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BayWatch
Director
Michael Bay is gambling big by turning the disastrous
1941 attack on Pearl Harbor into a big-budget,big-screen
romantic epic. If he succeeds, it will be his own big leap
forward.
By Michael Fleming
In
his Santa Monica headquarters, director Michael Bay is preceded
down the hallway by two gigantic beasts. The flesh-colored
English mastiff named Mason (after Sean Connery's character
in The Rock) is roughly the size of a Shetland pony.
Grace (named after Liv Tyler's character in Armageddon)
is a year-old puppy, nearing the size where she too could
be fitted for a saddle. As Bay steps into an office decorated
with such props as the model for the space shuttle from
Armageddon and a bomb from Pearl Harbor, he
explains that his beloved canines recently forced him to
trade in his car for a bigger one. "They're a big investment,"
he says. The same could be said for the 36-year-old director's
movies. His first film, Bad Boys, cost a mere $23
million and grossed $140 million worldwide. With that one
under his belt, he got to spend $75 million on The Rock,
which proceeded to gross $325 million. His next film, Armageddon,
cost a whopping $140 million and grossed more than $450
million.
Bay's
new film, Pearl Harbor, represents a different kind
of big. For what is clearly his first serious film, Bay
chose a big subject, the Japanese air attack on the US naval
station in Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941. With Braveheart's
Randall Wallace as his screenwriter, Bay has framed the
catastrophe of Pearl Harbor with a story about two best-friend
hotshot pilots- Ben Affleck and Josh Hartnett- and the nurse
they both fall for (Kate Beckinsale). In other words, you
have the makings of a big film that could earn big grosses
and make a big difference in how Bay is perceived as a director.
Bay
denies he's after elevated esteem, but he's also so confident
he's captured something special that he shows me 20 minutes
of highlights, even though he isn't supposed to. The footage
indicates that Bay's reenactment of Pearl Harbor is captured
on an awesome scale and in a level of remarkable detail
that brings James Cameron's accomplishment with Titanic
to mind. Like Cameron, Bay took a big up-front pay deferral
to get his picture made, so it makes a big difference to
his bank account whether Pearl Harbor opens big on
its big, big Memorial Day weekend.
MICHAEL
FLEMING: Pearl Harbor is quite a jump from the overly
commercial hits you've done, like Bad Boys, The Rock
and Armageddon. Was this a pet project you've
wanted to do for a long time?
MICHAEL
BAY: No. It started during a lunch with Joe Roth at
Toscana, with him pissed that I was going to do Phone
Booth for Fox. He was still studio head at Disney then
and had me in a deal, but I couldn't find anything I wanted
to do there. We'd developed Armageddon from scratch
and it took forever, so I just wanted to go shoot something,
and Phone Booth was going to take 20 days. Joe said,
"I'm going to get all your lawyers and agents in my
office." They put 20 different things on the table.
I was like, "Nah, nah, nah, nah, nah." Then Todd
Garner, one of the guys who helped bring me into Disney,
says, "Pearl harbor, love story, Jerry's interested."
Everybody thinks getting [producer] Jerry Bruckheimer involved
makes it a shoo-in, since I've made all my films with him.
But I said I didn't really know much about Pearl Harbor
beyond what everybody knows.
Q:
What got you interested?
A:
I started reading and got intrigued by the heroic stories
within the debacle. It was innocence shattered. Things happened
where you said, Oh, my God, this sounds too much like a
movie. A battleship, a couple hundred feet short of the
Titanic, twisted on its side, sank in seven minutes with
more than a thousand guys on board. Then Randall Wallace
got involved. But we still had no idea what the movie was.
How do you make something out of a story that is so depressing?
Randall came up with a great love story, and that helped.
But we had another problem- we knew we couldn't end the
movie with the attack on Pearl Harbor. Then Randall came
up with the Doolittle raid and we had our third act.
Q:
That's the daring air reprisal on Tokyo that Jimmy Doolittle
led shortly after Pearl Harbor?
A:
Yes, it was a really dangerous, heroic mission that happened
four months later. It was that sheer volunteer spirit in
America, which to me was the essence of the whole movie.
In the Pearl harbor crisis, there was a wholly American,
selfless response, down to how the nurses dealt with the
attack, using their stockings to dress wounds, their lipstick
to mark who would live or die. Imagine that. That is what
hooked me.
Q:
Your star, Ben Affleck, seems to have that perfect fresh-scrubbed,
period American-hero look.
A:
Ben has what some of the fighter pilots I'd met had. They
were a whole different breed, these guys. They were so determined
to do their jobs. And if the plane was broken, they were
going up anyway, risking their lives.
Q:
While stars like Kevin Costner and Charlize Theron were
mentioned for Pearl Harbor, you ended up with a cast
that was less well-known, for the most part.
A:
We felt the movie was strong enough that it didn't need
a lot of stars, so we wanted to find fresh talent. We told
everybody, "This is all the money we have for this
role." We told Kevin Costner, "This is all we
have, but this is an awesome part," and he wanted to
do it, but it came down to money. The amazing thing is that
a lot of people did make the sacrifice. Jon Voight as FDR,
Alec Baldwin as Jimmy Doolittle. I think it was because
of the subject matter, though one of our stars, Cuba Gooding
Jr., played on Jerry's hockey team- maybe that helped.
Q:
What distinguished Josh Hartnett from some of the other
young actors who auditioned?
A: We saw so many guys. It was a matter of being able
to believe him, of his not looking too pretty. Josh has
this kind of rugged thing going; he's a guy's guy. He was
going to get the lead if Ben didn't do it. That's how strongly
I felt about him. Then Ben came in, but josh was totally
fine with that, and he was actually better suited for the
second character. I'll tell you right now, Josh Hartnett
is going to be fucking huge. He was great.
Q:
What made you choose Kate Beckinsale?
A:
I didn't want someone who was too beautiful. Women feel
disturbed when they see someone's too pretty. I'm not saying
Kate's not pretty. When you look at Titanic, Kate
Winslet is pretty, but not overwhelmingly beautiful. That
makes it work better for women. Our Kate is very funny,
could hang with the guys. She's not so neurotic about everything,
like some actresses. she was solid, and I think the three
of them had some really nice chemistry.
Q:
Pearl Harbor was greenlit and then nearly canceled,
and it ended up being not the biggest-budget film ever made,
but the biggest ever greenlit by a studio.
A:
I was willing to sacrifice my fee on this movie, I felt
so strongly about it. Of course, you always have ambivalent
feelings- I'd made Disney a lot of money on Armageddon,
after all. But I realized they could deny me this movie.
When the budget process got tough, they were saying, "We'll
do it as a TV miniseries."
Q:
How high was the initial budget?
A:
It started at $175 million, but that was a stupid first
budget done before the script was locked. We got it down
to the neighborhood of $148 million. Jerry and I were getting
paid at that point. Joe Roth kept saying, "$145 million."
So we sacrificed our fees and promised to pay overages,
and we got there. Then Joe left Disney. Two weeks later,
the project was un-greenlit. I was heartbroken. We'd put
all this time into the script, and met all these Pearl harbor
survivors. These 80-year-old guys were baring their souls
for us, with tears in their eyes. This was such an opportunity-
nobody had ever really made a movie about them.
Q:
So, Disney was saying no to its biggest hit-making producer
and biggest box-office director?
A: I took this personally. I felt I'd always delivered
for them, broken my ass for them, and I'd never even gotten
a point on any of my movies. Hollywood's not kind that way.
But I didn't protest. I just thought, "Well, times
have changed." We've been seeing that for a while.
Studios now look for returns every quarter on their stock,
and that's not the way the movie business works.
Q:
It sounds like you've never been given the star treatment.
A:On Bad Boys at Columbia, I think I made $125,000.
I knew this film was my one shot and if I blew it, I'd be
fucked. So I was determined to not fail. Two days before
we started shooting, Don Simpson sent Jerry a six-page memo
essentially saying, "Let's take our names off that
movie." I ended up writing Columbia Pictures a check
for $25,000, a fifth of my fee, to shoot the ending scene
they wouldn't pay for. And you know what? They cashed that
check and didn't pay me back until the movie had made $60
million. And then we had to beg them for it. They treated
me like shit.
Q:
But you'd moved to Disney and made them a fortune on Armageddon.
Didn't that make a difference when it came to Pearl Harbor?
A:
Michael Eisner was saying, "Jerry, lose $10 million.
You've got to bring it down to $135 million." Jerry
says, "We can do this." He always says that; he's
an optimist. But I'm the one who has to figure out where.
I'm good at that- I learned from commercials and videos
how to spend the money wisely. I say, "No, we can't."
Somehow, though, we got to within $1 million of what they
demanded. "They said, "Nope."
Q:
How did you finally make their number?
A: I cut money from plane crashes at the end. The whole
movie is a class-A production, but there were these cheesy
crashes at the end. My thinking was that if the studio wanted
to fix it later, they could.
Q:
Were you angry by then?
A: I was miserable because I'd been toyed with. It was
heart-wrenching. I quit five times, but Jerry just kept
saying, "You have to make this movie." I'm glad
I listened. We brought it in, only going a couple million
into our contingency. I would never have predicted we'd
have been able to do this. Maybe it was the blessing that
the state of Hawaii requires you to do for any film shot
there. This guy who did the blessing starts talking and
he goes on half an hour and I'm thinking, "This just
cost us 50 grand." But thank God for that prayer. Despite
the number of explosions and dangerous stunts we did it,
we only had three sprained ankles, a broken collarbone,
and one guy with 10 stitches on his head.
Q:
James Cameron gave back his fee to Fox when Titanic
doubled its $100 million budget. Michael Mann took responsibility
for overages on Ali. Is it good for directors to
be held responsible for things like this?
A: No, I don't think it's healthy. Take Armageddon.
They say, "We want more effects shots at the end,"
and the budget goes over. Or they say, "We want you
to edit 45 minutes for a presentation at Cannes." That
adds to the cost. The Rock got pushed from July to
June 7, so we were working three editors on overtime- the
budget goes through the roof. That's not the director's
fault. I can tell you right now: I'm not giving my fee ever
again.
Q:
What was your visual game plan for this movie? Did you look
at every World War II film?
A:
No, I'm not one of those guys who decide to make Pearl
Harbor and order up every war movie. I saw a lot of
documentaries and I watched this amazing film John Ford
shot when he was a photographer for the military. He filmed
planes from a battleship, got some great shit.
Q:
How do you and Randall Wallace work out the problem of rallying
the audience from the horror of the bombing?
A: That's the real movie moment. We had to get the audience
back. We needed to have Ben Affleck and Josh Hartnett fight
the invading Japanese. We based their story on actual events,
on two fighter pilots who went to an airbase off the beaten
path and got two planes up and shot down seven Zeros. They
were the only guys to get planes up there.
Q:
When you signed on for Pearl Harbor, did you say,
"I'm going to present a terrific love triangle,"
or "I'm going to show the invasion as it really happened"?
A:
A bunch of visuals means nothing. I was hooked by the love
story in Pearl Harbor. Believe it or not, I have
a really soft heart and I can be sappy. Wow, that sounds
pretty bad. But it's what this movie is driving towards.
At the same time, you're taking the viewer on an experience
they've never seen before. Some of the Pearl Harbor survivors
got upset, saying, "Why do you have a love story? Why
can't you just film the attack?" I'd remind them of
Titanic. Break it down and you've got a ship sinking,
and without that love story, there's nothing to care about.
Then they understood.
Q:
You have a walk-on in Pearl Harbor, and you've been
on-screen before- I saw your performance as an evil frat
boy in Mystery Men.
A:
Oh, God [groaning]. The director called me up, and I just
did it. Actually, it was interesting to wait to days in
a trailer to be used for five minutes. I realized, Actors
must hate this! I used to think they had such easy lives.
Now I've been asked to be in "Felicity," playing
a wannabe director who's only into art films.
Q:
What makes your partnership with Jerry Bruckheimer work?
A:
I can handle the production stuff, and Jerry keeps all
the other shit away from me. When you have this large a
budget, you can't handle it on your own. It's good to have
somebody to bounce things off. Jerry makes it easier.
Q:
In Bad Boys, you cast Will Smith and Martin Lawrence
when both were TV stars. What made you think they'd mesh
so well?
A:
After Jerry and Don dropped the idea of doing the movie
with Dana Carvey and Jon Lovitz, they were thinking about
Arsenio Hall and Martin. I said to Don, "There's this
guy who's going to be hot, Will Smith." Then he and
Jerry got on the bandwagon. The movie was hard. I'm busting
my ass, and Martin's giving me shit. I'm not into bullshit.
We laugh about it now, but I said, "What the fuck's
up with you? Why are you such an asshole?" I knew he
just wanted to see what I was made of. He says, "I'm
a black man who never had anything." I said, "You
know what? I'm a white man who never had anything, either.
And I'm busting my ass to make this movie." We've been
great friends ever since.
Q:
How do you manipulate actors into doing what you want?
A:
Tom Sizemore told me this story about what Spielberg once
said to an actor: "I've done four takes on you. I'm
going to give you one more, and if you can't get it right,
I'm moving on." That's great motivation. There are
stories about me, that I'm tough. You know what? I know
what I'm doing. When you've got 14 planes in the air, bombs
that can kill and 650 people spread out over the length
of three football fields, you'd better be loud.
Q:
In a recent Movieline interview, Tea Leoni said she'd
been knocked out in Bad Boys, and when she came to,
you seemed more upset that she couldn't complete the scene
than about her well-being. Is that unfair?
A:
I think it is unfair. First of all, there was a studio saying,
"If you don't get this shot now, it's not in the movie."
I've got that on my shoulders. She got whacked in the neck
by Martin's stunt guy, and of course I was freaked out by
it and concerned for her. But a million other things are
going through my mind. What do we do now? She's got to go
to the hospital, she;s going to be in a neck brace. Can
we fake it? There are so many things when you're a director
that you don't make known.
Q:
On The Rock, you worked with Nic Cage, Sean Connery
and Ed Harris. Did you have to prove yourself to Connery?
A: Yeah. I wasn't intimidated because I'd filmed commercials
with very famous athletes who had contracts with Nike and
would tell me, "I'm dunking once." I'd say, "I'm
doing a whole commercial about you dunking." And they'd
say, "Well, I'm dunking once, maybe twice." I
learned how to deal with these guys. Some directors will
cower, but I don't take shit.
Q:
So there were no problems at all with Connery?
A: No. Well, on the last day, he did call me a fuckhead.
He had to hold his breath for 30 seconds in the water while
a fireball blew over his head. He and Nic couldn't come
up, or they'd get burned badly. It took me a half hour to
convince Nic to go down. He'd say, "OK, so like, if
I come up, you're telling me my hair and face will melt?"
I'm like, "Yeah, you can't come up." Sean did
not like the water. He said, "We should have fucking
rehearsed this, fuckhead." I said, "How are you
going to rehearse with a fireball? How do you want me to
do that on a stage?" He was just tired. He wanted to
go home.
Q:
Armageddon starred Bruce Willis, who has the rep of
taking over movies from weaker directors.
A:
I am not that type of guy. I've got the movie in my head,
and nobody's going to tell me how to shoot it. I was freaked
out when Bruce arrived a month after I began shooting. He
started doing exactly what you're saying. We were like two
dogs sniffing each other. But it got better once he got
comfortable with me. He's been burned recently. All actors
want is to not get burned. When I started showing Bruce
some scenes, he said, "Mike, if you'd shown me that
a little earlier, we'd have been a lot better friends."
I love Bruce.
Q:
What's your biggest strength as a director?
A: I am very good at handling a huge movie, with a million
things going on. I'm very decisive, clear in what I want.
I'm very cost-conscious, in terms of how to get the big
bang on the screen. I'm very good at making things happen
very fast.
Q:
Weaknesses?
A:
Patience. The politics. I just want to shoot.
Q:
Was there one project you desperately wanted and didn't
get?
A:
Speed. I wanted that bad, before I got Bad Boys.
They wanted a more experienced director. Jan De Bont made
it his first movie, but he's had a lot of experience as
a cinematographer. Then I wanted Drop Zone, which
became an ungodly movie, but which I wanted to do because
I thought I knew how to make it cool. Sherry Lansing says,
"I love you, honey, but..."
Q:
Have you ever wished critics appreciate your work more,
and give you credit for more than just commercial success?
A:
Nope. For me, the great joy is to watch an audience watching
what I've made. To hear not a peep from the audience at
the right moment, and then to hear the laughs and the cheers.
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