Robert Rodriguez is onstage in front of a packed Paramount Theatre introducing the
first public showing of The Faculty, produced by his wife and partner Elizabeth
Avellán. This is a benefit for the Austin Film Society's Texas Filmmakers' Production
Fund, which means not only is the event glitzy, but it is also very grassroots. The
audience is already going nuts. They love being here, they can't wait to see the
film and the place is filled with Austin celebs and filmmakers including directors
Guillermo del Toro, Richard Linklater, Mike Judge, Tobe Hooper, Tommy Pallotta, and
Bill Daniel, documentary filmmakers Paul Stekler and Richard Lewis, cinematographer
Lee Daniel, musician Ray Benson and Web guru Harry Knowles (looking quite splendid
in a large leather coat with his flaming red hair and beard).
Rodriguez is explaining that at the end of the film there will be a raffle, the
winner to receive the GTO used in the film. He suggests that the audience go nuts
every time the car appears onscreen to show they really want it. This just amps up
the crowd's enthusiasm. Only half-facetiously, Rick Linklater, who already owns a
GTO, says he hopes he wins.
The house is shaking and rocking with applause and once the movie starts, cheers
and screams. There are lots of screams.
The story, for me, started a few months back when Tommy Nix, (aka The Nixer, see
Roadracer), e-mailed me to see if I wanted to be in the then-still-untitled
movie. A few weeks later in the wee morning hours, I found myself headed to a warehouse
in South Austin off of I-35. As instructed, I'd brought a couple of changes of clothing
of the kind a schoolteacher might wear. I'd also brought proofs of Jack Jackson's
new graphic novel Lost Cause to read (for those who regularly read the Chronicle,
I'm trying to get at the pathos of this moment).
Shortly after arriving, I encountered Harry Knowles being made-up by the charming
make-up artists. As always, we picked up where we had last left off, right in the
middle of a conversation begun two decades ago when he was five and I in my late
20s. Wandering around we talked about Robert and the movie. Harry told several stories,
one about Robert calling him at 2am (Nosferatu-like, neither one sleeps much at night),
and tormenting him with the information that he was cooking a steak. According to
Harry, Robert held the phone so close to the steak you could hear it sizzle.
Getting there early for a shoot means nothing: film calls are always early. Film
production is not simply hurry up and wait, the whole process is geared toward extreme
preparation--having what will be needed on hand long before it is needed. This
is especially true of extras. I have shown up at 6am to be used at 5pm. Veterans,
we expected to be there awhile and wandered around in no rush. George Huang, director
of Swimming With Sharks, was there. Harry and I hung with him a lot because
he laughs at anything.
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photograph by Todd V. Wolfson
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This was, however, a Rodriguez set, where the film was already finished in Robert's
head, just needing to be shot, and where making a movie was a form of physical poetry.
Within a very short period of time, we were on the set in the middle of the warehouse.
Eerily, the set looked exactly like high school--the walls, the doors, the
lockers, the rooms. The faculty lounge reminded me of the one in the Bellows Falls,
Vermont school where I student taught seventh and eighth grade in the early Seventies.
It seemed almost the same, even the actors and extras playing teachers seemed all
too familiar.
In the faculty lounge, we got ready for the scene. In it, film teacher Knowles
is having his hand bandaged by school nurse Salma Hayek, who is being hit on by science
teacher Jon Stewart. After a while, timid English teacher Famke Janssen walks into
the room, while I sit on the couch doing a crossword puzzle as brilliant set designer
Cary White, playing another teacher, lurks in the background. Rodriguez walked us
through the scene several times, then we were sent off while he and the crew got
ready to shoot, setting up lights, plotting the camera course, checking the set,
and preparing sound. Harry and I went off to find George and make him laugh.
Watching Robert work, so confident, so in charge, so graceful in his motions,
I thought back to 1989 when I was a judge at a regional film competition (along with
Austin Chronicle intern Eli Kooris' mother Laura). We spent the day watching
generic film school output--editing and camera movement galore but precious
little articulated camerawork (in which the visual exercises actually have something
to do with the content of the film). At the end of the day, having watched many,
many high production value yet relatively boring films, we watched this video.
Homemade, almost an anti-graduate-student-work, it blew everything else away.
It stunk of film--cutting, angles, sound, action, plot, theme, a deeply crazy
poetry of pure cinema. Robert Rodriguez's Austin Stories, three short vignettes
starring brothers and sisters, shot with the family video camera and edited on the
family's two antiquated video decks, didn't just win, it hands-down beat everything
else.
Rodriguez was already kind of a campus celebrity because of his wonderful Los
Hooligans comic strip (The Texan, having launched Berke Breathed and Sam
Hurt, has inspired more bad comic strips than Helen of Troy did ships; Los Hooligans
was an exception). He had tried to get into University of Texas RTF classes,
but his grades weren't good enough. After winning, he went to Steven Mims, who was
then teaching film at UT, and said, "I beat your students; now can I get into
the program?" Mims got him in. Rodriguez's Film One project was an extraordinary
short, Bedhead, a continuation of Austin Stories, its family-oriented
humor indicates fertile narrative ground that Rodriguez has yet to explore in his
features.
During summer break, Rodriguez and his friend Carlos Gallardo decided to shoot
a low-budget feature in Acuna, Mexico (where they had shot short-action films on
video before) and sell it for a Spanish-language video release. Rodriguez entered
a month-long drug research program, intending to write a movie using a list of what
was available to him as a filmmaker--a bulldog, a jail, buses, guitars, and
automatic weapons. Over the years he had spent a lot of time with Gallardo, whose
family was a force in Acuna (across the river from Del Rio), so Robert knew the resources
available. The money from the drug test went for his share of production costs and,
during the stay, he wrote the El Mariachi script (keeping the list in mind).
The guy in the next bed was cast as the villain. Everything prepared, they went and
shot El Mariachi for $7,000.
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Robert Rodriguez with Jon Stewart and friend
on the set of The Faculty
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Visiting friends in L.A., Rodriguez dropped off Bedhead and a trailer he
had cut for El Mariachi to Robert Newman, a prominent ICM agent. The first
call Rodriguez got was for another copy; the machine ate the first one. The second
call was to say that when he finished the film, Newman would rep it. Sony bought
the $7,000 film for about a million (it cost hundreds of thousands more to get the
film ready for distribution). They also gave him money for Desperado, a sequel
to El Mariachi, and Robert Rodriguez was on his way to becoming a legend of
low-budget/no-budget filmmaking.
In a white Cadillac, John Sayles, Maggie Renzi, Paul Miller, and I crossed the
border from Del Rio to Acuna to the old (but still working) Boystown to visit the
set of Desperado. We walked on the set and at first couldn't figure out which
figure was Rodriguez. Then we realized he was the one lying on the ground operating
a ground-level camera. Elizabeth roamed the set shooting documentary footage with
a video camera.
The set looked like a Hollywood version of how a movie is made with smooth-flowing
activity instead of the iceberg pace of most productions. As Rodriguez ran a three-camera
shoot of a limo being hit by a missile, off to the side they set up and rehearsed
a man being shot off a roof. The johns started arriving at Boystown, they'd get a
beer and come out to watch. After a couple of hours we headed out; it was vacation
and Sayles noted that butchers on vacation don't visit butcher shops.
Rodriguez followed Desperado with the Showtime movie Roadracers,his
segment of Four Rooms, and From Dusk Till Dawn, which was written by
and co-stars Quentin Tarantino. The Film Society sponsored a riotous premiere of
From Dusk Till Dawn at the Paramount, but Robert and Elizabeth couldn't make
it (Quentin Tarantino hosted).
Back on the set, they called us to shoot the scene. I sat on the couch doing a
crossword puzzle. I had one line, "What is a five-letter word for stingy?"
The Chronicle staff loved this, thinking it somehow appropriate. My line didn't
make it to the movie.
Most sets move slowly. The director consults with crew and cast, but the actions
usually associated with him are actually performed by the first assistant director.
Rodriguez was all over the set, walking the camera movement, checking the video,
actually operating the camera. Elizabeth glided through, laughing and making sure
extras were treated as guests. The shoot went very quickly. This was a director and
crew who knew what they wanted. The day, though long, was too soon over.
A couple of weeks later, Rick Linklater and I visited the set just to hang out.
There was the same relaxed frenzy, Robert, relaxed but wired, was taking breaks and
walking around playing guitar.
An Austin audience at the Paramount is a peak experience for a filmmaker. As director
Jonathan Demme told producer Peter Saraf after the screening of Storefront Hitchcock,
"This is the exact audience for whom we made this film."
Rodriguez is clearly thrilled to be presenting this film to an Austin audience.
He fought to have this screening happen on this day at this theatre in this town.
He is rewarded with a wildly enthusiastic audience.
The physicality of Rodriguez's directorial style comes across in the film; you
feel it as well as see and hear it (two sound technicians from George Lucas' Skywalker
Ranch flew in to get the Paramount's sound system just right). I'm in the movie,
so my judgment is suspect, but what a terrific ride. It is such a pleasure to watch
the way Rodriguez moves the camera, directs actors and cuts and then ties it all
together with a brilliant soundtrack. The film whooshes around you. Later, after
it's over, both Robert and Elizabeth are reluctant to leave the theatre. They stand
there, talking to whomever, relishing the audience's joy at their movie.
--Louis Black
Full Length Reviews
The Faculty 
Capsule Reviews
The Faculty 
The Faculty 
The Faculty 
Other Films by Robert Rodriguez
Desperado 
From Dusk Till Dawn 
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Alien Resurrection 
Alien Terminator 
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