MATRIX:
What does being a Second Unit Director entail?
DAVID:
A Second Unit Director is needed when you have a separate filming unit.
The Directors of the film, Larry and Andy [Wachowski] hired me to direct
a separate unit that goes around and kind of cleans upafter sequences
they have done. On a lot of films you do mostly big action sequences,
but on THE MATRIX weve been involved
in doing everything from action sequences, to visual effects shots like
were doing today, to inserts, to dialogue with actors. So its
pretty much anything they tell us to do we do. A Second Assistant Director,
on the other hand, works under the First Assistant Director to run the
set, and the First AD works for me, the Second Unit Director. The First
AD is my lieutenant, and the Second AD works under him.
MATRIX: How did you get into this
kind of work?
DAVID: I started when I was younger,
25 years ago, as a stunt man, and had a great career as a stunt man and
a Stunt Coordinator. Early on I knew I wanted to do more, and started
working as a Second Unit Director in episodic TV. My first big feature
was Gorky Park, I was a Stunt Coordinator on that and got to do a little
bit of Second Unit Directing, and liked it. I loved the adrenaline rush
of doing stunts, but directing was a little bit more creative. Then I
moved on to becoming a pure Second Unit Director, and its been great.
MATRIX: What was your first feature
as a pure Second Unit Director?
DAVID: Ive done a lot of big
features as both Second Unit Director and Stunt Coordinator. I think Patriot
Games was the first where I kind of broke away. I did Patriot Games and
Clear and Present Danger, I did three films with Phillip Noyce, the Director,
and Harrison Ford, then went on to just keep working. I did Waterworld
and got into a whole water Second Unit thing for a while - I did Waterworld
and Sphere and a movie for Renny Harlin called Deep Blue Sea. Then I got
into action, doing a movie called Soldier, then The Negotiator, and then
I worked with Ang Lee on Ride with the Devil. Recently I did The Perfect
Storm with Wolfgang Petersen, and from there did Exit Wounds to Harry
Potter and the Sorcerers Stone and now were on THE MATRIX
sequels. Ive been blessed; Ive had a great career.
MATRIX: These sets are very big, is
Second Unit doing more than would ordinarily be done?
DAVID: It depends. On most of the
films I go on they have big Second Units because, logistically, theyre
very complicated shows, and it takes time. The Directors have certain
sequences they want to focus on and spend their time on, and because of
either actor availability or location availability etc, they have to give
up some work to a Second Unit Director. Larry and Andy would much rather
do all the work themselves if they could, unfortunately they dont
have the time to do that, so theyve given us a big responsibility
in executing some of the work for them.
MATRIX: Describe the shot that’s going on behind
you.
DAVID: That’s for the freeway. When the twins get blown up in their car
they try to attack Morpheus, he slices their car in half, and they roll
their car. Then Morpheus shoots their car and it explodes and there’s
a shot of the twins inside of the explosion as they fly up into the air
- this is the visual effects explosion element for that.
MATRIX: Have you worked Second Unit on all three of the large sets?
DAVID: No, the Park set was all First Unit, although we did a couple of blue
screen things for that, and then we did the freeway sequence. The rest
of it was mostly blue screen for a lot of different pieces within the
movie. Larry and Andy are filming all the Temple themselves. They did
the Park set and the Temple set so we could spend more time on the freeway
sequence.
MATRIX: What have been some of the more challenging things on this shoot?
DAVID: It’s all challenging; they have some very, very creative shots
and big expectations. The freeway sequence was very involved with a lot
of stunt guys, and a lot of intricate action, but it’s all fun.
MATRIX: What was your first reaction when you saw the freeway?
DAVID: Awesome!
I’ve done a lot of big action sequences with cars in the
past, but never had the ability to have our own freeway. I think it’s
the first time in film that anyone has built a freeway for a movie, and
it was great. The logistics of getting access to freeways is tough and
you have to work around peak traffic hours, weekends, etc. It was great
that we got to film 35 days in a row on our own freeway unrestricted;
we could blow it up and damage it, do whatever we wanted with it.
MATRIX: How long have you been on
the production?
DAVID: Ive been on it since
early February [2001], so about 5 months.
MATRIX: The freeway would have still been being constructed at that point.
DAVID: Yes, when we started it was in pre-production. We were having meetings
and storyboard meetings, planning out the film, and they were still building
the freeway when we came here.
MATRIX: Is how extensive the storyboards
are for this film typical?
DAVID: Yes, different Directors are
real extensive with their storyboards, and thats just having a really
clear vision of what you want, being prepared and doing your homework.
The brothers are right there with that, they were very prepared, they
knew exactly what they wanted. So it was easy for me because they just
gave us the boards and we would execute that.
MATRIX: Being involved in some of
the pre-production, what is your take on Owen Paterson the Production
Designer, and Zach Staenberg the Editor?
DAVID: Theyre awesome. Owen
is a great Production Designer, hes done an awesome job here and
hes got his work cut out for him in Australia. Zach I have a lot
of respect for as an Editor, he is blessed with having two great Directors
who are providing him with incredible footage, so hes got a good
job, not an easy job, but a good job because hes got unreal footage
to pull from to edit. Zach does a rough assemblage of the sequence and
then the brothers come in and fine-tune it. Theyve got a lot of
great people on this film; Bill Pope is a great DP [Director of Photography],
really good, really talented, really creative and works well with the
brothers. The Art Department, the Grips, theyre all incredible crews,
both the First and Second Unit crews.
MATRIX: Do you have a dedicated DP
on second unit as well?
DAVID: We have an entire crew; we
could make our own movie. In a way were shooting a movie, but were
shooting their movie. The main thing with Second Unit is making sure youre
not shooting your own movie, that youre shooting the brothers
movie, youre executing it the way they would do it if they were
doing it.
MATRIX: What is the process of give
and take with the Directors after a shot is done?
DAVID: You definitely hear it if they
dont like it, and thats what its all about. Our job
is to give them the shot that they want, and weve only re-shot a
couple of shots the entire time, which is good, the ratio has been really,
really good. Your job, as a Second Unit, is to execute the shot the way
they wanted it, then if you can see additional pieces they didnt
anticipate in the storyboards or pre-production, or when a situation presents
itself and you see a cool shot, then thats gravy - if you can get
that shot as well as the work youre there to get for them.
There are situations that present themselves that we didnt think
about, but its all collaboration, and its all really for us
to execute. We get the storyboards, we know what our job is, and we know
the shots we have to get. Its up to myself and my crew to manage
our time, to get our days work, and be prepared and plan out those
shots so we can get them exactly like they want them safely, which is
important. Then if theres something that isnt right theyll
let us know and well talk about that, then well go out and
make sure that its right.
MATRIX: Are Larry and Andy very collaborative?
DAVID: Yes. Theyre the bosses,
theyre in charge, they let you know whether its good or bad.
I dont really care about getting accolades, as long as Im
still here and havent gotten fired, then I feel Im doing a
pretty good job. When its not right theyll let you know, and
if they have faith in you and youve got their trust, then youre
still here to work another day and go out and make it right.
MATRIX: How much freedom does Larry
and Andys level of pre-production, versus others, give you?
DAVID: It depends on the Directors
youre working for. Recently Ive been working with Chris Columbus
on Harry Potter, Wolfgang Peterson on Perfect Storm and Andrzej Bartkowiak
on Exit Wounds, all three were very, very into being prepared and extensive
detail in pre-production. They all did extensive storyboards, worked with
the Storyboard Artists, and they knew what they wanted. There are other
Directors Ive worked for in the past who havent been action
Directors, Alan Pakula was one on The Devils Own, where there was a sequence
I was brought in to do. He knew what he wanted out of the sequence, but
he didnt shoot a lot of action, so he allowed me to storyboard this
sequence and plan out the shots to make the action work and make it exciting.
Then together wed go through those shots and talk about them and
whether they worked for him and the story or not.
Most of the really, really good Directors are totally involved 150%. The
brothers are involved in this movie and the third movie and the game and
all sorts of things at the same time, it takes an incredible level of
commitment. Its amazing to watch them. Chris Columbus is the same
way, hes doing Harry Potter and prepping Harry Potter 2, its
a lot of work to be a Director and to be committed. You dont just
cruise in and sit in your chair and say action or cut, youre responsible
for every little thing contributing to how a film looks. From the wardrobe
to the nail polish to the makeup to the sets, to dialogue sounding right
and real, and casting the right people so youre not embarrassed
when you get on set and find you have someone you cant pull a performance
out of its an extreme amount of commitment.
MATRIX: Does
a Second Unit Director often move on to direct their own films?
DAVID:
Yes. I directed a film already for Disney that was a kids film called
Homeward Bound II: [Lost in San Francisco]. Its a natural transition,
especially on films like this. Youre directing a big portion of
their film, and you show you can direct everything, from actors to inserts
to beauty shots to aerial shots to underwater stuff to action sequences.
Youre involved in pre-production and what goes into getting ready
to make the film. Then you work closely with the Editor on what they need
between the First Unit work, and the pieces they want to get to help tie
it all up and make it look like a seamless piece of film. So I think its
a natural transition to take Second Unit Directors into First Units. It
doesnt happen as much as with commercial Directors and video Directors
for some reason, which is really interesting, because a Second Unit Director
is involved in all of the filmmaking process, as opposed to just coming
out and doing a commercial. I think a lot of commercial Directors feel
they have a great visual style that they are trying to translate into
film.
MATRIX: Did the atmosphere feel different
when you directed your own film to how it does on Second Unit?
DAVID: No, because I kept the same
atmosphere on First Unit that I do on Second Unit. We have a lot of fun,
we do our homework and were prepared. I make sure its fun
because if its not fun, then theres no sense in doing it.
Youre blessed to be in this business, every day is different. We
have a really good time with my crew and I let everybody know how important
they are, no matter what their job. I did the same thing on Homeward Bound,
and we had a great time, it was a lot of fun.
MATRIX: Do you still get excited when
you get a call for a certain job?
DAVID: Yes, totally, I love working.
MATRIX: How was it when you got the
call for THE MATRIX 2 and 3?
DAVID: It was awesome. I was being
considered for it, although I knew they didnt really want a Second
Unit, Larry and Andy wanted to direct everything themselves. I flew back
from Harry Potter [to the US from England] for the interview, had a nice
interview with the brothers and then went back to Harry Potter. I was
working when I got a call saying they wanted me to do it, I was totally
stoked.
The brothers didnt want anybody directing their film, they wanted
to direct everything themselves, so they made it clear in the interview
that they didnt really want a Second Unit Director, but they were
being forced into having one just because of the circumstances. When they
said they wanted to hire me to do whatever they wanted me to do, I just
tried to gain their trust to show them I was shooting their film, and
that Id do it the way they wanted it done. Its worked out
well.
MATRIX: Based on your experience,
is THE MATRIX pushing any envelopes?
DAVID: Yes. The
brothers have a different visual style, so Ive learned a lot here.
I take something away from every film or every Director I work with. As
far as being able to work on the big films and even the smaller films,
Ive worked with some of the best Directors of Photography and the
best Directors. I try to take something away from each experience and
put that into my repertoire, so when Im directing my own films,
Ill be able to use all that.
MATRIX: What was your reaction when
you first read the script?
DAVID: I think its all tough.
When you talk about guys doing a fight like a MATRIX
fight on top of trucks as you’re speeding down the freeway going the wrong way,
and guys leaping off cars onto other cars, it’s all very intricate.
It’s a combination of the practical stunts, the practical effects,
and then the visual effects. The brothers have some really wild ideas
- in the third script as well - theyve got some cool stuff coming for the audience.
MATRIX: This is the last day of Second
Unit filming; how does that feel?
DAVID: Its good and its
bad, its kind of sad. We have a great crew, Ive had a lot
of fun on this show. Its been fun working with the brothers, I think
theyre great filmmakers. Its kind of a mixed bag because Im
also excited to go home and be with my family; Ive been gone over
a year and a half on three films in a row, so its good to be going
home, but I had a great time on this.
MATRIX: Being filmed both here and
in Australia, do you think that poses any extra challenges?
DAVID: Not at all, they used Alameda
for what they needed. They needed a space to construct
a freeway, and at the same time they needed space to build sets, so they
had cover sets
in case it rained and if they couldn’t work on the freeway they
could go under cover and go onto the set. So this was a great place for
what they wanted to do here. They also had the ability to use
some of the top effects guys and top stunt men in the world, drawing
those
guys out
of LA. Theres
a lot of talent all over the world, but they had some really good people
they brought in from LA. This part was great for what they wanted to
do
here, and now they move on to Australia and work there. There are great
crews over there, they get a lot for their money, and theyll have
a good time over there.
MATRIX: Do you have any insights to
how THE MATRIX 2 and 3 are going to be?
DAVID: Theyre going to be huge.
THE MATRIX caught people who werent ready for it when it first came
out. Theres a visual style they established, a fighting style they
established, on the first film that nobody had ever seen before, so it
was huge, the impact was enormous. People have copied the brothers
fighting style using Hong Kong wire team guys to do fights in every film
thats come out since then. Theyve raised their own bar as
to what people are going to expect from them. I think with the scripts
that they have and the work theyre doing, theyre definitely
going to thrill people who are the fans of THE MATRIX, and then people
who arent as well.