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Filmmakers (note, this section is being redeveloped)
"Wes
Anderson... has a very special kind of talent: He knows how to
convey the simple joys and interactions between people so well
and with such richness. This kind of sensibility is rare in
movies." - Martin Scorsese
About Wes...
"The Road Wes Traveled" by Joe Donnely
from Los Angeles Weekly Film Feature
The driver is
breaking the law again. Tearing like a tornado across the Mojave
wastelands in a rented white Ford Explorer. Hands at 10 and 2.
Chewing highway. Approaching his favorite speed: 90 mph. What
would the honorable folks at
Disney’s Touchstone Pictures think?
Had they done a
background check before anteing up for this buggy, they’d have
known it would be like this. Wes Anderson is a recidivist. The
last time he blazed through the Southwest, the law finally
caught up with him in Van Horn, Texas. When the cop ran the
registration and discovered Anderson had another speeding ticket
besides the one he was writing, he threatened jail time. But
first, he thought, let’s check the trunk to see what kind of
contraband this scofflaw is running across state lines.
In the trunk, the
cop found a portrait of Herman Blume, the character played by
Bill Murray in Anderson’s latest film, Rushmore. The
painting anchors the film’s opening shot. In it, Blume sits in
front of his disaffected movie family, looking like Ted Turner
on painkillers. Set against a burnt-orange curtain, the Blume
family portrait lingers onscreen an uncomfortable 10 seconds
before the curtain pulls back and the movie starts. Clearly,
somebody’s meant to get the picture.
"Is that that
guy from Groundhog Day?" the cop asked Anderson.
Anderson replied
that yes, indeed, the face in the painting was Bill Murray’s.
"Then I went
into my song and dance," he says.
The "song and
dance" is that point during a pullover when Anderson humbly
explains that he is a movie director on an errand of vital
importance to the project. In this case, say, delivering the
painting to Mr. Murray himself for approval.
"The cop ended
up calling the judge at midnight, and I paid by credit
card."
Then there was the
time a couple years ago when a policeman in Tennessee pulled him
over for doing 90 but knocked it down to 80 after the song and
dance.
"The cop was
really nice. He had a great accent. He thought it was really
something that we were both the same age," Anderson
recalls. "I thought he had some sadness about being only 27
and being an authority figure."
Anderson has learned
that part of Hollywood’s magic is how it cools out the trigger
finger of authority. The strategy in case we get pulled over,
which seems like a safe bet given Anderson’s preferred speed,
is for me to wave the tape recorder conspicuously and ask the
officer if I can get the whole thing on record for the story
I’m doing. The cop will ask what story, and . . .
"Then I’ll
downplay it, like, ‘Oh, Jeez, I’m embarrassed,’" says
Anderson. And the song and dance will be on.
Don’t blame him
for planning for the inevitable. When you drive as much as Wes
Anderson does, somewhere in the John Madden range, you’re
bound to rack up moving violations. It’s best to have a
strategy. Hot chicks cry. He does his song and dance.
Today he’s on the
road from Los Angeles to New York, with a first stop scheduled
for Amarillo, Texas. Any way you measure, it’s quite a haul,
but it’s nothing compared to the larger journey of an artist
who has come into his own. On that road, Anderson is
somewhere between great expectations and deliverance. There’s
a lot of emotional investment in how he negotiates this stretch,
and not just his own. Many critics appear ready to anoint him as
a favorite son. Some are even saying that Rushmore, just
his second feature following the critically praised but largely
ignored Bottle Rocket, marks his rise to the top of
American filmmaking. Rushmore’s limited showing in
December for Academy Award consideration earned it a place on
dozens of 1998 Top 10 lists and serious Oscar hype. Premiere magazine
has gone so far as to hail the somewhat gawky, 29-year-old
upstart as the heir apparent to Allen, Brooks, Lubitsch, Sturges
and Keaton. There are, though, dissenting voices in the chorus
of praise, and among the naysayers one can sense an eagerness to
lash back at whatever revenge-of-the-nerds factor Anderson’s
work represents, like New Times calling the film
"self-important" or Time saying it
"delights in itself too much."
Even though this
crisp Friday in December is a portentous one — the day Rushmore
opens for a week in New York and Los Angeles — the driver is
doing his best to ignore the signs along the big journey.
Audience reaction? Critical response? Backlash from the early
festival fawning? Full houses? Those are the questions crashing
around in the world outside the speeding Ford Explorer. For now,
Anderson is relieved they are off on the horizons behind and
before him. For now, his song and dance is to keep his eyes on
the road and his hands upon the wheel. For now, the smaller
journey, the one that will take him to Amarillo for a short rest
before he drives on, is posing questions.
"Do you want a
sandwich from the cooler?"
The driver pats the
cooler lid with a casual grace that suggests he feels pretty at
home behind the wheel of a rented white Ford Explorer. He ought
to. He’s been driv ing one on Disney’s dollar since he went
home to Houston for Thanksgiving.
"In lieu of
In-N-Out Burger?" the passenger asks fearfully.
We are 120 miles
into the trip and nearing Barstow. The digital display says we
have 185 miles until empty, the voltage is good and the oil life
is 99 percent. All systems are go. We’re in rhythm, which
means we can stop looking ahead and start looking at each other.
When you’re driv ing 14 hours with someone you’ve just met,
you’re going to make some silent assessments. One is that the
two people onboard would probably have intimidated each other in
high school. The driver unduly pegged as an intellectual snob.
The passenger dismissed as a smug jock.
"No. Not in
lieu of In-N-Out Burger," the driver decides. "Let’s
stop at the next In-N-Out!"
It’s a little
early for that, but when you’re driving 14 hours with someone
you’ve just met, a roadside In-N-Out Burger, like a lot of
things you thought you’d given up, has a certain siren call.
It’s a bonding thing.
"Hell,"
says the passenger, "it’s 12 o’clock somewhere. We can
even drive through."
"We will drive
through, believe me."
A wicked grin slips
across the driver’s sharp face. With his round glasses and
’70s shlub clothes, he looks a bit like Mr. Rogers gone to
pot, in pursuit of grease instead of grace. Soon enough,
he’s ordering double-double with cheese, fries and Coke for
the passenger; single with cheese, fries and vanilla shake for
himself.
"Can you put it
in one of those to-go trays please?" he says to the girl in
the window.
We grab the stash
and point toward Needles on Interstate 40. The colors of the
Mojave — brown, blue and fading green — clash outside the
white bubble of the Ford Explorer. As we dip fries into the same
puddle of ketchup, it’s clear we’re in this together now. To
break the ice, the driver asks the passenger how he typically
passes the day. The passenger admits to being in the throes of a
debilitating Beverly Hills 90210 addiction (reruns four
times daily on FX). Painful admission that it is, it doesn’t
stop the passenger from lobbying the driver to do for Luke Perry
what he did for Bill Murray in Rushmore — the inspired
casting-against-type that earns the actor rave reviews and
shines him in a new light.
"How can you
miscast him? As a Mexican or something?" the driver asks.
"I suppose as a
bus conductor or an airplane pilot."
"He’d just
become that," the driver says with conviction. "He’s
such a chameleon."
Alas, ultimately
Perry just doesn’t have the kind of face that interests
Anderson. He likes a face like that of Jason Schwartzman, the
18-year-old acting novice he cast as Max Fischer, the lovesick,
mildly sociopathic playwriting prodigy and lead character in Rushmore.
The actor’s face becomes a billboard for teen angst and a
sight gag at the same time.
"But Luke
really needs this, for the indie credibility!" says the
passenger, appealing to the driver’s magnanimity.
Finally Anderson
relents. "Okay, I think we can do that. I think we can push
him through the system. Man, Amarillo is a long ways away. At
the moment, we’re still in California. We still have to go
through New Mexico and Arizona, two of the biggest states in the
U.S."
Centuries ago, a
wise man said even the longest journey begins with the
first small steps. The journey of the artist might be the
longest and scariest of all. On this path the biggest step is a
leap of faith: It is making the terrifying declaration, to
yourself at least, that you are chosen, that you possess the
tools to be an engineer of the human soul. Thanks to Mrs. Torda,
Anderson began groping his way along that path a long time ago.
You see, back in 1977, when Anderson’s parents were getting
divorced, his fourth-grade teacher, Mrs. Torda, was into
experimental teaching.
"She was doing
this thing where she was making everyone do these weird
meditation exercises, that thing where you drop a tissue and
catch it in the air, you know?" he says. "And while
everyone would be doing this meditation thing, she started
giving me massages. It was a little odd. It was not a thing I
enjoyed. She sized me up as being extremely anxious and a
problem."
Part of the problem
was that Anderson was embarrassed about the divorce. He saw it
as a failure — not his necessarily, but the family’s. It
drove him crazy. He denied it was happening and tried to keep it
from everybody. Not surprisingly, the 10-year-old began verbally
acting out, telling lies, running through the hallways, throwing
things.
"I kept getting
in trouble. I kept getting little demerits."
He also started
writing — plays, of all things. So Mrs. Torda launched a
program with Wes where every two or three weeks or so that he
didn’t get a demerit, she would let him put on another play.
There was The Christmas Escape, and also his early
mystery classic The Initial Bullet.
"The mystery is
solved because it’s a doctor who has shot this guy and they
found these X-rays of the guy with a bullet in his head, and if
that’s not incriminating enough, the bullet has the doctor’s
initials engraved on it that you can see in the X-ray."
The driver is
staring out at the road ahead, smiling wryly. He’s a keen
observer of youthful folly, especially his own.
"One of
them," he continues, "was set all in cars. That was a
big one, because that one, I remember, we did it for the class,
then they expanded it for the lower school, and then they did it
for the whole school. I was in fourth grade. Yeah, that was a
big hit, that play."
The passenger looks
into the rear-view, stealing a reflected gaze into the
driver’s eyes. The past is rolling by in sequence like the
broken lines on the highway.
"So, when Max
says to his rival, ‘I’ve written a hit play, what have you
done?’ you’re speaking from your heart."
"Yeah, speaking
from my heart, except I think Owen [Wilson, his best friend and
writing partner] might have written that line."
"Owen’s
speaking from your heart."
"Yeah."
There’s a long
pause, as if Anderson is trying to scrutinize something
ethereal.
"We did an
Alamo play, The Battle of the Alamo in three acts, and I
was Davy Crockett. And we did The Headless Horseman, in
which I played the Headless Horseman and Ichabod
Crane."
"You had a
grandiose sense of yourself at this time," the passenger
suggests.
"Yeah, major
ego, because I was" — he clears his throat — "I
had a lot of insecurity, and I guess that’s the way it
manifested itself."
"Do you
remember what kind of affirmations you got when you were putting
on your plays?"
"Yeah, the
affirmation of me signing autographs for people who didn’t
want my autograph. You know, I had a pad of paper and I was
giving people my autograph. I was kind of standing there finding
kids who I thought wanted my autograph and giving it to them. I
was sort of feeling like I was a boy wonder."
Anderson chuckles at
the thought, unaware of or uninterested in the irony.
"Well,"
says the passenger, "no one wants anything more in fourth
grade than for people to want his autograph."
"Yeah, that’s
right. I tried to create a market for that."
What do you get when
you pay $5 billion to reroute the Colorado River 336
miles north and over 1,200 feet uphill to a desert cauldron fit
only for rattlesnakes and scorpions, then decide the damned
(literally) water is unfit for drinking but perfectly fit to be
the new home of the London Bridge, which is transported and
rebuilt brick by brick at a cost of more than $11 million and is
now the centerpiece of a town that hosts the London Arms Pub and
the Sherwood Forest Nursery?
The citizens of
Arizona got Lake Havasu City.
The sign in front of
the Pilot gas station near Lake Havasu City doesn’t say
Welcome to the Biggest Mistake in the West, but it does say
Welcome. And our gas gauge says empty. So at 2 p.m. and 320
miles into the trip, we stop.
During the last
stretch of California, we passed a coyote on one side of the
road and an attractive female hitchhiker in red pants on the
other. The driver was concerned for both, especially the woman
in red pants.
"Those red
pants are going to get her picked up at some point," he
said plaintively. "I just hope it’s the right
person."
Inside the Pilot
station, the Chipmunks are singing "All I want for
Christmas is my two front teeth, my two front teeth."
Coyotes, singing Chipmunks, the desert, it’s all part of
Christmas in Southern California. No wonder Bret Easton Ellis
left with a bad taste in his mouth. But the driver seems
supremely untouched by it all, even the road ahead of him.
He’s got the air-conditioned solution. He’s got books by Don
DeLillo, Tom Wolfe, Robert Evans and Roald Dahl on tape. He’s
got the LBJ tapes. He’s got a towel in the travel bag. He’s
got the Pixies, Rolling Stones, Elliott Smith and his best
friend’s girlfriend (Sheryl Crow) on CD. He’s got a cooler
full of sandwiches and chocolate-chip cookies. For the time
being, he’s got the world at bay.
The characters
populating Anderson’s movies are the same, existing in a
heightened, insular world of their own making. In Bottle
Rocket, the three friends at the film’s core barely come
in contact with anything or anyone that could be mistaken for
life as most of us know it. When they do, the outcome isn’t
good.
"There’s
never a world, there’s never a real world that they’re
involved with," Anderson explains. "They’re doing
their own thing. It looks kind of like this." He waves
at a flat, brown field outside the window of the Ford Explorer.
In much the same
way, Rushmore focuses on the emotional lives of the kids
orbiting around Rushmore Academy, particularly Max’s
schoolmates. Adults, for the most part, aren’t allowed in the
game unless they play by Max’s rules. When they don’t,
there’s trouble.
"The thing I
always think about with these movies, I always think a lot about
Charlie Brown," he says. "You know how in Charlie
Brown, in Peanuts, they are in their own little world?
There’s only a group of kids. It has a mood all its own."
By focusing on this
alternate reality, Anderson turns his camera into a microscope
and his movies into lab studies. What’s under the glass, to a
large degree, is the sustainability of friendship and the things
people do when friendships are tested. Max in Rushmore
and Dignan (played by Owen Wilson) in Bottle Rocket are
the Charlie Browns of these little worlds, where things go awry
when a storm blows into the emotional harbor of friendship.
"Both these
movies are about friendships that get put through weird tests
and that are renewed, kind of, you know? That are broken up and
renewed, especially if you go through some big things
together," he says, "like me and my friends who all
did Bottle Rocket together. Our lives are so different
from what they were when we started being friends."
When Wes Anderson
and Owen Wilson started being friends, they were a couple of
kids lollygagging through the tail end of college at the
University of Texas. They met in a playwriting class and
eventually became roommates. A mutual love of movies and writing
proved to be a creatively combustible combination. In time, an
idea for a quirky 14-minute short became the first installment
of their eventual first script, Bottle Rocket. When the
film was made, Owen and his brother Luke’s offbeat,
charismatic performances landed them on the Hollywood hot list,
winning them high-profile movie gigs and Sheryl Crow and Drew
Barrymore, respectively. Things changed, all right.
Even though Wes,
Owen and Luke presently live together in a ramshackle Tudor in
an unfashionable part of L.A., Anderson seems to understand
it’s never going to be the same among the three amigos. The
ride from Texas to Hollywood is over, and now that theymade it,
they’re certain to go in different directions. They already
are. Each is looking for his own home. It’s hard not to wonder
if the themes in Bottle Rocket and Rushmore are
Anderson’s way of addressing the fear that the real world will
impinge on his friendships.
"Yeah," he
says, "I mean it happens. That’s the way it happens. But
I don’t feel like we’re, right now I feel like our . .
." He searches for the right words, hands staying tight at
10 and 2. "The friendship that gets the most strain is the
one between me and Owen. And I feel like that’s as strong a
friendship now as it’s ever been, and we still have several
movies we want to do together. And I just sort of feel like,
it’s not something that I feel worried about right now."
When Wes Anderson
idealizes himself, it is as an artist. He sees himself in
a loft in New York, perhaps, with space and light and crazy hair
and a breeze through the south-facing windows and the burnished
reflection of creativity, emotion and connection bouncing back
off the page through his round glasses and into his shy eyes.
Something, he says, like Nick Nolte’s character in "Life
Lessons," Martin Scorsese’s contribution to New York
Stories.
"That would be
something to aspire to," he says almost wonderingly.
Anderson’s next
steps along the larger journey were little forays into the life
he began envisioning for himself. In high school and into
college it was time to try on the identity of an artist for
size.
At St. John’s, the
prep school Anderson attended in his hometown of Houston, where
much of Rushmore was shot, he withdrew from the center
stage he had provided for himself with the plays and began
focusing more on writing.
"Short, like
J.D. Salinger short stories," he recalls. "At that
point, I sort of felt like I was going to be a writer. Just a
story writer. A novelist or something. But I was also doing
little movies at the same time. Then the movie stuff just
started to take over more and more."
During college,
Anderson made creative use of the University of Texas’
curriculum policies, engineering his course load so that almost
all his credits were earned in independent or conference
classes. The loose schedule gave him and Owen Wilson time to
mine Austin’s cultural resources.
"We never had
any money, so it was kind of limited. There was just a lot of
hanging around and reading and going to movies. I was always
doing some research. You know, they have this incredible
humanities research center called the Harry Ransom Center."
All he could bring
into the Ransom Center was a piece of notebook paper and a
pencil, but once he was inside, a world populated by artists,
writers and filmmakers was his to explore. Some of us spent the
better part of our college years pouring beers over our heads.
Anderson spent hours researching F. Scott Fitzgerald, François
Truffaut and others who would become his cultural heroes.
"I was
interested in those people, and just as interested in their
lives as I was in their work," Anderson says.
The driver drifts
off, and Amarillo is too far away for the passenger to pursue
him. Conversations need rest stops, too. Inside the rented Ford
Explorer, it’s basically inert. The miles roll by unheralded
except by the digital miles-to-empty reading on the truck’s
display panel. Finally, the shrill ring of the car phone
interrupts the sound of wheels turning. It’s Anderson’s
brother Eric in D.C., petitioning Wes to come home for Christmas
or New Year’s or something like that. When the phone is handed
to the passenger, Eric picks up where the conversation about
college left off, telling of going through old stuff at their
father’s house and stumbling upon a box of about 20 post cards
Wes sent Eric from college. He says the post cards were bursting
with enthusiasm for films and books and the lives Wes was
discovering.
"They were the
most vibrant things," Eric says. "They just got me
excited about anything to do with movies and writing. That was
my artistic education."
It wasn’t long
before Anderson’s exploratory steps became more determined. He
began using the local cable-access station’s equipment to make
and air what he calls "little, short, stupid little
movies." This enabled him to develop basic skills and to
hone his eye for the endearing idiosyncrasies of the people in
his world. Starting with his landlord.
"That was the
main thing," Anderson says, "this landlord
documentary."
It all began when he
and Wilson, who were roommates by now, started to battle their
landlord over his refusal to fix their window cranks. To
illustrate the gravity of the issue, Anderson and Wilson staged
a break-in of their own apartment. They took some stuff out,
messed the place up a little and called the police, blaming it
on the broken window cranks. When the police and the landlord
arrived, the landlord said it looked like an inside job. The
police
didn’t take it too seriously, either. Things then escalated to
where the guys stopped paying rent and the landlord tried taking
some of their stuff as collateral.
"We ended up
moving in the middle of the night, and he hunted us down with a
private investigator," Anderson recalls fondly. "I
went to meet him, and I proposed doing this project."
Amazingly, the
landlord agreed to fund the documentary, which would run on the
access channel, ostensibly to promote Carl Hindler Properties.
"He believed
in, like, death penalties for drunk driving, burglary, and he
had this pet snake that died and that he had given
mouth-to-mouth resuscitation, which didn’t work. I said,
‘Well, what was the snake’s name?’ And he said, ‘Ah, we
didn’t really give it a name, we just called it baby, or
snake.’ And I said, ‘Uh, well, what did you do with the
snake after it died?’ And he said, ‘I have it in the freezer
in the back. I’d like to take it to a taxidermist.’"
Anderson continues
with his head slightly nodding and a smile escaping. It’s as
animated as he’s been since In-N-Out. "I asked him,
‘Have you ever used a lawsuit as a method of doing business,
as a way of pressuring people to get what you want?’ And he
said, ‘All the time. We use it all the time. And we’re
always winning, always winning major settlements.’ He had this
sailboat in his driveway. He liked to just go out and sit on the
boat, but he never got the boat in the water. The boat was not
seaworthy."
Welcome to Wes
Anderson’s movie milieu, where friends apply nasal breathing
strips or dress in yellow jump suits to do armed robberies, as
in Bottle Rocket. Or where a sophomore preppie who looks
like a discombobulated teen version of Superman-era Christopher
Reeve tries to build an aquarium on school grounds to express
his love for an older woman, as in Rushmore. Or where, as
with the landlord, peculiar individuality is exploited for humor
but never derision.
"I didn’t do
the documentary in a way that was meant to look bad,"
Anderson explains soberly. "I just thought he was a funny
character and I would just try to make it a truthful
portrait."
Given all that
has happened, the passenger is curious about what the hell
the driver thought was going to happen when he and his
friends started cooking up those 14-minute installments of their
pet project, Bottle Rocket.
"You know, we
were hoping we were going to become huge and all that
stuff," he says matter-of-factly. "I mean, our
ultimate hope was that people are going to see the movie and
everybody’s going to love it. That kind of thing."
"So, you
literally had this naive idea, ‘Hey, let’s make a movie with
our friends and we’ll just throw everybody in it and we’ll
tell our story and the world will love it’?"
"Yeah, more or
less."
Remember when you
were like that? When you and your buddies had your own language,
your own style, your own way of looking at things — your own
world in the larger universe? And you thought to yourself: If we
could just capture this, this magic, how cool would that be?
That’s what Wes
Anderson and Owen Wilson thought during that senior year at the
University of Texas, when they were hanging out and doing the
landlord documentary and the Super-8 films about themselves and
their friends. They finally made the declaration: We want to
make movies, and this thing, this thing that is us,
that’s gonna be our bottled lightning.
So Wes and Owen went
to work on Bottle Rocket with a manic determination. It
would start with a staged break-in, an inside job. They wrote a
330-page script. They moved to Dallas, where Owen’s older
brother Andrew worked at an advertising agency and could supply
16mm film, cameras and a crew. They cast themselves and friends.
And they made the first 14-minute installment. It wasn’t
about them, per se, but it did represent how they saw themselves
at the time. And it worked.
At least to the
degree that in 1994 screenwriter/indie kingpin L.M. Kit Carson
passed the short on to producer Polly Platt, who passed it on to
writer-director James L. Brooks, who badgered Columbia Pictures
into coughing up $5 million for the feature-length version. It
would have the same cast —- Owen and Luke Wilson in the lead
parts, Robert Musgrave as the third wheel, Kumar Pallana as the
incompetent safecracker — and the same director, Wes Anderson.
"And you felt
totally assured in your ability to do this?" the passenger
asks.
"Yeah, because
there’s never any time to have too much self-doubt
anyway," Anderson says with the distant tone of someone who
is stifling a post-traumatic-stress flashback. "And also, I
was of the opinion that we were going to make this thing that
everyone was going to love. But at that point, I was operating
under total naiveté."
"Why’d you
think it was so special?"
"I don’t
know. Just because it was our thing. I mean, I had
nothing else. Our whole lives were dedicated to this, it was a
thing that meant something to us. It was based on our own ideas,
and we thought they were different from other people’s ideas,
and it was just what we were stuck on."
When Anderson speaks
of Bottle Rocket, it’s as if he’s talking about a
first love. There’s tenderness for what it was, for how it
opened up new worlds, but there’s also disappointment for
everything it didn’t turn out to be.
"I was just so
personally excited about what it was going to be that I thought,
‘Wait until they see this.’ That’s why I was so
blind-sided."
What blind-sided him
was the audience reaction at test screenings in Santa Monica
prior to the film’s release in early 1996.
"When we had
our first test screening and it was a disaster, I was just in
shock, because I always felt like people were going to . .
." Anderson hesitates, his voice hinting at the distress he
felt. "I had it in my mind that people were going to like
it. I didn’t realize it was a strange movie that only certain
people were going to like and a lot of people would hate. And
that was the situation.
"We just
thought we’d blown the whole deal, kind of," he
continues. "I kind of always felt like if the movie’s a
disaster, well then, okay, it’ll be harder to make the next
movie. It’ll be very hard. There are a million ways to do it,
you know? But it was sort of an awful time.
"I mean, Owen
wanted us to go into advertising at one point, and he says he
investigated joining the military, which I
didn’t know."
Anderson turns and
looks directly at the passenger. It’s his grandest physical
gesture in at least 300 miles.
"You
know," he says, "I could be a trucker."
For a long time now
the vistas have been numbingly spare and redundant.
Interstate 40, the more efficient if less resplendent
replacement for old Route 66, goes on in a monochrome
Southwestern blur. We’re not sure where we are on the map, but
it feels as if we must be halfway to Amarillo. To combat
something like the doldrums, driver and passenger down large
colas and a gigantic bag of peanut M&M’s. Then we agree to
take advantage of the driver’s access to ambush the
notoriously inaccessible Bill Murray with an unsolicited call.
Beneath road-weary giddiness at the prospect of interrupting him
at home is the notion that this might not be a good idea, that
if Murray is not up for it, the wind could go right out of our
sails. Then what’ll we do? But the sugar and caffeine prevail,
and the driver dials the secret number.
After Anderson
briefs him on the situation, Murray seems eager to talk. It’s
clear he likes the idea of a couple of guys driving into the
night with a fairly absurd destination in mind. Amarillo? Why
Amarillo? Because that’s where Anderson made his first stop
the last time he drove to New York, and it worked. Weirdly
enough, as Murray warms up to the car phone, the passenger gets
the idea the actor wouldn’t mind riding shotgun on this trip.
"Is what you
see with Wes what you get?" the passenger asks, looking
over at the driver, who has resumed looking straight ahead.
"No, no. I
don’t think what you see is what you get with Wes. You get
much more," answers Murray. In the background is the
excited pitch of the family pool tournament we’ve taken Murray
away from. "He looks like R. Crumb’s old drawings of
himself. He looks like he’s going to be outraged, like he
finally sees what’s really wrong with you, and then the horror
backs off and the beauty comes through."
Murray goes on to
say that what made the Rushmore shoot work for him,
besides the quality of the material, was Anderson’s ability to
stress the positive. "Wes could find the good content in
whatever you were working with. That made it easy. It freed you
up to work."
His wife’s sharp
cue having hastened an early departure from the action, Murray
peppers the conversation with droll commentary on the
tournament’s progress. It isn’t hard to place him there as
Blume, off to the side in a tux, cigarette dangling from his
lips, a spectator in a tournament of his own making, tossing
peanuts to the family retriever in a small act of resignation
and rebellion.
It is suggested to
Murray that his characterization of Blume has an elegant,
spiritually wasted quality that suits the actor.
"I was feeling
the elegance of my own spiritual wastedness. I was feeling how
all the touchstones of wealth and privilege are slippery,"
he says. "Those emotions are not far from anyone’s home
if you’ve lived a little. Some days I came home and I felt a
little sore. I felt like I’d been cooked a little."
What about Anderson?
Has Murray seen something in him that might not be apparent to
the casual observer, or even the 14-hour one?
"He’s very
good at what he does, but don’t be afraid to ask him if he
needs a Band-Aid or some change, things you generally ask of
people who look like they’re in worse shape than him,"
Murray says in a way that makes you unsure how serious he is.
"A Band-Aid, yeah, I think a Band-Aid. There’s some cuts
there."
"The first
night we were on the shoot, he gave me three pairs of
socks," recalls Anderson, after Murray hangs up. "Two
are still in my bag."
Darkness wraps
around the rented Ford Explorer like a blanket as we
drive into the plains of eastern New Mexico. We made it from the
kiln-baked landscape of the low desert to the higher elevations
of pine trees and snow on the ground and moonlight reflecting
off mountain silhouettes. And back down again. The driver was
right, Arizona and New Mexico are big, but at last Amarillo
seems within reach. It’s not that far from Tucumcari, and
Tucumcari is not that far from here. The driver is ready for the
home stretch. Ever since he stopped flying two years ago, he’s
used to putting these miles on a day.
"Wes won’t
characterize it as a fear of flying, but more as a love of the
open road," explains Owen Wilson, calling from Los Angeles.
"Once my mom asked why he won’t fly, and Wes replied,
‘Nobody knows.’ That’s become the standard answer."
It’s the third or
fourth time in a matter of minutes that Wilson has called. He
and Anderson are in- ä
volved in a minor squabble regarding some advice Anderson is
giving Wilson that Wilson probably agrees with but doesn’t
necessarily want to hear.
"That was the
smooth-things-out conversation," Anderson says of
Wilson’s latest and most conciliatory call, "which then
becomes the general criticisms, the ‘Okay, I agree, but
here’s your big problem.’"
Anderson is
chuckling. "We’re like an old married couple. Never go to
bed angry."
Outside the
Explorer, the Rushmore hoopla is steamrolling. In fact,
the car phone has been ringing off the hook all afternoon and
into the evening with reports from the openings in Los Angeles
and New York. The larger journey seems to be catching up with
us.
"We had two
guys who were either on hallucinogens or laughing gas,"
buzzes Randy Poster, the film’s music supervisor, from New
York.
Übermanager
Geyer Kosinski had a stool pigeon at the L.A. opener who phoned
in a report. Kosinski phoned Owen with a report of that report,
and then Owen called Wes with a report of the report of the
report. The report? Only front-row seats for latecomers.
Spontaneous applause when the credits rolled. And this from a
typically blasé L.A. matinee crowd.
Word on the reviews
is overwhelmingly positive, too. The New York Daily News
says it’s "the best and most beautiful movie of
1998." The New Yorker can’t keep the smile
off its face. In The New York Times, Janet Maslin
says . . . well, who the hell ever knows what Janet Maslin is
saying, but it seems really good.
The passenger wants
to know how this makes the driver feel. "You’re the next
big thing. Does that rattle you?"
"Do you think
that’s right? I don’t know if that’s right."
"Film critics
are building altars to you in their offices."
"Yeah, but did
you read Kenneth Turan’s? Turan’s wasn’t that great."
"How do you
know? I want to talk to someone who knows this."
"Barry Mendel [Rushmore’s
producer]. He can read it to you. Okay, I mean Turan’s review
is not the greatest review ever. It’s not terrible, but he
says, like, he says something like . . . he didn’t like
Max."
"He didn’t
like Max?"
"He didn’t
like the character. Not the performance, but the
character."
"All right, but
you’re being hailed. You’re being praised. You’re being
compared to Buster Keaton. Are you skeptical?"
"No, I’m not
skeptical. I mean, I like it. It doesn’t feel that great, but
it feels good."
"Why doesn’t
it feel that great?"
"Well, I
don’t know."
"Are you like
Max in that you think, ‘Hey, I should be making what’s being
called the best American movie of the year’?"
"No, I
wouldn’t say that. I’m actually in good spirits. But the
reviews, bad reviews, I think, make you feel horrible. And,
like, Turan’s review does not make me feel very good."
"It doesn’t
sound that bad."
"It’s not
that bad, but it just has a tendency to, like, draw everything
into that. You sort of look for the worst and sink to that
level."
"Well, I could
be sitting in the car with the Woody Allen of the next
generation. How do you think I’m supposed to feel?"
"Well, you
gotta know that it’s hundreds of miles to go tonight, so I
don’t care who you’re sitting in the car with, you’re not
going to feel that good."
"Yeah, I
don’t know how I’m supposed to feel, either."
"I actually
feel pretty good. I wish we had some more daylight, but aside
from that, I think we’re doing pretty well."
"That’s what
I mean, you’re keeping your eye on the project at hand, but
I’m trying to talk about, not your place on this road to
Amarillo, but your place on this road of life."
"Right. The
road to, uh, the road to Mulholland. The road to Fifth Avenue.
Well, in terms of that, I can’t say that I feel ecstatically
happy about it. The thing is, we really don’t have any sense
of what level of attention the movie is going to have when it
really comes out, you know?"
Anderson should be
forgiven if he’s a little wary of the warm embrace being
extended to him and Rushmore. He heard it from the movie
people before with Bottle Rocket, although not on this
scale. Then, when Bottle Rocket, which refers to
low-impact fireworks, lived up to its name at the box office,
the experience left him thinking there were "lots of people
hating that movie that we don’t know about."
Rushmore,
however, is different in important ways. Even though it clearly
shares the same tender heart and skewed sensibility, the film is
the product of an examined life — mostly Anderson’s —
whereas Bottle Rocket was a snapshot of a particular
moment. It’s a short distance between Max Fischer, the hurting
adolescent who is trying to find the right balance of insecurity
and bravado, and Wes Anderson as a boy.
"It definitely
couldn’t be more personal. Bottle Rocket was about our
behavior at the time. This is about our lives and backgrounds
and all that family stuff," Anderson admits. "When I
talk about the story, I talk about it as something we did
together, but there’s a tremendous amount of personal
connection with me."
Indeed, when
Anderson speaks of the paradoxes of Max Fischer’s tenure at
Rushmore Academy, it sounds as if he’s talking about himself
in Hollywood.
"Max wants to
lead everybody, but he wants to do it in a way that uses this
whole establishment, kind of," he says, obviously getting a
charge out of divining his and Max’s character. "But he
has his own ideas about things. He’s just not a conformist,
but he hasn’t, like, reconciled himself with the image he
wants to have, you know?"
Of course. For men
and for artists, that’s something that happens a ways down the
road, on the larger journey. And that’s if you’re lucky.
Meanwhile, even as his much-hoped-for film opens on both coasts,
the driver is moving further into the anonymous middle of
America, where for a few days, anyway, he won’t have to
reconcile anything. The passenger suggests it’s kind of
symbolic.
"Now that you
mention it," says the driver, "it sounds a little
psychological. Like something’s happening and I don’t even
know what I’m doing."
Filmography
The Fantastic Mr. Fox (2009) The Darjeeling Limited (2007) The Squid and the Whale (2005) (as producer) The Life Aquatic With Steve Zissou (2004) The Royal Tenenbaums (2001)
Rushmore (1998)
Bottle Rocket (1996)
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