ELECTRONIC MAIL & GUARDIAN MAY 2, 1997
OUT TO PLAY
THE MASSACRE OF MY MOVIES
Hardware: A killer android in it, baseball bats, chainsaws, a shower
scene, gas explosions...
South African-born Richard Stanley was fired as director of The Island of
Dr Moreau after four days on set. ANDREW WORSDALE asks him why
TWENTY-SEVEN-YEAR-OLD renegade film-maker Richard Stanley had his first
film taken away from him and re-cut. While studying at the Cape Town
Film School his 15-minute Super 8 film, Rites of
Passage, about cavemen and re-incarnation, was confiscated and recut
by tutor John Hill down to five minutes for being "a cinematic wank".
After a year Stanley managed to track down what had been left
on the cutting room floor and reassemble it. But three vital minutes, he
says, are still missing. Ever since then he has been running into
skirmishes with the types who decide what movies should be. His Namibian
serial-killer/ghost story Dust Devil was cut by the distributors from 120
to a barely recognisable 83 minutes. He disassociates himself from the
film for UK band Marillion's concept album Brave, and most recently he was
fired from the set of The Island of Dr Moreau after four days.
Only his debut feature, the lowbrow sci-fi pic Hardware, was left
unscathed. And that was because, as Stanley claims: "It was a pretty
dumb film ... After having various scripts rejected I sat down and wrote
something with a killer android in the future, with American leads,
baseball bats, chainsaws, a shower scene, gas explosions, a cliff-hanger
scene and so on. I wouldn't make a film as obviously commercial as
Hardware again." Shot in one location for a meagre UKP1-million, the film
earned over $70-million despite stinking reviews.
Stanley left South Africa in 1984 and ended up in London. "I
didn't leave just because of military service - I imagined myself making
military propaganda films for the army but subverting their dogma,"
he says. "I left because the film industry seemed like a
closed shop, I couldn't get any work and the films they were making were
terrible anyway."
His first job in the UK came in response to an ad in Melody Maker. A new
band with no album had UKP100 to make a music video. The band was Field of
Nephilim and Stanley worked for several years as a sought-after director
of music videos for groups like Pop Will Eat Itself. He used the medium
as a training ground for feature work. And his enduring love
of magic and the occult blended perfectly with the apocalyptic strains
of post-punk pop culture.
Sorcery, the apocalypse, doom and religion have always been hallmarks
of his work. Hardly surprising - his mother is a feminist anthropologist
specialising in witchcraft and folklore.
In 1989 Stanley went to Afghanistan where he made Voice of The Moon,
an evocative documentary about the war in the region. But because it had
no voice-over explaining the issues, broadcasters passed on it. "I was
trying to do what Werner Herzog did in his film about Kuwait, Lessons on
Darkness - not lecture; just show."
After the success of Hardware in 1990 everyone wanted another sci-fi pic.
He was offered Judge Dredd but turned it down for his own screenplay
Dust Devil, based on the legend of Namibian serial killer Nadhiep.
"The script was written years ago," he says. In fact it had its origins
in an unfinished 16mm student short inspired by the unsolved
ritual murders in Bethany which also formed the basis of David Wicht's
Windprints.
Late in 1991 Stanley delivered a 120-minute cut of the film, which was
then cut by 10 minutes. But it seems the distributors wanted a
linear thriller to cash in on the serial-killer phenomenon that came
with Silence of The Lambs so they tried to make Hollywood sense out of
what was a "mystical murder movie". A version lasting 87 minutes was
premiered at Cannes.
"They butchered the intentions of the film," recalls Stanley, "they also
re-graded it, making it all overwhelmingly red like Hardware." To make
matters worse, when the producers, Palace, went bankrupt, Stanley had to
rescue the film. He put UKP40,000 into reassembling it to its original
form and regrading the colours for a more washed-out look. The result is a
fascinating exploration of tribal rituals, witchcraft, Namibian mysticism,
magic and suicide.
He hoped his next project would be trouble-free - the film of
HG Wells's The Island of Dr Moreau, in which a sailor is shipwrecked on an
island populated by human/animal hybrids created by vivisector Moreau.
With novelist Michael Herr he wrote a screenplay to make it "a really
slick, epic, voodoo, gothic horror". The result was good enough to attract
Marlon Brando, Val Kilmer, Northern Exposure star Rob Morrow and Fairuza
Balk.
But the first hint of problems came when Stanley was summoned to Tokyo
by the notoriously difficult Kilmer who wanted his commitment to the
film - the lead role - reduced by a crazy 40%. He switched Kilmer into the
part of Moreau's assistant and cast Morrow in the lead. Things got
progressively worse. Kilmer refused to give time to even the
most cursory rehearsal time.
The litany of woes continued. Kilmer failed to turn up for the first two
days of shooting, he hadn't bothered to learn his lines and didn't
know which scenes he was in. On the fourth day, Stanley was fired by the
film's financiers. Morrow jumped ship soon after and David Thewlis was
brought in as the new lead, with veteran director, but now cinematic hack,
John Frankenheimer.
As the replacements went ahead with production, rumours circulated
that Stanley was planning to burn down the set. He decided to go native in
the rainforest, with some other disenchanted crew members, and
borrowed the "melting dog man" costume to pose as an extra and observe
Frankenheimer's efforts on set. His guise was never found out. Those who
knew about it kept it secret from the Americans.
The comparisons between Stanley's original draft and Frankenheimer's
shooting draft are damning. They changed the Prendick character's name
to Douglas and got rid of the idea of him being a civil rights
lawyer working for the United Nations. Stanley believes it can no longer
be classified as a horror movie. "It's now the slave bunch liberated
by the outsider who leads the rebellion - the
same old pro-democracy liberal American message that creeps into
everything."
After his three-year endurance over the in-fighting with Dust
Devil, Stanley decided not to go to the press over the difficulties on
Moreau, and an agreement was made to cite "creative differences"
as the reason for his dismissal.
The problem is that he wanted to make an individualistic, highly cinematic
work and found himself dealing with company men who insisted
he toe the line, especially regarding money. "As soon as the budget goes
over a certain level, you're in the hands of the company. When
it hit $35-million, my position started to become untenable. They say: 'It
has to be this way, kid - the waist-high field of marijuana plants has
to go; the animal sex has to go; you can't have the female lead cooked and
eaten..."
Stanley admits he's angry with the Americans after this experience and now
hopes to make a film in Britain. It's tentatively titled The Wizard
of Wicklow and is an Irish witchcraft story set in the Fifties.
There are also several South African projects he's working on, but they'll
only reach fruition if the industry has the vision to support his
singularly cinematic point of view.
Stanley will be in South Africa in July with Hardware,
Dust Devil and Voice of The Moon, all of which will screen
in Grahamstown and around the country. The Island of Dr Moreau
opened countrywide on May 1.
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