The Art
of DVD Talk Movies
With the discs' goodies getting their own honors, a
director's commentary track takes on more significance.
By MICHAEL P. LUCAS, Times Staff Writer
In the cool darkness of a Santa Monica sound studio one
recent afternoon, director Michael Bay was re-watching his
$135-million war and romance epic "Pearl Harbor"--and
explaining, shot by shot, how he brought it to the screen.
Suddenly, there it was--the quick scene showing Japanese
planes roaring over a group of American boys playing
baseball at a little past sunrise on a Sunday morning. The
shot appeared in trailers and became a lightning rod for
critics who pointed out the obvious incongruity. It was
time to retort.
"It's funny when you hear press reports. They're saying,
'What are those kids doing playing out there so early in
the morning? Why is the light so bright at 7 o'clock in the
morning?' Well," Bay said, as if lecturing the crew in the
control booth, "dawn is about 6 o'clock. It's full, bright
light at 7. People think I'm stylizing the moment."
And so he went, describing how he made shots, pointing out
historical references, slapping back at critics when he
felt compelled.
For Hollywood directors these days, a picture isn't really
finished until they lay down the audio commentary track for
the DVD. It gives them one last chance to parse creative
decisions, confess to goofs and reply to critical
tormentors.
For the moviegoing public, the DVD has become the key
medium for divining the filmmaking process.
"It's a wonderful learning tool," director Peter
Bogdanovich said. "It gives people who are interested a
chance to hear exactly what the director had in mind."
Commentaries have been around since the laser disc days of
the mid-1980s, but now Hollywood recognizes them as an art
form of their own--which means that even if Bay doesn't win
an Academy Award for "Pearl Harbor," he can always hope for
a Video Premiere Award for best audio commentary.
Handed out by the trade paper Variety's Video Business
magazine--which will announce the 2001 winners on Oct.
23--Video Premiere awards recognize achievement in
straight-to-video releases and in new content for
theatrical films released on DVD--"making-of"
documentaries, deleted scenes, even menu design.
It's a competition that cuts through an odd strata of
Hollywood: This year's nominees range from "Forrest Gump"
(for best overall new extra features) to "Barbie in the
Nutcracker" (best animated video premiere movie).
But to win the audio commentary award, you need to be an
unusually facile storyteller, said Scott Hettrick, Video
Business editor in chief and head of the awards program.
"Some actors and directors are very good at it, with
enormously entertaining stories with lots of anecdotes,"
Hettrick said. "But others you'd expect to be good are,
well, dry and boring. We try to recognize those who do it
well."
The awards were first given last winter for DVDs introduced
in 2000. The first audio commentary winners were Harry
Shearer, Christopher Guest and Michael McKean for the 1984
faux documentary "This Is Spinal Tap."
The new crop of best audio commentary nominees for 2001
include Francis Ford Coppola ("The Godfather"); Arnold
Schwarzenegger ("Total Recall"); Rob Reiner ("When Harry
Met Sally ... "); George Lucas and his creative team ("Star
Wars: Episode I The Phantom Menace"); John Cleese, Eric
Idle and Michael Palin ("Monty Python and the Holy Grail");
and Robert Wise, Douglas Trumbull, John Dyskstra, Jerry
Goldsmith and Stephen Collins ("Star Trek: The Motion
Picture"). (Some of these DVDs haven't been released yet,
but the Video Premiere judges were given advance copies.)
A sampling of some new DVDs reveals a varied approach to
audio commentaries.
Lucas' "Phantom Menace" commentary is the first he's done.
Although he drones on professorially at times, his insights
are utterly keen--revealing the thinking behind such things
as his abstract method of advancing plots visually by
eliminating the beginnings and endings of action scenes.
"We'll jump quite a bit and take some real risks [in]
moving the story along faster than what most people are
used to in a movie," Lucas says in the commentary.
"George enjoys the role of film teacher ... speaking
directly to students," Rob Coleman, animation director of
Industrial Light & Magic, said in an interview. ILM is
Lucasfilm's visual effects house, and Coleman is one of
those nominated along with Lucas for "Phantom Menace."
In Universal's effects-driven "The Mummy Returns"--which
isn't nominated for anything but is a fun bit of
fluff--director Stephen Sommers and producer Bob Ducsay
occasionally fall into the annoying habit of pointing out
the obvious computer-generated image, but they reveal
handfuls of screen tricks and a litany of goofs, as when
four mummies attack the hero in one scene and he dispatches
only three.
On DreamWorks' "Shrek" (due Nov. 2), directors Andrew
Adamson and Vicky Jenson and producer Aaron Warner disclose
that animators made Princess Fiona a scary-looking anime
wench in their first pass, then improved her look so much
that she became too realistic--and oddly out of place in
the picture's fairy tale world. So she was tooned up a
notch--made a bit less natural-looking for the final cut.
Director John Landis eschewed a new director's commentary
for the re-release of "An American Werewolf in London."
"I've listened to some, and some were quite good but some
were quite pompous, so I just thought it was a bit too
much," he explained. He talked the DVD producers into using
comments he recorded several years ago for a British
documentary on American horror films.
Back at the Santa Monica sound studio, Bay was adding his
voice to "Pearl Harbor," which he hopes will be watched
generations from now. As the planes left that baseball game
behind, Bay meticulously walked his audience through the
movie's 40-minute, carnage-laden attack sequence--which was
generally well-received, even among critics who ridiculed
the film's plot and impressionistic depiction of history.
At times, he sounded almost defensive, peppering his
commentary with verbal footnotes citing research for scenes
in which nurses use stockings as tourniquets and when Cuba
Gooding Jr.'s kitchen steward shoots down a Japanese plane.
At other times, Bay sounded like any other director of a
big-budget studio production, leading a cast of
thousands--and commiserating with his fellow directors.
"There was a moment we had 200 extras," Bay said as footage
of a ghastly procession of burn victims flickered across
the screen. "One of the kids in the massive sea of extras
was laughing; he had burns on him and he was laughing. I
called 'Cut!' And I got on my megaphone and singled him
out, in front of everybody, and said, 'Do you think Pearl
Harbor was funny?"'
Bay went on to describe a visit with director James
Cameron, who told him about one rambunctious crowd scene of
extras who kept hamming it up on the set of "Titanic." "He
winked at me and said, 'One extra wrecks it all."'
As for a Video Premiere award, Bay will be eligible next
year, since his commentary will be issued next May as part
of a director's cut DVD edition. The first DVD release of
"Pearl Harbor" is set to coincide with the 60th anniversary
of the actual attack in December and won't carry a
commentary track.