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PAUL HAGGIS ON CRASH
Making Movies gets an exclusive insight into the mind
of Oscar-winning Million Dollar Baby writer, Paul Haggis.
We wanted to know all about his directorial debut, Crash.
Making Movies: Million Dollar Baby (Haggis wrote
the screenplay) provoked controversy in America among
the Christian right, and here you are now doing a film
about race relations. You have said before that you're
drawn to material that is political and volatile. Why
take such risks at a time when so many people are playing
safe?
Paul Haggis: Well I'm a bit of a contrarian. I
left television when everyone was rushing to it. When
Jerry Bruckheimer was going 'My God! Television! It's
taking over!' I was going, 'You know what? I think I'll
go into independent film.' I guess I've never been interested
in taking the path that everyone else takes.
But do you have a political background? I know that
you're involved with organisations such as Artists for
Peace and Justice, and The Centre for the Advancement
of Non-Violence.
I can't say I'm overly political. I'm just as concerned
as the next citizen and feel that if you're concerned
you have a responsibility to do something about that.
So, you know, we're just doing little things here in Los
Angeles to make actors, writers and directors a little
more aware of what our country is doing in our name. You
know, if we can each do our little bit then maybe, eventually,
something will happen.
We've mentioned taking risks. When you were writing
Crash, did you ever ask yourself whether you had the right
to put the kind of words that you do into the mouths of
your racially diverse cast of characters?
Oh completely. Every day we sat down, I said 'Bobby [co-writer
Robert 'Bobby' Moresco], what the hell are we doing?'
We're two white guys. We're going to be killed. We don't
have any right to say these things.'
One of the bravest scenes for me was the one where
the black couple, played by Thandie Newton and Terrence
Howard, talk about black identity. Did that feel particularly
risky for you?
Yeah, absolutely. But, oddly, it's the black community
that's really embraced this film more than any other.
And those were the ones I was most worried about. The
white liberal community, whenever you talk to somebody,
they say, 'What are you talking about? We don't have this
problem. We've solved all this nonsense. Why are you bringing
this up?' But I was most worried about the black reaction
to it.
Was there anything that was off limits? You don't
have any Jewish or any Arab characters in the film, for
instance.
No, there was nothing off limits. I didn't have a graph
and say, 'OK, I'll have two Asians, two Jews, two Arabs',
I didn't do that. I just followed the characters. We started
with the two carjackers, because I knew them. They jacked
my car [a Porsche] and I created a life for them over
10 years in my head. So I knew who they were. They were
now my protagonists. They were my Rosencrantz and Guildenstern
and I knew what they were going to do. So I started with
them and I said, 'Well who do they bump into?' I said
'They bump into myself and my wife', an affluent, white
couple. I fictionalised us, took it home, and said 'Well
what do we do?' Well we changed our locks at two o'clock
in the morning, because they had our house keys. The guy
who had come, what if he had been Hispanic and what if
he had looked like a gangbanger? Would I have felt safe?
I had to admit that I wouldn't have felt safe and I was
so deeply troubled by that, so shamefully, that I said,
'Ooh, ooh, I want to do something.' So I just kept following
the characters and when they bumped into people, I wrote
about them.
Why did you wait a decade before you started writing
the screenplay? You have said that 9/11 focused it for
you.
Well it did. I never actually set out to write this. I
never thought there was a movie in this. I just kept asking
myself different questions. Then, after 9/11, I have a
black friend, he's a writer, who said, and he hated admitting
this, but he felt kind of good about all these Arabs and
Muslims who were now being searched on the aeroplanes,
because now it was someone else's turn. I went 'Ooh, that's
interesting'. So that was one of the kicking off points
and I started to investigate it more. Because I wanted
it to be universal. I was interested in the deeper responsibility,
the more human aspects of our fears, than the sociological
aspect of it. So that was where it started.
To what extent does the fact that LA is such a car-based
society, a point which is central to the way Crash works,
determine the way people there view and interact with
each other?
Yeah, very much. We are all strangers to each other. But
it's not just Los Angeles. Unfortunately it's the world
now. Every time you step out of the urban centre you just
lose contact with anyone who looks different than you
do, because we can now choose where our walled communities
are. And we all do this. Every single ethnic group decides
that they want to live within their own communities, whether
it be Little Ethiopia, or Little Italy, or wherever.
How much do you think the racial dynamics in LA impress
themselves on the way different groups are represented
in Hollywood films?
Well it depends who you talk to. If you talk to most white
critics, or most white writers, directors, or producers,
they'll tell you, 'It's fair [laughs], it's representational,
and we're doing our best to do a bit more.' You talk to
someone who's Latino or Hispanic, or a lot of black actors,
and you find out different.
Were you responding at all to the stereotypical images
that we normally see on screen? Was that in your mind
when you were writing the screenplay?
No, I try not to think about other films when I'm writing
or directing. I guess the images that I have are pretty
clear, from small instances of racism I've seen on studio
lots to the LA riots. We have these riots and then [gasps
ironically] we're all horrified, shocked, horrified. It's
as if we live in Casablanca, you know? And then a year
later we go, 'Thank God we have cured this problem,' [Laughs]
and we've done nothing. Then three years later we wonder
why people are still unhappy. Gosh, why? We just love
to live in a state of delusion.
Is the scene in the film where a white producer tells
a black television director, played by Terrence Howard,
that a character is not being black enough in a scene
something that you have witnessed?
Yeah, I hadn't seen that particular scene. I'd heard about
that particular scene happening. I'd seen other things
like that. For example, I was on a studio lot not too
long ago and I saw two white producers of a television
series talking to a black director, and as I walked towards
them on the studio lot, I noticed that one of the white
producers was telling a joke. I couldn't hear what he
was saying, but as I came a couple of steps closer, I
noticed that it was a racist joke. He was telling the
joke to the black director as if to say, 'See, we can
do this now. We're all the same. It's a level playing
field.' And before I got close enough to say, 'No you
can't, you asshole,' the punch line came and the black
director sort of half laughed, slapped the guy on the
shoulder, and tried to walk back to the stage. Meanwhile
you see the white producers walking away feeling very
good about themselves thinking, 'See, we've overcome this
race problem.' [Laughs] That I found fascinating.
For me Crash is one of the most upfront treatments
of racism in an American metropolis since Do the Right
Thing. Did that make it difficult to finance?
Oh it was terrible. No one wanted to do it. First of all
I was an unknown director. I had directed for television
but that's actually worse. It would have been better if
I had been a complete unknown. Also, it's very hard to
tell the tone of the movie from the script, because it
could have come off as really preachy, or rather the characters
preaching and being didactic, and the film could come
off that way, which I didn't want to do. I wanted to lampoon
these characters who were saying these great, wonderful
things. So we took it out of the studios, no one wanted
it, and we took it to quite a few financiers, and they
liked the script but didn't want to do it with me as the
director. And then, finally, we found Bob Yari and Cathy
Schulman, and they said, 'Yeah, we'll put up a little
bit of money, to get it cast.' So it took us a year and
a half to get the right cast that worked for them so they'd
put more of the money up. All the actors worked for nothing.
We all waived our fees.
How difficult was it finding a cast? I know that Don
Cheadle played a major role in bringing people onboard.
Don was great. Don was the first person onboard. I was
terrified taking this film to Don. For one, I didn't know
him; I didn't know any of these actors. He was the first
African-American actor who read the script, and also I
have so much respect for him. So when he came to sit in
my living room, I had no idea what he was going to say.
He might have just come to say, 'Listen, I just want to
say what a racist bastard you are, and I want to say it
to your face.' He didn't. He sat down and said, 'I want
to do the movie.' I said 'Great. What role?' He said 'I
don't care. Any role.' He actually went back and forth
between the role of the television director and the police
detective for six months. Every week he'd phone and go,
'You know what? I changed my mind.' [Laughs] He finally
made up his mind six months later. We asked him to produce
the film with us largely because I knew he'd bring a credibility
that I didn't have. People look at him and they know he's
associated with quality films. Also, actors want to act
with Don Cheadle. He's an actor magnet. He's like Sean
Penn.
Will Smith claimed a little while ago that he was
not allowed to kiss Cameron Diaz in the romantic comedy
Hitch, only the Cuban-American actress Eva Mendes. You
keep to this configuration in Crash, by giving Don Cheadle's
character a Latino lover (played by Jennifer Esposito),
although you do comment on the prejudice that still exists
in America towards mixed race relationships. Nonetheless,
did you at any point consider breaking the taboo and giving
Don a white partner?
Yeah. Actually no, I didn't, because I knew where I was
going with that plot. I wanted him to say she's white
to his mum, just to piss her off [Laughs], and that to
drive Jennifer's character over the edge. Again, I didn't
really do anything for effect. I just followed the characters
and took them wherever they wanted to go.
Where do you find your common ground with Clint Eastwood
because politically you come from different ends of the
spectrum?
The wonderful thing about Clint is you can never second
guess how he is going to react to anything. I sent him
this project, the third thing we're doing together, Death
And Dishonour, about Iraq, it's a really difficult story,
a true story, and I thought he could have called me up
and said, 'You Commie bastard. What are you getting me
into now?' But he didn't. He called up and said, 'Wow,
difficult material. Hard story.' I said 'Yeah, but it's
the truth.' He said 'Yeah, I think we should tell it.'
So, you know, I really admire him. People think they know
who Clint Eastwood is but they just don't know.
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