all the imperfections, like scratches on the ship. Working
with Michael is very much about presenting stuff that looks
cool to the audience. Even though weâre telling the story
of a horrible disaster, day-to-day you have to think about
how to make it visually compelling.ä And if anyone objected
to Bayâs aggressive aesthetics, the wiry director would
hold up his hand and repeat his mantra (which Affleck had
printed on T-shirts he distributed): ãGuys, just trust the
box office.ä
Michael
Bayâs commercial instincts are purely unconscious. He has
always been drawn to iconic American ideals such as innocence,
hard work, and the individual who prevails over the system.
Itâs a sensibility that has been extremely profitable for
him ever since, at 12 years old, he started a lawn-mowing
business with Schwartzman called Nice Boys Do Nice Work.
Although Bay, who was adopted, grew up in a solidly middle-class
Los Angeles household÷his father was an accountant and his
mother was a child therapist÷he always feared that he would
be beaten by the odds against succeeding in either of his
twin passions, baseball and film. As a result, he would
be doomed to drudgery in the family business. ãMy grandfather
used to say, ÎYou can try this film stuff, but youâre going
to work in the jean business with me,â ä Bay recalls. ãAnd
Iâm like, ÎOh, God, I donât want to stone-wash jeans.â ä
Consequently, Bay anchored himself in the artistic mainstream.
There is no darkly self-indulgent art film hidden in his
closet. ãMy fellow film students at Wesleyan were all art-house
people,ä he says, ãand they hated me because I was in a
fraternity and played baseball.ä Even then, he had no tolerance
for arty pretension. He turned down USCâs film school because
the people there were too ãarrogant,ä and he went instead
to Pasadenaâs Art Center College of Design. The work that
launched his career was a student film in the form of a
Coke commercial, based, ironically enough, on the famous
Alfred Eisenstaedt picture of the WWII sailor and nurse
kissing in Times Square on VJ day. In many ways, thereâs
not much difference between the Bay of Pearl Harbor,
blasting dozens of military ships to kingdom come, and the
ballsy grad student who cold-called the Navy and convinced
them to let him use a battleship for his student film.
Seizing upon Bayâs gift for powerful mass-market imagery,
Don Simpson and Bruckheimer, the producing team responsible
for such hits as Flashdance and Top Gun, hired
him to direct a music video for Days of Thunder.
ãHeâs the George Lucas or Steven Spielberg of his generation,ä
says Bruckheimer, whose talent for flourish and exaggeration
is offset by his perpetual deadpan. ãI saw it in his early
work as a commercial director, and I saw it in Bad Boys.ä
That 1995 Bruckheimer-produced picture was Bayâs first feature,
and it was a fixer-upper from day one. ãThere were holes
in the script that you could drive a truck through,ä says
Bay, who ended up writing Columbia Pictures a check for
$25,000 to shoot an explosion that the studio refused to
cover. ãAnd after the movie made $60 million, I still had
to beg for my money back.ä But the surprise success of Bad
Boys established Bayâs relationship with the legendary
producer; the two now share a kind of complimentary alchemy.
ãMichael has no guile whatsoever,ä Affleck says. ãAnd Jerry
is the polar opposite. He is much more savvy [about] marketing
and promoting movies.ä Bruckheimer quietly puts out the
fires while Bay churns out the hits. ãIâm not a good politician,ä
Bay admits. ãBut I say what I feel and thatâs just the way
it is.ä
The hazing process on Bay movies is no secret. ãWe break
people in,ä says the director, who tests his actorsâ survival
skills both by putting them in dangerous situations and
by giving them the impression that their performances, and
even their jobs, are in peril. ãI felt like Michael was
going to fire me for the first month of Armageddon,ä
Affleck says. ãAnd most actors are very uncomfortable if
they donât feel like the most important thing happening
from the minute they get to the set until the minute they
go home.ä This attitude does not sit well with Bay. ãI donât
take shit from actors,ä says the director, whose head-to-toe
faded-jeans ensemble and wispy David Cassidy hairstyle make
him look like he stepped out of a â70s-era Leviâs commercial.
ãGetting 12 women into lipstick was the hardest thing about
making this movie. I would have a shit fit. Iâm the type
of guy who will personally go knock on actorsâ trailers.ä
Surviving Bayâs tirades wasnât easy for the five women known
on the set as ãthe gaggleä÷Beckinsale, James King (Blow),
Catherine Kellner (Shaft), Jennifer Garner (Dude,
Whereâs My Car?), and Sara Rue (Canât Hardly Wait),
all of whom play nurses. ãMen never know how much time it
takes for girls to get ready,ä Kellner says. ãAnd then somebody
yells at you and tells you to go make yourself look better.ä
As a result, the women relied heavily on each other for
estrogenerous support. ãWe had something called the Madonna
Touch-up,ä Kellner recalls. ãWhen somebody would yell and
one of us would lose it, we would all be jetted to the makeup-and-hair
trailer. And then we would play ÎVogueâ and cry our eyes
out really hard and just boogie. We have some hilarious
pictures of the Madonna Touch-up taking place.ä
Unfortunately for the gaggle, Bay had his camera trained
on them during one of the most unexpectedly revealing moments
of the shoot. The women were standing on the deck of an
historic battleship for a sweeping panoramic shot, when
the helicopter camera flew by and created a powerful gust.
ãOur skirts just flew up in our faces, and the entire ferry
boat behind us was filled with actual military,ä Kellner
says. ãIâm pretty sure nobody was wearing any underwear,
so they all got a good view of our asses and garter belts.
Then Kate turns to me and says in a really steely tone,
ÎI shall always remember this as the day I lost my mystery.â
ä
Given all the gung-ho elements of Pearl Harbor, itâs
genuinely baffling when, months later, Beckinsale insists
that she had no idea she was signing on for a blockbuster.
ãThe script just felt so romantic, like a war epic,ä says
the 27-year-old English actress, who has spent most of her
career working in indies such as The Last Days of Disco.
ãThen you get there, and you realize you are in a Michael
BayöJerry Bruckheimer movie, and you find out what a blockbuster
means.ä
One of the first things she discovered was that having a
child (her daughter, Lily, is now two years old) had made
her allergic to all physical danger, both perceived and
real. ãI would turn up for what seemed to be really innocuous
scenes and be fearing for my life,ä recalls Beckinsale,
looking a bit like fine china, beautiful but breakable in
her fairy-princessöpink chiffon gown, full makeup, and crimson
toenails. ãThe first day, I had to go into the ocean with
Josh [Hartnett], and I had never done any swimming in the
middle of the ocean. So we were out there trying to kiss
each other madly, and we were spitting salt water into each
otherâs mouths. I was so concerned that Michael would call
me a wuss. And here I was crying on the first day.ä
Bayâs low tolerance for wusses may have inadvertently produced
some of the filmâs best method acting. When Bremner asked
him for direction in a war scene, Bay replied like a drill
sergeant: ãWhen fucking Pearl Harbor happened, do you think
everyone knew what they were supposed to be doing?ä He insists
that his minimalist directing of the actors was sometimes
intentional. ãI would just say, ÎYouâre running from point
A to point B,â and sometimes weâd put bombs there, just
to get the actors all rattled up.ä
The
twenty-two-year-old Hartnett, who has more screen time than
anyone else in the movie, took Bayâs playfully Darwinian
initiation tactics the hardest. ãAt first Josh was like,
ÎWhat the hell have I gotten myself into?â which was much
like Ben was on Armageddon,ä Schwartzman says. ãThere
are a lot of people who just go, ÎHoly shit. Get my agent
on the phone. I didnât sign up for this.â ä Hartnett, who
read Othello between takes, approached his role like
a diligent freshman; Bay was the cocky upperclassman looking
to test the young actorâs mettle. ãHe was very serious,
and I told him, ÎJosh, youâre giving me too many moments,â
ä Bay says. ãNot every word is precious. Itâs something
actors have to learn.
ãI
once said to Josh, ÎI donât know what went on in your dark
little childhood, but Iâve got to tell you to smile once
in a while,â ä he continues. ãOnce when he was laughing
between scenes from an offscreen joke, I said, ÎCut, print,
and send that fucking smile to ILM, who will digitize it
and put it all over the movie.â ä
Hartnett found his support among the older actors. ãI thought
he handled himself with extraordinary grace and right-headedness,ä
Sizemore says. ãHe wants to be a great actor÷thatâs his
focus. He doesnât want to be a pinup.ä But, like Leonardo
DiCaprio, Hartnett may be destined to spend some time as
a reluctant teen idol. ãHe is such a pretty guy; heâs going
to become all of the Backstreet Boys rolled into one,ä says
Affleck, who is not unfamiliar with the instant-heartthrob
phenomenon. ãIn a way, itâs a disservice to him, because
he does some really good acting in the movie. But itâs kind
of a relief for me to let him take his shirt off and do
the beefcake stuff, and Iâll do the more adult stuff.ä
Affleck is very aware of criticsâ natural predisposition
to trash a movie like this. After Armageddon was
released, he resisted the suggestion that he was on the
crest of the next wave of action stars, and when he was
first approached about Pearl Harbor, he wasnât keen
on the idea. But he found himself intrigued by Bayâs passion
for the subject and sensitivity to its historic significance.
So he read the script and then gave it to the toughest critic
he knows. ãGwyneth [Paltrow] was always teasing me, saying,
ÎDonât do these boy movies. Come do a costume drama,â ä
says Affleck. ãSo she read it and cried and said, ÎYouâre
right, this movie is actually good.â
ãMy
friends who are actors all gave me endless shit, because
all they know is that Pearl Harbor means Armageddon,ä
he continues. ãAnd no one is gonna say that this is an actor-driven
movie. But when I sat down with Michael, he said, ÎI donât
want you to be the way anyone has ever seen you before.
I donât want anybody to seem contemporary or to have any
irony.â He said he wanted to take history and give you a
visceral sense of what it was like.ä
Bayâs visceral approach is both the source of his enormous
success and the catalyst for many of his struggles. Both
onscreen and off-, he has always been compelled to dive-bomb
into perilous situations and sort through the fallout later.
Heâs still grappling with the outcome of one such gutsy
endeavor, when, at 21, he decided to seek out his birth
mother. After convincing someone at Cedars-Sinai hospital
to give him access to confidential records, he tracked down
the woman who put him up for adoption shortly after he was
born. In the years since his one meeting with her, quiet
speculation has begun to circulate that Bayâs birth father
might actually be another notoriously prickly director,
John Frankenheimer (The Manchurian Candidate, Ronin).
ãItâs a strange thing, being adopted,ä Bay says cautiously.
ãAll Iâm going to say is that weâve spoken.ä He pauses to
ponder the suggestion that if Frankenheimer were his father,
it would be great support for the theory that artistic temperament
is genetic. ãCould be. We do both have kind of a tweaked
smile,ä he says, grinning. ãBenâs worked with us both. .
. .ä
ãLook,
theyâre both friends, and I do want to respect their privacy,ä
says Affleck, who screened a print of Armageddon
for Frankenheimer when they worked together on last yearâs
Reindeer Games. ãI will say that neither one is easy
to like the first time you meet him. But after you get to
know them, you canât help liking them. Neither one is great
at P.R., so I think theyâre both misunderstood.ä
Itâs hard to misunderstand Schwartzman, who seems to inadvertently
confirm the relationship when he tells the story of his
wife watching Frankenheimer on TV. ãBefore she knew John
Frankenheimer was Michael Bayâs father,ä Schwartzman recalls,
ãshe said, ÎGod, thatâs what Michael is going to look like
when he gets old.â ä
For the moment, Bay is more concerned with his legacy than
his origins. Pearl Harbor, whose captivating trailer
has been generating a ãWho knew he had it in him?ä buzz,
is his best shot yet at appealing to the one group of moviegoers
he still has to win over. ãIf we made movies for the critics,
weâd both be out of business,ä Bruckheimer says flatly.
Even this time, with the weight of history on their side,
itâs not going to be easy. Already, concerns are being voiced
by some veterans and historians that liberties have been
taken with the events÷that Cuba Gooding Jr.âs character,
for example, is shown shooting down planes, which he may
not have done in real life.
With Pearl Harbor nearly completed, there is still
a purity to Bayâs excitement. He is the kid with a great
art project he canât wait to show the world. And heâs more
than a little proud of having done it for a price. ãI gotta
show you the final cost report,ä Bay says, summoning his
assistant into his office with a document. ãI want you to
see this. This is very confidential.ä Bayâs crooked grin
spreads wide as he scans the Walt Disney Company internal
memo about estimated final costs on his movie. ãRight here!
Total overages: $210,000.ä He beams and waves the piece
of paper. ãHello! Hello!ä
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