Watching Movies With
Michael Bay
By RICK LYMAN
The New York Times
The director of "Pearl Harbor" found inspiration to become
a filmmaker from movies that create a world, especially musicals
like "West Side Story."
This article is the 10th in a series of discussions with noted directors,
actors, screenwriters, cinematographers and others in the film industry.
In each article, a filmmaker selects and discusses a movie that has
personal meaning. Previous articles focused on Quentin Tarantino,
Janusz Kaminski, Ron Howard, Curtis Hanson, Kevin Costner, Steven
Soderbergh, Ang Lee, Wolfgang Petersen and Harvey Weinstein.
SANTA MONICA, Calif. -- Michael Bay
was just days away from putting the conclusive touches on his latest
movie, the $135 million historical epic "Pearl Harbor," and
he had been working pretty much around the clock for a week, his
head full of last-minute details about music, sound cues and the
color mix.
"So I thought, yeah, what better way to lose myself than to
spend a few hours watching 'West Side Story'?" he said. "We're,
like, four days away from locking `Pearl Harbor' for good, in terms
of final everything, and here I find myself watching this movie and
just totally forgetting all about it. I love movies where you can
kind of relax and escape."
Mr. Bay, 37, is 6 feet 2 inches tall with light brown hair and movie-star
looks. He strode into the new screening room at Jerry Bruckheimer
Films, in a network of red-brick buildings near the Santa Monica
Freeway, and moved quickly to the center seat in the back row, extending
his long legs and staring down at the white flickering glare of the
screen. When he moves, whether walking across a room or stretching
out in a screening room chair, he does it with a very confident,
athletic polish.
"What I remember about this movie, and I haven't seen it for
a long time, is that you don't necessarily fall in love with the
actors or the love story," Mr. Bay said. "It's more about
the style and the dance and the energy and the amazing music. So
I thought, O.K., this is a good way to love myself at the end of
one of the hardest weeks I've ever had, on `Pearl Harbor.' "
Although he started his career making music videos for Tina Turner,
Lionel Richie and others, Mr. Bay has in a few short years become
one of the most successful directors of Hollywood action blockbusters,
beginning with "Bad Boys" in 1995, a buddy-cop thriller
starring Martin Lawrence and Will Smith, and continuing with "The
Rock" (1996), starring Sean Connery and Nicolas Cage, and "Armageddon" (1998),
a hugely successful science-fiction thriller, starring Bruce Willis
and Ben Affleck, about an asteroid streaking toward Earth.
In each case, Mr. Bay worked with the producer Jerry Bruckheimer,
as he is again with "Pearl Harbor," his most ambitious
project in both length (2 hours 50 minutes) and scope (stretching
from the air war over Europe to the Japanese attack on Hawaii to
the responding air raid over Tokyo), and one of the most anticipated
films of the summer. It opens next Friday in more than 3,000 theaters
and has the lucrative Memorial Day weekend all to itself. No other
studio dared go up against this Disney behemoth.
"Do you think people will be surprised that I picked 'West
Side Story' to watch?" Mr. Bay asked.
He didn't wait for an answer: "I've got to tell you, I have
so many different tastes in movies. But people try to pigeonhole
you. They say, `No, he just does action.' Which is why `Pearl Harbor'
will show a different side to me. It's more poetic and poignant.
Despite the big action scenes, it feels like an epic old love story."
Besides, he said, musicals illustrate what it is that first drew
him to filmmaking. And the kind of musicals made in 1961 when Robert
Wise and the legendary choreographer Jerome Robbins directed "West
Side Story" have more in common with the blockbuster action
movies of today than many filmgoers realize.
"When I was at college, at Wesleyan, I took this course in
musicals from Jeanine Basinger, a great professor, a real guru on
movies," Mr. Bay said. "Frankly, it was a course that I
wasn't really excited to take. I wasn't sure at the time if I wanted
to be a photographer or a cinematographer, but that course on musicals
really opened my eyes to how far you can push the film medium and
where you can take it in terms of cutting and craft. It's strange,
but when filmmakers are forced to solve the problems you need to
solve to shoot dance, they really find themselves using the film
medium to its fullest."
Genesis of a Passion
Great movies the ones that interest him and that he says he tries
to make use the medium to create a world on the screen, he said,
an imaginary but convincing place conceived by the filmmaker.
"I love it, the idea of crafting and creating these worlds," Mr.
Bay said. "In a way, I think it goes back to my childhood a
little bit. When I was 12 or 13, I used to make these very elaborate
train sets in my bedroom. I just loved going into my imagination
and making stories about the little fake town and creating my own
little disasters. It was very elaborate; detailed mountains, mom-and-pop
stores, houses, trees, golf courses. The idea was to make it as realistic
as I could get it. I remember one time my parents came into my room
to have a serious talk, you know. I was spending too much time locked
away with my train sets, and they wanted me to get outside more.
I actually made my first movie about one of my train sets. I was
doing some glue fires and the buildings caught on fire, and that
caught the drapes on fire. I put most of it out, but it kind of wrecked
my room. I was grounded for three weeks.
"And then, a few years later, I got a job with Lucasfilm where
I was filing artwork in their library. I was filing away the artwork
for the `Star Wars' movies, you know, and I remember one day coming
across the production designer's blueprints for Yoda's house. That
was when I really started to get interested in film, because I could
see how they were creating this whole world. It was just like my
train sets. Part of filmmaking is that you have to become a magician.
You have to create a world, and nowhere is that more important, more
essential, than with musicals. That's what `West Side Story' does.
Just look at how Robert Wise creates his world."
Selling a Vision of Reality
The film's lush overture fills the small screening room. On the
screen an abstract series of lines gradually expands and thickens
and transforms itself into the Lower Manhattan skyline. The color
keeps shifting from magenta to yellow to blue, all explosively vivid.
"Can you imagine sitting in a theater back then and just watching
this?" he said. "How long does this overture go on? It
must have been something, sitting there watching it with those first
audiences. Can you imagine audiences doing that now? I remember,
even when I saw it, I thought, `This is weird.' "
With a flourish, the overture ends and the camera pulls back to
reveal, across the bottom of the screen, the film's title. And gradually,
the brightly colored abstract rendering of Lower Manhattan resolves
itself into a real, overhead shot of the city. The camera glides
like a hawk over New York, where a street-gang version of Shakespeare's "Romeo
and Juliet" plays out with a beautiful Leonard Bernstein score,
lyrics by Stephen Sondheim and a script by Ernest Lehman. The movie
includes several ballads and love songs that have become classics,
like "Tonight," "I Feel Pretty" and "Somewhere," and
such comic gems as "America" and "Gee, Officer Krupke."
"I haven't seen this film in a long time, not since college," Mr.
Bay said. "So what was that, maybe 16 or 17 years ago? At that
point, I had been seeing a lot of musicals for Professor Basinger's
course, about five of them a week, and what really struck me about
this movie was how it started with this very stylized introduction
and then went into the real world with real shots of New York. This
first sequence, the first 15 minutes, was really amazing to me. Watch
how they do this, how they take this real world and introduce dance
to it and make you buy it. You know, there's this moment, really
early on, where they're walking down the street and they start doing
these pirouettes and you're thinking, `This is really weird.' But
you buy it. They make you buy it. That's always the big thing when
you are trying to put an audience into the world you are creating.
You've got to make them buy it."
Stylized Street Gangs
The camera slides over the rooftops of Manhattan, the familiar images
of the Midtown towers and the United Nations gradually blending with
more anonymous, densely packed neighborhoods. In contrast to the
lush overture, all that is heard now is a distant high-pitched tone,
like a cross between a schoolyard whistle and the call of a water
bird. "Here we go," Mr. Bay said. "I love this." With
a flourish, the camera careens down into an urban playground where
a group of young men lean against a chain-link fence. There is something
immediately odd about them. While everyone else in the concrete yard
is involved in a chaotic welter of ball-playing and activity, these
youths are poised in perfect configuration, and they are snapping
their fingers in time to the music, as if they are on their own wavelength.
When the young men members of the Jets street gang move through
the playground, they do it with careful choreography, a kind of swaggering
dance that ties them together and separates them from everyone else.
"You see the levels of stylization you have going here?" Mr.
Bay said. "First, you had those abstract lines and the bright
colors and the overture. And then this changed to the real world.
And then, after that, you meet these guys and they're kind of in
between. They exist in the real world. The real world is all around
them. But at the same time they're on a different level, in their
own musical dancer's world. O.K., fine. You go along with it. It's
interesting. But wait. Watch. Here's where it starts to get weird."
Subconscious Inspiration
The Jets are going down the sidewalk, moving to the music, and then
one of them, then another, and finally all of them break out of their
ranks and do graceful pirouettes, extending their arms, spinning
and then moving back together in the street gang's swagger.
"It's very bold," Mr. Bay said. "But this is where
I think you really start buying it. This is where you really understand
and accept the world that's been created for the movie."
Others are introduced, without dialogue: members of a rival Puerto
Rican street gang called the Sharks. The dance begins to tell a story.
In comical set pieces, the gangs encounter each another, their movements
always part realistic, part dance. "They don't say anything,
but you're able to follow what's happening through the dance and
the staging and you're sort of mesmerized," Mr. Bay said. "It's
the whole vibe. The colors, the costumes, the attitude. They're explaining
the whole Jets- Sharks turf war to us. Oh, I love that cut."
'It's Very Dynamic'
Three members of the Sharks, dancing forward, swaying from side
to side, move toward the camera and seem to run right into it. There
is a cut as one of their bodies covers the lens and, just as suddenly,
they are moving away from the camera down the street, their backs
to the camera. "That's great; it's like the camera moved right
through them," Mr. Bay said. "I love dynamic things like
that. Look at this, too, how the dancers are really close to us in
the foreground while the buildings are looming up in the background.
It's very dynamic. Wise was a film editor, you know. You can see
it in this movie. See how precise everything is, transition to transition.
All these great cuts. Man, I've stolen things from this movie and
I haven't even known it."
That's what "West Side Story" is about to him, Mr. Bay
said: the energy and dynamism of some of the sequences, especially
the gang scenes and the dances, as well as the way the movie creates
a universe with its own logic and look.
"They take this real world and they segue you into this fake
world, this dance-stylized world, and then they mix the two worlds
together," Mr. Bay said. "And later in the movie, just
like the Jets have their own world-within-a-world, when Tony and
Maria, the two lovers, get together, they have yet another distinct,
stylized world that's just for the two of them. It's a world-within-a-world-
within-a-world. There are so many levels of stylization, and sometimes
they all come together in the same scenes. That's what really excited
me about musicals. I know it sounds kind of strange, but you can
really let yourself go in musicals."
Even when the opening sequence ends, moving quickly into the film's
first song and dialogue scene, the mood continues. Russ Tamblyn,
George Chakiris and the other gang members talk in a rhythmic way.
It is not singing, but it is definitely syncopated, like somebody's
idea of conversational blank verse recited by a group. And the effect
only becomes more pronounced when others in the film like Simon Oakland's
racist cop and Ned Glass's kindly candy store owner speak normally.
The various levels of reality extend even to the film's sets and
locations: a mixture of authentic Manhattan streetscapes and stylized
versions of them lighted with the kind of bold colors pioneered by
Vincente Minnelli and popular with many musical directors from the
late 1940's to the twilight of the musical in the 60's.
"That's a real location, no question about it," Mr. Bay
said during one sequence on a basketball court. Later, in an alley,
with a bold, red light on the background wall and a chilly blue emanating
from windows to the side, he remarked, "That's a set." Real
location, studio set. That was the whole point. The film was creating
a world where the two kinds of reality could fit side by side, just
as the dancing street gangs mingled with the ordinary people walking
down the street.
"What I like about musicals is that they break the rules of
cinema," Mr. Bay said. "You know what I'm saying? The old
rules of editing where, it's said, you must cut from this to this.
You can't cut from here to there. You can't place the camera there;
you have to place it here. When I do my action movies, I break the
rules, too. That's one thing musicals and big action movies have
in common. With both of them, you can break the rules. One of the
things that can make them exciting is that you are breaking the rules."
Suspending Belief
The use of privileged angles puts the camera where, logically, it
cannot be for example, in the middle of what viewers know should
be a wall. In musicals, audiences are willing to accept the use of
some privileged angles. Viewers understand that the world being presented
is not meant to mirror the real world. The same license sometimes
works for action movies, Mr. Bay said.
"Like there is this shot in `Pearl Harbor' where the camera
follows this bomb all the way from the Japanese plane, falling through
the air over the battleship until it crashed through the deck and
explodes below," he said.
It is impossible. No camera could do this. But the audience will
accept it. In the service of the action, he said, the audience will
allow a certain suspension of the ordinary rules of filmmaking, just
as it will with musicals. In the case of his plummeting-bomb view,
Mr. Bay said, it is done to achieve a heightened reality rather than
a musical fantasy world. But remember, he said, hyper-reality is
a kind of stylization, too.
No matter how realistic it is, the miniature world of the train
set is not real, and part of the pleasure comes from knowing this
and enjoying the craftsmanship that made it so convincing.
In the rooftop dance in which the Shark men face off against the
Shark women to sing "America," Mr. Bay noted the twilight
urban setting, the surrounding water towers and the backdrop of shaded
windows. "I really hadn't realized there are so many music videos
that were basically stolen from this movie," he said. "It
was so influential. I mean, how many commercials and Janet Jackson
videos have copied this one scene alone?"
"West Side Story" won 10 Oscars, including best picture,
best directors, best cinematography (Daniel L. Fapp) and both supporting
acting awards (for Mr. Chakiris's performance as the leader of the
Sharks and Rita Moreno's as his girlfriend). It continued a cycle
of big-budget musicals that frequently dominated the Academy Awards
from Minnelli's "American in Paris" in 1951 through such
later films as "My Fair Lady" and "The Sound of Music" in
1965. In a way, Mr. Bay said, the big musicals of that era had an
audience appeal similar to that of today's big action movies escapism
with high production values.
The Romance Withers
The doomed lovers in "West Side Story" are the good-natured
Tony (Richard Beymer), a former member of the Jets, and Maria (Natalie
Wood), the sister of the leader of the Sharks, who try to overcome
the gang rivalry to forge a romance. As in Shakespeare, Tony is unwittingly
involved in a killing, and the romance withers into tragedy. In this
version, though, there is the added, very American angle of racism
and ethnicity: Maria and the Sharks are Puerto Rican; Tony and the
Jets are Irish and Italian. The Verona for which they fight is a
grubby grid of Upper West Side slums.
As Mr. Bay watches "West Side Story" and measures it against
his memory, most of his comments fall into four categories. He is
struck by Mr. Wise's dynamic cuts, by the vivid use of color, by
the differences in texture between the scenes shot on location and
those shot in the studio, and by how much, true to his recollection,
he finds the central love story and the lead actors uninteresting.
Some of the cuts, like those involving the prowling gangs, clearly
excite Mr. Bay. "Oh, man, that's a great cut, so precise,' he
said at one point. "Another great cut, look at this."
What, he is asked, makes a cut great?
"It's just something that, pow!, adds energy or gives you a
surge," Mr. Bay said, and is silent for several minutes.
"It's really hard," he finally said. "It's very hard
to describe what makes a good cut. I know it when I see it. It's
an internal thing."
Color Saturation
Like most musicals of the period, "West Side Story" also
frequently alerts audiences that it is taking place in a artificial
world by using bold and unnatural colors. In many sequences the room
walls or building exteriors are lighted with bright red or yellow,
and there are strange mixes of colors, like icy blues next to cozy
ambers. Sometimes the gangs' colors (blue for Jets, red for Sharks)
are used as a symbolic backdrop.
"I don't like too many colors in a shot," Mr. Bay said. "I
like blues. Remember that last shot, the one with the door in it?" He
was referring to a scene in Maria's bedroom. Its door is made up
of a dozen small, colored glass panes, a checkerboard of red, blue,
yellow and green panels. "Too many colors. I would never shoot
a scene in that room. Never. I have an aversion to that door. I don't
know why. It's just my eye. Fewer colors are just more pleasing to
me. Now look at this shot of the alley. This is nice. Not too many
colors, and you've got this warm orange next to the cold green. Yeah,
this is better."
At the end of the film, when the screen goes dark and the lights
come up, Mr. Bay said that his memories of the film were fairly accurate.
Again, he found the dance sequences and the scenes of the gangs energizing.
And, again, he found the love story uninvolving and the lead performances
bland. He was especially put off by Mr. Beymer's Tony, who seems
too much the choirboy to be a former gang member and neighborhood
legend.
"No way this guy is the co-founder of the Jets," Mr. Bay
said. "When he appears, I find myself starting to zone out.
He doesn't look like a tough guy. He's a little too femme for that,
you know? I don't buy him in this role. I must tell you, you just
can't fake it with acting. I think guys in the audience can sense
when you're not a guy's guy. That's why, you know, I was pitched
some actors for `Pearl Harbor,' and good actors, too, who are great
in other kinds of roles, and I'd have to say to the agents, `Sorry,
I don't really think he's a guy's guy.' "
Evolving With Popcorn
Overall, though, he felt that "West Side Story" had once
again provided him with the escapism that he wanted to distract him
from the myriad details of finishing his own movie.
He stood up, collected his empty water bottle and a stack of papers.
His jacket was draped over the back of an adjacent chair, he retrieved
it and slid it onto his long arms.
"You really think people will find it weird that I picked a
musical to watch?" Mr. Bay asked. "I guess it sounds kind
of funny. But you know, the thing about filmmaking is that you grow.
You grow and you change and your tastes change. Each movie I've made,
I did for a specific reason, and each of the last three of them,
before `Pearl Harbor,' were popcorn movies. `Bad Boys' basically
had no script and it was about the charisma of the two stars. `The
Rock' had a kind of outlandish story, but it had very classy actors
in it and it was exciting and energetic. `Armageddon' is like a total
fantasy for a 15- year-old. It's funny when the critics tried to
review `Armageddon.' I mean, relax, it's a popcorn movie. It's not
supposed to be taken seriously. It's a fantasy world."
That is true of "Pearl Harbor," too. It presents a fantasy
world Michael Bay's vision of what it would have been like to be
there, with privileged angles and digitally enhanced sound. But it
is different, too, he said, because its subject is more serious and
its ambitions are higher. It is a gourmet popcorn movie.
"What I love most about movies is creating my own world," Mr.
Bay said. "That's what I tried to do with `The Rock' and with
`Armageddon.' With `Pearl Harbor,' it's a more realistic world, but
it is still creating my own world. The same as they did with `West
Side Story.' We had to do some unreal things. We had to mix real
footage with digital footage. It's a false reality, but its purpose
is to make it feel more authentic."
Mr. Bay remembered his mother's visit to the "Pearl Harbor" set
in Mexico, the same huge water tank where James Cameron filmed much
of "Titanic." On the set, Mr. Bay and his team had constructed
portions of Battleship Row, the central cluster of military vessels
that were hit by Japanese bombers on Dec. 7, 1941.
"The crew had put up this director's chair for her and put
a sign on it that said `Mom,' " Mr. Bay said. "And she
came and sat down and looked around, and it was all really just massive.
And she said, `Oh, it kind of looks like your train set, only bigger.' "
Highlights of Michael Bay's directing career and information on "West
Side Story."
What They Watched
"WEST SIDE STORY." Directed by Jerome
Robbins and Robert Wise. Produced by Robert Wise. Screenplay by
Ernest Lehman. Music by Leonard Bernstein. Cinematography by Daniel
L. Fapp. With Natalie Wood, Richard Beymer, Russ Tamblyn, Rita
Moreno and George Chakiris. MGM Video, 1961. 155 minutes. $13.99. |