Sunday, 11 February 2024

I Shall Support You -- But I DON”T Think You Can WIN.


"If You Want to Run again, (obviously),
We Shall Support You; 
But We DON'T Think that
You can Win --"



ITN Exclusive: Margaret Thatcher's Dramatic First Interview After Being ...

In June 1991, Former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher sat down with ITN's veteran political correspondent Michael Brunson for an exclusive interview about her final days in Downing Street. It was the first time Thatcher had given her version of events since her resignation as Prime Minister and leader of the Conservative Party in November 1990. 
In a 25-minute interview, an emotional Mrs Thatcher reflected in detail on the days leading up to her resignation. The former Prime Minister wept as she remembered accepting the loss of her cabinet's support and having the House of Commons after deciding to step down – an event Mrs Thatcher described as "traumatic". 

#MargaretThatcher #Thatcher #UKPolitics 

To search the ITN Archive collection on Getty Images, follow the link below:






hello
[Music]
[Applause]
I hope you have some
thank you very much thank you very much
thank you
Mr Satchel this is the first time you've
spoken to British television since your
resignation so I wonder because we
haven't heard as it were your version of
events and your side of the story you
you've said in the past that you thought
that what happened that what led to your
departure was really because people took
fright at the opinion polls isn't it
really the case that what had happened
was that your cabinet had in a sense
begun to Desert you because they were
worried about the way you were handling
things like Europe and like the poltex
and wasn't that the real reason why
things turned out the way they did
no I don't think it was
and I would say so if I thought it was
there had been some controversy about
the community charge
but everyone agreed it was based upon
the right principles the right
principles but we just got it up too
high and that would have been corrected
by putting in more tax for bigger
proportion of taxpayers money no I think
it genuinely was what I said that
certainly there's some on the back
benches who are getting very alarmed at
the opinion polls but I think we'd
perhaps had fewer people who this time
had had experience of what happened
before and they they demonstrated that
in that they didn't give one a clear run
on the first ballot that was one thing I
thought it would come all right but when
I returned
I thought I simply must speak the
members of my cabinet one or two other
senior ministers and I'm not going to
say who said what but they weren't a
hundred percent
um and they were very concerned
although they said most of them not all
that they would certainly support me
there was just a feeling that I thought
well if we get through we'll probably
gets through
but the things will go on being divided
with this kind of
um little bit of uncertainty
I had just better decide because it
should have come clear on the first
ballot can you just I think that
decision was right may I say so I think
that decision was right although the
letters I had
um
we had over 160
000.
in the end
were marvelous they didn't understand
and they contested
what happened because they said we voted
for you in a general election
and we haven't been asked
nevertheless that was not the position
one was faced with
I was faced with a position where I only
got 204 votes and it really should have
been more they said I should have been
at home during that period I was
in Paris
signing the treaty we had worked for
eign
and certainly those were there will
quite forget now what we saw on that
occasion was almost you come bursting
out of that Embassy door to the waiting
microphones and you very quickly said
that you were going to stand for the
second ballot but I wonder if you could
tell us actually how it was because
moments before that you were waiting
upstairs weren't you for a phone call
we were and I couldn't go after the
evening's engagement until we'd had it
and I was told the results immediately I
said but this means a second ballot so
we had not in fact got enough but then
it seemed to not seem to me at that
stage it would be difficult uh to get uh
three or four more people to vote with
us on the second ballot and um although
it was not very easy to go to a second
ballot it didn't seem to be very
difficult
uh something happened while I was away
that night there were various meetings
all over the place I think in London I
couldn't obviously be here and when I
got back the next morning it still
seemed to me that I would have a good
chance but during the day uh I got on
with
starting to get the confidence motion
ready and then thought I simply must see
the cabinets and some other people and
it was just very strange have you seen a
situation slip away from you I'm a
politician I know I can feel it I can
sense it and when um some people whom I
expected to be absolutely a staunch
had very different views said look I
will support you but I don't think that
um that it is a foregone conclusion then
all right no General can fight without a
really good army behind and I Linda guy
indicated it was the view that I took
I'm still sure it was the right one
under those circumstances
when did you really first sense that the
support had drained away to the extent
that you had to reach that decision was
it in in the morning when you came back
no it was in the evening after I had
come back because you had a big meeting
of colleagues over lunch didn't you at
number 10. yes so that was perfectly all
right Perfect all right and staunch what
some suggestions at that that all might
not be well I don't think people told
you then about the division of numbers
in the cabinet but I think there was
more than a hint there wasn't there that
things might not be quite going your way
to say the very least well I came back
and I I saw quite a lot
and I learned a good deal from that and
then the advice that I had was that
things were moving and changing in the
house and no I I was not going to cling
I either carried on with full Authority
I knew I had the authority of the people
but I wasn't going to carry on without
the authority of my party I did not have
enough I had
um I had a majority
I had a majority on the first ballot I
had a majority but I did not have a
sufficient majority and it would not
have
have been enough to go on the divisions
would have gone on that would have
absorbed them that is not good at that
stage of a parliament for anyone I still
believe that the decision was right and
so after that I'm confessed I went there
it's about half past eight and I simply
said look I have got to get back to
number 10 to finish making up that
speech you realize I have got emotional
Center tomorrow and I'm going in and I'm
going to have a battle
but of course uh just earlier today so I
got back and I think it was about ten
past one when um I had just finished the
speech and I said that I would make up
my mind finally the following morning
I'd sleep on it and Dennis and I
discussed it and
um you know the result
I'm still convinced it was the right
decision what went wrong was that we did
not get a big enough majority on the
first ballot and there's nothing I could
do to cure that that was the thing I
couldn't get over they said to me as I
went through but you haven't been to ask
us to vote for you other people have and
I thought Goodness Me
do I after 11 and a half years have to
go and ask personally for a vote
I remember previous leadership elections
but there you are they thought that I
did and I thought that um that was not
necessarily the right way to do it
because in the afternoon confidence or
they hadn't so it fell away very rapidly
uh early evening and because of the
first ballot not being sufficient I took
the decision in the end when you had to
come to that decision after you'd seen
the members of the cabinet individually
and one or two one understands that said
Point Blank that they would resign if
you carried on that only underlines what
you've been saying with such force that
you couldn't go on but I don't think
anyone said to him and no one said to me
no one said to me they would resign if I
carried on
no one that's interesting because it is
reported that at least one one said to
me
they would resign
if I can I didn't see them all
I didn't see them all I think I saw
about 11 or 12 and one or two other
people
but no one said to me
not one
but the crucial thing is that you then
went back to number 10 you had a
conversation with certain Etc Dennis DT
as he's always known he has always been
an absolutely staunch defender of you of
course as any husband would be but he's
been very valuable to you well he's he's
he's he's absolutely marvelous
and I think he was a bit cut up too that
we didn't get more but if he did we
didn't get enough then um he he
thought it was better to resign so he
was supportive in your decision there he
didn't try to talk you out of it no
he realized the political situation too
you must have full authority of your own
party to do to do the decisive things
which I have always done
too many people were fearful of the
opinion polls and um
so that was the way it went and then the
following morning of course you had I
suppose what must have been brought up
early
um and things hadn't changed so I
decided to take the course of action
which I did
then I went into the house well could I
just first of all ask you to recall what
must have been a very difficult meeting
of the cabinet yes of course it was
of course it was you don't take a
decision like that
without it being difficult
without heartbreak
heartbreak there may have beamed it was
the right decision
but you had to get through it
bernardingham in his Memoirs has said
that it was a traumatic experience those
are his words yes it was and it would
have been very strange if it hadn't been
but we got through it in fact you broke
down we got to the house you broke down
during that cabinet didn't you yes but I
carried on
and then the house
by that time I was back fighting fit
as you saw
just before that though the image that
people will perhaps remember you said
the cabinet was extremely difficult then
you had to come out into Downing Street
and you had to face the cameras in
effect you had to face the world
[Music]
you had to come and make what was
perhaps the statement of your life
and then I see that you know we notice
now that it's affecting you now and it
must have been yeah you must take to my
voice now it's not affecting my voice
you're thinking back to traumatic things
um but I managed to get through them
I managed to get through the television
I managed to get to the cabinet again
because there was something else to do
I had to um uh get on to people and I
must say this but Douglas heard and John
Major said if you wish to go on we will
propose you and second you again
and and that was marvelous that was
marvelous and then one had to get to a
cabinet and one or two people wanted to
leave because they too of course wanted
to to make provision for their own uh
for their own candidature quite right
quite right but by that time I had other
things to do and so I got on with them
the almost Final Act if you like of the
drama and it was a drama of your
resignation that speech you gave to the
house
now you've said how difficult it was
going through all the run-up talking to
the cabinet and all of that the
emotional strain that had obviously and
we've seen put you through what about
the business of going to the house and
making that resignation speech
ing it always isn't a full house always
whether it's at question time or an
ordinary down extraordinary day because
the house was packed
and early on in the speech I got a
little frog in my throat which you
sometimes do and I knew I had to talk
through it until I got some here here so
that I could have a glass of water and
then all of a sudden you start to get
interruptions and so you go from a
prepared script and it's spontaneous you
answer the questions that come
and
that just takes you out of yourself
completely you're so concerned with the
debate and the the quick thinking on
your feet of the right reply and then we
got on to the more interesting parts of
the speech let me say if ever you're
speaking the economy is the most
difficult thing to speak about it tends
to be in a sort of jargon
and however much you try to get rid of
the jargon you can't uh you always can
speak about the state of Industry
because that's human and living but the
actual public expenditure monetary
policy public sector Bond requirement is
it is difficult and you have to you get
that fairly fairly near the beginning so
you get to it and then you get on to
things which live like industry and
commerce uh and also some of your your
foreign policy and social services and
so on
uh and it did just take off I knew it
was taking off I knew when we got into
debate it would be all right but it just
did
do you remember the moment yeah do you
remember the moment when Dennis Skinner
intervened yes yes he is a marvelous
parliamentarian and no one has been
better at interjections than Dennis
Skinner
uh and he made a joke that you're going
to be governor of the Central Bank in
Europe and he said lots of money lots of
money you know he would say that and
your reply
what a good idea
it just did a thought I'm enjoying it
was fun beginning to enjoy I'm getting
to enjoy it yes were you yes because we
got on to him uh yes it's it it's it's
something which takes you out of
yourself the way to get out of yourself
is to have such strong things to do
immediately
that requires all your concentration all
your thought all your effort it's it's
and then you've forgotten what what is
bothering you because you've got
something to do immediately and for most
of my my political life that has been so
whatever the things that that really
that really were deeply deeply
concerning to me personally one had to
get on with something else and and
that's how you just get through
let me ask you if I may though about
thatcherism
it's uh
a word that's much banded about and
sometimes you've said well
really what it means because there was
the principles of it were invented long
before Mrs Thatcher yes they were but to
other people
to some other people thatcherism means
something negative it means I think that
they see it as a time of of personal
greed of time when people were just out
for themselves and that's the sort of
image that they have of ceterism
but absolute nonsense
don't most people want to work hard to
do better by their own families to have
a better house better holidays better
furniture
isn't that a worthwhile thing wouldn't
life be very much better if more people
took responsibility for their families
and for building their own future and
building their own security
and when they do that and have a little
bit over to help people less fortunate
than themselves isn't that a good thing
and aren't we trying to get the third
world out of the poverty it's in by
building up its Industries and having
some investment to go and help them with
John Wesley answered the question you've
just put
do not impute to money The Faults of
human nature
it's not the money it's not the wealth
you create it's what you do with it and
most people do want a better standard of
living
many many people use their money to to
do more for the Arts to see more to
enjoy more of the great artistic Works
whether it be music whether it be art
look at the Fantastic voluntary effort
in this country
it's enormous
no those look great isn't it absurd
trade unions mostly argue for higher
wages they argue for bigger
differentials but they then coming and
saying greed so some people are greedy
but people who want a better standard of
living a better way of life without
children or not they are highly moral
they're highly valued citizens and
they're usually those people who look
after their houses and their families
look after their neighborhoods join in
doing things their neighborhood
community spirit
this is the real satirism
isn't that always the danger that people
might be seeing you still as trying to
second-guess the prime minister
well I hope they won't
I hope they won't I did all my own first
guessing
for 15 years of what was right to do and
it wasn't guessing
so going back to the right principles of
passionate belief and uh you asked me
recently what things I remember I recall
one thing very well in 1980 One Finance
Minister of another part of the world
where'd you really rather believed in
what I was doing but hadn't seen it put
into practice before and saying to me
it look you're having difficulty we're
watching you very carefully we're
watching Britain very carefully that's
good they always please me when they're
watching Britain
because if you can roll back the
frontiers of socialism and in Britain
roll forward the frontiers of freedom
other people will follow you
what's an extraordinary thing to say
I knew I must keep going my goodness me
I took a pounding but we did
we did change Trade union law we did say
to a company look if you're if you're
going broke this is because you haven't
got it right and we're not going to pull
taxpayers money and to save you when in
fact if there's any taxpayers money
ought to be going to Bringing to bursts
and new Industries and for the first
time they had to take the consequences
of their own action what else is
democracy and responsibility all about
we did and we got people enthusiastic
about Enterprise do you know we've had
more young people starting up on their
own than ever before it is a new spirit
that's the essence to get the economy
right you have to understand human
nature there is a new spirit and we did
get it right and I'm not going to say it
go
just a final point on the whole business
of the way your Premiership ended I
think you've said that that no prime
minister really ought to have to leave
in those circumstances of course the
counter argument is it's almost like
that old phrase about be you never so
high the law is above you it's almost a
sense isn't it in which you say be you
never so high as prime minister but you
may be out of Downing Street by tonight
and prime ministers ought to know that
oh if you're out for what I call
constitutional reasons
of course
we were out for the reasons of the rules
made by the conservative party for
leaders in opposition
and that's very different
that's very different
uh the rules are still there
are there not rules which apply to the
labor party or to any other party
this was the first time it had happened
and uh it happened it happened I took
the right decision I am now free
to live another life a very practical
use both to the people of this country
and internationally I have a passion for
Britain
for the spirit of the people
for their character
it's done wonders for the world in the
past
it can still do wonders for the world of
the future
and what is your foundation going to do
it is going to embody all of those
things which I've explained and believed
in how to roll forward the frontiers of
Freedom how to bring it about
educating people about what it is all
about giving practical help to the
people in Eastern Europe who are trying
to do it they will want to know how to
learn we can give them scholarships they
can come over here we can get people to
go over there to advise them we can hold
conferences where they all get together
and learn from one another and
perpetuate the ideals I've also been
very active in uh the environment and
there's a good deal of work to do there
on a scientific basis that is partly
education was partly practical it's
enlarging the frontage of Freedom it's
bringing more and more of the world to
democracy on the basis of what we in
Britain have done it's taking our
leadership to others they're coming I
have telephone calls how can we do it
one can't give anything likes the amount
of money which governments can give the
one knows people who
you give them a helping hand you put
them in the way of Grants or
scholarships you teach them how to do it
most of the changes in the world
are brought about by a few people who
believe things and don't give up the
saccharovs the soldier knit sins knew
what was needed the Next Generation
we have to teach how and the young
people have never been made servile or
Passive by the communist system
the older people have when I spoke to
the young people in Moscow and then
they're such a right to a man and woman
isn't it marvelous but they already
raring to go and we must help them with
the how of it the spirit of Enterprise
the spirit
the character that is Britain
was such a marvelous people
we've done so much for Europe
we've done so much we've taken to the
far-flung corners of the world
a legal system our common law one of the
best in the world sound uncorrupt
Administration
of the spirit of enterprise
America practice at the other side the
best you learn from us this we must have
a foundation to make certain we have a
center so which it can continue that is
what I will do the best of Britain to
the best of the world
Margaret Thatcher thank you very much
indeed for talking to us
my pleasure thank you

The Great Curator




7 entries found.

curate (n.)
late 14c., "spiritual guide, ecclesiastic responsible for the spiritual welfare of those in his charge; parish priest," from Medieval Latin curatus "one responsible for the care (of souls)," from Latin curatus, past participle of curare "to take care of" (see cure (v.)). 

Church of England sense of "paid deputy priest of a parish" first recorded 1550s.

curate (v.)
"be in charge of, manage" a museum, gallery, art exhibit, etc., by 1979 (implied in curated), a back-formation from curator or curation. 

Related: Curating. An earlier verb, curatize (1801) meant "be a (church) curate."


curator (n.)
"a guardian; one who has care or superintendence of something," late 14c., curatour "a parish priest," from Latin curator "overseer, manager, guardian," agent noun from curatus, past participle of curare (see cure (v.)). 

From early 15c. in reference to those put in charge of minors, lunatics, etc.; meaning "officer in charge of a museum, library, etc." is from 1660s

Related: Curatorship.

curation (n.)
late 14c., curacioun, "curing of disease, restoration to health," from Old French curacion "treatment of illness," from Latin curationem (nominative curatio), "a taking care, attention, management," especially "medical attention," noun of action from past-participle stem of curare "to cure" (see cure (v.)). 

From 1769 as "management, guardianship."

curacy (n.)
"the office of a curate," mid-15c.; see curate + -cy.

cure (n.2)
"parish priest in France or a French country," from French curé (13c.), from Medieval Latin curatus "one responsible for the care (of souls)," from Latin curatus, past participle of curare "to take care of" (see cure (v.) ). Also compare curate (n.).

parson (n.)
late 13c., person (late 12c. as a surname), "parish priest" (later often applied to a clergyman in general), from Anglo-French and Old French persone "curate, parson, holder of Church office" (12c.), from Medieval Latin persona "parson" (see person). The reason for the ecclesiastical use is obscure; it might refer to the "person" legally holding church property, or it may be an abbreviation of persona ecclesiae "person of the church." The shift to a spelling with -a- begins late 13c. in surnames. 

Related: Parsonic.  

Parson's nose "the rump of a fowl" is attested by 1834.

Frank X. Cross




When I work late, You work late







There are Three Ways
to Learn Psychology --

Read Greek Myths,
Read Carl Jung, or 
WATCH — 
Watching is Best.



The Ghost :
And You spent the next 15 Years,
sittin’ on yer ass, 
watching  Television.

Frank X. Cross : 
Check The Records, chump — 
I did some stuff  :

I was a baseball player — 
One Year, 
I hit The Home Run that 
won The Big Game.

The Ghost
-- That was The Kid on 
The Courtship of Eddie’s Father.

[ Frank winces in pain. ]







Joss Whedon interviewed by Mark Kermode and Simon Mayo


"We were talking about Work Ethic --
Because Everyone in comparison 
to your output, Joss, and your Work Ethic, 
would appear to be slack and lazy --
Because, y'know, people work very hard, in Life, and they get their pay --

But you seem to be working, like, 
a hundred times harder than anybody else --

J.W. :
"Well, part of that is Smoke and Mirrors, I think, 
but part of it is that do Love The Work,
and also, DO Have A Problem,
A Serious Mental Problem :

It's Workaholism, and it's not fun, 

I Don't Do Anything Else --

Other People Have Lives,
and, They're Nice to Their Friends,
and They do all sorts of things that I forget to do in The Morning

(and that also includes Basic Hygiene, but let's not talk about that....) "

I mean, none of my schoolteachers could've told you, that this was going to happen 
(except perhaps my Film Professor) --

It wasn't until I began studying and making Film, and Television, that I discovered that 

That was Why I am Here,
and that was really 
The Only Reason --

So, The Story is -- correct me if I am wrong --
That you had finished the filming for Avengers, 
and you were supposed to have some time off --
like, Time-Off, go away with Your Wife, that kind of thing --
Time Off --

But instead of doing that, in the 2 weeks you actually had, between film and editing, Post-Production and whatever, you actually
made another movie --

Which is 'Much Ado About Nothing'.

Is that actually True...?

Yes -- 
It was, in fact, 
My Wife's idea....
 




Friday, 9 February 2024

Failure of communication is a theme which runs through a number of my films.

  

Venkman
transfixed, fumbling for his walkie-talkie• 
…..Hello, RAY  — come in, RAY

Dr. Ray Stantz, The Heart 
of The Ghostbusters :
Venkman…!! — Venkman..!! 
I SAW it, I SAW it, I SAW it…!!!!!

Venkman : 
….it’s right HERE — It’s 
LOOKING at Me…

Dr. Ray Stantz, The Heart 
of The Ghostbusters :
He’s an ugly lil’Spud, isn’t he?

Venkman (loses patience) : 
....I Think He can Hear You, Ray --



    Kubrick on The Shining


    An interview with Michel Ciment


    Michel Ciment: In several of your previous films you seem to have had a prior interest in the facts and problems which surround the story -- the nuclear threat, space travel, the relationship between violence and the state -- which led you to Dr. Strangelove, 2001: A Space Odyssey, A Clockwork Orange. In the case of The Shining, were you attracted first by the subject of ESP, or just by Stephen King's novel?


    Stanley Kubrick: I've always been interested in ESP and the paranormal. In addition to the scientific experiments which have been conducted suggesting that we are just short of conclusive proof of its existence, I'm sure we've all had the experience of opening a book at the exact page we're looking for, or thinking of a friend a moment before they ring on the telephone. But The Shining didn't originate from any particular desire to do a film about this. The manuscript of the novel was sent to me by John Calley, of Warner Bros. I thought it was one of the most ingenious and exciting stories of the genre I had read. It seemed to strike an extraordinary balance between the psychological and the supernatural in such a way as to lead you to think that the supernatural would eventually be explained by the psychological: "Jack must be imagining these things because he's crazy". This allowed you to suspend your doubt of the supernatural until you were so thoroughly into the story that you could accept it almost without noticing.


    Do you think this was an important factor in the success of the novel?


    Yes, I do. It's what I found so particularly clever about the way the novel was written. As the supernatural events occurred you searched for an explanation, and the most likely one seemed to be that the strange things that were happening would finally be explained as the products of Jack's imagination. It's not until Grady, the ghost of the former caretaker who axed to death his family, slides open the bolt of the larder door, allowing Jack to escape, that you are left with no other explanation but the supernatural. The novel is by no means a serious literary work, but the plot is for the most part extremely well worked out, and for a film that is often all that really matters.


    Don't you think that today it is in this sort of popular literature that you find strong archetypes, symbolic images which have vanished somehow from the more highbrow literary works?


    Yes, I do, and I think that it's part of their often phenomenal success. There is no doubt that a good story has always mattered, and the great novelists have generally built their work around strong plots. But I've never been able to decide whether the plot is just a way of keeping people's attention while you do everything else, or whether the plot is really more important than anything else, perhaps communicating with us on an unconscious level which affects us in the way that myths once did. I think, in some ways, the conventions of realistic fiction and drama may impose serious limitations on a story. For one thing, if you play by the rules and respect the preparation and pace required to establish realism, it takes a lot longer to make a point than it does, say, in fantasy. At the same time, it is possible that this very work that contributes to a story's realism may weaken its grip on the unconscious. Realism is probably the best way to dramatize argument and ideas. Fantasy may deal best with themes which lie primarily in the unconscious. I think the unconscious appeal of a ghost story, for instance, lies in its promise of immortality. If you can be frightened by a ghost story, then you must accept the possibility that supernatural beings exist. If they do, then there is more than just oblivion waiting beyond the grave.


    This kind of implication is present in much of the fantastic literature.


    I believe fantasy stories at their best serve the same function for us that fairy tales and mythology formerly did. The current popularity of fantasy, particularly in films, suggests that popular culture, at least, isn't getting what it wants from realism. The nineteenth century was the golden age of realistic fiction. The twentieth century may be the golden age of fantasy.


    After Barry Lyndon did you begin work straight away on The Shining?


    When I finished Barry Lyndon I spent most of my time reading. Months went by and I hadn't found anything very exciting. It's intimidating, especially at a time like this, to think of how many books you should read and never will. Because of this, I try to avoid any systematic approach to reading, pursuing instead a random method, one which depends as much on luck and accident as on design. I find this is also the only way to deal with the newspapers and magazines which proliferate in great piles around the house -- some of the most interesting articles turn up on the reverse side of pages I've torn out for something else.


    Did you do research on ESP?


    There really wasn't any research that was necessary to do. The story didn't require any and, since I have always been interested in the topic, I think I was as well informed as I needed to be. I hope that ESP and related psychic phenomena will eventually find general scientific proof of their existence. There are certainly a fair number of scientists who are sufficiently impressed with the evidence to spend their time working in the field. If conclusive proof is ever found it won't be quite as exciting as, say, the discovery of alien intelligence in the universe, but it will definitely be a mind expander. In addition to the great variety of unexplainable psychic experiences we can all probably recount, I think I can see behaviour in animals which strongly suggests something like ESP. I have a long-haired cat, named Polly, who regularly gets knots in her coat which I have to comb or scissor out. She hates this, and on dozens of occasions while I have been stroking her and thinking that the knots have got bad enough to do something about them, she has suddenly dived under the bed before I have made the slightest move to get a comb or scissors. I have obviously considered the possibility that she can tell when I plan to use the comb because of some special way I feel the knots when I have decided to comb them, but I'm quite sure that isn't how she does it. She almost always has knots, and I stroke her innumerable times every day, but it's only when I have actually decided to do something about them that she ever runs away and hides. Ever since I have become aware of this possibility, I am particularly careful not to feel the knots any differently whether or not I think they need combing. But most of the time she still seems to know the difference.


    Who is Diane Johnson who wrote the screenplay with you?


    Diane is an American novelist who has published a number of extremely good novels which have received serious and important attention. I was interested in several of her books and in talking to her about them I was surprised to learn that she was giving a course at the University of California at Berkeley on the Gothic novel. When The Shining came up she seemed to be the ideal collaborator, which, indeed, she proved to be. I had already been working on the treatment of the book, prior to her starting, but I hadn't actually begun the screenplay. With "The Shining," the problem was to extract the essential plot and to re-invent the sections of the story that were weak. The characters needed to be developed a bit differently than they were in the novel. It is in the pruning down phase that the undoing of great novels usually occurs because so much of what is good about them has to do with the fineness of the writing, the insight of the author and often the density of the story. But The Shining was a different matter. Its virtues lay almost entirely in the plot, and it didn't prove to be very much of a problem to adapt it into the screenplay form. Diane and I talked a lot about the book and then we made an outline of the scenes we thought should be included in the film. This list of scenes was shuffled and reshuffled until we thought it was right, and then we began to write. We did several drafts of the screenplay, which was subsequently revised at different stages before and during shooting.


    It is strange that you emphasize the supernatural aspect since one could say that in the film you give a lot of weight to an apparently rational explanation of Jack's behaviour: altitude, claustrophobia, solitude, lack of booze.


    Stephen Crane wrote a story called "The Blue Hotel." In it you quickly learn that the central character is a paranoid. He gets involved in a poker game, decides someone is cheating him, makes an accusation, starts a fight and gets killed. You think the point of the story is that his death was inevitable because a paranoid poker player would ultimately get involved in a fatal gunfight. But, in the end, you find out that the man he accused was actually cheating him. I think The Shining uses a similar kind of psychological misdirection to forestall the realization that the supernatural events are actually happening.


    Why did you change the end and dispense with the destruction of the hotel?


    To be honest, the end of the book seemed a bit hackneyed to me and not very interesting. I wanted an ending which the audience could not anticipate. In the film, they think Hallorann is going to save Wendy and Danny. When he is killed they fear the worst. Surely, they fear, there is no way now for Wendy and Danny to escape. The maze ending may have suggested itself from the animal topiary scenes in the novel. I don't actually remember how the idea first came about.


    Why did the room number switch from 217 in the novel to 237 in the film?


    The exterior of the hotel was filmed at the Timberline Lodge, near Mount Hood, in Oregon. It had a room 217 but no room 237, so the hotel management asked me to change the room number because they were afraid their guests might not want to stay in room 217 after seeing the film. There is, however, a genuinely frightening thing about this hotel which nestles high up on the slopes of Mount Hood. Mount Hood, as it happens, is a dormant volcano, but it has quite recently experienced pre-eruption seismic rumbles similar to the ones that a few months earlier preceded the gigantic eruption of Mount St. Helens, less than sixty miles away. If Mount Hood should ever erupt like Mount St. Helens, then the Timberline Hotel may indeed share the fiery fate of the novel's Overlook Hotel.


    How did you conceive the hotel with your art director, Roy Walker?


    The first step was for Roy to go around America photographing hotels which might be suitable for the story. Then we spent weeks going through his photographs making selections for the different rooms. Using the details in the photographs, our draughtsmen did proper working drawings. From these, small models of all the sets were built. We wanted the hotel to look authentic rather than like a traditionally spooky movie hotel. The hotel's labyrinthine layout and huge rooms, I believed, would alone provide an eerie enough atmosphere. This realistic approach was also followed in the lighting, and in every aspect of the decor it seemed to me that the perfect guide for this approach could be found in Kafka's writing style. His stories are fantastic and allegorical, but his writing is simple and straightforward, almost journalistic. On the other hand, all the films that have been made of his work seem to have ignored this completely, making everything look as weird and dreamlike as possible. The final details for the different rooms of the hotel came from a number of different hotels. The red men's room, for example, where Jack meets Grady, the ghost of the former caretaker, was inspired by a Frank Lloyd Wright men's room in an hotel in Arizona. The models of the different sets were lit, photographed, tinkered with and revised. This process continued, altering and adding elements to each room, until we were all happy with what we had.


    There are similar movie cliches about apparitions.


    From the more convincing accounts I have read of people who have reported seeing ghosts, they were invariably described as being as solid and as real as someone actually standing in the room. The movie convention of the see-through ghost, shrouded in white, seems to exist only in the province of art.


    You have not included the scene from the novel which took place in the elevator, but have only used it for the recurring shot of blood coming out of the doors.


    The length of a movie imposes considerable restrictions on how much story you can put into it, especially if the story is told in a conventional way.


    Which conventions are you referring to?


    The convention of telling the story primarily through a series of dialogue scenes. Most films are really little more than stage plays with more atmosphere and action. I think that the scope and flexibility of movie stories would be greatly enhanced by borrowing something from the structure of silent movies where points that didn't require dialog could be presented by a shot and a title card. Something like: Title: Billy's uncle. Picture: Uncle giving Billy ice cream. In a few seconds, you could introduce Billy's uncle and say something about him without being burdened with a scene. This economy of statement gives silent movies a much greater narrative scope and flexibility than we have today. In my view, there are very few sound films, including those regarded as masterpieces, which could not be presented almost as effectively on the stage, assuming a good set, the same cast and quality of performances. You couldn't do that with a great silent movie.


    But surely you could not put 2001: A Space Odyssey on the stage?


    True enough. I know I've tried to move in this direction in all of my films but never to an extent which has satisfied me. By the way, I should include the best TV commercials along with silent films, as another example of how you might better tell a film story. In thirty seconds, characters are introduced, and sometimes a surprisingly involved situation is set up and resolved.


    When you shoot these scenes which you find theatrical, you do it in a way that emphasizes their ordinariness. The scenes with Ullman or the visit of the doctor in The Shining, like the conference with the astronauts in 2001, are characterized by their social conventions, their mechanical aspect.


    Well, as I've said, in fantasy you want things to have the appearance of being as realistic as possible. People should behave in the mundane way they normally do. You have to be especially careful about this in the scenes which deal with the bizarre or fantastic details of the story.


    You also decided to show few visions and make them very short.


    If Danny had perfect ESP, there could be no story. He would anticipate everything, warn everybody and solve every problem. So his perception of the paranormal must be imperfect and fragmentary. This also happens to be consistent with most of the reports of telepathic experiences. The same applies to Hallorann. One of the ironies in the story is that you have people who can see the past and the future and have telepathic contact, but the telephone and the short-wave radio don't work, and the snowbound mountain roads are impassable. Failure of communication is a theme which runs through a number of my films.


    You use technology a lot but seem to be afraid of it.


    I'm not afraid of technology. I am afraid of aeroplanes. I've been able to avoid flying for some time but, I suppose, if I had to I would. Perhaps it's a case of a little knowledge being a dangerous thing. At one time, I had a pilot's license and 160 hours of solo time on single-engine light aircraft. Unfortunately, all that seemed to do was make me mistrust large airplanes.


    Did you think right away of Jack Nicholson for the role?


    Yes, I did. I believe that Jack is one of the best actors in Hollywood, perhaps on a par with the greatest stars of the past like Spencer Tracy and Jimmy Cagney. I should think that he is on almost everyone's first-choice list for any role which suits him. His work is always interesting, clearly conceived and has the X-factor, magic. Jack is particularly suited for roles which require intelligence. He is an intelligent and literate man, and these are qualities almost impossible to act. In The Shining, you believe he's a writer, failed or otherwise.


    Did the scene where he fights with Shelley Duvall on the stairs require many rehearsals?


    Yes, it did. It was only with the greatest difficulty that Shelley was able to create and sustain for the length of the scene an authentic sense of hysteria. It took her a long time to achieve this and when she did we didn't shoot the scene too many times. I think there were five takes favouring Shelley, and only the last two were really good. When I have to shoot a very large number of takes it's invariably because the actors don't know their lines, or don't know them well enough. An actor can only do one thing at a time, and when he has learned his lines only well enough to say them while he's thinking about them, he will always have trouble as soon as he has to work on the emotions of the scene or find camera marks. In a strong emotional scene, it is always best to be able to shoot in complete takes to allow the actor a continuity of emotion, and it is rare for most actors to reach their peak more than once or twice. There are, occasionally, scenes which benefit from extra takes, but even then, I'm not sure that the early takes aren't just glorified rehearsals with the added adrenalin of film running through the camera. In The Shining, the scene in the ballroom where Jack talks to Lloyd, the sinister apparition of a former bartender, belongs to this category. Jack's performance here is incredibly intricate, with sudden changes of thought and mood -- all grace notes. It's a very difficult scene to do because the emotion flow is so mercurial. It demands knife-edged changes of direction and a tremendous concentration to keep things sharp and economical. In this particular scene Jack produced his best takes near the highest numbers.


    He is just as good when he walks down the corridor making wild movements before meeting the barman.


    I asked Jack to remember the rumpled characters you see lunging down the streets of New York, waving their arms about and hissing to themselves.


    Did you choose Shelley Duvall after seeing her in Three Women?


    I had seen all of her films and greatly admired her work. I think she brought an instantly believable characterization to her part. The novel pictures her as a much more self-reliant and attractive woman, but these qualities make you wonder why she has put up with Jack for so long. Shelley seemed to be exactly the kind of woman that would marry Jack and be stuck with him. The wonderful thing about Shelley is her eccentric quality -- the way she talks, the way she moves, the way her nervous system is put together. I think that most interesting actors have physical eccentricities about them which make their performances more interesting and, if they don't, they work hard to find them.


    How did you find the boy?


    About 5000 boys were interviewed in America over a period of six months. This number eventually narrowed down to five boys who could have played the part. That worked out to about one child in a thousand who could act -- actually not a bad average. The interviews were done in Chicago, Denver and Cincinnati, by my assistant, Leon Vitali, the actor who played the older Lord Bullingdon in Barry Lyndon, and his wife, Kersti. I chose those three cities because I wanted the child to have an accent which would fall somewhere between the way Jack and Shelley speak. The local Warner Bros. office placed newspaper ads inviting parents to make applications with photographs for the part. From the photographs a list was made of the boys who looked right. Leon interviewed everyone in this group, subsequently doing small acting improvisations which he recorded on video tape with those who seemed to have a little something. Further video work was done with the boys who were good. I looked at the tapes.


    Where does Danny Lloyd come from?


    He comes from a small town in Illinois. His father is a railway engineer. Danny was about five-and-a-half when we cast him. We had certain problems shooting with him in England because children are only allowed to work for three hours a day, and may only work a certain number of days in a calendar year. But, fortunately, rehearsal days on which you do not shoot are not counted in this total. So we rehearsed with him one day and shot on the next. I think his performance was wonderful -- everything you could want from the role. He was a terrific boy. He had instinctive taste. He was very smart, very talented and very sensible. His parents, Jim and Ann, were very sensitive to his problems and very supportive, and he had a great time. Danny always knew his lines, and despite the inevitable pampering which occurred on the set, he was always reasonable and well-behaved.


    What did the Steadicam achieve for you in the film?


    The Steadicam allows one man to move the camera any place he can walk -- into small spaces where a dolly won't fit, and up and down staircases. We used an Arriflex BL camera, which is silent and allows you to shoot sound. You can walk or run with the camera, and the Steadicam smooths out any unsteadiness. It's like a magic carpet. The fast, flowing camera movements in the maze would have been impossible to do without the Steadicam. You couldn't lay down dolly tracks without the camera seeing them and, in any case, a dolly couldn't go around the right-angled corners of the maze pathways. Without a Steadicam you could have done your best with the normal hand-held camera but the running movements would have made it extremely unsteady. The only problem with the Steadicam is that it requires training, skill and a certain amount of fitness on the part of the operator. You can't just pick it up and use it. But any good camera operator can do useful work even after a few days' training. He won't be an ace but he'll still be able to do much more than he could without it. I used Garrett Brown as the Steadicam operator. He probably has more experience than anyone with the Steadicam because he also happened to invent it. The camera is mounted on to a spring-loaded arm, which is attached to a frame, which is in turn strapped to the operator's shoulders, chest and hips. This, in effect, makes the camera weightless. The tricky part is that the operator has to control the camera movements in every axis with his wrist. He watches the framing on a very small television monitor which is mounted on his rig. It takes skill while you are walking or running to keep the horizon of the camera frame parallel to the ground, and pan and tilt just using your wrist. A further problem is caused by inertia, which makes it difficult to stop a movement smoothly and exactly where you want it. In order to stop on a predetermined composition you have to anticipate the stop and keep your fingers crossed.


    The Steadicam allowed you to do even more of those long-tracking shots you have done in all your films.


    Most of the hotel set was built as a composite, so that you could go up a flight of stairs, turn down a corridor, travel its length and find your way to still another part of the hotel. It mirrored the kind of camera movements which took place in the maze. In order to fully exploit this layout it was necessary to have moving camera shots without cuts, and of course the Steadicam made that much easier to do.


    In the normal scenes you used dissolves and many camera movements. On the other hand, the paranormal visions are static and the cuts abrupt.


    I don't particularly like dissolves and I try not to use them, but when one scene follows another in the same place, and you want to make it clear that time has passed, a dissolve is often the simplest way to convey this. On the other hand, the paranormal visions are momentary glimpses into the past and the future, and must be short, even abrupt. With respect to the camera movements, I've always liked moving the camera. It's one of the basic elements of film grammar. When you have the means to do it and the set to do it in, it not only adds visual interest but it also permits the actors to work in longer, possibly complete, takes. This makes it easier for them to maintain their concentration and emotional level in the scene.


    Did you always plan to use the helicopter shots of the mountains as the main-title background?


    Yes I did. But the location, in Glacier National Park, Montana, wasn't chosen until very near the end of principal shooting. It was important to establish an ominous mood during Jack's first drive up to the hotel -- the vast isolation and eerie splendour of high mountains, and the narrow, winding roads which would become impassable after heavy snow. In fact, the roads we filmed for the title sequence are closed throughout the winter and only negotiable by tracked vehicles. I sent a second-unit camera crew to Glacier National Park to shoot the title backgrounds but they reported that the place wasn't interesting. When we saw the test shots they sent back we were staggered. It was plain that the location was perfect but the crew had to be replaced. I hired Greg McGillivray, who is noted for his helicopter work, and he spent several weeks filming some of the most beautiful mountain helicopter shots I've seen.


    Did you have all those extras pose for the last shot?


    No, they were in a photograph taken in 1921 which we found in a picture library. I originally planned to use extras, but it proved impossible to make them look as good as the people in the photograph. So I very carefully photographed Jack, matching the angle and the lighting of the 1921 photograph, and shooting him from different distances too, so that his face would be larger and smaller on the negative. This allowed the choice of an image size which when enlarged would match the grain structure in the original photograph. The photograph of Jack's face was then airbrushed in to the main photograph, and I think the result looked perfect. Every face around Jack is an archetype of the period.


    What type of music did you use?


    The title music was based on the Dies Irae theme which has been used by many composers since the Middle Ages. It was re-orchestrated for synthesizer and voices by Wendy Carlos and Rachel Elkind, who did most of the synthesizer music for A Clockwork Orange. Bartok's Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta was used for several other scenes. One composition by Ligeti was used. But most of the music in the film came from the Polish composer Krystof Penderecki. One work titled Jakob's Dream was used in the scene when Jack wakes up from his nightmare, a strange coincidence. Actually there were a number of other coincidences, particularly with names. The character that Jack Nicholson plays is called Jack in the novel. His son is called Danny in the novel and is played by Danny Lloyd. The ghost bartender in the book is called Lloyd.


    What music did you use at the end?


    It is a popular English dance tune of the twenties, "Midnight, the Stars and You", played by Ray Noble's band with an Al Bowly vocal.


    How do you see the character of Hallorann?


    Hallorann is a simple, rustic type who talks about telepathy in a disarmingly unscientific way. His folksy character and naive attempts to explain telepathy to Danny make what he has to say dramatically more acceptable than a standard pseudo-scientific explanation. He and Danny make a good pair.


    The child creates a double to protect himself, whereas his father conjures up beings from the past who are also anticipations of his death.


    A story of the supernatural cannot be taken apart and analysed too closely. The ultimate test of its rationale is whether it is good enough to raise the hairs on the back of your neck. If you submit it to a completely logical and detailed analysis it will eventually appear absurd. In his essay on The Uncanny, Das Unheimliche, Freud said that the uncanny is the only feeling which is more powerfully experienced in art than in life. If the genre required any justification, I should think this alone would serve as its credentials.


    How do you see Danny's evolution?


    Danny has had a frightening and disturbing childhood. Brutalized by his father and haunted by his paranormal visions, he has had to find some psychological mechanism within himself to manage these powerful and dangerous forces. To do this, he creates his imaginary friend, Tony, through whom Danny can rationalise his visions and survive.


    Some people criticized you a few years ago because you were making films that did not deal with the private problems of characters. With Barry Lyndon and now withThe Shining, you seem to be dealing more with personal relationships.


    If this is true it is certainly not as a result of any deliberate effort on my part. There is no useful way to explain how you decide what film to make. In addition to the initial problem of finding an exciting story which fulfills the elusively intangible requirements for a film, you have the added problem of its being sufficiently different from the films you have already done. Obviously the more films you make, the more this choice is narrowed down. If you read a story which someone else has written you have the irreplacable experience of reading it for the first time. This is something which you obviously cannot have if you write an original story. Reading someone else's story for the first time allows you a more accurate judgement of the narrative and helps you to be more objective than you might otherwise be with an original story. Another important thing is that while you're making a film, and you get deeper and deeper into it, you find that in a certain sense you know less and less about it. You get too close to it. When you reach that point, it's essential to rely on your original feelings about the story. Of course, at the same time, because you know so much more about it, you can also make a great many other judgements far better than you could have after the first reading. But, not to put too fine a point on it, you can never again have that first, virginal experience with the plot.


    It seems that you want to achieve a balance between rationality and irrationality, that for you man should acknowledge the presence of irrational forces in him rather than trying to repress them.


    I think we tend to be a bit hypocritical about ourselves. We find it very easy not to see our own faults, and I don't just mean minor faults. I suspect there have been very few people who have done serious wrong who have not rationalized away what they've done, shifting the blame to those they have injured. We are capable of the greatest good and the greatest evil, and the problem is that we often can't distinguish between them when it suits our purpose.


    Failing to understand this leads to some misunderstanding of A Clockwork Orange.


    I have always found it difficult to understand how anyone could decide that the film presented violence sympathetically. I can only explain this as a view which arises from a prejudiced assessment of the film, ignoring everything else in the story but a few scenes. The distinguished film director Luis Bunuel suggested this in a way when he said in the New York Times: 'A Clockwork Orange is my current favourite. I was very predisposed against the film. After seeing it, I realized it is the only movie about what the modern world really means.' A Clockwork Orange has been widely acclaimed throughout the world as an important work of art. I don't believe that anyone really sympathizes with Alex, and there is absolutely no evidence that anyone does. Alex clashes with some authority figures in the story who seem as bad as he is, if not worse in a different way. But this doesn't excuse him. The story is satirical, and it is in the nature of satire to state the opposite of the truth as if it were the truth. I suppose you could misinterpret the film on this count, if you were determined to do so.


    How do you see the main character of Jack in The Shining?


    Jack comes to the hotel psychologically prepared to do its murderous bidding. He doesn't have very much further to go for his anger and frustration to become completely uncontrollable. He is bitter about his failure as a writer. He is married to a woman for whom he has only contempt. He hates his son. In the hotel, at the mercy of its powerful evil, he is quickly ready to fulfill his dark role.


    So you don't regard the apparitions as merely a projection of his mental state?


    For the purposes of telling the story, my view is that the paranormal is genuine. Jack's mental state serves only to prepare him for the murder, and to temporarily mislead the audience.


    And when the film has finished? What then?


    I hope the audience has had a good fright, has believed the film while they were watching it, and retains some sense of it. The ballroom photograph at the very end suggests the reincarnation of Jack.


    You are a person who uses his rationality, who enjoys understanding things, but in2001: A Space Odyssey and The Shining you demonstrate the limits of intellectual knowledge. Is this an acknowledgement of what William James called the unexplained residues of human experience?


    Obviously, science-fiction and the supernatural bring you very quickly to the limits of knowledge and rational explanation. But from a dramatic point of view, you must ask yourself: 'If all of this were unquestionably true, how would it really happen?' You can't go much further than that. I like the regions of fantasy where reason is used primarily to undermine incredulity. Reason can take you to the border of these areas, but from there on you can be guided only by your imagination. I think we strain at the limits of reason and enjoy the temporary sense of freedom which we gain by such exercises of our imagination.


    Of course there is a danger that some audiences may misunderstand what you say and think that one can dispense altogether with reason, falling into the clouded mysticism which is currently so popular in America.


    People can misinterpret almost anything so that it coincides with views they already hold. They take from art what they already believe, and I wonder how many people have ever had their views about anything important changed by a work of art?


    Did you have a religious upbringing?


    No, not at all.


    You are a chess-player and I wonder if chess-playing and its logic have parallels with what you are saying?


    First of all, even the greatest International Grandmasters, however deeply they analyse a position, can seldom see to the end of the game. So their decision about each move is partly based on intuition. I was a pretty good chess-player but, of course, not in that class. Before I had anything better to do (making movies) I played in chess tournaments at the Marshall and Manhattan Chess Clubs in New York, and for money in parks and elsewhere. Among a great many other things that chess teaches you is to control the initial excitement you feel when you see something that looks good. It trains you to think before grabbing, and to think just as objectively when you're in trouble. When you're making a film you have to make most of your decisions on the run, and there is a tendency to always shoot from the hip. It takes more discipline than you might imagine to think, even for thirty seconds, in the noisy, confusing, high-pressure atmosphere of a film set. But a few seconds' thought can often prevent a serious mistake being made about something that looks good at first glance. With respect to films, chess is more useful preventing you from making mistakes than giving you ideas. Ideas come spontaneously and the discipline required to evaluate and put them to use tends to be the real work.


    Did you play chess on the set of The Shining as you did on Dr. Strangelove (with George C. Scott) and on 2001?


    I played a few games with Tony Burton, one of the actors in the film. He's a very good chess-player. It was very near the end of the picture and things had gotten to a fairly simple stage. I played quite a lot with George C. Scott during the making of Dr. Strangelove. George is a good player, too, but if I recall correctly he didn't win many games from me. This gave me a certain edge with him on everything else. If you fancy yourself as a good chess-player, you have an inordinate respect for people who can beat you.


    You also used to be a very good photographer. How do you think this helped you as a film-maker?


    There is a much quoted aphorism that when a director dies he becomes a photographer. It's a clever remark but it's a bit glib, and usually comes from the kind of critic who will complain that a film has been too beautifully photographed. Anyway, I started out as a photographer. I worked for Look magazine from the age of seventeen to twenty-one. It was a miraculous break for me to get this job after graduation from high-school. I owe a lot to the then picture editor, Helen O'Brian, and the managing editor, Jack Guenther. This experience was invaluable to me, not only because I learned a lot about photography, but also because it gave me a quick education in how things happened in the world. To have been a professional photographer was obviously a great advantage for me, though not everyone I subsequently worked with thought so. When I was directing Spartacus, Russel Metty, the cameraman, found it very amusing that I picked the camera set-ups myself and told him what I wanted in the way of lighting. When he was in particularly high-spirits, he would crouch behind me as I looked through my viewfinder, holding his Zippo cigarette lighter up to his eye, as if it were a viewfinder. He also volunteered that the top directors just pointed in the direction of the shot, said something like, "Russ, a tight 3-shot," and went back to their trailer.


    What kind of photography were you doing at Look?


    The normal kind of photo-journalism. It was tremendous fun for me at that age but eventually it began to wear thin, especially since my ultimate ambition had always been to make movies. The subject matter of my Look assignments was generally pretty dumb. I would do stories like: "Is an Athlete Stronger Than a Baby?", photographing a college football player emulating the 'cute' positions an 18-month-old child would get into. Occasionally, I had a chance to do an interesting personality story. One of these was about Montgomery Clift, who was at the start of his brilliant career. Photography certainly gave me the first step up to movies. To make a film entirely by yourself, which initially I did, you may not have to know very much about anything else, but you must know about photography.


    Do you have a preference for shooting in a studio or in real locations?


    If the real locations exist, and if it's practical getting your crew there, it is a lot easier and cheaper to work on location. But sometimes going away on location is more expensive than building sets. It costs a lot of money today to keep a crew away from home.


    Why did you do The Killing in a studio?


    Because the sets were fairly cheap to build and the script let you spend a good chunk of time in each of them. Also, at that time, it was much more difficult to shoot in location interiors. There were no neck mikes or radio transmitters, and the cameras were big and the film slow. Things have changed a lot since then. But I remember having an argument at the time with a cameraman who refused to shoot a scene with a 25mm lens, insisting that the lens was too wide-angled to pan or move the camera without distorting everything. Today, people think of a 25mm almost as a normal lens, and a wide-angle lens goes down to 9.8mm, which gives you about a 90x horizontal viewing angle. The Shining could not have had the same lighting if it had been filmed on location, and because of the snow effects it would have been extremely impractical to do it that way. We would have been far too much of a nuisance in a real hotel, and in the case of those which were shut in the winter, they were closed because they really were inaccessible.


    What kind of horror films did you like? Did you see Rosemary's Baby?


    It was one of the best of the genre. I liked The Exorcist too.


    And John Boorman's The Heretic?


    I haven't seen it, but I like his work. Deliverance is an extremely good film. One of the things that amazes me about some directors (not Boorman) who have had great financial successes, is that they seem eager to give up directing to become film moguls. If you care about films, I don't see how you could want someone else to direct for you.


    Perhaps they don't like the actual shooting.


    It's true -- shooting isn't always fun. But if you care about the film it doesn't matter. It's a little like changing your baby's diapers. It is true that while you're filming you are almost always in conflict with someone. Woody Allen, talking about directing Interiors, said that no matter how pleasant and relaxed everything seemed on the surface he felt his actors always resented being told anything. There are actors, however, with whom communication and co-operation is so good that the work really becomes exciting and satisfying. I find writing and editing very enjoyable, and almost completely lacking in this kind of tension.


    Today it is more and more difficult for a film to get its money back. The film rental can be three times the cost of the film.


    Much more than that. Take a film that costs $10 million. Today it's not unusual to spend $8 million on USA advertising, and $4 million on international advertising. On a big film, add $2 million for release-prints. Say there is a 20% studio overhead on the budget; that's $2 million more. Interest on the $10 million production cost, currently at 20% a year, would add an additional $2 million a year, say, for two years -- that's another $4 million. So a $10 million film already costs $30 million. Now you have to get it back. Let's say an actor takes 10% of the gross, and the distributor takes a world-wide average of a 35% distribution fee. To roughly calculate the break-even figure, you have to divide the $30 million by 55%, the percentage left after the actor's 10% and the 35% distribution fee. That comes to $54 million of distributor's film rental. So a $10 million film may not break even, as far as the producer's share of the profits is concerned, until 5.4 times its negative cost. Obviously the actual break-even figure for the distributor is lower since he is taking a 35% distribution fee and has charged overheads.


    But you came to realise very early in your career that if you didn't have the control of the production you couldn't have the artistic freedom.


    There is no doubt that the more legal control you have over things, the less interference you have. This, in itself, doesn't guarantee you're going to get it right, but it gives you your best chance. But the more freedom you have the greater is your responsibility, and this includes the logistical side of film-making. I suppose you could make some kind of military analogy here. Napoleon, about whom I still intend to do a film, personally worked out the laborious arithmetic of the complicated timetables which were necessary for the coordinated arrival on the battlefield of the different elements of his army, which sometimes were scattered all over Europe. His genius on the battlefield might have been of little use if large formations of his army failed to arrive on the day. Of course, I'm not making a serious comparison between the burdens and the genius of L'Empereur and any film director, but the point is that if Napoleon believed it was necessary to go to all that trouble, then a comparative involvement in the logistical side of film-making should be a normal responsibility for any director who wants to ensure he gets what he wants when he wants it. In a more fanciful vein, and perhaps stretching the analogy a bit, I suspect that for Napoleon, his military campaigns provided him with at least all of the excitement and satisfaction of making a film and, equally so, I would imagine everything in between must have seemed pretty dull by comparison. Of course this is not an explanation of the Napoleonic wars, but perhaps it suggests some part of the explanation for Napoleon's apparently irrepressible desire for still one more campaign. What must it be like to realize that you are perhaps the greatest military commander in history, have marshals like Ney, Murat, Davout, the finest army in Europe, and have no place to go and nothing to do? Then, continuing with this by now overstretched analogy, there is the big-budgeted disaster -- the Russian Campaign, in which, from the start, Napoleon ignored the evidence which suggested the campaign would be such a costly disaster. And, finally, before his first exile, after fighting a series of brilliant battles against the Allies' superior numbers, Napoleon still had a final opportunity for compromise, but he over-negotiated, gambled on his military magic, and lost.


    In your screenplay about Napoleon, did you adopt a chronological approach?


    Yes, I did. Napoleon, himself, once remarked what a great novel his life would be. I'm sure he would have said 'movie' if he had known about them. His entire life is the story, and it works perfectly well in the order it happened. It would also be nice to do it as a twenty hour TV series, but there is, as yet, not enough money available in TV to properly budget such a venture. Of course, there is the tremendous problem of the actor to play Napoleon. Al Pacino comes quickly to mind. And there is always the possibility of shooting the twenty episodes in such a way that he would be fifty by the time he got to St. Helena....


    Al, I'm joking! I'm joking! 



Wednesday, 7 February 2024

Real

The Real Ghostbusters - Promo Pilot - Remastered (4K 60fps)



Using "Topaz Video Enhance AI", upscaled the 480p version and cleaned up the footage to 4K resolution and interoplated to 60fps. Made some minor color-correction and sharpening in Adobe After Effects. Also on my channel, you can find an alternate remaster with all of the above enhancements, but at the original pilot's framerate.

I used Robert Barbieri's amazing fan-made restoration as a starting point, but the only copy I could find of it was at 480p. I upscaled it to 4K with the AI software, which also removed additional noise/artifacts and reduced frame jitter/shake, added back detail to line work, and interpolated the frame rate. 

I then brought the 4K render into Adobe After Effects and manually sharpened, slightly adjusted black/white levels, and slightly increased saturation. My results would not have been as good if I started with the older copy that came from a casette tape. So a huge shout out to Robert Barbieri! 👏🏽