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"Armageddon"
director Michael Bay may just be the future of movies.
Will the world survive?
It's
two weeks until "Armageddon." Two teams are working
round the clock to get the movie finished, and director
Michael Bay is sitting at a console in a sound-mixing stage
in Culver City, Calif. On screen, a terrified Ben Affleck
is screaming for his life in an action sequence aboard the
Mir. Before long half of Affleck's lines have evaporated.
"It's bulls--t," Bay mutters loudly to himself.
"No one would say that." The spoken word does
not get top priority in a Michael Bay movie. Indeed, you're
lucky if you can hear anybody above the explosions.
James
Cameron may be King of the World today, but in the world
of blockbuster movie- making, the 34-year-old Bay is the
new crown prince. In Hollywood, where getting in touch with
your inner child is an economic necessity, Bay's boyish
obsession with speed, energy, and excitement has made him
a whopping success. In fact, he has yet to taste failure.
"Bad Boys," his 1995 action-comedy debut with
Will Smith and Martin Lawrence, was a surprise hit. His
follow-up, "The Rock," grossed $332 million worldwide.
And now, with "Armageddon," he has been entrusted
with the largest budget (some $150 million) in Disney Studio
history. That's a lot of money to spend on the second
asteroid-hurling-toward-Earth movie of the summer. But if
the seers are correct, it's going to leave its summer rivals
biting meteor dust.
Joe
Roth, Disney's Studio's chairman, believes Bay is the action-movie
heir apparent to Steven Spielberg
and Cameron. "He's the only one in the field right
now positioned to be the leading director in his class,"
says Roth, who's signed the director to an exclusive deal
for his next two pictures. Bay's ear-splitting, frenetic
MTV style does not resemble the aforementioned giants. What
the director does share with them is a gift for tapping
into the gut, and the pocketbook, of the mass market.
There
are critics who see Bay as the Great Satan. For them, he's
a symbol of Hollywood's capitulation to mindless, meaningless
razzle-dazzle--a poster boy for the death of cinema. Bay
in unapologetic. "Isn't the whole idea to fill the
theaters? I'm the first to admit it isn't f-cking brain
surgery. You do it because you want approval from the audience.
Failure is when no one shows up. When people--not the critics--absolutely
hate your movie."
Judging
from the roar of approval at an advanced screening, people
are going to like "Armageddon" a lot. Unlike the
touchy-feel "Deep Impact," which actually takes
the possibility of the planet's demise seriously, "Armageddon"
is a slap-happy adventurism. It's "The Dirty Dozen"
save the world, in which a disreputable band of roughneck
oil-riggers, led by Bruce Willis, are recruited by NASA
and trained in a week to fly into outer space, land on the
Texas-size asteroid and drill a hole for a nuclear bomb.
The
movie's a 2 1/2-hour roller coaster that shamelessly leaps
from one ticking-bomb cliffhanger tot he next, from rowdy
jokiness to unabashed sentimentality, from chest-beating
patriotism to flaming special effects. "Armageddon"
moves with such speed the audience doesn't have time to
wonder if any of it makes sense. The movies true subject
is its own momentum. Bay's camera is always on the move--
for no particular reason except the rush it supplies. Every
scene is diced and spliced into tiny pieces: not since "Beyond
the Valley of Dolls" has there been such hyperediting.
Yet
the damn thing works. "Armageddon" is as irresistible
as it's indefensible. Its excessiveness, it's arbitrary
mood swings and ersatz passions all seem part of its nutty,
gungho charm. Bruce Willis has rarely been so appealing
heroic; Steve Buscemi,as a horny genius, and Owen Wilson,
as a cockeyed optimist, supply lovely quirks tot he motley
crew; Billy Bob Thornton as a big man at NASA gives a familiar
role an unfamiliar flavor, and the coltish Liv Tyler is
sexy without seeming to try. Bay borrows from everywhere,
and recognizing the eclectic sources can be part of the
fun: "The Right Stuff," "The Terminator,"
"The A-Team," American Express and IBM ads and
even a startling Robert Frank photograph. Bay is a pop magpie,
but he recycles Hollywood cliches with such velocity and
slickness they almost seem newly minted.
Growing
up in the Westwood section of Los Angeles, Bay loved to
play with trains, build miniature volcanoes and blow things
up. He never lacked confidence. As a childhood friend puts
it, "Michael doesn't suffer from self-doubt."
Michael attended Wesleyan College in Connecticut, he stood
out from his fellow Film Studies majors. He didn't wear
black or strike suffering poses, says Jeanine Basinger,
his teacher and mentor. "his senior film was about
a fraternity boy who was driving his yellow Porsche around
town very fast."
Bay
began his career as a music director of music videos and
commercials (the Got Milk? campaign). His award-winning
work led producers Jerry Bruckheimer and Don Simpson to
hire him for "Bad Boys." "This was my one
shot," Bay remembers. "My career could go down
the toilet on this." After an uneven test screening,
he fought hard to shoot a new scene. "But the line
producer said, 'We're not going to shoot it. We're done.'
I asked how much was it going to cost, and he said $25,000.
And I wrote him a check right there. He wouldn't even take
my check. I was this close to quitting the movie
business. F-ck this. I'm treated better on commercials.
I'm out here busting my ass every day and you won't take
my f-cking money to get the f-cking audience to clap."
Bay
knew he had an eye, but it took him a while to get the hang
of working with actors. Affleck, for one, liked the room
he was given to improvise. "For him, acting isn't so
precious. It goes on in such chaos that it's baptism by
fire for the actors. If you thrive in it, nothing will ever
distract you again." Will Smith is another fan: "He
wants to have a good time and wants everybody there to have
a good time. How does he do it? I don't know if these are
things I can share with NEWSWEEK." Smith will
say, "Michael Bay has a very serious appreciation for
the fairer sex. He loves women. Martin [Lawrence] and I
would have our shots--he'd spend an hour on us and then
four hours to get the shot of a girl walking by."
Some
critics are already blasting away at Bay's latest movie--Variety
had nothing but contempt for "Armageddon." To
Bay's former teacher, Basinger, it's an old story. "It's
an American tradition when a filmmaker is hugely successful
to kill him critically. Michael really is the 21st century.
It's the kind of filmmaking we like to say is the end of
civilization. Michael isn't doing what the intellectuals
would like him to do and he never will. If he did Jane Austen,
those people would be walking pretty goddam fast across
the English countryside."
--By
David Ansen and Corie Brown
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