SANTA MONICA-After 11 years at bicoastal/international
Propaganda Films, where his spotmaking career launched
him into feature filmmaking, director Michael Bay has
announced he is forming his own as-yet-unnamed commercial
production house.
SHOOT
spoke to Bay after he had just wrapped principal photography
on his fourth feature, the upcoming Disney release Pearl
Harbor. The $145 million-budgeted epic action movie, centering
on the Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor, is slated to
open in theatres on Memorial Day 2001. Relating that his
contract at Propaganda expired in January, Bay said that
he plans to open a company in partnership with Scott Gardenhour
as executive producer. Gardenhour has recently worked
as a freelance producer and also served as an executive
producer on the Baja, Mexico-filmed sequences in Pearl
Harbor.
"I
wasn't a founding director at Propaganda, but I was literally
one of the first directors," said Bay. "I was
25 when I came, and I grew into a filmmaker there. I think
there was a time when Propaganda was considered one of
the best in the world. I've seen it go from a really small
family atmosphere to a factory, and ... [after it was
sold], it became a place where I didn't know anybody.
The company [an investment group led by former Sundance
CEO Gary Beer] that bought them [in '99] literally started
firing everyone who ran Propaganda. I couldn't even tell
you who's at that company anymore."
Bay
acknowledged that, effectively, he has been away from
Propaganda for the past four years, during which he has
focused on developing and directing features. His credits
include Bad Boys (1995), The Rock ('96) and Armageddon
('98). The films, all high-grossing box office hits, were
produced by Hollywood mega-producer Jerry Bruckheimer,
who also is producing Pearl Harbor.
"I'm
36," added Bay, "and I'm coming off what I think
is going to be the best movie I've done so far. I just
think it's time that I start my own company. I'm still
very much a feature guy, but I do want to do commercials."
Bay, who maintains a production deal with Disney, noted
that, for the past four years, he has had his own Santa
Monica-based long-form company, Bay Films. He said he
plans to produce spots from that office, although he may
take on additional space in the future.
Gardenhour's
relationship with Bay dates back to some five years of
freelance-producing spots for the director at Propaganda.
Gardenhour joined Propaganda' s staff as an executive
producer in '95, later becoming its VP/commercials before
leaving in Feb. '98. Subsequently, he had what turned
out to be a brief stint as president/CEO/executive producer
at Farmland Studios (now JGF, Hollywood) that ended in
late '98 (SHOOT, 12/18/98, p. 7). Following this, he returned
to the freelance world and went on to serve as line producer
on the international portion of Armageddon.
Bay
is tentatively booked on a Pepsi job out of BBDO New York
that is slated to shoot in London in the next couple of
weeks; that job will be produced out of Bay Films. Observing
that Pearl Harbor is now headed to postproduction, Bay
stated, "It's a long enough post that I'm going to
have plenty of time to do commercials."
Bay
said he and Gardenhour plan to develop a company that
may well add other directors, as well as sales reps. "I
don't know how big or small it will be," explained
Bay. "We're going to gear up slowly. But I don't
think I really want to be associated with [another company].
I'm game to look at any directors out there." Sounding
like a man with an aptitude for mentorship, he added,
"A lot of commercial people have broken into the
feature world that haven't really made it. The feature
world is a very different business from commercials. I
guess, from my background, I can help [directors] prevent
some of the mistakes that I've seen some of these other
young commercial directors make in the feature world."
Many
regard Bay as experiencing one of the fastest rises in
the commercial industry, as well as being one of the biggest
crossover success stories. After graduating from Pasadena,
Calif.-based Art Center College of Design, he forayed
into music videos. His direction of clips for such artists
as Donny Osmond, Meat Loaf, Tina Turner, Aerosmith and
the DiVinyls earned recognition and a number of MTV Video
Music Award nominations.
After
making his spot debut on an American Red Cross ad, Bay
proceeded to amass an impressive body of commercial work,
including spots for Nike, Reebok, Isuzu, Coca-Cola, Budweiser,
Levi's and Mercedes-Benz. Among his spot highlights is
"Aaron Burr" in the "Got Milk?" campaign
for the California Fluid Milk Processors Advisory Board,
out of Goodby, Silverstein & Partners, San Francisco.
The ad won Best of Show and Gold awards at the '94 Clios;
and, together with other "Got Milk?" spots,
was recognized at that year's Association of Independent
Commercial Producers (AICP) Show at MoMA in several categories,
including best advertising campaign.
"Aaron
Burr" also contributed to a body of work that earned
Bay the Directors Guild of America Award as best commercial
director of '94. The other spots were "Baby and Cat"
and "Vending Machines," also for the California
Fluid Milk Processors Advisory Board; "Big Lawyer
Roundup" for Miller Lite via Leo Burnett Co., Chicago,
and "Deion Sanders" for Nike via Wieden+ Kennedy,
Portland, Ore.
COPYRIGHT
2000 BPI Communications, Inc.
COPYRIGHT
2000 Gale Group