Paul Thomas Anderson interview on "Boogie Nights" (1997)

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  • Опубликовано: 21 сен 2024
  • Paul Thomas Anderson talks about his film, "Boogie Nights."
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Комментарии • 318

  • @ManufacturingIntellect
    @ManufacturingIntellect  7 лет назад +9

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  • @Zombiesnyder13
    @Zombiesnyder13 7 лет назад +452

    Amazing that with only 27, he became one of the best directors of modern time

    • @FrancoisDressler
      @FrancoisDressler 7 лет назад +1

      zombiesnyder13 He's truly a wunderkind

    • @IAteFire
      @IAteFire 7 лет назад +2

      Kyle Campbell
      thats around the age most directors get started

    • @valgehiir
      @valgehiir 7 лет назад +39

      IAteFire, yes, but most directors at 27 do not make their first movie an instant classic and a masterpiece.
      This is one of the rare movies where everything comes together, a perfect storm of and strike of genius by the director, amazing script, and perfect casting. This very, very rarely happens, and Paul Thomas Anderson hasn't, and probably never will top Boogie Nights.

    • @pulphope
      @pulphope 7 лет назад +5

      valgehiir, Boogie Nights wasnt his first feature... he had quite a bit of trouble securing his vision for his debut Hard Eight/Seymour, which is what theyre joking about at the start of the interview

    • @aDriveAway
      @aDriveAway 5 лет назад +4

      @@pulphope "Seymour" lol

  • @sbklvr
    @sbklvr 6 лет назад +376

    Wahlberg's most riveting performance was in this movie. He didn't say a word, his expression said it all. It's where him and his 2 buddies are at a cokeheads house and Jesse's girl was playing on the guys stereo. Amazing stuff.

    • @0oidiedinatimemachineo024
      @0oidiedinatimemachineo024 4 года назад +6

      thats such a great scene.

    • @abandoned-mines-novascotia
      @abandoned-mines-novascotia 4 года назад +31

      That whole sequence was a case study in film making. The moment the shot goes inside, and Sister Christian starts... it's like the entire movie shifts gears ENTIRELY and goes into a rabbit hole. It's difficult to describe. It's bizarre to the point you actually feel "high" or somewhat drunk by the time you get halfway through it. Then all the stupor feeling alleviates the moment they get back out the door... and we're back to the "Boogie Nights" feel.

    • @derangedQuiver
      @derangedQuiver 4 года назад +2

      When I first saw that scene my jaw dropped because I couldn’t believe how simply it was put what Dirk was thinking without any words being said. Riveting!

    • @992turbos
      @992turbos 4 года назад +4

      The scene was based on real events. Look up the Wonderland Murders.

    • @sincman
      @sincman 4 года назад +5

      That scene was incredible! As was the whole series of scenes where everyone was falling apart from the limo scene, to the donut shop to the gay bashing scene. All with that ominous chime playing the whole time.

  • @juxe411
    @juxe411 4 года назад +316

    can’t believe mark wahlberg regrets starring in boogie nights. It’s literally his best movie.

    • @benfongtorres9036
      @benfongtorres9036 4 года назад +10

      he's said that? where?

    • @mr.commenter7953
      @mr.commenter7953 4 года назад +14

      It's paul's best film imo!

    • @pumpkinking5174
      @pumpkinking5174 4 года назад +11

      It's his new found religion......BS.

    • @datgangshi
      @datgangshi 3 года назад +68

      It's not because he regret it, he said that he will never make a movie like that again since he doesn't want his kids to see their dad in that kind of role.

    • @gabrielesimone1372
      @gabrielesimone1372 3 года назад +9

      It's Burt Reynolds. Burt Reynolds regrets having starred in Boogie Nights.

  • @campguy
    @campguy 3 года назад +134

    the drug deal scene with Alfred Molina is one of my favs of all time.

    • @ViceroyoftheDiptera
      @ViceroyoftheDiptera 3 года назад +12

      That scene alone is a masterpiece

    • @paulvoorhies8821
      @paulvoorhies8821 2 года назад +4

      Agreed. The firecrackers really make it.

    • @silentreactor97
      @silentreactor97 28 дней назад

      One of the most intense, hilarious and disturbing scenes in film history! Boogie Nightz is elite level filmmaking, you can just tell how much PTA was inspired by Scorsese & Tarantino while making Boogie.

  • @MrMurph73
    @MrMurph73 5 лет назад +159

    Thomas-Anderson directs Boogie Nights at 27.
    The Beatles broke up when McCartney was 27.
    Hendrix dies at 27, having changed the face of rock music forever.
    Took me until 27 to get my first serious girlfriend.
    FML.

    • @pod9363
      @pod9363 4 года назад +14

      Andrew Murphy in modern times that’s pretty decent lol.

    • @louieandtommysdiscountedit3177
      @louieandtommysdiscountedit3177 4 года назад +34

      We all move at our own pace. Don’t let it get to ya, bro.

    • @hazuinf
      @hazuinf 4 года назад +25

      James Murphy didn't start LCD Soundsystem until he was 31

    • @alejoparedes2388
      @alejoparedes2388 3 года назад +7

      At least you have a girlfriend.

    • @willhess8011
      @willhess8011 3 года назад

      @@hazuinf they have some great songs

  • @paulvoorhies8821
    @paulvoorhies8821 2 года назад +45

    The definition of wunderkind. How did someone so young nail the atmosphere and feel of the 70s with such amazing authenticity.

    • @ChrisWolff2013
      @ChrisWolff2013 2 года назад +4

      He was born literally at the start of the decade and lived through it.

    • @paulvoorhies8821
      @paulvoorhies8821 2 года назад +1

      @@ChrisWolff2013 He was 9 in 1979. That’s what I mean.

    • @ChrisWolff2013
      @ChrisWolff2013 2 года назад

      @@paulvoorhies8821 I know. That's what I meant. He lived through those times.

    • @paulvoorhies8821
      @paulvoorhies8821 2 года назад +5

      @@ChrisWolff2013 So did I. We’re the exact same age. I promise you I couldn’t have done what he did. Not even close.

  • @dschlicks
    @dschlicks 5 лет назад +207

    Dirk Diggler is arguably the greatest pseudonym of all time.

  • @bodenlosedosenhose1590
    @bodenlosedosenhose1590 7 лет назад +250

    Is that really PTA? Looks more like John Lennon ate Stephen Hawking.

  • @BandiGetOffTheRoof
    @BandiGetOffTheRoof 6 лет назад +77

    He nailed the 70's vibe. That fucked up hazy dream of a time...

  • @ibakan
    @ibakan Год назад +22

    Phillip Seymore Hoffman's part was so uncomfortable and vulnerable...genius. RIP

  • @Weshopwizard
    @Weshopwizard 3 месяца назад +5

    This movie is the best use of music in a film ever!!!!

  • @jimw.4161
    @jimw.4161 4 года назад +32

    Paul, you made an extraordinary film. A masterpiece. Every element is just perfect. Brilliant job!

  • @mottthehoople684
    @mottthehoople684 6 лет назад +52

    A strong script can make anyone a star I grew up in that time frame and this movie scarred me not for me personally but for how lost so many people were in that time frame a brilliant piece of writing not a pleasant movie but an accurate movie

  • @faerveldir
    @faerveldir 5 лет назад +66

    26-27 years old when he made this movie..incredible. So inspiring.

    • @rudolfvanderven
      @rudolfvanderven 2 года назад +5

      and also slightly depressing.

    • @Ryan07_20
      @Ryan07_20 10 месяцев назад +1

      He’s connected to people in the industry, not many other 26 year olds get a cast like that and control over their 2nd movie

  • @slimesquad8107
    @slimesquad8107 6 лет назад +33

    That look on Pauls face after his introduction is priceless.

  • @Drgroomes
    @Drgroomes 4 года назад +51

    Luv his statement about film school and how they shame you from writing "Terminator 2".........like duh, we're all inspired by great movies including T2

    • @bobboonah
      @bobboonah Месяц назад

      Not so sure about "start with T2" though. That movie is pure craft.

  • @tusharkumar8750
    @tusharkumar8750 Год назад +6

    Can't believe he is the same person who made "There will be Blood". Literally one of the best movie of 21st Century+ Once in a lifetime performance by DDL. ❤

  • @kmb1964
    @kmb1964 Год назад +9

    the scene with Albert Molina, Cosmo, the Chinese kid lighting firecrackers, etc is one of the best scenes of all time.

  • @urwholefamilydied
    @urwholefamilydied 2 года назад +6

    I love how he talks and does this interview like he's a seasoned vet, and not the new sensation who literally had done ONE other movie. Still pretty crazy that he's like 27 or 28 here. "I like to approach my friends and ask them what role would you like to do... I have the power as a director who's done one other movie to give that to them". LOL

  • @susanacuratolo1200
    @susanacuratolo1200 2 года назад +4

    Excellent Interview---a great & fresh window into Paul Thomas Anderson!

  • @PaulRamen
    @PaulRamen 4 года назад +78

    Interesting to imagine a world where Leo did Boogie Nights instead of Titanic

    • @andrewburgemeister6684
      @andrewburgemeister6684 2 года назад +7

      Probably for the best that didn’t happen, Titanic shot Leo to being the heart-throb of our times and of course stardom!

    • @pzez2781
      @pzez2781 2 года назад +1

      That would've been similir experience to wolf of the wall street. Both movies share tragic rise and fall theme of the Protagonist. And both are extremely hilarious with strong plot.

    • @andrewburgemeister6684
      @andrewburgemeister6684 2 года назад +1

      @@pzez2781 well actually, GoodFellas also directed by Scorsese was a fantastic and tragic rise and fall story only this time focused on gangsters!
      It’s actually the big influence for Boogie Nights and then for Scorsese’s The Wolf of Wall Street.

    • @pzez2781
      @pzez2781 2 года назад +1

      @@andrewburgemeister6684 Ohh I didn't know that, it's been on my watchlist though. Now you mentioned it I need to check it out.
      Did you watched "Raging Bull". It also shares same theme and is pretty good movie.
      If you know more movies with this same theme let me know!

    • @andrewburgemeister6684
      @andrewburgemeister6684 2 года назад +1

      @@pzez2781 yes, Raging Bull is a masterclass in filmmaking and method acting from Robert De Niro! Taxi Driver is up there as well as a irreplaceable masterpiece!

  • @mikewilliams7985
    @mikewilliams7985 Год назад +6

    PTA is so candid and sheepish in this interview. You'll never see a director be this candid today.

  • @bobbyricigliano2799
    @bobbyricigliano2799 4 года назад +8

    One of my all time favorite films. Brilliant.

  • @Untoldtruth_01
    @Untoldtruth_01 2 года назад +3

    Love the insight he brings to screen,boogie nights i still watch every year at least once

  • @mistressf
    @mistressf 5 лет назад +15

    It's kinda cute to see Paul gloat about what a great time they had making this and how much actors love his long takes when burt reynolds (r.i.p.) later said he absolutely hated everything about it. Still love him and this masterpiece of a film.

  • @froztee99
    @froztee99 2 года назад +3

    I love what he said about actors and how he just let them do their job how THEY want it. He just writtes the characters and they develop them with their own style

  • @colinfrantz5453
    @colinfrantz5453 2 года назад +3

    Love PTA but I couldn't help but roll my eyes when he said acting is "the hardest job in the world"

  • @WillyFinklestein
    @WillyFinklestein 4 года назад +26

    I'm pretty sure Boogie Nights predicted The Bangbus

  • @judasplow25
    @judasplow25 4 года назад +12

    Boogie nights is a classic!

  • @jackjackthompson5771
    @jackjackthompson5771 2 месяца назад

    The ability to handle pressure and stress is key for a director. I would crumble! Amazing people

  • @Daniel_Ilyich
    @Daniel_Ilyich 8 лет назад +72

    It would be so cool if PTA adapted something by DFW for the screen .

    • @danh4724
      @danh4724 8 лет назад +6

      I'd love to see anything by DFW adapted for the screen, especially by an expert like PTA.

    • @awesome420ication
      @awesome420ication 7 лет назад +18

      At the risk of sounding like fucking moron, who's DFW?

    • @Daniel_Ilyich
      @Daniel_Ilyich 7 лет назад +7

      The deceased author, David Foster Wallace.

    • @julianrusso7232
      @julianrusso7232 7 лет назад +18

      I dunno if this is a well known fact or not, but PTA stated in an interview with Marc Maron that DFW was his english professor at Emerson college but left soon after; but not before being called by PTA to discuss a paper the young filmaker was writing.
      An even more interesting connection is that not long after the release of Boogie Nights, DFW writes an article called "Neither Adult Nor Entertainment" about his visit to the AVN Awards, an annual ceremony referred to as the Oscars of Porn.
      In the lengthy article, DFW quite briefly mentions Boogie Nights young up-and-coming director by name and and wonders whether he "will make an appearance."
      I think these two had a stronger connection or relationship then is let known.

    • @julianrusso7232
      @julianrusso7232 7 лет назад +3

      Dan Ham you should check out
      Brief Interviews with Hideous Men. a film adaptation of DFW’S book by actor John Krasinski, it's pretty damn good.

  • @andyjones7514
    @andyjones7514 Год назад +4

    This was the only role where Burt Reynolds actually took chances. I mean this was a Deniro/Keitel kind of role but Burt Reynolds got it and it was his best performance.
    And look at all the actors who went on to become sterling actors. Moore, Hoffman, Cheadle, Reilly, and others who've had solid careers.
    The story was great you had what were really a bunch of kids who came from nothing, and broke apart primarily from drug abuse who realized all they had was each other and they reunited in the end as a family.
    The soundtrack was perfect especially in the pool party scenes. And God only knows was the perfect way to end this masterpiece.

  • @jjgreen5206
    @jjgreen5206 5 месяцев назад

    I love these old Charlie Rose interviews. So intimate and well done. Charlie got caught up in a very tolerant culture, that clamped down quick. I’m glad he’s back and I’ll bet he’s smarter and better than ever, with a newfound sensibility and sensitivity

  • @bedroom.headroom
    @bedroom.headroom 5 лет назад +17

    Leo would not have been right for that role. Mark killed it so hard, still my fav role of his

    • @andrewburgemeister6684
      @andrewburgemeister6684 2 года назад

      Props to Leo for suggesting Mark though, he could see that this movie would be gold, but that he was busy with Titanic and also that the role needed that extra bit.

    • @justinhopper5941
      @justinhopper5941 2 года назад

      I don’t think Leo could play a really simple guy like mark did and doesn’t look like he could be a pornstar, especially back then lol

  • @brasseye4070
    @brasseye4070 6 лет назад +30

    This film is a masterpiece

  • @JonShade-fy2gm
    @JonShade-fy2gm Год назад +3

    To be fair, acting actually IS a pretty brutal job in many ways. It can sound really glamorous, with the constant traveling and making films with seriously movie stars and premieres and such - it’s actually really, really kind of rough. Especially if you’re naturally very shy and hate traveling and then there’s learning copious lines, which for some can be almost impossible. People constantly coming up to you and harassing you, they feel like they know you - it can be flattering but also really scary. You spend hours and hours onset waiting for your shot to be set up and depending on the director you may have to do 10 or maybe even 50 takes. You’re often yelled at for no reason, and the humiliation can just tear you apart inside. Everyone has their own formidable egos, and you have to have a really thick skin in order to not be absolutely crushed. The really kind and compassionate actors can also be pushed around and there’s a really fine line between kindness and confidence. It’s a daily struggle - and if you’re a woman, it’s an even more cruel struggle in terms of aging and how crazy it makes you. I loved the craft of acting so much but I just couldn’t handle it. I just had to stop. You have to be tough as nails and put up with an enormous amount of bs. Then there are all the insane temptations of serious drugs and so much destructive stuff that become so available to you. Yeah the money is just silly, and there are some amazing people you get to work with (if you’re lucky enough), but generally speaking, I’d have to agree with the above commenter - it is pretty brutal. Or it sure as hell can be.
    (This guy seems reminiscent of David Foster Wallace, who was really enamored & influenced by the film world, & directors such as David Lynch. Film is the most magical medium and so important as an art, but often for some much much healthier to enjoy at a distance. This director is absolutely correct about film school - IMO anyway. A total waste of money & it can kill your inspiration. Learn by doing, doing, doing.)

    • @streetfightertwo
      @streetfightertwo Год назад +2

      Not to mention, super competitive. There's so many good, well established actors already and then so many new good 'up and coming' actors.. It's too much. I can only imagine getting to be a successful actor and getting to live that lifestyle all day, everyday. I'm sure you get used to all of it at some point. Once it's your World and you live it and breathe it for so long.. You own it. At least you took a shot at it, that's awesome that you got to see it all for yourself and decided it just wasn't worth it in your eyes 👍

  • @marchmcmadness7134
    @marchmcmadness7134 2 года назад +13

    This guy is a genius.

  • @charlieprice3881
    @charlieprice3881 Год назад

    Love Boogie Nights, wonderful movie. Saw it in a West End cinema end of 2021, awesome

  • @xXRoNaLD0xX
    @xXRoNaLD0xX 6 лет назад +11

    these videos are gold to watch in this twisted generation

  • @carlobalzer3238
    @carlobalzer3238 6 лет назад +10

    Brilliant film boogie night Burt Reynolds brilliant R I P

  • @The_Maze_Is_Not_Meant_For_You
    @The_Maze_Is_Not_Meant_For_You 10 месяцев назад +1

    In 2023, where do we see this kind of stuff happen?
    I weep. I lament. I despair....

  • @philp4415
    @philp4415 5 лет назад +10

    "Eddie Adams from Torrance.....I knew you'd be back!"

  • @theguywhoisaustralian1465
    @theguywhoisaustralian1465 3 года назад +13

    It's pretty incredible that such a nerd can make one of the sexiest movies ever.

    • @andrewburgemeister6684
      @andrewburgemeister6684 2 года назад +2

      PTA grew up in the Valley himself knowing about the ins-and-outs, and actually watched a heap of cheesy 70’s skin flicks on 8mm lol.
      And to think he was only like 7 in ‘77 when the movie starts, yet he nailed the era!

  • @adamseidel9780
    @adamseidel9780 2 года назад +2

    So interested to see the story of a great director (really a great organizational leader of any kind) discuss how the key contributor to their successful project was somebody they initially didn’t want and now can’t believe how they didn’t see it from the start.

  • @delrey874
    @delrey874 Год назад +3

    PTA is one of the best directors today👌

  • @cgh7337
    @cgh7337 2 года назад +4

    That film teacher should've said, "if you're here to make Terminator: Salvation, Genisys or Dark Fate, please wait for me after class & do not tell any of your loved ones where you're at"

  • @jerrierichter4
    @jerrierichter4 Год назад +1

    The man most brilliant film of the 1990’s!

  • @ayubnor0
    @ayubnor0 3 года назад +5

    Amazing how PTA made this when he was in his mid-20's.

  • @GoZurg
    @GoZurg 5 месяцев назад +1

    Who would've known that PTA and Leo would collaborate 27 years after Leo passing on this role.. crazy

  • @DJVMFVME
    @DJVMFVME 3 года назад +13

    Mark was perfect for his role as Keanu was perfect for the Matrix. Boogie Nights may be one of the greatest ensemble acting film.🙏🏽 Magnolia also.

    • @andrewburgemeister6684
      @andrewburgemeister6684 2 года назад +1

      Boogie Nights has a great ensemble cast, Mark, Burt and Julianne are phenomenal, and the others including the late and great PSH, John C Reilly, Don Cheadle et. al were all perfectly cast and turned in great supporting performances to complement the leads.

  • @colinritchot1975
    @colinritchot1975 6 лет назад +7

    PTA is a genius, wrote the script for Leo fucking Dicaprio before he was. Plus, he wrote it and directed at 27. Genius

  • @rufashaochicken
    @rufashaochicken 3 года назад +9

    they didn't do interviews like this anymore

  • @JoeyTaylor-zh7pg
    @JoeyTaylor-zh7pg 5 месяцев назад +1

    what an amaizng tie

  • @adriennefoley2906
    @adriennefoley2906 3 года назад +2

    Wow .... just a natural talent 👍🏻

  • @martingraham8418
    @martingraham8418 5 лет назад +11

    Paul looks like he's preparing to play Ben Linus from Lost.

  • @MustafaKamal-ys9rw
    @MustafaKamal-ys9rw Год назад

    gotta watch it again.

  • @ronthompson95
    @ronthompson95 2 месяца назад +1

    I gave up my dream of being a porn star after seeing this movie. Thank you Paul.

  • @mfrey1000
    @mfrey1000 3 года назад +1

    Amazing interview.

  • @shaynedonnelly9596
    @shaynedonnelly9596 8 лет назад +42

    "Boogeh Nights"

  • @liketheroman
    @liketheroman 2 года назад +2

    He looks so different to 1999 Magnolia era PYA

  • @vinnart
    @vinnart 2 года назад +2

    Agree completely about school for arts especially today with the internet where you can learn pretty much anything they would teach you in school for free. I have a BFA that I can wipe my ass with if I run out of TP that cost me 30k I will never be able to repay. They get you if you want to go into teaching art like I thought I wanted to. Never need to have a BFA to have success and make money though. Biggest mistake of my life.

  • @ThompsonSteamtrain
    @ThompsonSteamtrain 2 месяца назад

    Quentin Tarantino and Paul Thomas Anderson are great filmmakers with attention to detail setting a film in the 70s

  • @christopherfritz3840
    @christopherfritz3840 2 года назад +1

    Man. People now forget (obviously 😑) how excellent The Charlie Rose Show WAS..

  • @gubgub4321
    @gubgub4321 4 года назад +3

    Homeboy's necktie going CRAZY

  • @paulcusentino4917
    @paulcusentino4917 3 года назад +1

    My favorite movie ever

  • @erinnitorreda7861
    @erinnitorreda7861 2 года назад +3

    He's goodlooking

  • @토마스앤더슨폴
    @토마스앤더슨폴 7 лет назад +4

    Shorthair suits him much better...That guy is fukcin awesome

  • @erickelm4974
    @erickelm4974 Год назад +1

    Mark Whalberg has got the "athletic cool guy" down pat in most movies he has starred in. Unfortunately most of those roles were different variations of the same character. Boogie Nights is one of the only movies that saw Mark Whalberg surrender himself to a well written character that allowed him to show a vulnerable side that hasn't been highlighted since... in my opinion, his best.
    The Fighter is a close second, in "roles they were born to play"... but I still have to give Boogie Nights the edge, just because it is the part that seems the furthest from mark's actual personality. Which in turn further highlights and informs his work on this classic film.

  • @mavismorely3305
    @mavismorely3305 7 лет назад +26

    dana carvey is a good movie writer and stuff

  • @AJ8871
    @AJ8871 Год назад +1

    it’s hilarious how many actors working on that movie seemed to be clueless to the subject matter

  • @Slowdived80
    @Slowdived80 3 года назад +4

    and Leo has not appeared in any PTA movies to date. Leo went for super stardom role instead of for me a top 10 movie of all time. Boogie Nights. And Mark W was brilliant in the role.. the whole cast were on point.

    • @andrewburgemeister6684
      @andrewburgemeister6684 2 года назад +1

      Don’t get me wrong, Leo is fantastic himself and actually really selects his roles and connects with great directional talent, but I don’t know if Dirk would have been a fit for him.
      Mark was great though, and it was for the best he did this and Leo shot to stardom and eventual acclaim from ‘Titanic’.

    • @cpellett0821
      @cpellett0821 2 года назад +1

      Yeah but nobody knew the movie would be so celebrated. Nobody wanted to be in it or buy it. It was originally a sprawling three+ hour NC-17 risk.

    • @cpellett0821
      @cpellett0821 2 года назад +1

      @@andrewburgemeister6684 Leo is too polished and - sorry - small for this role. Mark was perfect because he can play really doofy and innocent and he can play really mean and wild. Plus he just has the look. I believe he's this Eddie kid from Torrance. The casting is just spectacular, even Heather Graham, not a great actress, was perfect for Rollergirl

    • @andrewburgemeister6684
      @andrewburgemeister6684 2 года назад +1

      @@cpellett0821 yeah, I have to sorta agree.
      Mark was the perfect choice for Eddie playing a naive California kid sucked into the dark world of the 1970’s porn industry.
      And I agree about Heather Graham as well, all of my friends said they sorta had a crush on Rollergirl haha

    • @NoahIsThaGOAT
      @NoahIsThaGOAT 4 месяца назад +1

      Hey at least he’s gonna be in PTA’s next movie

  • @angelinatran1122
    @angelinatran1122 4 года назад +21

    Amazing film..i call my husband "Boogie" because he not only looks like Mark wahlberg but we have a little inside joke...

  • @rickrobson9785
    @rickrobson9785 2 месяца назад

    PTA & Tarantino changed American Cinema. They love movies. It shows in every scene

  • @parkersingley8543
    @parkersingley8543 8 лет назад +46

    Wtf is with Charlie Rose's tie?

    • @WoWReforged
      @WoWReforged 7 лет назад +6

      It causes brain damage :D

    • @BucketOfMarbles
      @BucketOfMarbles 7 лет назад +3

      it's moire from the stripes.

    • @MarkSeibold
      @MarkSeibold 6 лет назад +1

      His microphone attached, has buckled the material. I know what this is like, because I just went through a half hour interview on our local television here, near my hometown...

    • @daveyboy_
      @daveyboy_ 6 лет назад

      thats the screen

    • @abandoned-mines-novascotia
      @abandoned-mines-novascotia 4 года назад +4

      His tie looks to be a small checkerboard pattern. High-contrast small black and white gradients are problematic with analog video. It has to do with the chroma/luminance signals interfering with each other, trying to reproduce the imagery. On a tube TV in the old days, it didn't look that bad. Later, especially when off tape (second or third generation), when digitized it really freaks out the analog-digital converter trying to make the pixels. So you get this moving moire effect. You'll see this all the time when there are small black n white patterns in old video.

  • @jeremycorby4422
    @jeremycorby4422 5 лет назад +10

    PT Anderson could have easily played Scotty Jay.

  • @jamesdelcol3701
    @jamesdelcol3701 6 месяцев назад

    I didn't know Paul did "Boogie Nights"! I just got onto screenplay writing and now I know the directors and am paying attention to film making. I want to write a few cameos for someone like Daniel Day-Lewis. He gets too absorbed and it hurts his head to work like that for a long time. I'll give him a little part and he can tell a short story and go home to the shoes or whatever Daniel is into. Unless he likes it so much that he won't do a small role. This would be a very good use of Daniel which will not annoy him for the length of the film is 1 month and done. Would he do that? I have something in mind.
    I worked on many historical thesis after college. My graduate work went very deep on several subjects. American Expansionism, Vietnam War and the CIA Assassination program - The Phoenix Program, Psychoanalysis in Literature and Freud's "Interpretation of dreams" and "The Schreber Case". I want to use Daniel to tell a part of the story in Vietnam. The commanders who really cared in Vietnam. The people who really believed that inside every Vietnamese, there was an American trying to emerge. This kind of talk from back then. That we were there fighting communism. Commander of 1st Infantry Division US military commander Lt. General Jonathan O. Seaman. I'm going to shoot My Lai. I'll use resources from my scholarship to make the film. It goes all the way to 1975 and then the mafia died in Palermo, Italy.
    In 1967, Seaman returned stateside and assumed command of First United States Army at Fort Meade, Maryland. Seaman was the deciding official in cases of 13 officers involved in the failure to investigate or cover up the 1968 My Lai Massacre during the Vietnam War.
    And a new commander took over after the My Lai Massacre. 16 March 1967. The Phoenix Program was a blaze and so was Vietnam for the next 5 years they fought tooth and nail in every situation. It got more and more violent until 1972 when Nixon passed the new drug code and CIA assets started getting picked up for drug trafficking.
    Some Italian mafia men got a deal with the FBI to come to America and leave the Mafia behind forever in 1981. They were trafficking in heroin during the whole Vietnam War. They set it up in the 50's. After the war French Corsicans met about the Heroin trade it was time to start again because the war was over. It wasn't until they had a war in Palermo that the mafia in Italy came to America. There was only 2 left and they procreated. Now there is 4 brothers with kids. Everyone else is dead from the war. They are completely out of that business and as American as apple pie. My fraternity brother's family was there at the beginning of what we call mafia. At the very beginning.
    I have not interviewed this family yet because it is a very touchy thing me bringing out one of the biggest crimes in history. I have a lot of information. They were the mafia and now they are normal every day people and don't associate with gangsters at all. But they have all the characteristics of Italian Mafia. They live by Omerta. Looking at another man's wife is still a rule. If you have an affair they look at you like they want to kill you. You are a scumbag if you act like one. It is still Omerta with them.
    A very young Paul Thomas Anderson. I am "informed" by Paul. Thanks Charlie. 😊

  • @yungpapi
    @yungpapi 3 года назад +2

    this ain't PTA it's Milo Thatch from the disney movie Atlantis 👁👄👁

  • @joshuatrees797
    @joshuatrees797 2 года назад +1

    Anyone know if the short film (documentary) is available anywhere online?

  • @angelikak.295
    @angelikak.295 5 месяцев назад

    BOOGY NIGHTS 🎉🎉🎉❤

  • @bladecastlevania3653
    @bladecastlevania3653 3 месяца назад

    He looks like a young John Sebastian (lovin' Spoonful)

  • @samiritbanik1504
    @samiritbanik1504 Год назад +1

    god i love pta

  • @LukaLipert
    @LukaLipert 3 года назад +1

    12:18 Can someone tell me what movies his listing? pristine prince of the chase?

  • @uvarovnikita
    @uvarovnikita 4 года назад +4

    Imagine Leonardo DiCaprio playing Dick Digler instead of Jack in Titanic.

    • @nectarinedreams7208
      @nectarinedreams7208 Год назад

      I think it would've been a mistake. Titanic is Titanic, and it basically gave DiCaprio free rein for the rest of his career, and then he got to do Boogie Nights several times anyway but with the OG, Scorsese.

  • @dotbryce9850
    @dotbryce9850 2 года назад +1

    Still waiting for that Leo led Anderson film 😞

  • @dagothkid6372
    @dagothkid6372 6 лет назад +16

    He was dating Fiona Apple 🍎 back then.

  • @RavnerRavner
    @RavnerRavner 5 лет назад +2

    his 'leg up' in show business was his father

  • @CannibalWHORE22
    @CannibalWHORE22 2 года назад +2

    PTA when he had the computer hacker look

  • @RandallWhiskey
    @RandallWhiskey 5 лет назад +6

    Oh this is the guy that created there will be blood

  • @Armyofonebillion
    @Armyofonebillion 4 года назад +3

    Dude pta is the king at casting people just for them to back out and get the best fit
    Joaquin, daniel day lewis, mark

    • @nectarinedreams7208
      @nectarinedreams7208 Год назад

      Wasn't Day-Lewis the first choice for both of the PTA films he's in?

    • @Armyofonebillion
      @Armyofonebillion Год назад

      @@nectarinedreams7208 he said no at first, then casted someone else then they backed out then DDL was like alright i take it back lmao

  • @92bellea
    @92bellea 8 лет назад +2

    You are cool! thank you!

  • @thefungoden3978
    @thefungoden3978 2 года назад +1

    From what I've heard, Beatty wouldn't have needed a prosthetic to play Diggler.

  • @hurdygurdy8754
    @hurdygurdy8754 Год назад

    insane when you think about how fiona apple wrote ‘paper bag’ about this guy

    • @shiobuzz3724
      @shiobuzz3724 Год назад

      Who cares?

    • @fshhh
      @fshhh 9 месяцев назад

      @@shiobuzz3724 I think it’s interesting. Why are you so mad?

  • @colinritchot1975
    @colinritchot1975 6 лет назад +5

    Charlie Rose is either the best or 2nd best interviewer of celebrities next to Howard Stern.

  • @modmary3527
    @modmary3527 3 месяца назад

    Boogie Nights spawned the new age family. The need for misfits to find their own parents, and siblings.

  • @neuronebulae1039
    @neuronebulae1039 2 года назад +2

    austin powers energy

  • @usernamenotvisibIe
    @usernamenotvisibIe 2 года назад

    What's the name of this program? Interviewer?

  • @ariacevedo6879
    @ariacevedo6879 3 года назад

    Cant believe theres no Burt renolds interveiw out there

    • @jg769
      @jg769 2 года назад +2

      @Ari Acevedo Burt Reynolds stated in his autobiography that he wasn’t comfortable with the subject matter in the film and even asked his family and friends not to watch “Boogie Nights”.

  • @metahduh4003
    @metahduh4003 3 месяца назад

    I've always been impressed with american actors, compared to what we have here. LOL

  • @RoddyTullenz
    @RoddyTullenz 3 года назад +2

    Uwe Boll is light years ahead of PTA. Convince me he’s not...

    • @RoddyTullenz
      @RoddyTullenz 3 года назад

      @Super Sharp Shooter still convinced.

    • @StephanieLaerkeAndersen
      @StephanieLaerkeAndersen 2 года назад

      You must be joking? Paul Thomas Anderson would wipe the floor with him.
      I do agree with Uwe Boll however when he talks about Hollywood being a cesspit, but I suspect that he is also slightly jealous of the successes of others.

    • @TheGoodChap
      @TheGoodChap 2 года назад

      @Super Sharp Shooter in the name of the king: a dungeon siege tale is a masterpiece 😆