Andrew Davis & Louis Sachar: Interview
Interview by Clint Morris
Interview with Holes director & writer, Andrew
Davis & Louis Sachar
Holes opens in cinemas October 30th
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Andrew Davis
(left) & Louis
Sachar (right) on the set of Holes
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The first thing you notice about
Director Andrew Davis and writer Louis Sachar - as they sit
contentedly in a suite at one of Melbourne's ritziest motels
- is their smiles.
They're smiling from ear to ear.
And what's more, it seems to a genuine flush. But then again,
why wouldn't they be in high spirits?
They've done the atypical task of teaming to successfully
take Sachar's book, turn it into a film, and leave everyone
- counting the author - happy.
As the writer of enchanting children's book, Holes
- the story of a youth sent to a uninhabited camp for juveniles
where he's put to work digging holes in search of concealed
treasure - Sachar trusted unequivocally that Davis, director
of such films as The Fugitive and Collateral Damage,
would do his jovial tale justice. And, judging by the box
office take on the film, as well as the palpable mateship
between the two men - Davis most unquestionably has. Even
though it seems like a major left turn for the filmmaker.
So how does someone who was last seen directing the troubled
Arnold Schwarzenegger vehicle Collateral Damage, get
hired by Disney?
Davis laughs. "We'll I was wounded". Then answers
"One of the producers, Teresa Tucker-Davies and I were
looking for something different, a family oriented movie.
And she found this wonderful little film and I read it, and
fell in love with it and shared it with my family and we called
up Louis and said we'd like to try and make a movie out of
this. We met each other, had some dialogue, negotiated, gained
some partners along the way
it just evolved.
"We wanted to do a good job of this film. We didn't
want to take away his childhood," says Davis. "It
was a beloved book. We just needed to know how to take this
magic, complicated story and make it work and so we spent
a little bit of time talking to writers and ultimately, I
said why can't Louis write the movie?
"So we spent a little bit of time teaching him how to
do that. Initially, he said he didn't like it
he didn't
want to do it anymore, but came around."
Adds Sachar, "We saw eye to eye, it's just that this
was all new to me. I don't know what works and what doesn't
work. I have no idea what it'll look like on screen or what
it costs to make. I mean, sometimes we would argue about something
- something I felt strongly about or someone Andrew felt strongly
about - and we would ultimately work it out. We have a mutual
respect."
"The wonderful thing was we could refer to Louis constantly,"
says Davis. "We wanted him on the set. I felt I had to
show to him that we're going to keep it on a course. I enjoyed
the fact that he was smiling a lot. You'd show him a prop,
or a lizard or a cast member and he'd say That's cool!
Yeah!"
But Davis isn't the only one trying something new here, much
of the cast is too, including veteran actress Sigourney Weaver,
who plays the film's noxious juvenile camp manager, known
only as 'The Warden'. "I just loved the Aliens movies",
admits Davis. "And she was Theresa's first choice. I
mean we talked to a lot of other people, but she just seemed
you like the person in the book. And Jon Voight's someone
I wanted to work with for a long time
it was a dream
cast. Thing is, though we didn't always get who we were after
initially, things just worked out."
Davis's career has largely consisted of action movies, but
furthermore the Oscar nominated film adaptation of The
Fugitive. "Financially, that's my great accomplishment.
It was nominated for best picture. But I think Holes
is an equally good accomplishment. I think because we've satisfied
so many people with it. It was a harder movie to make. It's
got big heart. Films are kind of like children: some of them
get better grades than others but you still love them all."
Davis and Sachar recently reunited to work on the Holes
DVD together. "Yeah we did a commentary. Both of us.
We're just too scared to listen to it. It's doing very well,
about #2 in America - just behind Daddy Day Care."
So what's next for Davis, after Holes? Back to explosive
action movies? "I'm trying to decide what to do next.
They're not big action movies," smiles Davis, quick to
slam rumours of an Under Siege 3, which he'll direct.
"So nothing's a sequel. Unless you call remaking a classic
a sequel."
"I'm thinking of doing Don Quixote. Not the Terry Gilliam
one. This would be based on an old Waldo Salt script. I think
Gilliam's one has something to do with an advertising executive
or something. Apparently Gilliam still wants to do his
its
very complicated.
"I wouldn't be surprised if Johnny Depp, with his success
of late, if he says he wants to do it, they'd do it,"
says Davis. "Mine's a separate project. It's hard to
think how I can make a movie that's going to be so all of
the world, that's going to have somebody in it that people
are going to want to come and see, because every three years
someone else is 'hot' and it's such a classic story - not
unlike Holes - that has such a following, I've got
to do it right. If I got to make it, I'd like to make it with
someone like Jon Voight you know, or someone like John Leguizamo
- who probably aren't big enough stars to get it greenlit."
"That's the easy thing about being a writer," adds
Sachar, who himself is currently penning a new hush-hush book.
"I don't have to please anyone. I just write what I like."
Davis says that making Sachar's family novel into a film
has got him more interested in making different types of movies.
"I like black comedies, irreverent movies and I like
Strangelove a lot. I like to have some sort of social comment.
I just think that movies can take you somewhere where you
normally don't go and give you a sense of a world that's different."
"I'd like to work with Denzel Washington, Tom Hanks,
Robin Williams
I'd like to work with him. Some of the
younger actors, I like Matt Damon. Frances McDormand I like
to work with."
The days of working with Steven Seagal are visibly behind
the reformed filmmaker then. But is that because actors like
Seagal are doing direct to video flicks these days and just
aren't bankable?
"I worked with him twice. The first time he was a puppy
dog. We had worked on the story together and he was very open
to trying things. And then by the time Under Siege
came along he'd done three or four movies and he was a bit
of 'a star'. Bear in mind, he was really only in Under Siege
for 41 minutes. It was Tommy Lee Jones most of the time. But
yeah, he's okay. Now, of course he's in a bit of trouble with
all this court stuff, the mafia and all that stuff.
"It's not just action stars; it's a lot of the big stars.
It's either the wrong material or the audiences just don't
go to movies - they'll see their release on television. So
it's hard. I mean Holes did better than a lot of the
movies this year that had big stars in them, so that's telling
us something about family audiences."
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