On June
17, 1972, Washington, D.C. police arrested five burglars breaking into the
Democratic National Committee headquarters at the Watergate Office Building. It
was later revealed that then-President Richard Nixon approved plans to cover up
the break-in. Washington Post
reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein were instrumental in bringing much of
this scandal to light with their chief anonymous source famously nicknamed “Deep
Throat” after the mainstream pornographic movie that was popular at the time.
This
scandal has been documented and dramatized numerous times, most famously in
Alan J. Pakula’s film, All the
President’s Men (1976), arguably the definitive take on this incident. In
1999, along came director Andrew Fleming and his screenwriting partner Sheryl
Longin with Dick, a comical movie
that pokes fun at the Nixon administration and the Watergate scandal as it
imagines “Deep Throat” being two naïve 15-year old girls. This was several
years before the real identity of this informant was revealed so much of the
movie’s humor comes from these unlikely teenagers helping take down Nixon.
Dick opens with a framing device of French Stewart
as a Larry King-type talk show host interviewing an aging Woodward (Will
Ferrell) and Bernstein (Bruce McCullough). Naturally, he asks them to reveal
the identity of “Deep Throat,” which of course they refuse while bickering like
an old married couple. The movie proceeds to riff on the famous opening credit
sequence of All the President’s Men,
poking fun at it with two teenage girls doing the typing and making a mistake
that is corrected with White Out.
Arlene
Lorenzo (Michelle Williams) and Betsy Jobs (Kirsten Dunst) are hanging out at
the Watergate Hotel where the former lives with her mother (Teri Garr) writing
a fan letter some pop rock star of the day late one night. While mailing said
letter they accidentally stumble into the Watergate break-in. The next day,
they encounter G. Gordon Liddy (a wonderfully twitchy Harry Shearer) during a
tour of the White House with their class and spot a piece of “toilet paper”
stuck to his shoe. It turns out to be the CREEP list featuring financial
pay-offs to the Watergate burglars. Naturally, the two girls are clueless as to
what the list means.
While
H.R. Haldeman (Dave Foley) is interrogating Arlene and Betsy (“When you think
of your President do you think friendly thoughts?”), President Richard Nixon’s
dog Checkers notices them and seeks attention from the two girls. To keep them
quiet, Nixon (Dan Hedaya) appoints them official White House dog walkers,
thinking that they are just a couple of dumb girls, but it allows them access
to the inner workings of the White House where they witness cover-up tactics
such as the shredding of important documents.
The
characters of Arlene and Betsy carry on in the proud comedic tradition of
movies such as Bill and Ted’s Excellent
Adventure (1989), Romy and Michelle’s
High School Reunion (1997) and Dude,
Where’s My Car? (2000), of two, not-so-smart or naïve best friends bumbling
their way through a series of misadventures. Michelle Williams and Kirsten
Dunst are well-cast as two teenagers that aren’t exactly dumb per se, but
rather inexperienced. Arlene is the smarter of the two and it is she who
decides to ask Nixon to put an end to the Vietnam War when Betsy’s perpetually
stoned brother (Devon Gummersall) gets drafted. The next day, Nixon announces
an end to the war! Dunst’s Betsy isn’t as smart but plays her part in helping
shape history. Williams and Dunst are believable as best friends that spend
most of their time together in their own little world. The movie tracks their maturation
from naïve teenagers to politically astute young women that help bring down a
presidency.
Veteran
character actor Dan Hedaya is a hoot with his wonderful caricature of Nixon as
a gruff bumbler who thinks that he’s manipulating these two girls when it is the
other way around. Hedaya is surrounded by impressive supporting cast of
comedians from Kids in the Hall and Saturday Night Live, including Jim
Breuer as White House counsel John Dean, Dave Foley as Haldeman, Ana Gasteyer
as Nixon’s secretary, and Harry Shearer as Liddy. Much as Steven Soderbergh
would do later with The Informant!
(2005), these comedians were not instructed to ham it up but instead play it
straight, which makes their performances funnier.
About an
hour in, scene stealers Will Ferrell and Bruce McCullough show up as the famous
Washington Post investigative
journalists, playing them as antagonistic partners with the Bernstein being the
vain one, occasionally checking his hair, and the Woodward as the more serious
one refusing to share any of his work. These comedy ringers’ exaggerated take
is in humorous contrast to the solemn view in All the President’s Men.
Much of
the humor in Dick derives from a
treasure trove of Easter eggs for history buffs as the infamous
18-and-a-half-minute gap in one of Nixon’s audio recordings is explained because
of Arlene and Betsy recording a message for the President with the former
professing her love for him at length. We also see Arlene and Betsy
inadvertently help alter history as they not only contribute to ending the war
but also aid in brokering peace between Russia and the United States. “I think
your cookies have just saved the world from nuclear catastrophe,” Nixon tells
them about the latter. Dean betrays Nixon and testifies against him after
Arlene and Betsy shame him for his involvement in the cover-up.
Director
Andrew Fleming and his co-screenwriter Sheryl Longin first started writing the
screenplay for Dick in 1993 where
they started with two teenage girls getting into all kinds of misadventures but
none them worked. Longin remembered an experience she had at the age of seven.
She was with her family on vacation at the same hotel as President Nixon in Key
Biscayne. She and two older friends threw ice cubes at Secret Service agents
from a seventh-floor window and was convinced that she would get in trouble.
Nixon subsequently canceled a planned speech by the hotel pool. She and Fleming
took that incident and came up with the idea of the girls being “Deep Throat.”
Initially
this was just a joke that they found amusing, “and we kept absorbing that, and
it just never went away. We just kept finding it amusing. I told people about
it. They said, ‘That’s hilarious. No one will ever make that movie.’,” Fleming
said years later. After the success of The
Craft (1996), he decided to use the buzz from that movie to make Dick, shopping it around Hollywood.
People thought it was funny but didn’t want to make it. Fortunately, Mike
Medavoy, head of Phoenix Pictures, who had worked with Fleming on Threesome (1994), agreed to make it with
Columbia Pictures.
They
initially sent the script to former Washington
Post executive editor Ben Bradlee asking if he’d play himself but he
declined. They also sent a copy to former John Dean who sent it back with a
note that read, “Good luck.” For the two leads, Fleming was impressed with
Kirsten Dunst in Interview with a Vampire
(1994) and cast her alongside Michelle Williams, hot off the popular television
show Dawson’s Creek.
Fleming
and Longin were worried early on that the movie was too irreverent but after
reading transcripts of Nixon’s infamous audio tapes they felt that “he was
irreverent. He violated us, lied to us. Did things that were illegal and
seriously, permanently damaged this country.” Longin said, “Our generation then
felt very cynical about politics. We became cynical and apathetic, and we
really feel it was because the earliest thing we knew about politics is that
they were lying and abusing power.”
Dick was well-reviewed by critics at the time. Roger
Ebert gave the movie three-and-a-half out of four stars and wrote, "Comedy
like this depends on timing, invention and a cheerful cynicism about human
nature. It's wiser and more wicked than the gross-out insult humor of many of
the summer's other comedies." In his review for The New York Times, Stephen Holden wrote, "In exaggerating
Nixon's mannerisms, Mr. Hedaya has created the year's funniest film caricature.
With his hunched shoulders, darting paranoid gaze and crocodile grimace, Mr.
Hedaya's Nixon is the quivering, skulking embodiment of a single word:
guilty." The Washington Post's
Rita Kempley wrote, "Dunst and Williams, with their giggly comic
chemistry, loopy charm and resourcefulness, can be universally
appreciated." In his review for the Los
Angeles Times, Kevin Thomas said of the filmmakers, "the core audience
they’re most likely hoping to connect with are Betsy and Arlene’s
contemporaries, who today would be hitting 40. Actually, ‘Dick’ is so sharp and funny it should appeal to all ages." Entertainment Weekly's Lisa Schwarzbaum
wrote, "Like Election and Rushmore, it’s a ‘teen’ comedy that
isn’t a teen comedy at all, but cops groovy teen spirit in the service of
something much more adult."
Dick uses The
World of Henry Orient (1964) as its primary template with two young girls bonding
over their mutual obsession with an older man that includes posters and scrap
books dedicated to him. Once they get to see behind the curtain, as it were,
they become disillusioned and mature both emotionally and politically, and
participate in his downfall. The movie eventually mutates into a paranoid
conspiracy thriller a la All the
President’s Men as the girls not only witness the last days of the Nixon
administration but help take it down while being followed and surveilled.
Dick is a fun movie but it is easy to see why it
tanked at the box office, not even making back its modest $13 million budget.
While it certainly can be enjoyed as a goofy comedy about the hijinks of two
girls, as it was marketed, you really need to be well versed in the Watergate
scandal and All the President’s Men
to fully enjoy the humor and inside jokes. This is what killed it commercially
as teenagers either didn’t know about it or didn’t care, which is a shame as Dick is an immensely enjoyable movie
that deserves a second lease on life.
SOURCES:
Gajewsk,
Ryan. “Dick Director on Challenges of
Making a Watergate Comedy and Whether It Could Be Done Today.” The Hollywood
Reporter. June 17, 2022.
Waxman,
Sharon. “Generation X’s Tricky Dick.” Washington Post. August 1, 1999.
"...the main purpose of criticism...is not to make its readers agree, nice as that is, but to make them, by whatever orthodox or unorthodox method, think." - John Simon
"The great enemy of clear language is insincerity." - George Orwell
Thursday, June 30, 2022
Saturday, May 28, 2022
Gotham
Made
during her bombshell period, Virginia Madsen is perfectly cast as an elusive
femme fatale in Gotham (1988), a
made-for-television movie for the Showtime Channel and that was part of a run
of sexy roles in the late 1980s that also included Slam Dance (1987), and into 1990s with The Hot Spot (1990) and forgettable erotic thrillers such as Caroline at Midnight (1994) and Blue Tiger (1994). Fortunately, this one
stars Tommy Lee Jones and whose angle is a neo-noir fused with a ghost story.
“You ever find yourself walking down a dark street, you think you hear footsteps coming up slowly, somebody just out of sight?” This question kickstarts the story as Charles Rand (Colin Bruce) asks down-on-his-luck private investigator Eddie Mallard (Jones) to find his wife Rachel (Madsen) and tell her to leave him alone. The only problem: she’s been dead for over ten years. Rand offers Mallard a lot of money to take the case, which he accepts even though, as he confesses to his friend Tim (Kevin Jarre) later on, he fears that he’s feeding into this man’s delusions.
Eddie humors his client and his odd ramblings about his wife (“She lusts for daylight. She wants power in the daylight.”). The man is truly haunted by her death and apparent resurrection and this intrigues Eddie – that and the hefty paycheck. One day, Charles spots Rachel across the street and asks Eddie to go over and talk to her. With her long white gloves, vintage hat tilted at just the right angle and retro black dress, Rachel looks like she stepped right out of a 1940s film noir. Of course, she denies knowing Charles and humors Eddie by going out for a drink with him where she explains that she is a woman of expensive tastes.
Rachel shows up at Eddie’s office and apologizes for coming on so strong the other day and takes him out for a bite to eat as a way of apologizing. She comes across as a slightly sad, lonely wealthy lady. He’s intrigued by her stunning looks and enigmatic past. Their paths cross again as she wanders out of the smoke on a deserted city street one night. The deeper he goes into the case the more he realizes it’s not as simple as it seems and like most noirs he finds himself drawn into an increasingly complex web with Rachel at its center. Is she really the deceased wife or is this merely the delusions of a crazy man?
Tommy Lee Jones is well cast as a world-weary gumshoe who thinks he knows all the angles until he takes on this case and becomes entangled in Rachel’s web. Like Rachel, Eddie undergoes his own transformation and Jones does an excellent job of conveying a man who has seen it all to one obsessed with a woman that tears his life apart.
Saturday, April 23, 2022
Licorice Pizza
Filmmaker
Paul Thomas Anderson was born, raised and continues to live in the San Fernando
Valley in California. It has and continues to provide a source of inspiration
for some of his most personal films, including Boogie Nights (1997), Magnolia
(1999), Punch-Drunk Love (2002), and Licorice Pizza (2021). He even shot
parts of his adaptation of the Thomas Pynchon novel Inherent Vice (2014) in the Valley. Why does PTA return to this
place repeatedly? Beyond the convenience of shooting close to home, he is fascinated
by the towns and the people that inhabit them as evident most significantly
with Licorice Pizza, a nostalgic look
back at the area, focusing on the burgeoning romance between two young people
in 1973.
This is a
largely plotless film that follows the misadventures of Gary Valentine (Cooper
Hoffman), a 15-year-old high school student, and Alana Kane (Alana Haim), a
25-year-old woman. He’s an aspiring actor with several projects already on his
resume and she works for a photographer. They meet at his school during class photo
day and immediately starts hitting on her. Initially, she’s repulsed by him but
gradually he wears down her resistance through sheer force of will and she
finds herself intrigued by his tenacity.
Gary is
bursting with youthful confidence, ready to take on the world and launch his
next entrepreneurial scheme, whether it’s selling waterbeds or opening a
pinball emporium. Alana already seems resigned to her lot in life when she
tells him, “I’m going to be here taking photos of kids for their yearbooks when
I’m 30. You’re never going to remember me.” This is such a sad admission for
someone so young.
At the end of their initial encounter and after repeatedly insulting Gary, rebuffing his advances, Alana walks away, giving a little smile and a shake of her head that is handled beautifully by Alana Haim. It’s a wonderful, little moment in a film full of them as we see how Garry has gotten to her and she’s smitten. The film examines the push-pull of their courtship. He’s a hopeless romantic and she’s a jaded cynic. She knows that this can’t go anywhere because of their age difference, but is intrigued enough by his impressible attitude that she wants to see how it all plays out.
Soon,
Alana finds herself caught up in Gary’s infectious optimism and the rest of Licorice Pizza follows these two and
their wild misadventures as they navigate the will they or won’t they fall in
love journey we’ve seen before albeit through PTA’s unique filter. Much has
been made about the age gap between the two lead characters and PTA seems
acutely aware of this, deftly handling their romance in a way that is sweet
while eschewing anything overtly sexual.
After the
initial meet-cute between Gary and Alana, the film stumbles and loses its way
for a moment with a baffling scene where we see Gary’s mother (Mary Elizabeth
Ellis) handle public relations for a local Japanese restaurant owned by an
American (John Michael Higgins) and his Asian wife (Yumi Mizui). He speaks normally
to Gary’s mom but to his wife in a cartoonish Asian accent that comes off as
offensive. This scene is jarring in tone and content compared to the rest of
the film. What is the point of it other than showing us what Gary’s mom does
for a living? What are we supposed to take away from this scene? People were
racist back in the ‘70s? It serves no real purpose and temporarily breaks the
enchanting spell of the film. The same could be said about a weird, random
moment later when Gary is suddenly and literally yanked from a scene by the
police who mistakenly arrest him for murder. No reason is given and it is never
addressed again.
Like he did with Punch-Drunk Love, PTA casts unconventional actors for his leads. Cooper Hoffman and Alana Haim aren’t your typical handsome Hollywood actors – hell, they aren’t even actors at all, but rather normal-looking people that could’ve come out of the 1970s. For two people whose first time it is acting in a film Hoffman and Haim have wonderful chemistry together and are believable in their respective roles as they aren’t saddled with actorly affectations that can happen to professionally-trained actors at that age.
Gary
talks a good game but doesn’t really know what he wants to do as evident with
all the endeavors he starts but doesn’t stick with – acting, waterbed salesman,
pinball emporium manager – but that’s okay, that’s what you’re supposed to do.
You are supposed to try all kinds of things and have all kinds of experiences.
That’s called growing up. Alana is self-aware and acknowledges how weird it is
that she’s hanging out with Gary and his 15-year-old friends. She may not have
it all figured but she’s trying and this journey she takes is one of the most
fascinating aspects of Licorice Pizza.
PTA
deftly chronicles the ups and downs of their relationship, from getting to know
each other only to back off when faced with obstacles such as jealousy and rivals
for their respective affections. They are both young and still figuring out how
to communicate with each other and sometimes mixed messages are conveyed such
as Alana overcompensating for her attraction to the younger Gary by getting
briefly involved with a much older man, Jack Holden (Sean Penn channeling
William Holden), an actor in the twilight of his career. This segues into a
memorable vignette involving a veteran filmmaker (played by Tom Waits no less)
who coaxes Jack into performing a wild stunt. He may be much older than Gary
but he’s just as immature as Sean Penn illustrates masterfully with a
deliciously eccentric performance.
At the end of their initial encounter and after repeatedly insulting Gary, rebuffing his advances, Alana walks away, giving a little smile and a shake of her head that is handled beautifully by Alana Haim. It’s a wonderful, little moment in a film full of them as we see how Garry has gotten to her and she’s smitten. The film examines the push-pull of their courtship. He’s a hopeless romantic and she’s a jaded cynic. She knows that this can’t go anywhere because of their age difference, but is intrigued enough by his impressible attitude that she wants to see how it all plays out.
Like he did with Punch-Drunk Love, PTA casts unconventional actors for his leads. Cooper Hoffman and Alana Haim aren’t your typical handsome Hollywood actors – hell, they aren’t even actors at all, but rather normal-looking people that could’ve come out of the 1970s. For two people whose first time it is acting in a film Hoffman and Haim have wonderful chemistry together and are believable in their respective roles as they aren’t saddled with actorly affectations that can happen to professionally-trained actors at that age.
Another memorable sequence comes when Garry and his friends deliver a waterbed to the house of famous hairdresser turned movie producer Jon Peters (a hilariously arrogant Bradley Cooper) who proceeds to go on about his very famous girlfriend Barbra Streisand and threatens them if they mess up assembling his waterbed. Bradley Cooper’s take on Peters is equal parts comical and frightening – a Hollywood mogul high on his own supply and with a raging ego to match it.
Saturday, March 19, 2022
Tequila Sunrise
Robert
Towne needed a box office hit. By 1987, the legendary Hollywood screenwriter,
who rose to fame in the 1970s with the likes of The Last Detail (1973) and Chinatown
(1974), was in director’s jail after his debut, Personal Best (1982), flopped at the box office and he went through
a messy legal battle against studio executive David Geffen. He was trying to
get his second directorial effort, Tequila
Sunrise (1988), off the ground and knew he’d need bankable movie stars in
the lead roles. He managed to secure Mel Gibson, Michelle Pfeiffer and Kurt
Russell who were all coming off successful high-profile hits with Lethal Weapon (1987), The Witches of Eastwick (1987) and Overboard (1987), respectively. They
jumped at the opportunity to work with someone such as Towne, drawn to his
well-written screenplay. The end result is a gorgeously shot neo-noir with a
love triangle that tests the friendship between two long-time friends on
opposite sides of the law.
Dale
“Mac” McKussic (Gibson) is a high-end drug dealer that is supposedly retired
even though Nick Frescia (Russell), head of narcotics for Los Angeles County,
runs into him at a drug deal. They are friends from way back and so Nick lets
him go before the bust goes down, however, Mac knew it was coming and got rid
of the drugs. One gets the feeling from the casual way they interact with each
other that they’ve crossed paths many times before this incident. Mac escapes
and just makes his late reservation at his favorite posh restaurant run by Jo
Ann Vallenari (Pfeiffer), who catches the eye of both him and Nick. The rest of
the film plays out a twisty cat and mouse game as Nick is torn between busting
his friend and trying to save him while Mac is torn between doing one last drug
deal and his love for Jo Ann – the person that puts their friendship to the
test. As the film progresses, various characters’ true motivations come into
focus and we see if Mac is smart enough to stay one step ahead of the Columbian
drug cartel he works for, the DEA and hold on to Jo Ann.
All three lead actors exude sex appeal like crazy and part of the thrill of watching Tequila Sunrise is how these three movie stars interact with one another, breathing life into Towne’s wonderful prose. Michelle Pfeiffer’s Jo Ann is no damsel in distress. She’s a strong woman who easily holds up to questioning early on from federal agents who grossly underestimate her fortitude as evident in a beautifully acted and written scene where Jo Ann expertly turns the tables on the Feds to Nick’s bemusement. She’s suave and knows how to deal with her classy clientele but isn’t snobby either. With her beautiful smile, Pfeiffer makes Jo Ann very charismatic and sexy. It is easy to see why Mac and Nick find her so alluring. In turn, she is drawn to Nick’s charisma and Mac’s vulnerability.
With his slick, Pat Riley hairdo and shark grin, Kurt Russell’s Nick is a super confident lawman that is great at his job as he is very perceptive and savvy, which comes from years of experience and knowing what goes on in his own backyard. The actor gives his character just the right amount of cockiness so that he doesn’t come across as arrogant. This plays well off J.T. Walsh’s humorless federal agent intent on busting Mac regardless of Nick’s friendship with him. Russell has a wonderful scene with Pfeiffer where Nick comes clean and explains why he got romantically involved with Jo Ann and the cocky façade comes down to reveal a brutally honest person not afraid to be vulnerable in front of her. He didn’t just get close to her to get close to Mac. He genuinely loves her and is willing to put all his cards on the table. Russell shows an impressive range in this scene but, like Jo Ann, you’re still not quite sure if he is 100% genuine and not playing an angle.
The great Raul Julia shows up partway through as the DEA’s Mexican counterpart but with a secret agenda of his own. The actor looks like he’s have all kinds of fun with his role, breaking out into song on two separate occasions for no reason at all, taking over the scene for a few seconds. He really gets to sink his teeth into the role once his character’s true identity is revealed.
Character actor extraordinaire, J.T. Walsh is excellent as a slimy DEA agent that immediately butts heads with Nick who is much smarter and has no problem rubbing the man’s nose in it. Walsh is a master of simmering rage, glowering constantly as his character is constantly outsmarted and proven wrong.
Robert Towne based the Tequila Sunrise screenplay on the courtship of his wife. In the mid-1980s, he frequented chef Piero Selvaggio’s Valentino restaurant in Santa Monica. He would arrive late and talk with Selvaggio’s wife Luisa. She would end up leaving her husband for Towne. At one point, he moved to Paris to help Roman Polanski on the script for Frantic (1988) and met producer Thom Mount. He told him about his script for Tequila Sunrise and after reading it took it to Warner Bros. The studio agreed to do it if Mount could attract a movie star. Mount and Towne approached Harrison Ford while he was making Frantic with Polanski and he agreed to do it but as they got closer to principal photography he pulled out as he didn’t think he could play Mac.
To save money on the $38 million budget, Sylbert found a large, old empty warehouse, instead of a soundstage, in Santa Monica to house the production offices and build sets. For the look of the film, Sylbert chose the colors of the Tequila Sunrise drink and the Los Angeles sunset – gold, orange and red. According to Mount, “Richard understood that the drink was the color key from the very beginning.” Sylbert based Jo Ann’s restaurant on Valentino’s and Matteo’s, an Italian restaurant in West L.A. It was built in the warehouse over eight weeks. He also helped design the menu and chose the cuisine. Towne even brought in Giuseppe Pasqualato, a former chef at Valentino’s to cook on set, which also had a functioning bar.
Tequila Sunrise was the box office success Towne needed but he didn’t direct another film for ten years – Without Limits (1998). He kept busy, though, thanks to a lucrative partnership with Tom Cruise, contributing several screenplays for the movie star in the 1990s, including Days of Thunder (1990), The Firm (1993), and Mission: Impossible (1996). Tequila Sunrise is a fascinating battle of wills. We have three highly intelligent people trying to figure out each other’s motives. It becomes complicated when mixed with emotions as a love triangle develops and clouds judgement. As one character says late in the film, “Friendship is all we have! We chose each other!” This is a film about friendship and loyalty. This is what motivates the three lead characters. Nick tries to save Mac from getting killed or busted as the drug dealer is his friend. Mac finds a way out of the drug dealing business as he loves Jo Ann. She loves Mac and doesn’t want him to get hurt. For a neo-noir it is lacking that fatalistic streak that runs through many of them. Towne is a little too enamored with the romantic aspects of his script to convey a convincing doomed protagonist that is a hallmark of the genre. Gibson’s Mac is a little too slick, a little too sure himself for anything really bad to happen to him and that is perhaps the film’s only glaring flaw in an otherwise wonderful, sun-drenched cinematic cocktail.
Mount, Thom. Audio Commentary. Tequila Sunrise DVD. 1988.
Friday, February 18, 2022
Desperado
In 1992, independent filmmaker Robert Rodriguez made his feature film debut with El Mariachi, a $7,000 action movie that showed a stylistic flare beyond its meager budget. It made the rounds at several film festivals with a lot of media attention on the self-assured young man and the incredible story of how he made a movie for so little money. Naturally, Hollywood came calling and initially Rodriguez resisted, making Roadracers (1994) for the Showtime cable television channel after his deal with Sony Columbia Pictures was put on the back burner due to scandal. He eventually made Desperado (1995), a sequel to Mariachi that not only saw him working with a significantly larger budget of $7 million, but with movie star Antonio Banderas.
Martin met with Avellan and told her that Rodriguez would not be editing the film himself as he had done on El Mariachi and told her, “Honey, just like when you go to a beauty parlor and somebody does your nails because they specialize in that and somebody does your color because they specialize in that, it’s the same in the movie business.” Insulted, Avellan said nothing in order to keep the peace between Rodriguez and the studio but inside she was fuming. Post-production began in November 1994 in Los Angeles with the studio finally allowing Rodriguez to edit his own film but only if he did it there where they could keep an eye on him. Rodriguez said:
Leydon, Joe. “Cranking up the Volume.” Los Angeles Times. November 27, 1994.
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