By Rob Hunter
“Bryan Lee O’Malley is the anti-Alan Moore.”
Edgar Wright’s fifth feature film hits theaters today, so we decided to give a listen to the commentary track on his third movie. It was an easy decision seeing as we’ve already covered the tracks for Shaun of the Dead, Hot Fuzz, and The World’s End.
Keep reading to see what I heard on the commentary track for…
Scott Pilgrim vs. the World (2010)
Commentators: Edgar Wright (director, co-writer), Michael Bacall (co-writer), Bryan Lee O’Malley (author)
1. O’Malley brought photographic references for the film’s production including pictures of the street he grew up on which they’ve captured in the opening shot.
2. “I wanted this to have a kind of Sesame Street feel,” says Wright regarding the film’s focus on numbers.
3. Wright name-drops Quentin Tarantino and signifies the event by dropping a pen.
4. Wright says the lame poster on the wall of Scott (Michael Cera) and Wallace’s (Kieran Culkin) apartment would be a certain female tennis player scratching her butt in a British film. “Is that a big thing in the States as well?” he asks, before advising you image search it with “safe search” turned off. I’ve saved you the effort though, and here’s the infamous poster in question that he’s referring to.
5. The Catholic girls school that Knives Chau (Ellen Wong) attends is actually an all-boys school in reality.
6. The comics don’t explain the characters’ fighting abilities, but notes from the studio suggested the film needed to do so. They added the Ninja Ninja Revolution game to “show a little bit of prowess.”
7. O’Malley never actually shared his apartment bed with a homosexual roommate, but he did share one with a heterosexual roommate. “We would have a body pillow between us. We were that unsure of our masculinity.”
8. Scott’s Pac-Man story/joke is a replacement of the one in the comic which was much more image/drawing-based. It couldn’t be recreated on screen in a reasonable way.
9. They “painstakingly” went through the dialogue in films by John Hughes and Cameron Crowe “looking for any dialogue that had any relevance to fights or league.”
10. Culkin improvised throwing the house keys at Scott’s head before he crashes into bed.
11. Knives’ name was inspired by a woman from O’Malley’s childhood church whose name sounded similar to that. “The other half of it is a friend of mine brokoe up with his girlfriend, and she pulled a knife on him.”
12. Wong actually made her character’s Sex Bob-Omb shirt.
13. Wright stole all of Scott’s tee-shirts from the film. “Now I have to lose about 30lbs to get into them.”
14. Per Wright, the best way to watch the film is normal speed first, frame advance on the second watch, “third watch just look for numbers and X’s, fourth watch just watch Johnny Simmons, fifth watch watch it backwards.”
15. He threatens a Logan’s Run-like cut of the film eliminating everyone over the age of thirty including Thomas Jane and Clifton Collins Jr.
16. Wright says if there was ever a director’s cut of the film it would basically just include longer versions of the songs.
17. The idea behind the League of Evil Exes came to O’Malley after discovering that his girlfriend at the time (and now wife) had dated three guys named Matthew. He joked to himself about there being a League of Matthews, and the first ex, Matthew Patel, is named in their honor.
The article 33 Things We Learned from Edgar Wright’s ‘Scott Pilgrim vs. the World’ Commentary appeared first on Film School Rejects.
0 comments:
Post a Comment