Read Which Lie Did I Tell? Online
Authors: William Goldman
Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Film & Video, #Nonfiction, #Performing Arts, #Retail
The change came after
A Bridge Too Far.
Joseph E. Levine, the producer of that film, thought of me as a kind of good luck talisman. His career was not exactly rocketing the years before
Bridge,
and when that movie brought him back close to the fire, he attributed a lot of it to me. And he wanted to go into business with me. He bought my novel
Magic,
made that movie, and then proposed a three-picture deal: I would write three original screenplays for him, pretty much of my own choosing. I had never signed a multiple deal before, never thought I would. But I jumped at it. The work experiences with him had been so decent, unlike a lot of the standard Hollywood shit we all put up with.
One thing that made Mr. Levine unique was that
he w
as the bank.
He made his movies with
his own money,
took no studio deals until late in the game, when he had something to show. He was gambling that he would find movie studios who would want to buy, and he had gotten rich that way.
Bridge
had cost him $22 million. An insane gamble in today’s world, nuttier back then. But the day it opened it was $4 million in profit. Mr. Levine sold the movie everywhere, Europe, Asia, country by country, territory by territory; he had collected $26 million by opening day.
Typical of his bravery was one day when he was in a hospital in New York after surgery. I was visiting him, and the director, Richard Attenborough, called from Holland. They were
shooting the crucial parachute drop, and the weather had been dreadful. The parachutists were willing to work the next day, a Saturday.
Attenborough requested that extra day. It would cost Levine seventy-five thousand of his own dollars. Levine
screamed
at Attenborough for even suggesting such a thing. Attenborough repeated his request. Levine asked if he had sufficient footage for the sequence as it was. Attenborough said he had more than enough but it was all drab-looking. Levine screamed at him again. It was a ridiculous request. Attenborough held tough, saying the extra day might make all the difference. Levine then asked what was the weather report for Saturday. Attenborough admitted it was for more of the same: dreary.
Now Levine really let fly. You limey bastard, on and on, and he finally
hung up on Attenborough. But not before he agreed to the extra day. The weather turned glorious and almost the entire wonderful drop sequence comes from that extra day.
Try getting a studio to do that.
So the fact that Mr. Levine did not need studio backing, that he cared not at all for studio money or thinking, was a huge factor in my agreeing to the three-picture deal.
It turned out to be a huge contributor to my downfall.
The Sea Kings
was the first of the three-picture deal. A pirate flick. Came from a
great
snippet of material. In the early 1700s, the most famous, and most lethal, pirate was
Blackbeard. At the same time, living on the island of Barbados, was a fabulously wealthy planter,
Stede Bonnet.
Bonnet had been a soldier but had never seen action. He had a monstrous wife. Had almost died the previous winter. And, in a feat of great lunacy unmatched just about anywhere on earth, Bonnet decided to become a pirate. He commissioned a ship—the only such one in history, by the way. Pirate ships were always stolen.
So off he sailed.
And met, for a blink, Blackbeard.
They did not sail together for very long, but the idea of these two strange and remarkable men knocked me out. So I wrote
The Sea Kings
about them. (Butch and Sundance on the high seas, if you will.)
The decision that I made was this: Bonnet, rich beyond counting and miserably unhappy, a student of piracy, wanted one thing more than any other: an adventure-filled life (and if that included death, so be it). Blackbeard was sick up to here with his adventure-filled life. Piracy was getting tougher and tougher, and he was broke, as all pirates (save Bonnet) were. What he wanted was a long, comfortable life and a sweet death in bed.
So I wrote a movie about two men who were each other’s dream.
It was filled with action and blood and double crosses and I hoped a decent amount of laughter. When I was done, I gave it to Mr. Levine.
Who just loved it.
The Year of the Comet
was my second original, a romantic thriller, about a chase for the world’s greatest bottle of wine, and you can read all about it in the chapter with its name on it. I will add only this here—
—Mr. Levine loved it too.
I wrote the part of Blackbeard for Sean Connery, and Mr. Levine got
the idea of casting the two James Bonds, having
Roger Moore play the more elegant Bonnet. Another casting notion was the two Moores: Dudley (
10
had happened) as Bonnet, Roger shifting over to Blackbeard.
In the wine movie, he wanted Robert Redford in the Cary Grant part.
Obviously, you did not see these movies.
What happened?
When Mr. Levine had come to me for
A Bridge Too Far,
he was pushing seventy, and he hated being out of the loop, was willing to take almost any gamble. Now that
Bridge
and
Magic
had helped restore him, his needs were lessened.
He was also older now.
But most critical: the price of movies had begun to skyrocket. So the fact that he was his own bank, so wonderful earlier, was now a huge problem—he was rich, but not
that
rich. Some research was done on the cost of constructing that everyday little item, the pirate ship.
You don’t want to know.
Stars’ salaries.
You don’t want to know.
He had chances to lay the scripts off to studios but he couldn’t do that, y’see, because then he’d be just like everybody else, taking shit from the executives. When he w
as the bank, he
gave
shit. I heard him blow studio heads out of the water. I saw him sit at his desk, smiling at me, while he hurled the most amazing insults at these Hollywood powers—
—and they had to take it—
—because he had movies they wanted.
That was the fucking staff of life for the old man. His ego would not allow him to be just like everybody else.
He didn’t need it.
So both scripts just lay there. (They very well may have been unusable scripts—always a very real possibility when I go to work—but that was not the governing principle here.) I never wrote the third original—Mr. Levine and I parted company.
I was O for two.
The Ski Bum
began as an article in
Esquire
by
Jean Vallely. Briefly, it concerned a ski instructor in Aspen who led a very glamorous life. Wealthy and famous clients, the kind of romantic existence most of us only moon about.
That’s by day.
By night he was aging, broke, scraping along in a trailer with a wife and little kid.
I thought it would make a terrific movie.
The producer had bought the underlying rights. I signed on, went to Aspen, noodled around, did my research, went to work on the screenplay. Got it to the producer and the studio, Universal.
The producer loved it.
Alas, Universal’s studio head
hated
it. When the producer left for another studio, he asked to buy it back, take it with him. Universal said,
no conceivable way. We hate this piece of shit and we are going to keep it forever, thank you very much.
I always thought that was strange. If you hate something so much and you’re offered a fair price to unload it, why keep it around? I did know, of course, the most usual reason—fear
of humiliation. What if a studio gives up a piece of material that turns into
Home Alone
(happened) or
E.T.
(happened)?
But this was all company stuff, taking place far far above my head.
Dissolve, as they say (they really do), Out There.
It’s a couple of years later and another executive has come to power at Universal. The guy who hated it so much is still above him, but this secondary power likes the screenplay and wants to see the movie made. We met and his first words to me were these:
“You don’t have the least idea what happened, do you
?”
I didn’t then.
I do now.
The producer had been, at the time, relatively new in the picture business. But he was a gigantic figure in the music business: Name a superstar singer, he handled him.
Well, Universal owned an amphitheater and needed talent to fill it. So the very great
Lew Wasserman made a deal personally with the producer to handle the amphitheater and also have a movie-producing deal.
Anything
he wanted to make was an automatic “go.”
With one teensy proviso: it had to cost less than an agreed-upon amount. Anything that cost more,
Ned Tanen, the head of
Universal Pictures, would have to agree to.
The Ski Bum,
which needed stars and snow and all kinds of other expensive stuff, obviously needed Tanen’s okay.
This presented kind of a problem for the picture because, decades ago, Tanen and my guy had been together in the mailroom at William Morris, where so many great careers were launched.
And they had hated each other with a growing passion since then.
Not only that, Tanen was pissed that the producer had gotten a movie deal at his company by going over his head to Wasserman.
So there it was.
Tanen, of course, rejected it. And, of course, rejected any attempt to buy the screenplay back.
The new executive and I tried an end run. Tanen never budged.
O for three.
The Right Stuff
came next. A ghastly and depressing saga (recounted in magnificent detail in
Adventures in the Screen Trade,
so I won’t repeat it here). I left the project angry and frustrated. These were bad times in America—the hostages had just been taken in Iran—so I had wanted to write a movie that might have a patriotic feel. The director wanted something else.
O for four.