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【danS-新闻】Nordling对 CRIMINAL ACTIVITIES 导演专访

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  • 游鱼夏
  • 兰斯洛特
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I don't normally like to interview people before I've seen their movie, because I like to have more of a context when I'm talking to them. But for Jackie Earle Haley I wanted to make an exception. Haley's completed his directorial debut, CRIMINAL ACTIVITIES, a crime film centered around a group of friends who get in debt with some very bad people. Shot in Cleveland, Haley has brought together a stellar cast, including John Travolta, Dan Stevens, Michael Pitt, Edi Gathegi, and Rob Brown, and Haley himself. Plus, Jackie's just a cool guy, and he was fun to talk to.
Another reason I interviewed him is that Haley, along with Edi Gathegi, is bringing his film to Comicpalooza this Friday, to screen in front of Houston audiences. I'm very excited about this - although Houston's a big city, we don't often get these kinds of opportunities to see films like this early. CRIMINAL ACTIVITIES is slated to open this fall - it's just been picked up by Image Entertainment, and to hear Jackie describe it, it sounds like a nasty, amoral, fun little crime flick. It'll be cool to see Travolta flex his crime movie muscles again. The rest of the country will just have to wait until this fall. But if you're attending Comicpalooza this weekend, you'll be given a rare treat - a screening at 8:00 PM, followed by a Q&A with Jackie Earle Haley and Edi Gathegi. Kelly Leak returns to Houston! Here's my interview:
Nordling: I actually met you once, you came to Butt-Numb-A-Thon and brought that clip of WATCHMEN.
Jackie Earle Haley: That was a fun day. It was super early, if I remember.
N: I’m very excited about CRIMINAL ACTIVITIES. I’m seeing it on Friday with everyone else at Comicpalooza, and as a Houstonian I really appreciate you bringing your film to our town. I wanted to ask you a few questions about your film. It looks to be an interesting crime film, and I wanted to see what your inspiration was in stepping into the director’s chair for the first time, and this script.
JEH: My inspiration for wanting to direct this film goes way back to THE BAD NEWS BEARS. I have literally always wanted to direct. So much so, that every single set I was on since I was a little kid, I was completely paying attention to what the director was doing, I think I knew camera geography by the time I was 12 or 13. I remember when I was 11, and my parents were completely aware of this, and they bought me a Super 8 MM, that’s film, not video, camera along with a little plastic editor and projector. And this was back when you had to like, you know, film was on a reel, and you had to splice it with scissors, and you had to glue the stuff together.
This is something that I’ve always wanted to do, and the thing that’s always flummoxed me was how to get a script off the ground, how to get people behind it, how to make it happen. I remember when I was 30 I was thoroughly bummed that I hadn’t directed a movie yet. And I think that, just over time – and again, it’s not like I put out a great amount of effort, I just couldn’t figure out where to find a script, and who to take it to, and how to get it financed. So you come to all these years later, and I’m 52 years old at the time. I get a call from my manager’s husband, Wayne Rice, who is a very prolific producer – some of his bigger titles are VALENTINE’S DAY, NEW YEAR’S EVE, but he’s also done 20 to 40 movies over the years. I think over the last ten years or so he has been, in the morning he and his wife will sit and watch my audition tapes. Sometimes they’re a bit elaborate, not just, you know, a camera on sticks pointed at a white wall, and I’m performing – I’ll choreograph what the camera’s doing and try to make a scene as well as I can and a winner. So I think he saw that and realized that directing was something I could do, and so he called me up and said, “Listen, I’ve got this script, and I know for a first film it’s very important that you love the script, but if you read this script and respond to it and like it, I’d like you to direct it.” So of course, I’m thrilled, but at the same time, I’m 52, and I don’t want to just direct anything at this point. So I agreed that I really needed to love the script, and so I got the script, read it, and immediately loved it. I think it’s a really well-written script. So I call him back so fast after reading it and saying, “I love this script, and I’d love to direct it.” He was already basically financed and so we dove right into casting. So we got everything put together, and we went and made this film in Cleveland, and then I spent a little over half a year focusing on editing it, and putting all the final brushes on it. Test audiences seem to really be digging it, it’s really well-written, and I think we got a pretty cool little movie.
N: I really admire the cast you’ve brought together. I love Dan Stevens in THE GUEST – he’s terrific in that. Michael Pitt, John Travolta – this movie’s got a great cast. How did all that come together?
JEH: I was really fortunate that the casting crew was really helping us along, and I think that Wayne and I both have very similar sensibilities. I first talked to John (Travolta), and I think John really responded to the script. He normally has a policy of wanting to meet the director in person before he makes a movie, but he and I had a really nice 20-minute phone conversation and the next day he called his manager and said, “You know, I don’t really need to sit down with him – let’s go ahead and do this.” And he really loved this script, and he was awesome in the movie.
The whole ensemble is great. Michael Pitt, he plays the alpha of the group, Dan Stevens plays kind of the nerd of the group. It’s really amazing too, because in DOWNTON ABBEY, he’s the suave, sophisticated guy, and in THE GUEST he’s completely different. Dan Stevens is a really diverse actor. He disappears into this role – he’s quite amazing at it. And Chris Abbott – he’s this really cool, naturalistic actor, he’s wonderful in the first couple of seasons of GIRLS, and his character Warren is, well, I like to call him the heart of the movie because his character is the least self-centered, and he’s got the most empathy towards his other castmates. Rob Brown plays the more grounded guy – when things start to go crazy, he helps pull everybody together.
Then we got Edi Gathegi, who plays Marques, who these guys end up kidnapping and holding for 24 hours, he’s the centerpiece, the lynchpin of the film. He’s got a ton of dialogue, and he’s a wonderful actor. He just absolutely nails it. He showed up on the set literally prepared to do any scene. He had the whole thing memorized. I’m really proud of the ensemble we’ve put together. It really is a phenomenal cast. They’re all just spot-on throughout the whole movie.
N: Working with an ensemble cast as diverse and as big as this, how difficult is it as a director, especially for the first time, just juggling all these characters, and making sure everyone falls in line with the story?
JEH: Let me first state that in terms of being a first-time director, it was kind of an odd experience in the sense that, it really felt like that I’d done this ten times before. I know that’s a weird thing to say but even Wayne the producer even said, “Whenever you’re working with a first time director, you always look at him for when suddenly he looks like a deer caught in the headlights, and you never had that look on your face.” And I think I attribute that to the fact that I’ve been a director of commercials and producing them for years, and I think that gave me a certain expertise when production was involved, but that doesn’t necessarily translate into directing a movie.
But I think when you combine that experience with the knowledge of the fact that I’ve acted in so many movies, and have attacked so many scenes as an actor with other actors, with a director, that I think those two skills dovetailed together so that it really just felt like I’d done this before. I think the real trick in directing is really casting the right people to begin with. Because if you get the right people, who understand their character, understand the story, and they’re good at what they do – it wasn’t hard to keep them on track with the story because they were all just so good. It’s a matter of letting them go, letting them do their thing, guiding them where you want to push them a little bit in a direction. When you get the right cast, magic just happens, and you do several takes, and you’ve got several choices, so when you get into the editing room, you’re really able to craft some really good shit, because everybody dished it up for you on the day.
N: You’ve worked with so many different directors – you’ve worked with Zack Snyder, and Steven Spielberg, and so many other great directors. Do you feel as a director that you’ve pulled something from everybody that you’ve worked with? What do you think was the most important thing you’ve learned from working with all these directors over the years?
JEH: That’s a good question. I’m not sure I’ve got an answer right off the top of my head, but I will tell you that obviously each and every experience helped me to grow as an actor and as a director. When I was a kid, I was always aware of what the director was doing, what he was thinking, what he’s seeing. Each one of those guys have slightly different approaches. Like Zack Snyder, that guy storyboards and pre-plans like you wouldn’t believe. He’s so prepared on the set that he can sit and joke around between takes because he’s already made so many of the decisions. Then you get Tim Burton, who obviously is prepared, but I’ve heard him say, working the first week or so of DARK SHADOWS, the tone was being found. It wasn’t necessarily completely pre-planned. He was in search, partially, of this tone, in those first several scenes in his first week, and that helped guide where he was going with it. Everyone has slightly a different approach, but what exactly I’ve learned, it’s hard to say. It’s more ingrained in my being.
I will tell you this one time, as a weird aside, but it goes back to how I’ve felt, like I’ve done this so many times before, even though it was my first time – I do remember on the set with Steven Spielberg, when we were doing LINCOLN, we were out in this field, and it’s all muddy, and there are crane shots, and everything, and I can’t remember what I said to him, like “It’s awesome what you do,” and he said to me, “You know, right now I’m just exercising really old muscles.” And I swear to God, that’s what it felt, even though I’m making my first movie, that I’m exercising old muscles.
N: As crime genre films go, what movies did you see that really kicked it into gear for you as a fan and as a director, for inspiration?
JEH: My brain doesn’t really work like that. I’m not a “favorite color” guy, but I will tell you films like PULP FICTION, which was very grabbing, a very exciting way to tell a story. SNATCH, in a whole different kind of way. I like a lot of different types of films. It’s not like I want to just do crime films. This movie is really exciting – it got me an actual directing agent after the completion of this movie. I got a guy now sending me scripts and stuff. He was saying, “What kind of films do you want to do?” Surprisingly, my real goal is that I’d like to do diverse stuff. The real goal for me is that I want to make movies that start with a really good script. And you’d be surprised – that’s harder than you’d think.
N: I always admired Ron Howard for that. He never stuck with one kind of film. He does everything – any story that he’s fascinated by, he’ll make that movie.
JEH: That’s funny that you say that, because that guy – I remember from way back, identifying with him, because I always wanted to be a director and was an actor, and here’s this very famous actor, and he started to direct movies. And I was always a fan of his movies because he seemed to be a consummate storyteller, whatever the genre. Whenever there’s a Ron Howard movie, I’d want to see it just because he made it, from a BEAUTIFUL MIND to APOLLO 13, this guy is phenomenal. He’s a true storyteller.
N: Tell me about the shoot in Cleveland? How was that?
JEH: They had a really good program out there, that’s why the producer wanted to go out there, but when we got there, it was a wonderful place to shoot. They had some great human resources and we had a great crew. It was a 25 day shoot. We did really great. I think sometimes we surprised everybody because we’d end up having short days. Everybody’s a little bummed they’re not getting overtime, but everyone was so quick, and so good at what they do. I got my production designer out of there, and she did an absolutely wonderful job. Local casting did a phenomenal job. Wardrobe, makeup, keys came from there. We brought in our DP, but within the state there was a great camera crew, and it was a good place to work. I would go back there for sure.
N: I appreciate you bringing your film to Comicpalooza, and I can’t wait to watch it, but I got to tell you, Kelly Leak returning to Houston, the Astrodome isn’t quite there anymore.
JEH: Hah! I’m looking forward to seeing you all out there, and I hope you dig the movie!
Tickets are still available for Comicpalooza - lots of geeky activity this weekend at the George R. Brown Convention Center. I hope to see you there.
Nordling, out.
来源:http://www.aintitcool.com/node/71590?utm_source=full-feed&utm_medium=feed&utm_term=coolnews&utm_campaign=1310_RSS


  • 园子
  • 兰斯洛特
    11
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太长,没翻译,周末再慢慢看


2025-07-19 13:38:30
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  • 偶尔鸣叫
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我就知道一定会提到守望者和zack synder。Jackie的罗夏演的真好,不知道当导演如何


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  • 深情蓝眸
    13
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最近太忙了,都没时间来吧里看看。失职了。


  • 独角角🦄
  • 吧主
    13
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英文好长啊~~~~~


  • ぁぃ川
  • 德拉库拉
    5
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我闲着没事的时候本打算把这篇文章翻译下的,翻了一会发现这还真是好长啊。所以翻译了开头和关于丹丹龙的内容,有些话不像人话大家凑合着看看


  • ぁぃ川
  • 德拉库拉
    5
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我通常在采访别人之前会先看他们的电影,因为我希望在和他们交流时了解了一定的背景。但对于Jackie Earle Haley我破例了。Haley完成了他的导演处女作 CRIMINAL ACTIVITIES,一部犯罪电影,围绕着欠下坏人债务的一群朋友展开。影片在克利夫兰(美国城市)拍摄,Haley带来了一流的卡司,包括John Travolta, Dan Stevens, Michael Pitt, Edi Gathegi, Rob Brown, 和 Haley他自己。另外,Jackie是个很酷的人,和他聊天很有趣。
另外一个我采访他的理由是Haley和Edi Gathegi将要把他的电影带去德州漫展,放映给休斯敦观众。我对此很兴奋,尽管休斯敦是个大城市,我们不常有这样的机会如此早的看到电影。CRIMINAL ACTIVITIES被安排在这个秋天上映,它刚刚被Image Entertainment公司买下。听Jackie描述,这是一部令人讨厌的,没有道德原则的,有趣的犯罪电影(什么鬼!)。再次看见Travolta在犯罪片里展现他的肌肉是件很酷的事。在休斯敦市以外的人们要等到这个秋天才能看到。但如果你这周要去德州漫展,你会得到一次罕见的款待,晚上8点放映电影,之后是和Jackie Earle Haley 和 Edi Gathegi的问答环节。Kelly Leak回到了休斯敦!以下是我的采访:
Nordling:我实际上见过你一次,你来到Butt-Numb-A-Thon并带来了 WATCHMEN(《守望者》)的片段。
Jackie Earle Haley:那是很有趣的一天。如果我还记得的话,那是很久之前了。
N:我对于CRIMINAL ACTIVITIES很兴奋,我在周五的德州漫展上和其他人一起看了他。作为一个休斯敦人,我感谢你把这部电影带来我的家乡。对于你的电影我有一些问题。这看上去是个很有趣的犯罪电影,我想知道是什么激发了你首次当导演?
JEH:我想当导演的灵感要一直从THE BAD NEWS BEARS(《少棒闯天下》)说起。我实际上一直想导演。所以,当我还是个小孩子时,我在片场的每个场景,我都关注导演在做什么。在我12.13岁的时候我就懂得摄像机机位布局。我记得当我11岁的时候,我的父母完全发现了这一点,他们给我买了。。。balabala


  • ぁぃ川
  • 德拉库拉
    5
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开头如上 ,休斯敦人民拉了把仇恨。下面是和丹丹龙有关的,一共没几句话。
N:我很欣赏你带来的演员阵容。我爱THE GUEST里的Dan Stevens,他棒极了。Michael Pitt, John Travolta这部电影有很棒的卡司,你是怎么把他们聚在一起的?(特意单独提丹丹龙哦!)
JEH:(跳过一段,关于John Travolta如何接他的角色)
整体效果非常棒。Michael Pitt扮演团体中的核心人物,Dan Stevens扮演团体中的有点怪人的角色。这非常让人惊奇,因为在唐顿庄园里,他是一个有礼貌的,老于世故的人(你真的是在夸人?!)而在访客中他又是完全不同的。Dan Stevens真的是一位多样化的演员。他完全融入了这个角色,他做得相当出色。


2025-07-19 13:32:30
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说真的,大家成立一个字幕组吧!以后有任何的采访和电影都可以及时汉化。英语不好也没关系啊,为了偶像不断进步是一件很幸福的事。想想你好好学英语,讲不定哪天就在扭腰的大街上遇上他了呐!


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  • 兰斯洛特
    11
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N:作为一部犯罪电影,是你看了什么电影触发了你作为一个演员、导演的灵感?
J:我并不是这样想,我不是一个颜色控,但我可以告诉你电影就像PULP FICTION,一部非常吸引人,以非常刺激的方式讲诉故事。抢夺,以一种完全不同的方式。我喜欢不同类型的电影。那并不像是我只想做犯罪电影。这部电影非常刺激,在完成这部电影之后,它给一个了我一个真实做导演的感觉。现在我得到一个家伙给剧本和材料。他当时说:你想要什么样子的电影?出人意料的是,我的真正目标就是我喜欢导这个剧。对我来说真正的目标是我想从一个真正的好剧本开始做电影。然后你会惊讶到——这比你想象中的要难。
N:我一直钦佩Ron Howard一点,他从来没有固定在一种电影,他尝试各种——不管什么故事他都会使那部电影让令人着迷。
J:你这么说很有趣,因为那个家伙——我记得在回来的路上,我和他确认过,因为我以前一直都只是个演员,又很想做导演,然后这里有个非常有名的演员,他开始导演电影。我一直都是他电影的粉丝,因为他似乎个完美叙事者,不管是什么类型的(故事)。不管什么时候有Ron Howard的电影,我都想看就是因为这是他拍的,从BEAUTIFUL MIND到APOLLO 13,这家伙是非凡的。他是个真正叙事者。、
N:跟我说说在克夫兰的拍摄是怎么样的经过?
J:他们在那里有一个很好的项目,这就是为什么制片人想在那里出外景,但当我们到了那里后,那里真是极好的拍摄地,他们有些很好的人力资源,我们也有一个极好的团队。那是一个25天的拍摄过程。我们都做得很好。我有时候在想我们让所有人都惊讶了,因为我们在结束的时候还在拍几天。每个人都有点小抱怨,因为他们没做好要加班的准备。但每个人都很快(做好准备),而且都做得很好,我那里有个很好的美工,而她显然做得很好。当地的工作组也很棒。全部戏服。化妆、主管都在那里。我们带来我们的DP,在国内,我们也有一个很好的摄影团队,那里是个很好的拍摄地,我毫无疑问地愿意回到那里。
N:我感谢你带着你的电影来到德州动漫展,我等不及要去看,但我要告诉你,Kelly Leak也会回到休士顿。Astrodome体育场已经没有什么位子啦!
J:哈哈,我期待在那里见到你们,我希望你们了解电影,给德州漫展的电影票还是买得到的哦,这个周末在George R. Brown Convention Center,在有很多有趣的活动,我希望可以在那里见到你们!
Nordling报道。
=============================THE END========================================


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