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Auteur on Auteur: Our Favorite Directors Insult Each Other.

post #1 of 47
Thread Starter 

Source: http://flavorwire.com/200745/the-30-harshest-filmmaker-on-filmmaker-insults-in-history

 

Copied here because the source pages are a pain in the ass to navigate.

 

1. Francois Truffaut on Michelangelo Antonioni:
“Antonioni is the only important director I have nothing good to say about. He bores me; he’s so solemn and humorless.”

 

2. Ingmar Bergman on Michelangelo Antonioni:
“Fellini, Kurosawa, and Bunuel move in the same field as Tarkovsky. Antonioni was on his way, but expired, suffocated by his own tediousness.”

 

3. Ingmar Berman on Orson Welles:
“For me he’s just a hoax. It’s empty. It’s not interesting. It’s dead. Citizen Kane, which I have a copy of — is all the critics’ darling, always at the top of every poll taken, but I think it’s a total bore. Above all, the performances are worthless. The amount of respect that movie’s got is absolutely unbelievable.”

 

4. Ingmar Bergman on Jean-Luc Godard:
“I’ve never gotten anything out of his movies. They have felt constructed, faux intellectual, and completely dead. Cinematographically uninteresting and infinitely boring. Godard is a fucking bore. He’s made his films for the critics. One of the movies, Masculin, Féminin, was shot here in Sweden. It was mind-numbingly boring.”

 

5. Orson Welles on Jean-Luc Godard:
“His gifts as a director are enormous. I just can’t take him very seriously as a thinker — and that’s where we seem to differ, because he does. His message is what he cares about these days, and, like most movie messages, it could be written on the head of a pin.”

 

6. Werner Herzog on Jean-Luc Godard:
“Someone like Jean-Luc Godard is for me intellectual counterfeit money when compared to a good kung-fu film.”

 

7. Jean-Luc Godard on Quentin Tarantino:
“Tarantino named his production company after one of my films. He’d have done better to give me some money.”

 

8. Harmony Korine on Quentin Tarantino:
“Quentin Tarantino seems to be too concerned with other films. I mean, about appropriating other movies, like in a blender. I think it’s, like, really funny at the time I’m seeing it, but then, I don’t know, there’s a void there. Some of the references are flat, just pop culture.”

 

9. Nick Broomfield on Quentin Tarantino:
“It’s like watching a schoolboy’s fantasy of violence and sex, which normally Quentin Tarantino would be wanking alone to in his bedroom while this mother is making his baked beans downstairs. Only this time he’s got Harvey Weinstein behind him and it’s on at a million screens.”

 

10. Spike Lee on Quentin Tarantino (and the “n-word” in his scripts):
“I’m not against the word, and I use it, but not excessively. And some people speak that way. But, Quentin is infatuated with that word. What does he want to be made — an honorary black man?”

 

11. Spike Lee on Tyler Perry:
“We got a black president, and we going back to Mantan Moreland and Sleep ‘n’ Eat?”

 

12. Tyler Perry on Spike Lee
“Spike can go straight to hell! You can print that… Spike needs to shut the hell up!”

 

13. Clint Eastwood on Spike Lee:
“A guy like him should shut his face.”

 

14. Jacques Rivette on Stanley Kubrick:
“Kubrick is a machine, a mutant, a Martian. He has no human feeling whatsoever. But it’s great when the machine films other machines, as in 2001.”

 

15. Jacques Rivette on James Cameron (and Steven Spielberg):
“Cameron isn’t evil, he’s not an asshole like Spielberg. He wants to be the new De Mille. Unfortunately, he can’t direct his way out of a paper bag. “

 

16. Jean-Luc Godard on Steven Spielberg:
“I don’t know him personally. I don’t think his films are very good.”

 

17. Alex Cox on Steven Spielberg:
“Spielberg isn’t a filmmaker, he’s a confectioner.”

 

18. Tim Burton on Kevin Smith (after Smith jokingly accused Burton of stealing the ending of Planet of the Apes from a Smith comic book):
“Anyone who knows me knows I would never read a comic book. And I would especially never read anything created by Kevin Smith.”

 

19. Kevin Smith on Tim Burton (in response to “I would never read a comic book”):
“Which, to me, explains fucking Batman.”

 

20. Kevin Smith on Paul Thomas Anderson (specifically, Magnolia):
“I’ll never watch it again, but I will keep it. I’ll keep it right on my desk, as a constant reminder that a bloated sense of self-importance is the most unattractive quality in a person or their work.”

 

21. David Gordon Green on Kevin Smith:
“He kind of created a Special Olympics for film. They just kind of lowered the standard. I’m sure their parents are proud; it’s just nothing I care to buy a ticket for.”

 

22. Vincent Gallo on Spike Jonze:
“He’s the biggest fraud out there. If you bring him to a party he’s the least interesting person at the party, he’s the person who doesn’t know anything. He’s the person who doesn’t say anything funny, interesting, intelligent… He’s a pig piece of shit.”

 

23. Vincent Gallo on Martin Scorsese:
“I wouldn’t work for Martin Scorsese for $10 million. He hasn’t made a good film in 25 years. I would never work with an egomaniac has-been.”

 

24. Vincent Gallo on Sofia (and Francis Ford) Coppola:
“Sofia Coppola likes any guy who has what she wants. If she wants to be a photographer she’ll fuck a photographer. If she wants to be a filmmaker, she’ll fuck a filmmaker. She’s a parasite just like her fat, pig father was.”

 

25. Vincent Gallo on Abel Ferrara:
“Abel Ferrara was on so much crack when I did The Funeral, he was never on set. He was in my room trying to pick-pocket me.”

 

26. Werner Herzog on Abel Ferrara:
“I have no idea who Abel Ferrara is. But let him fight the windmills… I’ve never seen a film by him. I have no idea who he is. Is he Italian? Is he French? Who is he?”

 

27. David Cronenberg on M. Night Shymalan:
“I HATE that guy! Next question.”

 

28. Alan Parker on Peter Greenaway (specifically The Draughtsman’s Contact):
“A load of posturing poo-poo.”

 

29. Ken Russell on Sir Richard Attenborough:
“Sir Richard (‘I’m-going-to-attack-the-Establishment-fifty-years-after-it’s-dead’) Attenborough is guilty of caricature, a sense of righteous self-satisfaction, and repetition which all undermine the impact of the film.”

 

30. Uwe Boll on Michael Bay:
“I’m not a fucking retard like Michael Bay.”

post #2 of 47

It's nice to see that filmmakers are just as bitchy to one another as film bloggers.

 

That Vincent Gallo seems like a delightful fellow.

post #3 of 47
Quote:
Originally Posted by Episode29 View Post

It's nice to see that filmmakers are just as bitchy to one another as film bloggers.

 

That Vincent Gallo seems like a delightful fellow.



Indeed!  Also, I love Tyler Perry's response to Spike Lee.

post #4 of 47

 

     Quote:

31. Peter Hyams on Ted Kotcheff

 

"Up his with a French Horn."

 

 

Heard there was some tension there, didn't know it was that vitriolic.

post #5 of 47

 

 

Quote:

20. Kevin Smith on Paul Thomas Anderson (specifically, Magnolia):
“I’ll never watch it again, but I will keep it. I’ll keep it right on my desk, as a constant reminder that a bloated sense of self-importance is the most unattractive quality in a person or their work.”

 

 

Guess Smith lost his copy a while back, eh?

post #6 of 47

Yeah, I came to this thread to ask "didn't Smith recant his Magnolia diss?".

post #7 of 47

One that was missed up there was Paul Thomas Anderson wishing David Fincher testicle cancer. PTA's father died of cancer a couple of years before Fight Club was released, and obviously from Magnolia(which was a few months after Fight Club's release), PTA still thought heavy of his father's suffering.

 

What absolves all this is that PTA wrote back to Rolling Stone apologizing to Fincher, and to reassure him that he doesn't wish the guy ball cancer.

post #8 of 47

Fuck Kevin Smith six ways from Sunday, but his comeback to Burton is the best one.

 

Oh, and fuck Burton seven ways from Sunday.

post #9 of 47

I love Vincent Gallo, but:

 

"23. Vincent Gallo on Martin Scorsese:
“I wouldn’t work for Martin Scorsese for $10 million. He hasn’t made a good film in 25 years. I would never work with an egomaniac has-been.”

 

What year did he say this? Whatever the year, his appearance in Goodfellas makes this quote not add up.

 

And he also had this gem:

 

"Monte Hellman . . . was going to direct (Buffalo '66). The great Monte Hellman. And we started collaborating to prepare to do the movie and I realized that my hero had become a stubborn, miserable, out-of-touch man."

post #10 of 47

He's also really, really vitrolic about Coppala, and he was the STAR of his last film. I heard an interview with FFC on NPR, and he was saying that Gallo was nothing but a consummate professional and an all-around decent guy.

 

Weird.

 

Also, that David Cronenberg quote is spectacular. I could look up the context, but I kind of enjoy imagining it on my own.

post #11 of 47
Quote:
Originally Posted by Z.Vasquez View Post

He's also really, really vitrolic about Coppala, and he was the STAR of his last film. I heard an interview with FFC on NPR, and he was saying that Gallo was nothing but a consummate professional and an all-around decent guy.

 

Weird.

 

Also, that David Cronenberg quote is spectacular. I could look up the context, but I kind of enjoy imagining it on my own.

 


I've always thought Gallo, as a persona for the press, has always been prefabbing his heel reputation to get more attention(and investment returns) on his films. It's a shock jock marketing plan, really. 

 

Notice he flairs up only when it's a film he's directing. For example, we heard not a slimey peep out of him while he starred in Tetro during it's filming.

 

post #12 of 47

Has David O. Russell said anything inflammatory on record? I know he gets busted on set, and headlocked Chris Nolan at one point, but has he ever sat down with a journalist-- saying shit like "George Clooney is a fucking cunt."?

post #13 of 47
Thread Starter 

 

Quote:
Originally Posted by Walker View Post

 I know he gets busted on set, and headlocked Chris Nolan at one point



Wait, what?!

 

post #14 of 47

I second that "WHAT!?"

post #15 of 47

I believe that's from a Sharon Waxman article, excerpted here:

 

 

Quote:
David O. Russell is an unorthodox director and person to interview. Having now evolved from his wunderkind status with films such as 1994's Spanking the Monkey, Flirting With Disaster in 1996 and 1999's Three Kings, Russell now presents us with a mature piece on existentialism. More on I Heart Huckabees later, but Russell remains a director whose personality tends to overshadow his films. Reports from the set of Three Kings suggested he got involved in fistfights with George Clooney, and his new film has been dogged by a New York Times article by reporter Sharon Waxman which Russell is reportedly very, very unhappy with. Waxman accuses Russell of goading and shocking his actors (among them Jude Law, Dustin Hoffman and Mark Wahlberg), writes about how he headlocked British director Chris Nolan until he agreed to free Jude Law from a contract to let him appear in his film, and even quotes one of his leading ladies Isabelle Huppert as describing him as 'very annoying'.

 

post #16 of 47
Thread Starter 

Holy shit, that's awesome. In a "get a restraining order, STAT!" kind of way.

post #17 of 47
Quote:
Originally Posted by Walker View Post



 


I've always thought Gallo, as a persona for the press, has always been prefabbing his heel reputation to get more attention(and investment returns) on his films. It's a shock jock marketing plan, really. 

 

Notice he flairs up only when it's a film he's directing. For example, we heard not a slimey peep out of him while he starred in Tetro during it's filming.

 


 


Definitley, but I guess I'm more surprised by Francis Ford Coppala not socking the guy in the face, let alone hiring him to star in his film.

post #18 of 47

I really like the Eastwood quote. Just because I imagine his character from Gran Torino saying it.
 

Quote:
Originally Posted by Walker View Post
Notice he flairs up only when it's a film he's directing.

 


Not always. Before it was even released, Gallo referred to Kiefer Sutherland's Truth Or Consequences NM as "a derivative, unoriginal piece of shit."

 

He's right but still... Ouch.

 

Phil, I'm drawing a blank. Who was he in GoodFellas?

 

post #19 of 47

My favorites from the initial list....

 


 

Quote:
Originally Posted by MichaelM View Post

6. Werner Herzog on Jean-Luc Godard:“Someone like Jean-Luc Godard is for me intellectual counterfeit money when compared to a good kung-fu film.”

 

Please, please, PLEASE..........let Werner make his own kung-fu movie someday.  Starring Nic Cage.  It would be the greatest thing ever!

 


 

Quote:

10. Spike Lee on Quentin Tarantino (and the “n-word” in his scripts):“I’m not against the word, and I use it, but not excessively. And some people speak that way. But, Quentin is infatuated with that word. What does he want to be made — an honorary black man?”

 

12. Tyler Perry on Spike Lee“Spike can go straight to hell! You can print that… Spike needs to shut the hell up!”

 

13. Clint Eastwood on Spike Lee:“A guy like him should shut his face.”

 

I love how Spike used to call Quentin racist back in the day and then turn around and say something along the lines of "It's only OK for a black director to use the N word in his movies".  I like some of Lee's films and am really looking forward to what he could do with the Oldboy remake, but I can't stand listening to him in the press.  Kudos to Clint and (I hate to say it) Tyler Perry!

 

 


 

Quote:
20. Kevin Smith on Paul Thomas Anderson (specifically, Magnolia):“I’ll never watch it again, but I will keep it. I’ll keep it right on my desk, as a constant reminder that a bloated sense of self-importance is the most unattractive quality in a person or their work.”

 

21. David Gordon Green on Kevin Smith:“He kind of created a Special Olympics for film. They just kind of lowered the standard. I’m sure their parents are proud; it’s just nothing I care to buy a ticket for.”

 

Oh Kevin, how ironic that statement is these days.  Also, while I like David Gordon Green, does he really think something like Your Highness is that much better than Smith's work?  'Cause it isn't.  Some of his other films are, but that one certainly isn't.

 

 


 

Quote:
26. Werner Herzog on Abel Ferrara:“I have no idea who Abel Ferrara is. But let him fight the windmills… I’ve never seen a film by him. I have no idea who he is. Is he Italian? Is he French? Who is he?”

 

I remember this spat.  Ferrara was pitching a fit about Herzog "remaking" Bad Lieutenant.  I have news for you Abel.  You directed a remake of Invasion of the Body Snatchers back in the day.  I HATE it when a filmmaker bitches about someone remaking their work when they have a remake of their own in their resume.  Cronenberg was guilty of this back when Scanners almost got remade.  Love the man to death, but shut your trap!  You directed a remake in '86!

 

 


 

Quote:

27. David Cronenberg on M. Night Shymalan:“I HATE that guy! Next question.”

 

30. Uwe Boll on Michael Bay:“I’m not a fucking retard like Michael Bay.”

 

These are both priceless.

 

 

 

 

 

Also, has anyone ever actually seen QT insult another director's work before?  I don't think I ever have.

post #20 of 47

QT slammed Michael Mann over Miami Vice and Collateral a few years back. I believe he said Vice was the worst film of 2006. Then there was that spat with Oliver Stone over Natural Born Killers. Other than that he seems to keep his trap shut for the most part. 

post #21 of 47

I heard something along the lines of QT accusing Stone of "fagging up" his script for NBK. Which he kind of did.

post #22 of 47

He was polite about it, QT slammed Memento saying "How does he remember he has a condition?".

post #23 of 47
Quote:
Originally Posted by Walker View Post

He was polite about it, QT slammed Memento saying "How does he remember he has a condition?".



Been a while, but doesn't the movie strongly suggest it is psychosomatic, so he molds his symptoms to the point where he can just barely function?

post #24 of 47
Quote:
Originally Posted by Walker View Post

He was polite about it, QT slammed Memento saying "How does he remember he has a condition?".



Um... Leonard tatooed notes to himself about it all over his bocdy?

 

 

post #25 of 47

That's the idea, yes, and obvious to the point that I'm a bit surprised that Tarantino didn't absorb it.

post #26 of 47

The "Remember Sammy Jankis" tattoo jumpstarts his brain.

post #27 of 47

Terry Gilliam sure likes to stir shit up, especially when talking about Steven Spielberg. Unfairly so considering some of the shit Gilliam has directed.

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WuvgzPkext0

 

Has Spielberg ever insulted another filmmaker?

post #28 of 47

Seems like Spielberg is too much of a professional to do something like that publicly.

post #29 of 47

Spielberg doesn't kick the dirt, even when other filmmakers try to goad him into it. I remember back in 2005, Tim Story tried picking a (PR-grabbing) fight with The 'Berg, saying that Fantastic Four was going to kick War of the Worlds' ass, both in quality and box office. Spielberg's reply when asked about it? "I think there's room for both our movies. I'm looking forward to seeing Fantastic Four with my kids."

 

Actually, waitaminute, whatever happened to Tim Story?

post #30 of 47

Tim Story is his own Mexican, non-union equivalent.

post #31 of 47

Ah!  Then what about Timo Cuento!?

post #32 of 47

He's the director of Los Cuatros Fantasticos!

post #33 of 47

I hear it really improved on the Cormano version.

 

But not much.

post #34 of 47
Quote:
Originally Posted by MichaelM View Post

Source: http://flavorwire.com/200745/the-30-harshest-filmmaker-on-filmmaker-insults-in-history

 

Copied here because the source pages are a pain in the ass to navigate.

 

1. Francois Truffaut on Michelangelo Antonioni:
“Antonioni is the only important director I have nothing good to say about. He bores me; he’s so solemn and humorless.”

 

2. Ingmar Bergman on Michelangelo Antonioni:
“Fellini, Kurosawa, and Bunuel move in the same field as Tarkovsky. Antonioni was on his way, but expired, suffocated by his own tediousness.”

 

3. Ingmar Berman on Orson Welles:
“For me he’s just a hoax. It’s empty. It’s not interesting. It’s dead. Citizen Kane, which I have a copy of — is all the critics’ darling, always at the top of every poll taken, but I think it’s a total bore. Above all, the performances are worthless. The amount of respect that movie’s got is absolutely unbelievable.”

 

4. Ingmar Bergman on Jean-Luc Godard:
“I’ve never gotten anything out of his movies. They have felt constructed, faux intellectual, and completely dead. Cinematographically uninteresting and infinitely boring. Godard is a fucking bore. He’s made his films for the critics. One of the movies, Masculin, Féminin, was shot here in Sweden. It was mind-numbingly boring.”

 

5. Orson Welles on Jean-Luc Godard:
“His gifts as a director are enormous. I just can’t take him very seriously as a thinker — and that’s where we seem to differ, because he does. His message is what he cares about these days, and, like most movie messages, it could be written on the head of a pin.”

 

6. Werner Herzog on Jean-Luc Godard:
“Someone like Jean-Luc Godard is for me intellectual counterfeit money when compared to a good kung-fu film.”

 

7. Jean-Luc Godard on Quentin Tarantino:
“Tarantino named his production company after one of my films. He’d have done better to give me some money.”

 

8. Harmony Korine on Quentin Tarantino:
“Quentin Tarantino seems to be too concerned with other films. I mean, about appropriating other movies, like in a blender. I think it’s, like, really funny at the time I’m seeing it, but then, I don’t know, there’s a void there. Some of the references are flat, just pop culture.”

 

9. Nick Broomfield on Quentin Tarantino:
“It’s like watching a schoolboy’s fantasy of violence and sex, which normally Quentin Tarantino would be wanking alone to in his bedroom while this mother is making his baked beans downstairs. Only this time he’s got Harvey Weinstein behind him and it’s on at a million screens.”

 

10. Spike Lee on Quentin Tarantino (and the “n-word” in his scripts):
“I’m not against the word, and I use it, but not excessively. And some people speak that way. But, Quentin is infatuated with that word. What does he want to be made — an honorary black man?”

 

11. Spike Lee on Tyler Perry:
“We got a black president, and we going back to Mantan Moreland and Sleep ‘n’ Eat?”

 

12. Tyler Perry on Spike Lee
“Spike can go straight to hell! You can print that… Spike needs to shut the hell up!”

 

13. Clint Eastwood on Spike Lee:
“A guy like him should shut his face.”

 

14. Jacques Rivette on Stanley Kubrick:
“Kubrick is a machine, a mutant, a Martian. He has no human feeling whatsoever. But it’s great when the machine films other machines, as in 2001.”

 

15. Jacques Rivette on James Cameron (and Steven Spielberg):
“Cameron isn’t evil, he’s not an asshole like Spielberg. He wants to be the new De Mille. Unfortunately, he can’t direct his way out of a paper bag. “

 

16. Jean-Luc Godard on Steven Spielberg:
“I don’t know him personally. I don’t think his films are very good.”

 

17. Alex Cox on Steven Spielberg:
“Spielberg isn’t a filmmaker, he’s a confectioner.”

 

18. Tim Burton on Kevin Smith (after Smith jokingly accused Burton of stealing the ending of Planet of the Apes from a Smith comic book):
“Anyone who knows me knows I would never read a comic book. And I would especially never read anything created by Kevin Smith.”

 

19. Kevin Smith on Tim Burton (in response to “I would never read a comic book”):
“Which, to me, explains fucking Batman.”

 

20. Kevin Smith on Paul Thomas Anderson (specifically, Magnolia):
“I’ll never watch it again, but I will keep it. I’ll keep it right on my desk, as a constant reminder that a bloated sense of self-importance is the most unattractive quality in a person or their work.”

 

21. David Gordon Green on Kevin Smith:
“He kind of created a Special Olympics for film. They just kind of lowered the standard. I’m sure their parents are proud; it’s just nothing I care to buy a ticket for.”

 

22. Vincent Gallo on Spike Jonze:
“He’s the biggest fraud out there. If you bring him to a party he’s the least interesting person at the party, he’s the person who doesn’t know anything. He’s the person who doesn’t say anything funny, interesting, intelligent… He’s a pig piece of shit.”

 

23. Vincent Gallo on Martin Scorsese:
“I wouldn’t work for Martin Scorsese for $10 million. He hasn’t made a good film in 25 years. I would never work with an egomaniac has-been.”

 

24. Vincent Gallo on Sofia (and Francis Ford) Coppola:
“Sofia Coppola likes any guy who has what she wants. If she wants to be a photographer she’ll fuck a photographer. If she wants to be a filmmaker, she’ll fuck a filmmaker. She’s a parasite just like her fat, pig father was.”

 

25. Vincent Gallo on Abel Ferrara:
“Abel Ferrara was on so much crack when I did The Funeral, he was never on set. He was in my room trying to pick-pocket me.”

 

26. Werner Herzog on Abel Ferrara:
“I have no idea who Abel Ferrara is. But let him fight the windmills… I’ve never seen a film by him. I have no idea who he is. Is he Italian? Is he French? Who is he?”

 

27. David Cronenberg on M. Night Shymalan:
“I HATE that guy! Next question.”

 

28. Alan Parker on Peter Greenaway (specifically The Draughtsman’s Contact):
“A load of posturing poo-poo.”

 

29. Ken Russell on Sir Richard Attenborough:
“Sir Richard (‘I’m-going-to-attack-the-Establishment-fifty-years-after-it’s-dead’) Attenborough is guilty of caricature, a sense of righteous self-satisfaction, and repetition which all undermine the impact of the film.”

 

30. Uwe Boll on Michael Bay:
“I’m not a fucking retard like Michael Bay.”


This was a great list and a great read, thanks so much. Many were spot on and clever, and cracked me up. A lot of truth to a few of these soundbites, IMHO
post #35 of 47

I could be mistaken but I believe Spielberg was publicly critical of Roberto Benigni when Life is Beautiful came out. Called the movie offensive and said he would have walked out if his wife, Kate Capshaw, hadn't made him stay. I could have sworn there was something else but I'm blanking on it at the moment. 

post #36 of 47

http://articles.nydailynews.com/1999-03-15/gossip/18095525_1_marvin-levy-shoah-visual-history-foundation-holocaust

 

 

Oh, and the full story behind that great Cronenberg quote is that some ignorant dipshit in a press conference stood up and rather matter-of-factly asked about M. Night Shyamalan's "obvious" influence on David Fucking Cronenberg in regards to A History of Violence. As the story goes, there was a brief, uncomfortable silence, and then Cronenberg made his comment. I personally would have liked to have seen Cronenberg shoot the dumb prick with a cancer bullet.

 

 

post #37 of 47

I once watched half of Diary of a Mad Black Woman while I suffered through the flu.

 

Tyler Perry shouldn't be allowed to complain about anything ever, even if that involves tigers eating his legs.

 

 

Quote: S.D. Bob Plissken

  Kudos to Clint and (I hate to say it) Tyler Perry!

 

 

 

post #38 of 47

I read an interview with Samuel L. Jackson where he talks about how much Quentin Tarantino wants to be black. Sam's not offended, he thinks it's funny as shit.

post #39 of 47

Jackson also defended Tarantino saying that "This (Jackie Brown) is a good film. And Spike hasn't made one of those in a few years." Ouch. Guess that's why Jackson hasn't been in a Lee film since.

 

http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1355/is_n15_v93/ai_21250148/

post #40 of 47

This has always been a favourite of mine - 

 

Playboy: What about The Godfather?

Peckinpah: Haven’t seen it - but I hate Coppola, too.

Playboy: Why?

Peckinpah: Because I hear the film is great and the only movies I want to like are my movies. I don’t want any other son of a bitch making good movies.

post #41 of 47
Quote:
Originally Posted by Schwartz View Post

Been a while, but doesn't the movie strongly suggest it is psychosomatic, so he molds his symptoms to the point where he can just barely function?



It isn't psychosomatic. What he molds is not the symptoms, he tricks himself into believing he's still on the hunt.



Quote:

Originally Posted by Greg Clark View Post

"I think there's room for both our movies. I'm looking forward to seeing Fantastic Four with my kids."


That reads like a pretty subtle dis, in my opinion. His way of saying: "I don't feel the least bit threatened by your fucking kiddie movie, thank you very much."

 



Quote:
Originally Posted by Odo19 View Post

I could be mistaken but I believe Spielberg was publicly critical of Roberto Benigni when Life is Beautiful came out. Called the movie offensive and said he would have walked out if his wife, Kate Capshaw, hadn't made him stay. I could have sworn there was something else but I'm blanking on it at the moment. 


Well... He's dead on if that's the case. La Vita E Bella is one of the most awful critically acclaimed films in history.

 


 

Quote:
Originally Posted by JacknifeJohnny View Post

Oh, and the full story behind that great Cronenberg quote is that some ignorant dipshit in a press conference stood up and rather matter-of-factly asked about M. Night Shyamalan's "obvious" influence on David Fucking Cronenberg in regards to A History of Violence.

 


As some of you know, I am the eternal Shyamalan defender. But that is one of the most idiotic statements I've ever heard. What exactly was the obvious influence he percieved? There is nothing Shyamalanesque AT ALL in A History of Violence. I guess this journalist thinks that Shyamalan invented the concept of a plot twist.

 

I remember there was an interview from the same time when they asked him about a Tarantino influence. Cronenberg said something to the effect of: "Tarantino just makes movies that are about other movies." That could definitely be considered a dig, I think.

 



Quote:
Originally Posted by AtomTastic View Post

Peckinpah: Because I hear the film is great and the only movies I want to like are my movies. I don’t want any other son of a bitch making good movies.


That's as clear cut a reason as to why filmmakers take pot shots at other filmmakers.

 

post #42 of 47

While it is definitely a compliment, I've always loved the story Brian De Palma tells about completing an extremely complicated shot on one of his films during shooting and feeling good about himself...................only to go see Raging Bull shortly after and feel depressed again.

 

To paraphrase De Palma, "No matter what you do, there's always Scorsese!"

post #43 of 47

Just to be clear I wasn't criticizing Spielberg in my post. Life is Beautiful very well may be a piece of shit. I wouldn't know as I haven't seen it. 

 

Also as long as we're on Cronenberg he savaged the Wachowski Bros. in an book of his interviews that came out a few years back. It seemed to come out of annoyance that Existenz was released around the same time as The Matrix. He criticized the movie as being made for 8 year olds. He also had some unkind things to say about Paul Verhoeven's version of Total Recall( as you may remember he was in the running to make it for a number of years). 

 

Edit: Hey wait a sec...Erix's Don Johnson avi is gone? I guess this means The Miami Vice Experience is truly gone now. NOOOOOOOOO!!!!! Fuck it. I'm starting season 2 then. 

post #44 of 47

Yeah, I love Cronenberg, but he can hold grudges.  He definitely hates The Matrix for stomping eXistenZ at the box office and Verhoeven's Total Recall for getting made when his version didn't.  Understandable though, I guess.

 

The only time I really wish David would have kept his opinion to himself is when he got rather venomous a few years back at the prospect of Scanners and The Brood being remade (both redos are dead now, I believe.........though Scanners might end up as a TV series).  Anyway, it's a bit hypocritical considering the fact that one of his most known and praised works is itself a remake.

post #45 of 47


 

Quote:
Originally Posted by Odo19 View Post

Edit: Hey wait a sec...Erix's Don Johnson avi is gone? I guess this means The Miami Vice Experience is truly gone now. NOOOOOOOOO!!!!! Fuck it. I'm starting season 2 then. 


Not to go off topic, but I promise you it isn't gone. I'm paying tribute to the great Charles Napier but Don will be back and so will The Experience. I just put it on an extended hiatus because, believe it or not, those are rather hard for me to do and I didn't want to burn out.

 

I remember someone around here once promised to watch every single Star Trek episode and never lived up to it... And then he left. That's not me.

 

(I was planning it to return in conjunction with The B Movie Column, but it will probably have to wait until next week.)
 

Quote:
Originally Posted by S.D. Bob Plissken View Post

The only time I really wish David would have kept his opinion to himself is when he got rather venomous a few years back at the prospect of Scanners and The Brood being remade (both redos are dead now, I believe.........though Scanners might end up as a TV series).  Anyway, it's a bit hypocritical considering the fact that one of his most known and praised works is itself a remake.


His Scanners redo hate is especially mystifying since that concept was already run into the ground with endless sequels anyway.

 

post #46 of 47
Quote:
Originally Posted by Erix View Post

That reads like a pretty subtle dis, in my opinion. His way of saying: "I don't feel the least bit threatened by your fucking kiddie movie, thank you very much."


Spielberg's subtle dis would be effective if WAR OF THE WORLDS didn't seem like something written by an 8-year-old. At least FANTASTIC FOUR has the excuse of being based on a children's comic book.

 

post #47 of 47

Not an insult per se but it's funny to see David Lynch react to his meeting with George Lucas. Suffice it to say they do not hang out together on weekends.

 

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