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What sort of man does it take to direct both Get
Carter and Morons
From Outer Space? Blockbuster's Marshall Julius meets British
filmmaking legend Mike
Hodges
.
Veteran British director Mike
Hodges is the first to admit he's a man of extremes. "I've made
a lot of very serious films," he begins, "from my first feature, Get
Carter, to my latest, I'll
Sleep When I'm Dead . Both very sombre and extremely grown up.
But then I really love the silly stuff as well, films like Flash
Gordon and Morons
From Outer Space
. My work reveals a kind of schizophrenia, I
suppose."
Before
exploring the solemn side of Hodge's work, I can't help but press
him for information about a personal favourite of mine, kitsch
classic Flash
Gordon (1980)
. "The only improvised $37 million movie
ever made," recalls the director. "I was presented with costumes and
weaponry and all sorts of stuff which was often a bit naff, and I
would have to be as inventive as possible. So I would walk on the
floor, literally every day, and just make it up as I went along.
"I made it with the
belief that it would never be seen by anybody," admits Hodges. "The
financing always seems kind of precarious. Plus we were working
against blue screens, yet we didn't know when we started how we were
going to do the skies or anything, really. I was pleased with how it
all turned out, though. And I think it's still terrifically good
fun."
Silly stuff
aside, it's Hodges' crime thrillers that the Seventy-something
director remains best known for, from the iconic, influential Get
Carter in 1971 right up to recent DVD release I'll
Sleep When I'm Dead, in which former gangster Clive
Owen returns to his old stomping ground to avenge his brother's
death. Not so different from Get
Carter
in that respect, but a far more restrained and believable
treatment of the subject.
"It's
a dangerous film to have made, in many ways," says Hodges of I'll
Sleep When I'm Dead
, "because it breaks so many rules. Especially in
contemporary cinema. If the film had been made in the Fifties or
Sixties it would have probably been more acceptable, but these days
films don't generally trust their audiences to absorb atmosphere and
accept a slower pace. It's risky if you break the rules, but I've
been very gratified by the positive response the film has received.
Everyone seems to get it."
Hodges first worked
with Owen on the film that made him a star, Croupier,
it's clear the two work well together. "I like his minimalism," says
Hodges of his leading man. "I like the fact that he paces himself,
that he knows what scenes are important. He's a bit like Hitchcock.
Hitchcock
was bored stiff on most of what he shot, except for those amazing
set-piece sequences that he delighted in. Like Hitchcock
, Clive knows the scenes that count and
saves his best for them. When he steps in front of the camera, he
makes everything work really well."
Of the many
characters in I'll
Sleep When I'm Dead, Owen has the least amount of dialogue,
playing it strong and relatively silent all the way. "Some actors,"
says Hodges, "give them a script and they look straight away at how
many lines they have. And if there aren't enough they often won't do
it. But Clive looks at the character. How important they are to the
story, rather than how many words come out of their mouth. He's a
lot like Clint
Eastwood in that respect. I don't think playing James
Bond would suit him at all, though," says Hodges of the
persistent rumours surrounding Owen and the 007
franchise. "That would be a terrible
mistake."
Not such a terrible
mistake as Sylvester
Stallone's dreadful Get
Carter remake. "To be honest I've never seen it. I can't really
watch Stallone.
My son brought it home on DVD one night, but we all got drunk and
forgot to watch it. Everyone's told me since, all my friends, not to
watch it. I'll tell you what really upset me about it though: the
fact that Michael
Caine
actually appeared in it. What
on earth did he do that for? He was my first film star, and Carter
was his best role ever. Why would he risk spoiling the memory by
doing the remake? Certainly it was an odd endorsement, but then
Caine is famous for doing anything for the money, and is the first
to admit it. "He just hates not working," clarifies Hodges, "but I
think it was a mistake."
 Back to I'll
Sleep When I'm Dead, and though there's not a single innocent in
the entire movie, the real villain of the piece is played by Malcolm
McDowell
, an actor well known for
"...chomping up the scenery, if you let him. But I think he knew,
when we talked about the role, that I wouldn't stand for it. We've
known each other for years but we've never worked together before,
but he'd seen my films and he just knew that I wouldn't tolerate any
overacting. And I think he's absolutely extraordinary in this. He's
an incredibly brave actor, I think, a real trooper."
Shot for a relatively tiny budget, I'll
Sleep When I'm Dead is pure Hodges, made without the meddling of
producers only interested in the bottom line. "As a result of Croupier's
international success I've gotten myself into position where I have
control of my films, and I won't make them unless I do. I've had a
lot of trouble over the years with films being taken away from me
and recut, most memorably, I suppose, A
Prayer For The Dying, with Mickey
Rourke
. But I'm too old to go
through that kind of nonsense again. These days, if they want me to
make another movie, I have to be the boss."
Marshall
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