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Five Favorite Films with Paul W.S. Anderson

The Resident Evil: Afterlife director also talks about working in 3D... and epicness.

KT

After a long hiatus from the Resident Evil director's chair, Paul W.S. Anderson returns with Afterlife, fourth in the series, which sees survivors Alice (Milla Jovovich) and Claire Redfield (Ali Larter) mowing down zombies and monsters and entering their most horrific location yet: Los Angeles. Between the original Resident Evil and Afterlife, Anderson directed AVP: Alien vs. Predator and Death Race, all part of a long body of fanboy work that includes early efforts like Mortal Kombat and Event Horizon. With Afterlife hitting theaters this Friday, Rotten Tomatoes sat down with Anderson to talk about what compelled him to return to direct this installment and what it was like working with James Cameron's 3D technology.


Paul W.S. Anderson's Five Favorite Films, listed in no particular order:


Rotten Tomatoes: What brought you back to the director's chair for this one?

Paul W.S. Anderson: A couple of things. One is, basically, I really miss the fun of directing Resident Evil. I loved making the first movie as a director, and... I mean, I'd written and produced the other movies, but I kind of missed the fun of directing them. I wanted that fun again, and I wanted the experience of making a movie with Milla [Jovovich] again. So I very much wanted to come back. And also, added to that, it was like, "Why another Resident Evil movie? Why are we going to get people to come back and see it one more time?" And I felt, if we were going to make another Resident Evil movie, the only thing to do was to make the biggest and the best Resident Evil yet, and to really kind of elevate the franchise. Just raise the bar. You know, I was very influenced by what [James] Cameron had done with the Terminator franchise, where you saw the difference between Terminator and T2, where it's the same franchise with the same characters and it's the same story, but the movie's on a much more epic scale. And I thought that's what we should do with our movie and with our franchise, and I felt I was the right filmmaker with the right skill set to do that.

How do you get more epic than the third part, which was reasonably epic...

"Reasonably epic." We?re going for "epically epic." Well, I think there's a couple of ways. I think the 3D was one aspect of it. I thought, "We'll make it 3D." That will open up the movie, because it will make it a more immersive movie, and a more immersive experience, which, I think for action and for horror, the more immersive you can be, the better it is. You know, 3D is obviously not as suited to drama and romantic comedies. But for what I do, I felt that 3D was a very, very appropriate technology.

And the other is, just to kind of, to make the movie more of a globetrotting movie with more epic imagery in it. So, to that end, we shot in Tokyo, we shot on these fantastic glaciers in Alaska, we shot in Hollywood, we shot in Long Beach, we shot in Canada. I mean, it really became a movie with a much broader, more epic scope.

Having not seen the movie, I assume Alice is now battling zombies across the globe, then?

Yes. The first act all takes place in Tokyo. I mean, all of them have had one environment, really. The first one was very much kind of a chamber piece horror that took place in the hive, in a very contained time period. The second one kind of broadened out a little bit, but it was all in one city in one night.

So this is more like a James Bond zombie movie, with locations across the world?

It's more globetrotting. It's a more epic film. Yeah, it's definitely... It's an epic of the undead genre, that's for sure.

Was it harder to work with the 3D cameras? This is quite new technology, having just been used by James Cameron. What were the challenges?

Well, Cameron screened a chunk of Avatar for us over a year ago, and I loved the quality of the 3D imagery that he was getting with this camera system. That's what persuaded me to use the Cameron/Pace camera system and to really go 3D with the movie. Because I'd seen a lot of 3D movies before, and to be honest, I always felt that it was an idea that was waiting for the technology to catch up with it. Great idea, but no one had really executed it correctly. When I saw the imagery they were getting with the Cameron/Pace rigs, I was like, "Now they've cracked it, finally. This is what 3D should look like."

And I think people are still confused about what 3D should look like. As good as Avatar looked, you know, really the next real, live-action 3D movie to come out would be Resident Evil, because everything else that's been released this year has been a dimensionalization. It's become a post-production process, which, to me, I always refer to them as "2-and-a-half-D." You know, it's not 2D, but it's not really, true 3D either. True 3D is, you have to kind of originate the images in three dimensions. I know from the footage we've shown to people... We did a big press junket in Cancun a few weeks ago, and the press were like, "Wow, I finally see what 3D is supposed to look like." It's supposed to look like what it looked like in Avatar, where there's incredible depth, and it's really crisp, and it looked really slick.

Do you think once audiences get used to that, they won't accept any more conversions?

I think so. I really believe that, as filmmakers, we have a duty, which is, if we're asking people to pay a premium price for a 3D ticket, we have a duty to deliver a premium product. And I feel that the premium product is delivered by really shooting a proper 3D movie. And it's expensive, there's no doubt about it; it's cheaper and it's easier to shoot a 2D movie and dimensionalize it. But you have to shoot in real 3D to get the real 3D quality, I think.


Resident Evil: Afterlife, starring Milla Jovovich, Ali Larter, and Wentworth Miller, opens this weekend in the US. For more reviews and information on the film, check back on the Resident Evil: Afterlife page!

August M.

August M. on 09-9-2010 05:47 PM

Good favorite movies, but you make terrible movies.

todd123

todd123 on 09-9-2010 06:14 PM

hahahahha agreed.

Paul N.

Paul N. on 09-10-2010 12:57 AM

seriously. he knows what awesome movies are, he just can't make them.

Damien Lives

Damien Lives on 09-10-2010 01:59 PM

fuck you august m

cornelius fucklebutt

cornelius fucklebutt on 09-11-2010 11:08 AM

Do you need a hug?

Joe S.

Joe S. on 01-3-2011 05:07 PM

TheATeamSucks

Alan Smithee

Alan Smithee on 09-12-2010 09:58 AM

You hit the nail on the head.

bamb0o-stick

bamb0o-stick on 09-9-2010 06:19 PM

I see he's watched some good movies -- but has he even seen his own?

User

User on 09-15-2010 09:13 AM

got spammed........

Linda B.

Linda B. on 09-9-2010 06:37 PM

Can't argue with Space Odyssey.

joe s.

joe s. on 09-9-2010 06:37 PM

this might be the best "favorite 5 films" list in the history of rt

joe s.

joe s. on 09-9-2010 06:38 PM

this might be the best "favorite 5 films" list in the history of rt

infernaldude

infernaldude on 09-9-2010 06:39 PM

Event Horizon is a pretty good movie. Definitely lacks the bad editing, weak and hasty conclusions, and terrible acting that haunts his later films.

Soldier is alright in a weird way, mostly thanks to Kurt Russell.

Pretty solid list, though.

Here's my 5 faves!

1. Aliens
2. Shawshank Redemption
3. City of God
4. Raising Arizona
5. The Thing

todd123

todd123 on 09-9-2010 07:09 PM

Its funny you say that I looked up his earlier films and was shocked to see Even Horizon because I think that's a great movie. To bad everything else has been crap.

todd123

todd123 on 09-9-2010 07:09 PM

Its funny you say that I looked up his earlier films and was shocked to see Event Horizon because I think that's a great movie. To bad everything else has been crap.

Chair Man

Chair Man on 09-10-2010 12:44 PM

So true. Event Horizon was pretty great. Usually its hyperbole when someone says "but everything else he did was crap" but in this case it is totally true. Such bad movies in his resume and one fairly shiny gem. Nice list though. Hey I like good movies too...maybe I can get a job like him and direct crappy ones!?!

rizznick

rizznick on 09-9-2010 07:59 PM

Soldier was terrible, Kurt Russell had like one line in the entire movie, it reminds me of Solo with Mario Van Peeples, also quite bad. I saw both of the movies in the theaters, I need my money back.
Your Top 5 are awesome though! Good mix of films

Brandon W.

Brandon W. on 09-11-2010 06:55 AM

Raising Arizona? Really? Ok

infernaldude

infernaldude on 09-13-2010 08:37 PM

Hell ya! I know Lebowski, Fargo, and others are "better" films. But RA has nostalgia attached to it for me. I saw it in the theater with my dad. We had no idea what we were getting into, him not being a movie guy and me being like 8 years old. We laughed our asses off and I've been a Coen fan ever since.

anil k.

anil k. on 09-14-2010 08:40 AM

I will agree with u, Event horizon is the best movie for anderson, but with little screen play

Cicatriz

Cicatriz on 09-9-2010 07:31 PM

this guy blows

cornelius fucklebutt

cornelius fucklebutt on 09-9-2010 07:35 PM

Good list; abhorrent filmmaker.

kyle c.

kyle c. on 09-9-2010 07:40 PM

I'm assuming he checked rt before he chose his favorite movies... just so he wouldn't look bad

Phillip K.

Phillip K. on 09-13-2010 08:45 AM

lolz, I've always wondered if some of the people they interview do this.

Daniel P.

Daniel P. on 09-9-2010 07:48 PM

Funny how he likes great movies yet his suck ass. Way to go buddy

Lando Griffin

Lando Griffin on 09-9-2010 07:54 PM

What's the best movie you have made

sunBAKED

sunBAKED on 09-10-2010 03:07 PM

ahahahaha yess. win

curiouspaul

curiouspaul on 09-10-2010 03:17 PM

So we can't have an opinion of movies until we've made one? What a narrow minded comment.

Clayton S.

Clayton S. on 09-10-2010 06:18 PM

His movies "suck ass" is nothing short of moronic. A real opinion is backed up with an argument.

Ken

Ken on 09-9-2010 09:56 PM

It is funny, but maybe not uncommon--Uwe Boll's favorite is Apocalypse Now

Damien Lives

Damien Lives on 09-10-2010 02:00 PM

funny how you suck ass scumbag

Emerald1234S

Emerald1234S on 09-9-2010 07:52 PM

Of all the Andersons who direct films, he is my least favourite one

KJ Cassidy

KJ Cassidy on 09-10-2010 04:07 AM

What about Paul Thomas Anderson? He's made some badass films.

rizznick

rizznick on 09-9-2010 08:11 PM

Paul W.S. Anderson doesn't make films, he makes movies. It sounds like the movie "Shopping" with Jude Law was awesome, I need to check out the U.K. version of it.
Because I love martial art films and hated the "Street Fighter" movie and how it played out I think I latched on to "Mortal Kombat", for a PG-13 movie it sure kicked ass in the right places.
Event Horizon was great until the ending, I wonder if the studio is to blame for that, or test audiences.
I liked the game "Resident Evil" and felt he ruined it by making the first movie, however with each new movie I usually watch it for the one or two good moments they might have, plus they've had different directors but all have equally sucked. Part 3 looked to be the best when I watched the trailer.
AVP was PG-13????????? torture, and the ending was terrible!!!!!
Deathrace 2000 was fun but by now I now to check my brain at the door and just enjoy the ride.
At least he likes 5 good movies.
Side note: Going to see part 4 tonight, it's a chance to go out of the house. I am remembering to check my brain at the door and enjoy Milla in 3-D

Thomas E.

Thomas E. on 09-10-2010 12:16 PM

There is no difference between the meaning given to the words "film" and "movie" when discussing a motion picture you have just seen. Citizen Kane is just as much a movie as Independence Day is a film.

DanielForth

DanielForth on 09-9-2010 08:39 PM

this guy is such a goof ball

MDB_88

MDB_88 on 09-9-2010 09:19 PM

I know I'm going to get some crap for this since there's seems to be a lot of Anderson haters here but I enjoyed the original Resident Evil for what it was (definitely one of the better video game adaptations yet even though that might not be saying much) and I actually really enjoyed Death Race (against my better judgement and preconceived notions going in). I'm not saying it was an amazing movie by any stretch of the imagination but I had fun watching it..... Which is all i was really asking for.

todd123

todd123 on 09-10-2010 07:16 PM

The original resident evil didn't even remotely follow the story of the original game. How it it a good adaptations???

Sirrax79

Sirrax79 on 09-15-2010 02:34 PM

Video game to move adaptions don't tell the exact same story, so what? The basic plot wasn't that different than from the games, Umbrella corp, virus changes people into zombies blabla.

Joe S.

Joe S. on 01-3-2011 05:20 PM

He didn't say that is was a good adaptation. He said that it's one of the better adaptations, which is true.

CaptainSiberia

CaptainSiberia on 09-9-2010 09:40 PM

He likes some good movies, but he makes crappy ones, so who gives a shit about what he has to say?

Frisby2007

Frisby2007 on 09-10-2010 03:52 AM

Just be glad they haven't asked Uwe Boll what his favorite films are.

CriscoOne

CriscoOne on 09-10-2010 05:20 AM

Haha. Uwe Boll might produce the most interesting, yet disturbing results. I would in no way give them any merit and he is a terrible filmmaker, but I really wonder where his influence comes from.

Zac L.

Zac L. on 09-10-2010 12:15 PM

Not only have they, but it was a great list.
http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/postal/news/1727919/five-favorite-films-with-uwe-boll/

jamasianman

jamasianman on 09-9-2010 10:10 PM

I liked Death Race, Soldier, and Event Horizon. And even the first Resident Evil. Does that make me a Paul Ws fan?

jeevo

jeevo on 09-9-2010 11:01 PM

The zombies in these Resident Evil films are lamer than spending a Friday evening with Steve Urkel. A blind 5 year old with a 96 count box of Crayola Crayons could come up with more convincing zombie make up than the job Anderson and his cronies did in these movies.

That gets me to another point. Are these even zombie films anymore? Jump kicks and Stone Cold Stunners are now effective ways of combating zombies? Christ.

kalifonia08

kalifonia08 on 09-10-2010 01:32 PM

I want to hang out with Steve Urkel. Is that bad?

ARmy2510

ARmy2510 on 09-10-2010 03:28 AM

Anderson, i see You are soo bad student...

planetawesome

planetawesome on 09-12-2010 11:07 PM

My thoughts exactly.

John T.

John T. on 09-10-2010 03:53 AM

Haven't seen four of the five films on this list. The one I did see, I didn't like. Do Androids Dream Of Electric Sheep? by Philip K. Dick was a great book. What we got in Bladerunner was mediocre at best when compared to the book. Just another, sad, dim adaptation of a great piece of writing.

Gus S.

Gus S. on 09-10-2010 11:35 AM

If you've only seen one film on this list, then you know nothing! Don't you ever speak badly of Blade Runner! I have also read the book, which was great I admit, but the movie is definitely better!

MJ

MJ on 09-10-2010 05:10 PM

Why would you admit that you haven't seen four out of those five? They are great, classic movies.

Og Gorrilaking

Og Gorrilaking on 09-10-2010 04:22 AM

I quite like some of him. Death Race was great fun, as was Resident Evil.

Og Gorrilaking

Og Gorrilaking on 09-10-2010 04:23 AM

*some of his movies. Spelling fail.

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