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  • we grew up film fanatics.

  • We weren't.

  • You know, we're sort of film geeks guys that like to watch a lot of movies and talk about a lot of movies.

  • And I remember the day that we told our father that he was gonna drop out of law school to make a movie blow.

  • Where the Russo Brothers I'm Anthony and I'm gel.

  • And this is the timeline of our careers l a x 2194.

  • Yes, you.

  • If you pull us up on I am Devi, you'll find this interesting title there.

  • Yeah, it's called L a x 2194.

  • We have nothing to do with that project.

  • So we don't know why it's on our We've actually tried for years to get it off, or I am Devi Page unsuccessfully.

  • You've never heard of it?

  • Were Cleveland at the time going to school?

  • I have no idea What So I am Devi, if you're listening, please, Can you take that off?

  • You've never heard of it?

  • Are very very first movie was called pieces Joe and I made it.

  • We shot it between like 94 97 because about which is why we weren't working at l.

  • A x 21 exactly took three years to shoot this movie in our hometown of Cleveland.

  • I'll using friends and family is cast and crew.

  • Yeah, we were inspired by Robert Rodriguez, who had recently made El Mariachi and wrote a book about how he made a movie for $7000.

  • We, unfortunately, did not get this movie done for $7000.

  • Cost us a little bit more than that.

  • We ran out of money here.

  • We did remember we shot this shot on 16 millimeter.

  • We ran out of money and we had a key negative in the fridge there six months Saturday.

  • If there had been a black the entire film, we would have lost the whole movie.

  • We're sort of film geeks, guys that like to watch a lot of movies and talk about a lot of movies.

  • And we weren't necessarily Spielberg in the backyard with the camera shooting films.

  • We really didn't know how to make a movie.

  • We had to buy some books to teach yourself how to do it from one guy in Cleveland.

  • That could be a GP, and I remember the day that we told our father that he was gonna drop out of law school to make a movie.

  • It was a rough day.

  • Didn't speak to him for six months.

  • But a lot of awkward meals at the dinner, too.

  • Yeah, it was awkward for a period there, but he eventually came around and became one of our biggest champion.

  • So he he became very happy at some point.

  • Choices were not here sitting here, not her father.

  • So, yeah, it was a very experimental genre film, the kind of movie that only a guy like Steven Soderbergh would, uh would enjoy.

  • And thank goodness he was actually sitting in the theater for that screening.

  • Said he really liked the movie and it was the start of our careers.

  • We never released it because we have a lot of meat music in that movie that we actually cut the film to.

  • We don't know anything about the film business and how much music costs.

  • So when we went to clear Led Zeppelin and Funkadelic and all these other awesome bands were used in the movie, I couldn't afford, you were sort of like what we need to pay for this stuff.

  • Really.

  • It was a film.

  • It's a disaster.

  • It's a documentary.

  • It's supposed to look like that good news is save his crack.

  • I received a phone call while I was living, you see, like student housing, and I picked it up and the voice on the other end said, I this is Steven Soderbergh.

  • Joe there was getting an M f A degree in film at the time.

  • You see a way, and I thought it was one of my fellow classmates messing with me.

  • Unfortunately for us, it was actually Steven Soderbergh.

  • We want Thio eat with him at a Riverside Cuban restaurant on Venice Boulevard in Los Angeles.

  • Had a really interesting conversation with him.

  • He said he wanted to produce her next film and help us get into the business.

  • He really liked some of the stylized elements of pieces, and I thought we had potential.

  • I was gonna become our godfather, said Speak, at which point we, Joe and I went into about a three year cycle where we wrote three screenplays.

  • Eventually, Stephen formed a partnership with George Clooney when they were making Ocean's 11 so they had a production company based at Warner Brothers and we got a call one day from the head of their production company and he said, Basically, Stephen wants to produce the mother movies through this company, and you guys were the first name he brought up.

  • So we sort of showed up with our three scripts that we had written, and Steven said that one and we made welcome to Collinwood took us about a year to cast the movie were relatively unknown filmmakers with movie that only Steven Soderbergh liked.

  • So you know, not necessarily a calling card phone, and we sat on the couch in Jordan.

  • Stephens office used to call it the Russo Brothers Corner on.

  • We had a phone and a side table, and we make calls all day just trying to get actors interested talking to agents.

  • This was in the very like a right around 2000.

  • I think that we're doing this so is right after that sort of the epic nineties, the indie films of the nineties.

  • So we were able to target like some of our favorites from those movies.

  • Sam Rockwell, William H.

  • Macy, Patricia Clarkson, Michael Jeter, Washington.

  • George Clooney played a role in the film George actually jump start the movie.

  • We couldn't.

  • I could get the budget we needed until George actually took a roll.

  • A small role in the film.

  • Uh, but, uh, he steals every scene he's playing.

  • A safecracker teaches, um, teaches our group of criminals how to crack a safe, which is the way we were able to go back home in Cleveland, where we had made pieces originally.

  • And, you know, the prior film we had made was basically a do it yourself movie where where the crew is, like, you can count them on one hand.

  • So we go to our first day of shooting.

  • I'm welcome to Collinwood in Cleveland.

  • We're shooting in this warehouse area and we start to pull up to set the two of us on the first day.

  • And all of a sudden there's all these trucks all over the place, all these police all over the place, and I start to get really anxious.

  • And Joe and I are looking at each other.

  • What the heck's going on?

  • We're supposed to shoot here today.

  • Everything is in the way.

  • It's cops and trucks all over the place.

  • He had no idea that this was our crew and the police were there for our production.

  • We literally like we had no frame of reference from that scale from a budget like that to a budget like that.

  • Get cops and trucks by slightly.

  • You mean 200 times the budget?

  • That's right.

  • But it was still minuscule compared to a cat America water soldier.

  • So we had to shoot some complicated stunts on on this movie, one of which involved hanging Michael Jeter and Sam Rockwell from a pipe about 30 feet.

  • Uh, well, the ground for sequence in which they're trying to sneak across the pipe in order to get into this apartment to break into a safe.

  • The learning curve was steep again for guys who had played just about every roll on their first movie behind the scenes.

  • Now we had to start understanding how of the departments worked.

  • That movie was a film school.

  • It's very much was this was right after the rise of The Sopranos, and I think the Shield had just premiered on FX.

  • FX was striving to be like free cable HBO run by a guy named Kevin Reilly.

  • Yeah, Kevin Ryan, who is a real maverick.

  • Very, very smart executive.

  • The time when they were trying to make television more cinematic, they couldn't afford.

  • Like the big feature director, they began looking at indie directors for t Bring to television for the first time.

  • So somebody had somehow mentioned us to.

  • Kevin liked what we were doing, and he offered us this pilot called Lucky, which was a very strange comedy about a degenerate gambler.

  • And we shot it hand held and really aggressive and different, and it caught a lot of people's attention in the industry.

  • I think the show lasted one season.

  • It was one of our favorite for you that you have worked.

  • A pilot became kind of an industry favorite, and I can't tell you how many meetings we got as a result of that pilot people really loved it.

  • Luckily, that pilot in the hands of David Nevins on dhe, they had a pilot script for a show that they were really excited about called Arrested Development.

  • Michael, look what happened to my fox.

  • Someone cut off his little foot.

  • Is it?

  • Is it noticeable?

  • Well, remember, you're gonna be all splattered in red paint.

  • That's gonna distract the eye Ron Howard said.

  • A very interesting thing to us at the time.

  • He's like he felt like it was really important to try to reinvent what television comedy could be.

  • That was the aspiration of that show, which is which is reality.

  • Television was coming in and was taking up all the time side because it was really cheap.

  • And, you know, he felt like sitcoms were stale and single camera comedies were becoming with a thing of the moment.

  • The problem with them is that they were expensive.

  • So they went to indie filmmakers like us to try to figure out a way to accomplish everything that they wanted on a budget.

  • So Dogma was big at the time of the film, movement is very stripped down film movement, and Anthony, I thought, All right, well, let's just dogma arrested development And we wrote a cover letter to cast saying Everyone gets the same trailer.

  • Be prepared to hear on hair and makeup.

  • We're gonna move quickly.

  • Natural way.

  • The 1st 2 things never happened, by the way, but they were part of our initial, the spirit of them.

  • But, you know, way we're pushing everybody to work in a certain pace.

  • And we came up with this idea tease digital cameras.

  • And these were the first is the first time I think in a network history that someone had shot asked to shoot a narrative show with digital cameras.

  • Of course, the network thought were insane.

  • Remember, this is like 2002.

  • Yeah, I wanted to make it feel like a market.

  • Mentally.

  • We were also being very referential to reality television, which was was taking over programming at the Times.

  • They feel like people understood the aesthetic behind it.

  • Yeah, so they're big concern was like, Oh, you guys can't shoot this on digital video cameras.

  • It's gonna look like crap.

  • And we're like, we want it to look like crap.

  • That's the point.

  • That's the whole aesthetic we're going.

  • Also, the point is that with digital camera, move much faster and keep the camera rolling so you could just shout out ad Libs to the actors and I can just keep going.

  • It was a tool for us to really try to reinvent how things were being made, what budget level they were being made at, and that Yeah, I mean, there's a lot of other to the narrative of rusted vote.

  • We convince them that, you know, that was the way to go.

  • And then we had to get script down from 60 Suitable.

  • I think we ended up shooting a 36 page script.

  • The other thing about rest development and this was an innovation that we came up with while we're trying to figure out how to shoot this enormously long pilot is the element of the narrator, which was performed by Ron Howard.

  • You know, that narration and arrested development allowed us in the editing process or even in the script process to pull out chunks of the story so that we could just get to the funny parts, you know?

  • So anything any sort of plot that we needed to summarize Ron Howard could do it very quick.

  • As a narrator thing came up with this two weeks before we shot you were sitting in a room with Mitch going How we get all this, you know?

  • How do we get all this?

  • We tried to get stripped all the ways that we couldn't do it.

  • There were other techniques techniques we came up with, which included flash back so that we could get really quick story bites out.

  • The narrator was the key to all that because it allowed us to go anywhere at any time.

  • So with a show like peer pressure, I think, which was episode night of Season one, where Believes Bluster wants George Michael to get weed for Lucille because she's having dizzy Vertigo attacks.

  • It's sort of crazy.

  • Episode unfolds.

  • I think ultimately that might have been like a pen up ultimate episode in terms of all the stylistic techniques we used on that show, plus the level of insanity that reaches at the end to shoot out on the docks with the hot cops and a bunch of fake drug dealers.

  • If you look at your pressure as sort of away to encapsulate what arrested development is, I think it really touches on.

  • You know, the dramatics of the show you have to do with parents and Children and in the town, the insane tone of the show Way just won an Emmy and arrested development for the pilot and given us a lot of political capital in the television space on, we're able to pick and choose projects with Ford.

  • One script that came across my desk that we really fell in love with was written by Dan Harmon on It was called Community, and it was about a collection misfits at a community college.

  • And we just thought it was a genius idea and that the execution of script was really for our taste.

  • It was layered.

  • It was clever.

  • It had really any characters in it, Uh, callbacks.

  • Call Fords.

  • It really reminded us of arrested development.

  • A lot of ways I should say, our approach, the television was exactly what our approach to indie filmmaking was.

  • Prior to that which is, you know, we would approach a project from the very beginning, just with a script, basically.

  • And then we would build the show out from there like a future director.

  • Woods.

  • What excited it's about working on those shows you could come in and create a world on.

  • That's what people came forward to create world.

  • And they asked us to come in and executive produce the show and sort of godfather it.

  • We came up with a very different look than arrested development.

  • We just felt like these were two very different shows.

  • There's more of magical realism to community Andi think the tie that binds on all the projects that we work on from pieces to Collinwood, too Arrested Thio community.

  • Up till this point, we're all about ensemble cafs and all about misfit families that were, you know, either either bonded by blood or bonded by friendship and community was, you know, a show that, you know, once we created a sandbox and everybody jumped in and started playing box has kept getting bigger and bigger and bigger way started to think about the pilot like a John Hughes movie.

  • We're very referential, Thio that in terms about the style we approached the pilot to community with and then that evolved like we I think, once the show got picked up and we wanted to move forward, we're talking with Dan.

  • You know, we don't want to stay stuck in that genre.

  • So we began to dabble in various genres with that show and sort of run different episodes, a different kind of narrative conceits in cinematic technique conceits, and that really became part of the life blood of what that show was.

  • Kristen out from statistics.

  • Probably way had had about a decade run in television that went really, really well.

  • And during that run, Joe and I started to think about transitioning back to features, and we really wanted to do an action feature.

  • We're working on an idea together for that.

  • When all of a sudden are Agent called up basically said No.

  • Marvel has a list of 10 directors that they want to talk to about the next Captain America movie on You guys are on it.

  • So they had already made Captain America the first Avenger, and they were thinking about making another one.

  • And for some reason we showed up on that list.

  • Later, we found out why, when we went in to find me with Kevin Faggy and his team, we had directed these two paintball at this odes.

  • Season two of Community and the painful episodes and community were well known because they were actions spoofs Destin Lin, who's really close friend of ours, had done the one in Season one, and then Way did two episodes back to back in season 21 was based on spoofing Sergio Leone e the others with Star Wars.

  • Kevin, it turned out, come via runs Marvel.

  • It was a huge fan of the papal episodes and asked us to come in and talk about what we would do with Captain America.

  • Yeah, we didn't.

  • One thing I love about Marvel is they don't necessarily bring people in who they think are actually hirable.

  • They're really just going on a creative exploration.

  • So, you know, the conversation with us could have just ended there.

  • But things clicked and we kept, I think, over two months we may be met with Marvel over four times over two months, where we kept getting more and more specific about what we would do with a second Captain America movie.

  • Unfortunate thing about being asked to do Captain America film is that instead of collecting comics when I was a kid, I still have my collection.

  • It's a really big collection in my closet.

  • I think stories that speak to you as a child you have an emotional connection to stay with you for your life in a way that no other stories can.

  • So I think I've learned a lot about narrative from reading comic books and was Lord of the Rings fanatic used to carry it around like a Bible everywhere went and I had a stack of comic books, and that's, I think, where the two of us learned to tell stories of a very early age.

  • We had the bug, uh, to do a movie like this.

  • And I think there's probably very few phone calls coming off of community that could pull us away from that.

  • Should I think that in that movie, I think was surprising for a lot of people?

  • You know?

  • Not a lot.

  • I don't think anyone thought of us at that point as as action directors, but we wanted to do a really hardcore action film because it's one of our favorite genres and styles.

  • And the movie worked really well, and we ended up having a long run with the M See you So continuing our work with ensembles on Captain America.

  • Civil War.

  • We supersized it from when her soldier, I think, worked with more characters than we're in any Marvel movie up to date.

  • It at that point really sort of are started trending in the direction of what would ultimately become infinity Warren Endgame.

  • Main set piece of that film, of course, is a battle between the Avengers have been split into two signs, of course, the movie too Philosophical divide, and it was set at an airport in Germany.

  • From a staging standpoint, it was by far and away the most complex thing we've done in our careers.

  • Up to that point, Uh, anything took a good 50 days of shooting.

  • It was almost like a movie within the movie.

  • It was such a complex in sequence.

  • And a lot of people ask us, How do we approach action?

  • How do we How do we execute action?

  • I think that sequence is a really good example of how Joe and I approach it.

  • WeII designed everything around character.

  • You know, all action for us is just an expression of character and specific to the narrative of what's happening with that character.

  • That moment story.

  • And I think if you look at the airport sequence in Civil War, you'll see we.

  • The whole sequence is sort of a series of character moments where everybody is having a very unique experience to where they are in the narrative at that point, and that gives us the shape and form for the sequence.

  • It gives us a narrative thrust to push through the sequence A ll that for a drop of blood, Joe and I Throughout our careers, we've always tried to find unique ways, toe work, unique opportunities and unique forms to working because we feel like it allows us to tap into different creative muscles and find original expressions.

  • And one of the great things about the emcee you is that it's serialized storytelling on a scale in movie theaters that's never been attempted before.

  • So because it's serialized that provided us with opportunities as storytellers to go to places that you normally can't go to it in a single standalone to our movie.

  • So when we realized with our partners Marcus and McFeely, who are the writers on all of our Marvel movies, that we could possibly trade a movie where the bad guy wins, get away with it.

  • It was very exciting.

  • Tow us storytelling level for many reasons, One of which is you don't normally see movies where the bad guy wins, but number two is, you know, we all have lives where unfortunately, the bad guys do win sometimes.

  • So Thea pertaining to go there on a narrative level was really exciting.

  • Tow us because we could deliver people movie that had a difficult ending.

  • But I wouldn't be so devastating to them that because they knew that there was there was a potential future.

  • There was a potential road forward because these movies air serialized.

  • So that was the big suing that we took with Avengers Infinity.

  • One of the other trends I think in our work the sides ensembles is deconstruction we like to deconstruct.

  • The community is a show about deconstruction of pop culture rest developments and show about the deconstruction of a family of an insane family on.

  • If you look at every choice that big choice that we made in the Marvel universe, it's about construction.

  • I think that we lined up really well with phases in which we got involved Marvel.

  • They had already built the beginnings, and typically what you do in a second act is you deconstruct the beginning, you tear it down, and then in the third act, you build it back up.

  • So if you look at our work over there soldier Civil War on Finney War of its second act leading into the third Act, which is endgame.

  • We're deconstructing Wonder Soldier.

  • We tell you that the good guys or the bad guys on Civil War.

  • We divorced the Avengers from one another on because they're divorced on infinity work.

  • They lose and you know, half the universe is killed, which would lead us to end game.

  • We will.

  • The end game was a great creative opportunity for us and that it was the ending, you know, It was our job to no longer think about where the AMC goes in the future, but simply like to look back at the previous 21 movies and provide the most satisfying ending to that narrative that we can.

  • So you know what?

  • What a ridiculous opportunity where Joe and I, I got to use these characters and build upon this narrative that had had been contributed to buy so many wonderful artists through the years, even through the decades, going all the way back to Stan Lee and Jack Kirby.

  • And so that was an amazing opportunity for us as filmmakers, you know, if you told us we were kids, that we never have the opportunity to tell that story, we have never believed you.

  • I think if you want to assess the arcs of the two leads of the Marvel Universe cap starting off, uh, where he did And then, you know, the end self actualized live out a life with his lost love Tony.

  • And it certainly was always fated to die.

  • He was a futurist who I saw death on the horizon on Dhe and couldn't rest until he defeated it, even if it costs him his life.

  • What's fascinating about him is that he went from the egoist two Selfless on cap goes from service to self actualization.

  • So they have, really, I think, compelling arcs the two of them over over the course of their films.

  • And we're very happy with the end of the game.

  • We like layered storytelling.

  • We like surprises.

  • We like to create a sort of density of narrative that you know, people on the second viewer.

  • Third, because we like to watch movies multiple times confined little nuances, uh, subtle references that they didn't see the first time around.

  • I think really what it is is like Joe and I.

  • We grew up film geeks.

  • We didn't grow up filmmakers.

  • The dialogue around movies was really important to us because that's like if we weren't watching movies.

  • We were talking about movies.

  • I think one reason why we like to sort of layer movies with all these sort of interesting, just not ideas or elements is that we love the conversation that can flow from those kinds of things that we we've got so much in our own lives, that of being a part of those conversations were just trying to sort of, you know, create films that do that generator on conference.

we grew up film fanatics.

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アベンジャーズ』監督がキャリアを語る。アレッステッド・デベロップメントからエンドゲームまで|ヴァニティ・フェア (Avengers Directors Break Down Their Career: Arrested Development to Endgame | Vanity Fair)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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