"Scary Movie 4": RT Talks With David Zucker
A few weekends ago RT got the inside scoop on "Scary Movie 4" from its director, legendary comic trailblazer David Zucker ("Airplane!," "The Naked Gun"), and castmembers Anna Faris, Regina Hall and Craig Bierko. Read on for the first installment of our "Scary Movie 4" interview series, in which a candid Zucker talks comedy, "Brokeback," and the art of spoofing.
David Zucker is a veritable comedy legend whose career began with co-writing 1977's "The Kentucky Fried Movie," took off with the 1980 classic, "Airplane!" and continued with even more comedies: "Top Secret!," "The Naked Gun" series, "Ruthless People," and more. After reviving the "Scary Movie" franchise with 2003's "Scary Movie 3," (which made $109 million at the box office), Zucker is back this week with another "Scary" parody (written by Craig Mazin and frequent Zucker collaborator Jim Abrahams) -- and this time, he's set his sights on "War of the Worlds," "The Grudge," "Brokeback Mountain," Tom Cruise, and more entertainment phenomena from the past few years.
Q: Which was better for you to make, "Scary 3" or "Scary 4?"
David Zucker: ["Scary Movie 4"] was harder, because we only had nine months to do it, from conception to release. We worked weekends, and nights, mainly because one of the main requirements was to have the two main movies -- for "Scary 3," there was "Signs" and "The Ring" -- for this one we were all set to do "The Ring 2," but "Ring 2" was not accepted by the audience. It was quickly forgotten. In part maybe because of "Scary Movie 3!"
So we had to wait for "War of the Worlds." But our release date was already set, April 14, so we all agreed that we were just gonna do it. So for this one it's "War of the Worlds," "The Grudge," and a bunch of other movies like "Saw."

Q: Did you spoof all the movies you wanted to in "Scary Movie 4?
Zucker: Yes, every possible one. In the past few years, the pickings were a bit thinner than they were for "3," so we had to really make the best of the movies that were in the popular mind. "Million Dollar Baby," "The Grudge," "War of the Worlds," and "Saw" were big. "The Village" wasn't as successful as other M. Night [Shyamalan] movies but it was a very striking, original movie.
Q: What makes Anna Faris so convincing in the role of Cindy?
Zucker: Horror movies are scarier if it's a woman, and we learned that the scarier it is, the funnier it is. [Faris] is a really good actress; she's so convincing, and she can convey the sincerity. The more the audience can be involved in the plot and believability of the characters, the funnier the jokes will be.
I don't tell the actors to try to be funny. My biggest direction is to let the lines do the work -- let the script be funny, you just do the dramatic acting.

Q: In "Scary Movie 4," a lot of jokes revolve around women and children getting punched in the face…
Zucker: Anna Faris gets it all the time, with all the physical comedy. The best horror movies have women in the lead because it's just scarier, they seem more vulnerable, but [in "Scary 4"] the lead characters always have to get bonked around. That's been comedy since vaudeville, Charlie Chaplin, the Marx Brothers.
There's always children in horror movies, and they're always treated with great reverence in current cinema. That's something we dive into; we say, we're not gonna hold these kids sacred, they're movie actors, and we're gonna knock them around the same way.
It's just like my mom loved "Airplane!" but she hated that scene of Peter Graves talking to the child…I could never convince her that it wasn't just a joke on pedophilia, we were really doing a joke on the image in American cinema of the squeaky clean, all-American airline captain. And this was the one thing that really undercut that image, and that's what made people laugh. Personally, I don't think pedophilia is very funny at all. I have no qualms about using that, or child abuse -- who thinks that's funny? -- but I think people can take all these jokes in the context of, we're doing a spoof, we're satirizing movies, this is not real-life comedy. We think we're following rules that are different from other comedies.

Q: Were any of the jokes added at the last minute?
Zucker: "Brokeback Mountain" was definitely not in the movie as written, that was added later. While we were shooting, the whole "Brokeback" story broke, and that became so talked about, such a cultural phenomenon, that we wrote the scene. We didn't know how that would play - we were all set for people not to laugh at all. We were always thinking in the back of our minds, a lot of jokes have been made in print, on Letterman and Leno; how many more laughs can we get out of this movie? But it worked.
Another big surprise was that just the mere mention of Myspace…we just thought, it's a clever thing and it's almost like an ad lib, we threw that in a couple days before but we get such a reaction.
[Possible spoiler ahead]
Zucker [On Leslie Nielson's nude scene]: There was a body double, when you see him from behind…that's part of my weird job. I have to look at asses.

David Zucker is a veritable comedy legend whose career began with co-writing 1977's "The Kentucky Fried Movie," took off with the 1980 classic, "Airplane!" and continued with even more comedies: "Top Secret!," "The Naked Gun" series, "Ruthless People," and more. After reviving the "Scary Movie" franchise with 2003's "Scary Movie 3," (which made $109 million at the box office), Zucker is back this week with another "Scary" parody (written by Craig Mazin and frequent Zucker collaborator Jim Abrahams) -- and this time, he's set his sights on "War of the Worlds," "The Grudge," "Brokeback Mountain," Tom Cruise, and more entertainment phenomena from the past few years.
Q: Which was better for you to make, "Scary 3" or "Scary 4?"
David Zucker: ["Scary Movie 4"] was harder, because we only had nine months to do it, from conception to release. We worked weekends, and nights, mainly because one of the main requirements was to have the two main movies -- for "Scary 3," there was "Signs" and "The Ring" -- for this one we were all set to do "The Ring 2," but "Ring 2" was not accepted by the audience. It was quickly forgotten. In part maybe because of "Scary Movie 3!"
So we had to wait for "War of the Worlds." But our release date was already set, April 14, so we all agreed that we were just gonna do it. So for this one it's "War of the Worlds," "The Grudge," and a bunch of other movies like "Saw."

Q: Did you spoof all the movies you wanted to in "Scary Movie 4?
Zucker: Yes, every possible one. In the past few years, the pickings were a bit thinner than they were for "3," so we had to really make the best of the movies that were in the popular mind. "Million Dollar Baby," "The Grudge," "War of the Worlds," and "Saw" were big. "The Village" wasn't as successful as other M. Night [Shyamalan] movies but it was a very striking, original movie.
Q: What makes Anna Faris so convincing in the role of Cindy?
Zucker: Horror movies are scarier if it's a woman, and we learned that the scarier it is, the funnier it is. [Faris] is a really good actress; she's so convincing, and she can convey the sincerity. The more the audience can be involved in the plot and believability of the characters, the funnier the jokes will be.
I don't tell the actors to try to be funny. My biggest direction is to let the lines do the work -- let the script be funny, you just do the dramatic acting.

Q: In "Scary Movie 4," a lot of jokes revolve around women and children getting punched in the face…
Zucker: Anna Faris gets it all the time, with all the physical comedy. The best horror movies have women in the lead because it's just scarier, they seem more vulnerable, but [in "Scary 4"] the lead characters always have to get bonked around. That's been comedy since vaudeville, Charlie Chaplin, the Marx Brothers.
There's always children in horror movies, and they're always treated with great reverence in current cinema. That's something we dive into; we say, we're not gonna hold these kids sacred, they're movie actors, and we're gonna knock them around the same way.
It's just like my mom loved "Airplane!" but she hated that scene of Peter Graves talking to the child…I could never convince her that it wasn't just a joke on pedophilia, we were really doing a joke on the image in American cinema of the squeaky clean, all-American airline captain. And this was the one thing that really undercut that image, and that's what made people laugh. Personally, I don't think pedophilia is very funny at all. I have no qualms about using that, or child abuse -- who thinks that's funny? -- but I think people can take all these jokes in the context of, we're doing a spoof, we're satirizing movies, this is not real-life comedy. We think we're following rules that are different from other comedies.

Q: Were any of the jokes added at the last minute?
Zucker: "Brokeback Mountain" was definitely not in the movie as written, that was added later. While we were shooting, the whole "Brokeback" story broke, and that became so talked about, such a cultural phenomenon, that we wrote the scene. We didn't know how that would play - we were all set for people not to laugh at all. We were always thinking in the back of our minds, a lot of jokes have been made in print, on Letterman and Leno; how many more laughs can we get out of this movie? But it worked.
Another big surprise was that just the mere mention of Myspace…we just thought, it's a clever thing and it's almost like an ad lib, we threw that in a couple days before but we get such a reaction.
[Possible spoiler ahead]
Zucker [On Leslie Nielson's nude scene]: There was a body double, when you see him from behind…that's part of my weird job. I have to look at asses.

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CrazyGhost78 writes: on Apr 12 2006 03:12 PM I hate these movies. So. Much. (Reply to this) |
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South_park300 writes: on Apr 12 2006 04:04 PM RT should have asked him why the movie wasn't screened for critics (no reviews on RT yet??) good thing? not likely but alas, i like the series. its a guilty pleasure (Reply to this) |
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moviewizguy writes: on Apr 12 2006 04:29 PM [b]Scary Movie 4[/b] IT WAS SCREENED TO THE CRITICS! I've got many sites that have reviews on this movie and also many interviews on Anna Faris saying she was nervous of watching tjis movie because of the criitics. (Reply to this) |
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South_park300 writes: on Apr 12 2006 04:43 PM well even so, why arent they on the site yet? whats the word? good or not (Reply to this) |
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Now it's dark writes: on Apr 12 2006 06:03 PM I'm so glad he's directing it. The last one wasn't funny. (Reply to this) |
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Decade_e_a writes: on Apr 12 2006 06:06 PM im seein it cause i hated all the horror movies in it. Except saw. And brokeback. But just like the last one, i'll bet its better than the movies it spoofed. (Reply to this) |
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RoadDogXVIII writes: on Apr 12 2006 07:48 PM The movie was screened for critics, indeed. It's at 50% at the Rottentomatometer. So here's hoping it's around that range. Cause it looks funny as hell. (Reply to this) |
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South_park300 writes: on Apr 12 2006 08:08 PM yeah, they are starting to leak in. i just thought the reviews would have come about on here much earlier. you can pretty much bet it won't be fresh, none of them have been. looks to be another guilty pleasure! (Reply to this) |
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MDB_88 writes: on Apr 12 2006 09:09 PM [b]57%[/b] wow..... its on it way up... its now at 57%... it wont stay that high but its a good sign that its getting positive reviews =) heres hoping that the scary movies are back on the incline........ (Reply to this) |
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killthemall4444 writes: on Apr 13 2006 05:20 AM In reply to this comment (#833622) I hate you so much. (Reply to this) |
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killthemall4444 writes: on Apr 13 2006 05:22 AM It's at 50% at the moment but there are only eight reviews so nothing is certain yet. From what i see the critics who hated scary movie in the past are still going to hate it. (Reply to this) |
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Prosper761 writes: on Apr 13 2006 08:26 AM I am proud to say that while I have seen the Scary Movie movies, I have never paid to do so. They are fine for a lazy night at home when there is nothing else on and nothing else to do. (Reply to this) |
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ddunbar7265 writes: on Apr 13 2006 10:15 AM I just get stoned and fall on the ground laughing. It's the way to go! (Reply to this) |
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Gareth writes: on Apr 13 2006 12:31 PM It was screened, saw it last night. Lots of Dumb laughs, but you will laugh. (Reply to this) |
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