Guardians of the Galaxy arrived this week (12/9) on Blu-ray™ 3D Combo Pack, Blu-ray and On-Demand! Enjoy the bloopers clip below as well as a Q&A with director/co-writer James Gunn.
Q: What were the
biggest challenges in bringing Guardians Of The Galaxy
to the screen?
A: The biggest challenge
was definitely having to set up so many characters and so many
foreign planets that nobody had ever heard of within the first 20
minutes and then get to the story. To have people feel comfortable
with the plot and who the characters were while telling a fun,
engaging story – that was the big challenge. I really look forward
to doing the sequel because I won’t have to do all that heavy
lifting. I can just focus on the characters and the adventures they
go on.
Q: How would you sum
up the movie yourself?
A: I see it as a space
adventure but with a lot of comedy and a lot of heart. We didn’t
restrain ourselves in any way, other than just keeping the characters
as real as we possibly could.
Q: Was it tricky
getting the tone of the film right in terms of not making the comedy
too adult?
A: I was thinking that if
I had kids, which I don’t - I have a dog but I don’t care what my
dog sees – then what would I really care about them seeing? Would I
care about them seeing a raccoon say ‘S**t’? Not really. There’s
one risqué joke in there that no kid will understand and if they do
they’ve been watching something else risqué, but mainly I was
thinking about what would be OK for my nieces and nephews to see. But
I don’t think I’ll ever write anything that’s not funny because
it’s what comes naturally to me. I’m writing characters, I fall
in love with those characters, and those characters make me laugh as
they go about their lives. I’m just writing down what they’re
doing as I see it happen in my brain.
Q: Were you heavily
influenced by the Marvel comics when you made the movie?
A: Yeah, especially the
2008 team because Dan Abnett and Andy Lanning wrote the series.
They’re the ones that chose the characters who are in the movie and
the characters they chose were all sort of Z-grade comic book heroes,
some of whom had been around for 30 years. Groot first appeared in
1963. So there was a lot of humor and a lot of interesting stuff in
those comics, a lot of space fantasy, and so if there was anything
that influenced us when we were making the movie it was Dan and
Andy’s work. I’m very indebted to those guys. I’m also indebted
to some of the Cosmic guys from the 1970s like Jim Starlin, who
created whole universes that really began the Cosmic side of Marvel,
and he created Thanos. There are a lot of those elements in the film.
Q: The humor in the
film is very bold and brave, but did anybody try and rein you in?
A: It was the opposite,
actually. There was a lot of humor in my first draft and I thought
‘This might be a little too out-there for Marvel and they might
want to pull it back and make it a little straighter’. I actually
brought that up in the first meeting because they really liked the
script, which of course I was incredibly relieved to hear, and they
actually said, ‘You can make it funnier if you want’. And that’s
what I did.
Q: The
film is sure to be a DVD and Blu-ray favorite.
How do you think it will replay repeatedly?
A:
There’s lots of little things in there that people might miss the
first time round. There are all kinds of things from the Marvel
universe. I was very specifically thinking of the R2-D2 model that
Spielberg had on the spaceship in Close
Encounters Of The Third Kind when I did
the Collector’s Museum scene. If you freeze-frame it you’ll see
all manner of references. We also have Cosmo popping up, who’s a
character in the Guardians Of The Galaxy
comics. He’s a Russian dog who speaks with a Russian accent and
that was our nod to him. I really like Cosmo in the comics but he’s
very hard to have in the movie because it’s difficult to have a
live-action dog next to a CGI racoon due to the way fur looks on
screen. In the comics they don’t get along at all, which is why
they’re growling at each other in the film. Also, there are some
deleted scenes and outtakes because we’d goof around on set a lot,
and they’ll be on there.
Q: Did
you already know Chris Pratt, who plays Peter Quill/Star-Lord, before
making the movie?
A: No
but through the process of making the film he’s the one I became
closest to. We became very good friends and he moved next door to me
when we were based in London so we could hang out all the time. I
didn’t know him before but strangely we have a couple of close
friends in common, which I think made us instantly trust each other
because the friends in question are very good people. They’re guys
that I like. They’re just good, basic dudes.
Q:
When you’re working with a huge budget
is it easy to get carried away and go ‘I want this and I want
that’?
A: I
don’t do that. I’m selective. For me having a big budget is
definitely better than having a small budget simply because visually
I can do what I want, but there are always strengths that come
through limitations. On this movie, though, having the budget was
great.
Q: How
did you choose the songs for the soundtrack?
A: For
me that was the most fun part probably of the entire film. When I
first wrote my treatment for the movie I put a picture of a Sony
Walkman on the top of it. That was probably the first sign that this
was not the typical thing, but Kevin Feige [the producer and Marvel
Studios president] loved that Sony Walkman and he was going, ‘I
wonder if we can work that into the advertising somehow’. We didn’t
do that in the end although it would have been cool. To me, the songs
are the emotional center of the movie. They’re Peter Quill’s
attachment to earth and his attachment to the mother he lost. The
songs were very important and they were all baked into the script.
The way I chose them is that I went and I made a playlist of 500 pop
hits from the 1970s on my iTunes, then I whittled it down to about
100 songs that seemed tonally in line with what I saw in my head.
With those 100 songs I would play them around the house and be
inspired by them, then when I wrote the script I’d try to find the
right song for the right moment, like when Peter is dancing through
the temple. At first I wrote it with Hooked
On A Feeling in mind then changed it to
Come And Get Your Love
halfway through. I’d try and find the right song for the right
moment.
Q:
Were there any instances where you were
refused permission to use a song or it proved too expensive?
A: No,
never. Part of it was probably the songs I was choosing. With the
exception of David Bowie – and Moonage
Daydream isn’t one of the more
well-known David Bowie songs – they were mostly songs that people
had probably heard but they probably didn’t know the title of the
song and they probably didn’t know the artist. I wanted to get
things that were familiar but not too
familiar. It’s not like I was putting The Rolling Stones and Led
Zeppelin on the soundtrack. Because of that fortunate aesthetic
choice it meant that the songs were not unaffordable.
Enjoy some Guardians of the Galaxy bloopers.
Q: Why
do you think Guardians
has been such a big hit with audiences?
A: The
thing that makes it so much fun is taking these outlandish situations
and these outlandish characters and then having these aliens act like
they’re real people. The things they’re arguing about are things
you’d argue about with your friends in your apartment. That’s a
big part of the fun of it. I also think it’s a reaction to a lot of
the other blockbuster movies. We’re not taking ourselves too
seriously and we’re not adding a sheen of darkness and broodiness
over the movie to cover up the fact there aren’t real
characterisations in there, and we’re not adding a string of
explosions with no character moments in between – we’re creating
something that is, first and foremost, about those characters. I love
those characters with all my heart and I’ve put them on screen to
the best of my ability.
Q:
What were the big movie influences for
you?
A: I
thought of the movies I loved as a kid, like Raiders
Of The Lost Ark, The
Empire Strikes Back and Back
To The Future. I wanted to create a
movie that wasn’t necessarily like those movies but a movie that
made me feel like those movies made me feel. That was the starting
point.
Q: If
you had the whole Marvel universe to choose from, who would you like
to see in the sequel, even if it was just for a cameo?
A;
[Laughs] I do
have the whole Marvel universe to choose from. It depends on where we
go with the sequel. At some point the Guardians will meet up with
characters from other Marvel movies and that’s totally cool, but
it’s not really my interest. My interest is to keep building Marvel
Cosmic and to make Marvel Cosmic as cool as it possibly can be, and
also to bring in other characters that I didn’t get to put in the
movie. There are a lot of Marvel Cosmic characters I’m really into
that I think would make great cinematic heroes or villains. The
opportunity to create them for the screen is exciting to me.
Q: The
cast has said you have a very definite idea of what you want. Is that
something that stems from directing independent movies?
A: It’s just sort of
how I create something. I need to have a very specific idea of where
I’m going and [laughs] when I don’t, I fake it. It’s how I go
about doing things and I really believe that Hitchcock idea that the
movie is really made before you step on set. The majority of the
filmmaking process is in pre-production. The more you’ve planned
out the more freedom there is on set to find new stuff, to play
around, find new jokes and let the actors kind of breathe – but it
needs to come from a place where it’s completely structured.
Q: Hitchcock also said
he preferred the preparation to the actual filming process, but it
sounds like you had a great time making Guardians…
A: We had a great time
and we really like each other. I always think back to something I
heard Madeline Kahn say when I was really little. I don’t know why
it stuck with me but it’s that Twinkies are delicious to eat but it
doesn’t mean people who work in the Twinkie factory are having an
especially great time. Obviously it meant something to me because I
heard it when I was around seven years old and I still remember it.
Maybe I even made part of it up. I don’t know. I think she
said that. So making a movie is not easy but this one was fun.
Q: Chris Pratt says
you had to tire him out to get what you wanted. Do you deliberately
use tricks to get responses from your actors?
A: I don’t know if
they’re tricks, it’s just a method and it isn’t necessarily
true for everybody but Chris is such a cerebral guy. He doesn’t
seem that cerebral, I know; he seems like a dummy. But he’s a
really cerebral guy and he thinks a lot. One of the tricks with Chris
is to keep pushing him and pushing him until he gets to the place
where he’s just acting on instinct, then you capture this magic.
Unfortunately I didn’t know that on the first day of shooting; it
took me a little while to learn it. With Dave Bautista [who plays
Drax The Destroyer], on the other hand, we understood each other from
the moment we met each other so that was a little bit easier. With
different actors at different times you get what makes them click.
Q: How important is it
to cast name actors like Vin Diesel [Groot] and Bradley Cooper
[Rocket] when they’re not actually appearing on screen?
A: I didn’t know Vin
was going to be as important as he was. That’s the grace of God. We
had other people doing the voice for a temporary track and it was
fine and the character of Groot was really cool. Then Vin came in and
what he did was kind of miraculous. The editor Fred Raskin and I were
sitting in the room and we kept turning to each other because we
couldn’t believe how much of a difference he made to that
character. Suddenly Groot was complete and he was full and he was
real, and that’s because of Vin’s voice. We had this secret
script that had ‘I am Groot’ on one side and on the other side it
had the lines he was actually saying. Sometimes he was cursing and
sometimes he was saying a whole paragraph and at other times it was
just one word. It’s amazing to me how when Vin says ‘I am Groot’
he gets across what he’s meant to be saying. We have Rocket in the
movie interpreting what Groot’s saying and it’s funny, but we
kind of get what he’s saying anyway. Having Bradley do Rocket was a
little different because I knew Rocket was as important as anything
in the movie. We auditioned a lot of people but it was difficult to
find somebody who was able to do all the comedy that Rocket does and
also be as emotionally grounded as Rocket needs to be. He really is a
haunted little beast. He’s the least happy of all of the Guardians
and I needed that on screen, and I also needed someone who was going
to do a character, not just come in and do their celebrity voice over
this animated raccoon. I needed someone who could create a character
out of him and Bradley had the track record of being able to do all
that. My first day of recording Bradley was maybe my happiest day
making this movie, [laughs] and by happiness I mean relief because
it’s pretty much how I experience pleasure.
Guardians Of The
Galaxy is available on Blu-ray,
Digital HD and
Disney Movies Anywhere
December 9, 2014
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