2016-09-07

The outspoken helmer recalls clandestine meetings with the exiled whistleblower, missing his mother’s funeral to make ‘Snowden’ (“I would have had to cut like four days of filming. And we couldn’t afford it”) and why he cut Donald Trump out of ‘Wall Street’: “He was good. I have no complaint.”

(THR) – Edward Snowden was given no script approval, nor did he receive any payment for Snowden, says director Oliver Stone. His new movie tells the story of the former NSA operative and how he came to reveal that the U.S. government was secretly monitoring domestic telephone calls.

The 69-year-old filmmaker and renegade met after Snowden’s Russian lawyer “contacted me because he wanted to sell me his book, which he had written about Snowden,” said Stone. “But it was a fictional book. He had fictionalized it. And it was an interesting Russian novel. Very Dostoevsky. Really it’s about a young man from America who comes over and reveals a 1984world. I didn’t know at that point in time whether we were going to make a fictional movie with an unnamed character, or else we would make the story as realistic as possible about Snowden, because I didn’t know if Snowden would cooperate.”

The lawyer arranged a meeting in Moscow, in a secure place that Stone would not reveal. At first, he said, Snowden was wary. “I don’t think he was comfortable with the idea of a movie at that point. He’s into reality and the concept of a movie is so foreign to him. I think he had seen a piece of The Untold History of the United States, which I’d done. That was that 12-part series. And I think he was impressed with it.”

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After more meetings took place, Stone said, Snowden began to thaw. “[He] got warmer. It took time.” In the end, he agreed to take part because “he accepted in his heart that a movie would get made,” Stone noted. “And he said that it was sort of an inevitability about a movie getting made, that he doesn’t have any rights because he’s in exile, and so forth and so on.”

The three-time Oscar winner behind such movies as Platoon, Born on the Fourth of July and Wall Street, blamed the studios’ corporate ownership for the fact that none agreed to finance the picture. “The biggest problem in the end turned out to be the self-censorship of scared American corporations,” Stone said. “And that’s the truth about our society. … At the price we were offering, and the script the way it was, it’s very hard to believe [that there wasn't] a political factor [in denying the project financing].”

Stone was interviewed Aug. 26 at Loyola Marymount University’s School of Film and Television, where he was the first guest in the sixth season of the Hollywood Masters interview series. Other guests this season will include actors Annette Bening, Ewan McGregor and Andrew Garfield, producer Brian Grazer, Fox TV executive Dana Walden, and French superstar Isabelle Huppert.

In a wide-ranging conversation about his work, Stone also recalled working with Donald Trump in a scene for Wall Street that subsequently was deleted from the movie.

“He was good,” said Stone. “I have no complaint. There were a lot of demands. I mean, he had two pages of prerequisites: You couldn’t shoot him from this side, that side. But I talked to him, and he’s a charming man in person. As an actor, he was stunning. You know, we did take one with Michael [Douglas] and [Trump] talking in a barbershop. And he jumped up after the take and he said, ‘Wasn’t that great?’” In the end, Stone chose to cut the scene. “It was too late and too little for where we were, at that point in the movie. And I wasn’t thinking about his future presidency — I was just dealing with an editing issue. I should have left it in probably.”

An edited transcript of the interview follows.

STEPHEN GALLOWAY June 1971. You had been at NYU Film School for a couple of years. Learning from Martin Scorsese, among others.

OLIVER STONE Among others. Yeah.

GALLOWAY And now you are out in the cold world. Nobody knows who you are. You have just made a short film, which, by the way, you can see on YouTube. It’s very good, about Vietnam. What is your thinking about your career and what you want to do with the rest of your life?

STONE It was more like a starvation diet at that point. There was no choice involved. You could either choose to go on, or else you drop out. A lot of people did. They realized that there was no real business, so to speak, you know, when you formally get hired. During our school year, the last year, all of us had been trying to do things. I had worked at Channel 13, and those days, that was the WNET. I think it was the public station. I’d worked on a wonderful novel that was filmed with a bunch of actors like Cornelia Otis Skinner, Gary Merrill, old timers. And it was great. Jack Gilford. It was a great experience to be a PA. And various things like that. I had been a cab driver, night time, and I went more and more into cab driving when I graduated. Night times in New York. That was an experience.

GALLOWAY Was that a good or bad experience?

STONE It was both. (Laughs.) Both. But you know, over the next three, four years, there were no jobs. I kept writing scripts and getting the jobs that I could. Worked on a porno film as an associate producer.

GALLOWAY What was the name of the porno film?

STONE Carrying dollies up four, five flights of stairs. In those days we —

GALLOWAY Do you remember the name of the film?

STONE I’d rather forget it. (Laughter.)

GALLOWAY Go on. You know the name. (Laughter.)

STONE But there were things like that. And I got a job finally. One of the jobs I got that was pretty steady, and gave me a beautiful unemployment insurance, was at a sports film company making baseball films. They were contracted to Major League Baseball. And it was a good contract. But they wanted to expand into advertising. And I was not an expert at advertising. I wasn’t very good at selling either, so I sold nothing practically for a year. But I pretended to sell or tried. But I was writing scripts mostly during that whole period in the back office and such. And I was unsuccessful as a scriptwriter, I have to tell you, but I kept at it. There must have been seven, eight, nine scripts in there. And treatments, long treatments. Always hopeful. Heartbreaking. Not read. Took forever to read. You know, I wanted to get them to people like Charles Bronson and Lee Marvin, and some of the actors. And it just wasn’t working out. But of course, my choice of subject matter may have something to do with it. I don’t know. But that business was tough. In the early ’70s, it was very tough, because they weren’t making as many movies I think. That was one of the problems. Really, it started to change in the early ’80s, when the video revolution came in. That allowed those smaller films to be made that we have all seen in the years since. But it was a hard market. I ran into a couple of NYU graduates down at the garage where the taxis were. And all their grandiose dreams. Some of them had money. Some of them were shooting their own films with the money. It was tough.

GALLOWAY What did Scorsese teach you?

STONE It was one year, the first year. Basic production. And we made films that were primitive and crude. Basic motions. I would say, what they called Sight and Sound. That was the name of it. It was 60 seconds, film. You started with a black and white film, 16 mm, and then you worked your way up to five minutes, maybe. Or three minutes. And these were exercises, and generally Marty criticized them pretty well. I mean, he cared. He was passionate. But it was hopeless for him. It was a graveyard. He knew that. And I think he was writing or he was working on projects at that time. But he would come in dutifully every time we had the class. And you could see he hadn’t slept very well at night. Because in those days, there was no [VCRs]. And older films were available on TV in the morning time, around 2 o’clock, 3 o’clock, 4 o’clock, you’d see the classics. And that was one of the few ways you could see older films. Unless you’d go to the theater up on 98th Street. So he would always be exhausted. He would talk a mile a minute. And it was hard to understand some of what he said.

GALLOWAY He talks incredibly quickly.

STONE Yeah. And I mean, his hair was down to here, and you could barely see his eyes in the morning. But he was a good teacher, and inspiring. You know, Haig Manoogian was there.

GALLOWAY The dean of the school.

STONE A lot of good teachers. My screenwriting class, I just have to say, was empty. The young people then did not really believe in writing. It was like, put the script together on the spot, like Jean-Luc Godard, go out and shoot. So I was surprised at the lack of attention to that discipline, which I loved, the old screenwriters.

GALLOWAY How did you learn to write? You had written a 1,400-page novel.

STONE I’d written a novel before, when I —

GALLOWAY It wasn’t published.

STONE Yeah. I was an older student. I came back from Vietnam at that point. And I had written a novel at 19, which was published 30 years later. It’s called Child’s Night Dream. And it’s about being 19. So I cared about writing, but I had written a novel, and how to visualize it into a cinematic approach is a whole different ballgame.

GALLOWAY And so who taught you? Or where did you learn? From watching films? Or did somebody guide you?

STONE Well, that’s what we were doing at NYU. You know, first of all, the concept was you can make films. I mean, you would take that for granted now, but back then it was a very special, exotic colony. You didn’t join it that easily. And certainly anybody who went to Hollywood, like Marty went with AIP, I think, that was a big deal. We didn’t have connections. Now it’s changed. Back then, you had to get in by commercials if you could. Or the writing, [which] worked for me. And it took six years, seven years.

GALLOWAY You made two films, The Hand and Seizure, before you made the film that you consider your first feature, Salvador, which is still one of my favorite films of yours.

STONE Yeah. I love that one.

GALLOWAY What did you learn from the first two that helped you make the third one?

STONE Oh … Years. I learned years, you know. The first one was a horror film, Seizure, in 1973. And I did it with very little money. And we had a tremendous amount of problems. It was a real first-time film effort. Very funny stories, of course, with Seizure. It was called Queen of Evil, but we had to change the title. Our film had many legal problems, and it was seized. I mean, I had to seize the film back from the cinematographer in Montreal. And I called the film Seizure. (Laughter.)

GALLOWAY How did you seize it back?

STONE Oh God. It’s complicated. The Mounties were involved. Bills. I mean, we had a lot of unpaid bills and we had to sneak it across the border to show the work print. It was a nightmare. We finally got secured by Harold Greenberg, who was a gigantic whale of a man, who had the Bellevue Pathé Lab in Montreal. He basically swallowed the film, and it disappeared into a 42nd Street double bill as a Cinerama release. But it’s actually an interesting film, if you look at it. I don’t know if you have seen it.

GALLOWAY I haven’t. No.

STONE It was released on video. It’s very interesting. It’s similar to the theme of The Hand, which is basically an artist, a cartoonist, who has tremendous problems with his imagination. And he projects some of the worst nightmares possible. And it happens to him. Sort of a Cavalcanti film, Alberto Cavalcanti. Dead of Night. That kind of a thing.

GALLOWAY How have you changed as a director since then?

STONE More complex and more mature. I think better with using the camera, using the scenes, directing actors, in every way. I mean, you grow. You grow from your experience. You have to do it. And by the time I made Salvador, I’d been through a lot of heartbreak. I mean, I’d already won an Academy Award for [writing] Midnight Express in ’79. And then had a rough spot with The Hand, because The Hand was actually an interesting movie. Again, but the producers were putting a tremendous amount of pressure on me to make it more of a horror film, and less of a psychological horror film. And that was a problem. I, you know, had to photograph the hand 100 different ways. It was an externalization of the character’s inner life. And that was always what it was. It wasn’t supposed to exist independently. But you know Hollywood. They want it to exist independently. But to have to shoot an object that’s very small and make it dangerous is extremely difficult. It’s like trying to make a mouse into an elephant. But I had Carlo Rambaldi doing special effects. Wonderfully precise man, but the only problem was he hated my DP, because he said my DP couldn’t light his hands. And we had 50, 60 hands in there and we were trying to do very complex stuff. And we did some very good stuff. We still see it. But it was a very difficult film for a first feature, second feature.

GALLOWAY You mentioned Midnight Express, which became a very controversial film. [To the audience:] I don’t know if you’ve seen it, but it’s a film I love. Even before you were known as a director, you were known as the writer of Midnight Express, which offended a great part of the Turkish population. I think Amnesty International complained about its portrayal of Turks as villains. This is a story about Billy Hayes’ experiences in a Turkish prison. Alan Parker, the director, has subsequently sort of apologized for the film. How do you feel about it?

STONE I’ve never apologized for it. I said, “I’m sorry about this misunderstanding.” But this was a serious misunderstanding here. This film, for me, was based on injustice everywhere. And it was a worldwide issue. Certainly, in the United States. I had been in prison briefly, but it was a horrifying experience. For a drug, federal smuggling charge. And a lot of that passion went into the screenplay. And I felt that the — it was really the early drug war. I felt that this treatment of people who were taking drugs was outrageous and still do. Very angry about it. And I made a film about it, too, at one point called Savages, later.

GALLOWAY Which I love.

STONE But this was an early reflection of that. And I made a speech at the Golden Globes, which I had won that year. And I was saying, “This is not about Turkey. This is about the United States. When you people who make television shows here in the United States are always doing the same cliche. You’re glorifying the cop. And you’re making the drug dealer something evil and much worse than he is.” And I got booed off the stage.

GALLOWAY Wow. Really?

STONE Well, I was high, frankly, but … (Laughter.) My publicist tried for years to destroy the tape, but I think it still exists. And I know it does.

GALLOWAY When you were in prison, they found two ounces of marijuana on you or something?

STONE Something like that. Yeah.

GALLOWAY Were you in prison in San Diego?

STONE Oh, we have to go to that! Yeah. You like the interesting juicy stuff, but …

GALLOWAY I knew you would knock me for that, but you know it’s interesting. So since I’m asking that question, tell us about it.

STONE Which one?

GALLOWAY About that prison experience.

STONE Oh, come on. Really?

GALLOWAY Of course.

STONE We’re talking about movies, not—

GALLOWAY [To audience:] You want to know about this?

AUDIENCE Yes!

STONE I was coming back from Mexico, and I had just come back from Vietnam, about seven days. Hadn’t even called my parents to tell them I was back. I was really one of those guys from Vietnam who was coming back from a lot of combat. And I was taking psychedelics at that point, just trying to get used to the world again. But it wasn’t a world that I had recognized. And the experience of veterans coming back, you know, was difficult. So I left the country. And partied in Mexico. And came back, and I was arrested [in San Diego]. And it was scary, because there were two judges. One was a five- to 20-year[s in prison] judge, and the other one was a parole judge, who would give you five years on parole, you know, and you wouldn’t even serve. So it was like, “What day do you go up in front of the judge?” And there was no representation. They never came at that point. The prisons in San Diego were feeling the early drug war. And it was overcrowded. Three times too many inmates. It was a very eye-opening experience, and another side of America that I had never seen before. So between the infantry and the prison, and between the Merchant Marine — I started to see the world in a different way than I’d grown up.

GALLOWAY You said something interesting, which most people wouldn’t think. And you just mentioned this was a scary experience. You said a lot of what you were dealing with when you were young was fear, and that you yourself still deal with fear, and you’re still afraid.

STONE Ha. When did I say that to you?

GALLOWAY You didn’t say it to me. I think you said it in the book [The Oliver Stone Experience].

STONE Gosh. This is a very good journalist, I have to tell you. (Laughter.) This man, he digs.

GALLOWAY Thank you. Tell us about that.

STONE I have to say, I was shocked when you told me you read this book, which just came out. Because you know, it’s a big book, and you really prepared. [To audience:] But he’s taken you far ahead and far deeper into things that you may not understand of —

GALLOWAY I appreciate that. But let’s not avoid the question. Fear. Do you still feel that?

STONE Yes. I do. I do. I think that’s an inherent quality in all people. I mean, I think it’s a fear that’s deeper now than it ever was. Sure. But I’ve come to terms with it. It’s a beast that you face every day. And being older gives me some advantages over it.

GALLOWAY By the way, the other thing you said that was interesting, you gave the commencement address at the University of Connecticut, I think in May. And you said, “I’ve been to four colleges.” Yale, from which you dropped out. NYU. I think the third one was Hollywood, but the fourth one was the College of Older Age.

STONE Yeah.

GALLOWAY And that really interested me. Because you have mellowed somewhat, I think. True?

STONE Yes. (Laughter.)

GALLOWAY You may elaborate.

STONE You know, this is very personal stuff. I feel like you’re a psychiatrist.

GALLOWAY (Laughs.) And I promised your assistant I wasn’t going to go down this path —

STONE I don’t even know you and —

GALLOWAY Let’s go back to the film that really put you on the map. And I’m going to show an excerpt from this truly brilliant film. Be warned. It’s a very violent scene, but it’s an extraordinary film. Watching it again is even better than when I saw it when it came out. So let’s take a look at a sequence from Platoon.

[CLIP]

[APPLAUSE]

STONE That’s a strong scene.

GALLOWAY How do you feel watching it?

STONE Whew. I feel terrible. What do you want me to say? I mean, it’s not a pretty scene, but it’s accurate, not in the exact details, but it’s a condensation of many of the things that happened over there. And happen in every war that we’re fighting since World War II, it seems. And maybe even then. You know, when you’re in a country that you’re not invited into, and you’re white, and it’s a Third World country, the infantry gets very divided, and whatever they say about “Support the troops,” you know, the truth is some of the troops should not be supported. People go over there and they get out their anxieties and their fears, and they blame anybody outside themselves. They don’t look in. And they look out. And they often take it out on people who have no ability to speak the language and so forth and so on. In some cases, invalids and people who are stupid, or … retarded, mentally challenged. And it happened in some form to me. And there was a guy — like this guy Kevin Dillon plays — who existed in the platoon I was in. No names, but there were all kinds of acts of homicide that were done not overtly, and not in front of officers, but that happened like in a situation like that. Where it would be covered up by a cowardly sergeant who was a bully. You saw the sergeant, the John C. McGinley character.

GALLOWAY In fact, he’s in four of your films —

STONE This brings it all together. And it also, one detail that you should remember. In these situations — and this is like true for Iraq and Afghanistan — when you go to these places, these villages, they are often collaborating with the enemy. Yes. Why not? Because they are in an impossible situation. They’re getting pressure from the insurgent side or the native side. They’re getting a lot of pressure. And here comes the U.S. And here we are saying, “You got to work with us.” And then guys get very pissed off because they find supplies in those villages. Or let’s say they know where the booby traps are, this, that. There’s 100 ways you can collaborate. They collaborate because they have no choice. They’re in the middle of a mess.

GALLOWAY You were 21 when you went to Vietnam. You volunteered. I think you actually missed your 21st birthday because you crossed the international dateline.

STONE Yeah. I got robbed. (Laughter.) But I stay forever young.

GALLOWAY What possessed you to do that?

STONE Possessed me? Well, you’ve read the book [The Oliver Stone Experience] Obviously, I was a bit like Ron Kovic, a lot like Ron Kovic. I believed in the fight against communism. My father had been Republican. I grew up conservative. And in 1950s New York, you had to believe that the communist conspiracy was about to engulf the United States. You just had to. That was the way we were raised. And it was all-American. It was very much like it is now in a certain sense. Engaged in a cold war in which we certainly invented the enemy, or exaggerated him to the point at which he was, as Joe McCarthy said, you know, about to take over our government and all this stuff. And we went to that war, many of us, in that belief. I was completely alienated and shocked when I returned and didn’t know where I was. Took me a while to straighten, to get back into society. Going back to NYU Film School about nine months later was part of it. It was a very shaky time. Talk about fear. We had a lot of fear, you know, about life, about coming back to American society that you don’t recognize. Nobody cared about Vietnam. I mean, only the poor went there. I mean, I would say in the officer class, and most of the young people did not go. They had deferments. So you’re not dealing with your own people. You don’t have that camaraderie. No one understands what you’re doing over there. They think it’s a bummer. They think it’s lost time. And too bad, you know. Move on.

GALLOWAY You were pretty badly wounded in Vietnam. You were shot I think in the neck. And you still have shrapnel there?

STONE I was not seriously wounded, thank God. I was hit twice, yes. And both times I was scared. Yeah. First time I thought I was going to die because there was a lot of blood, in the neck. And the second time I got blown up by a satchel charge. And I’m OK. But I got out of the field briefly, and I stayed out for a while, but I couldn’t stand the rear, and I ended up getting into — I go into the details in this book. But I always had problems with authority in the army, you know, because you’re being bossed around by people like John McGinley, stuff like that. So I ended up back in the field. They were going to Article 15 me, which is put me basically in detention, and put me in a jail there. Another jail. And then I would extend my stay. I’d come out of jail, and I’d have to go back to the field for the same amount of time.

GALLOWAY God.

STONE You know, they really think it through. It was called LBJ, the prison.

GALLOWAY Wow. (Laughs.)

STONE It was named Long Binh Jail, but LBJ were the initials for Lyndon Johnson, who was the antihero of the time. Anyway…

GALLOWAY Are you still anti-authority?

STONE You bet. (Laughter.) You bet.

GALLOWAY That’s interesting. Is there any authority that you’re not anti?

STONE I’ve been having problems with that through my whole life, as you can tell from my films and some of my documentaries, too. I really think that we don’t think for ourselves. I think many of us are sleepwalking. Many of us buy the lies. So I tend to be contrary and think for myself as much as possible. And sometimes I don’t. But I was going back to something you said earlier, but I forgot what it was.

GALLOWAY About being shot and wounded.

STONE No, something about —

GALLOWAY Fear?

STONE Well, I’ve forgotten now.

GALLOWAY OK. We can always come back to it. What interests me is, in Platoon, you have the good force played by Willem Dafoe and the bad force played by Tom Berenger. To what extent were those autobiographical, drawn from your real life?

STONE They’re both based on two characters that I [knew]. There were a lot of characters, but … I didn’t finish the story: Instead of taking an Article 15, I made a deal with them and I went back to another infantry in the First Cavalry up north. So I ended being actually in three different combat units. So as a result, I saw a lot of terrain, and I saw a lot of different characters. I guess that was lucky in a way. And up there in First Cav, I ran into an Elias, who was played by Dafoe, who died under —

GALLOWAY And his real name was Elias, wasn’t it?

STONE His real name was Elias and I used it. And his daughter came to see me and all that. Yeah. He was Juan Angel Elias.

GALLOWAY He was an Apache in real life.

STONE Half-Apache, half-Spanish. He came from the Southwest area. And he had died after I left the unit, in a very mysterious kind of friendly fire. There was a lot of friendly fire. And you know, you hear stories. You don’t know. You never know what happened. But it led me to believe the story that Platoon became. Because I saw it as a mythic war. I saw it as an iliad, you know, that we had gone over there. Eventually I saw it as The Iliad, as we’d gone over there like the Greeks and were stuck on the beaches of Troy for how many years? Eight years? I forgot what it was. Eight, 10 years. Twelve years.

GALLOWAY About 10.

STONE Whatever it was. Ridiculous war. And we fight among ourselves. You see, most of TheIliad is about the fight between the Greeks. Same thing was true here. [The real-life basis for] Barnes was in another unit. I was his radio man for a while and so I got to know him a little bit, but you didn’t get to know that guy. This guy literally was scared to death. I mean, had eight wounds or something like that. And he managed to survive. I don’t know how. A shot to the head, and came back after nine months in Japan being rehabbed. Nine months in Japan, coming back to the field. And I got him then. (Laughs.) I have to tell you, he was hard-core. Anyway, that became the basis of the other character, played by Berenger.

GALLOWAY What’s so fascinating is that you’ve revisited Vietnam, well, with three features. That, and Born on the Fourth of July, which I was just talking about before we began, which I think is my favorite film of yours. And we’re going to show a clip from that at the very end of this interview. And then Heaven and Earth, which has some just lovely moments. You won’t remember this, but I remember telling you I love that moment in it when Tommy Lee Jones is looking for his wife and sees her. So moving. And the acting is one of the great acting moments.

STONE And this young girl was unknown. I found her in a casting session for unknowns in San Jose.

GALLOWAY Will you revisit Vietnam? You were going to make a film about one of the great massacres.

STONE Yeah. That was a great story. In 2009, I wanted to go back and do My Lai, which was the massacre that many of you, some of you may know about. Five hundred civilians were killed. Like that scene you saw in Platoon. It was expanded to like 500 and some. Unbelievable behavior by at least two to three platoons, and the leadership, too. They were not the only ones at fault. The officer class completely missed it, and they missed it almost deliberately. And the more you dig into this mess, the harder it gets. The wider it gets. What was interesting about the movie, it wasn’t all just a massacre. It was about this investigation. It was one of the few crimes that was investigated by the U.S. Army at that time. [General] Westmoreland wanted to clean the record, because he hated all these attributions of barbarism. So he appointed a three-star general, a guy he trusted, Ray Peers. Ray Peers had been in Korea, World War II. Peers was a tough guy, and he definitely believed that this was an exaggerated story, made up by whining you know, low-level NCOs or enlisted men. He really believed that. He went over there eventually, after he interviewed a lot of people in the States. And he saw something that really shocked him. And to his core he was shaken. And I have to say, he becomes the linchpin of the story, as does the heroic behavior of some of the men that day at My Lai, including Thompson, the helicopter pilot who tried to save as many people as he could. Those two become the heroes. And Peers, unfortunately, after he turned in his investigation, he had been promised the fourth star and a commanding role in Korea, and he never got it. His Army career was effectively over. He busted all of the people he could, including the general of the division, who at that time was a West Point commandant. That’s a big deal in the Army. He busted this guy, who was a three-star also, and the guy said, “You will never go up higher in the Army again. You know, this is it for you.” So it was a tremendous betrayal of his class, and he had the guts to do it. And I think that’s a great story.

GALLOWAY Do you still want to make that film?

STONE I guess so. It’s so complicated. It’s so many helicopters. (Laughter.) Because you need period helicopters. And you know, we spent money making it. We built the whole village. We got three weeks out. Bruce Willis was in the picture. He dropped out. Reneged. And so forth. You know.

GALLOWAY Is it heartbreaking when something falls through like that?

STONE Absolutely. You know, especially when you make a massacre movie. You have to get in the state of mind.

GALLOWAY Oh, really?

STONE It’s like prep time. You’re going back into that. I didn’t want to go back there and I did. It was really authentic in terms of all the people I’d been interviewing. And we were using as many Vietnamese as we could. And I went to My Lai itself.

GALLOWAY A lot of people talked about you as political. I always think of you as almost an old-school moralist. You know, if you look at Platoon, you have very much the good and the bad. If you look at some of your later films, there are always moral issues and moral dilemmas. We’re going to come to Snowden later. Certainly that’s a very moral issue. And there’s one film of yours, which is very moralistic, but it has a different point of view on the good and bad. And I want to show a clip from it, and see if you agree. And that’s Wall Street. So let’s take a look at this really iconic moment, which you all know. The “greed is good” speech in Wall Street.

[CLIP]

[APPLAUSE]

GALLOWAY It’s such a lovely performance. Your father was a Wall Street broker. You come from an interesting background. We’re both half-French. My mother’s French. We’re both half-Jewish. Well, on my mother’s side. Yours is on your father’s. You grew up spending time in Paris. You grew up with a father who was on Wall Street, and a Republican, and whose personal life was somewhat complicated.

STONE Hmm.

GALLOWAY How much was this film autobiographical, and how much did it help you exorcise your dad?

STONE Well, I exorcised my dad probably with Nixon.

GALLOWAY OK. Oh, wow.

STONE I loved my father. I really did. And I miss him terribly. And he had a great sense of humor, unlike Nixon, I think. But he was an Eisenhower man. Those people who remember, that’s sort of what he was. And he was definitely anti-Franklin Delano Roosevelt, terribly. As a businessman, they felt that Roosevelt was socializing the United States. Michael [Douglas] sounds like Trump here. It’s an ethos I grew up with and I understand it. And I was fascinated by it because it was a mood more than anything. I was terrible at mathematics, so I never had the makings of a banker or a broker my father would have wanted me to be. It was my cousin he preferred, who was a genius at this. But I wanted to go back into that world, because I miss the 1950s, and wanted to understand it. But I ended up updating it to the ’80s. And when I went to Wall Street, this is what I found. These people were the cutting edge of Wall Street, the new buccaneers. They were outsiders and they were making a dent in the system. I say that because when I went to make Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps 20 years later or 25 years later, I found the culture had changed, that the Gekkos, the Michael Douglases had become now the establishment. In other words, that form of behavior, which was piratical in those days, and becomes the basis of him getting arrested by the SEC, no longer exists. And these people are everywhere in our culture. Everywhere. Every corporation buys up every other corporation that’s smaller, like sharks. And it’s a devastation of our economy and the middle class. Devastation of our jobs, our basis, all this NAFTA thing that came about with the Clintons, came about through Wall Street pressure. And they’ve always had this, had an in with the Clintons.

GALLOWAY Are you not a Clinton fan?

STONE Oh, I’m trying just to tell you about some history here. You’re changing the subject matter, because if you want to talk about greed, that, we’re in the middle of it. I’ve never seen such greed. [Gekko] talks about a million-dollar profit. Now, that becomes billions. Millions have become billions. So this is a culture — many of you missed this transition, but my father would have rolled over in his grave. He died before this movie came out, so he missed it. But he really —

GALLOWAY Did you ever talk to him about making a film about Wall Street?

STONE He believed in the old Wall Street where you were responsible to your client. You had a client, you had a client for life. You worked for the client. Somewhere along the way, that all got screwed up. “F— the clients.” The bank is the one that takes all the money from the clients and tries to make more money with it. It’s a ruthless culture now, and we don’t have a sense of responsibility to the buyer. So I am a moralist. Yes, I am.

GALLOWAY You did actually film a scene with Donald Trump. What happened?

STONE Did you ever see it?

GALLOWAY No.

STONE It was a deleted scene. He was good. He was good. I have no complaint. There was a lot of demands. I mean, he had two pages of prerequisites that he had to —

GALLOWAY Like what?

STONE Oh, you couldn’t shoot him from this side, that side, but I talked to him. And he’s a charming man in person. I mean, he gets along. You know, he’s a seller.

GALLOWAY You said he was the most confident man you ever met.

STONE Oh, as an actor. He was stunning. Yeah. No, seriously. I couldn’t believe it. You know, we did take one with Michael and [Trump] talking in a barber shop. And he jumped up after the take and he said, “Wasn’t that great?” (Laughter.) You know, he kept doing it. And we kept going because I was deepening the scene as we went. And he didn’t understand nine takes. He’d just done eight, nine takes, he’d never understand it. But every scene, he’d just jump up. He was the same way every time. He didn’t change. But I knew that.

GALLOWAY Was it good?

STONE I said, “It’s OK, Donald. It’s really good.” “But you know, I think we can just do this.” And he’d be disappointed.

GALLOWAY Why did you cut him out of the film?

STONE Because it was a writing issue in terms of — It was too late and too little for where we were, at that point in the movie. And I wasn’t thinking about his future presidency or anything like that. I was just dealing with an editing issue. I should have left it in probably.

GALLOWAY Or bring it back.

STONE You had a somewhat confrontational relationship with Michael Douglas, particularly when you shot the scene with the “greed is good” speech. Why?

STONE Not in the second movie. The second movie was —

GALLOWAY No, no. But I’m talking about the first one.

STONE The first movie. No. At the beginning, we had a rough start. Different styles of approach to [it]. He’d come from TV and he had never seen so much dialogue. And he had a lot of dialogue in the movie. And I don’t think his approach to it was working. We had a confrontation, and he talks about it quite a bit. It sounds like, you know, I’m the bad guy, but —

GALLOWAY No, no, no.

STONE We wouldn’t have been able to make the picture we did unless he changed his approach. And I think he did change the approach as a result. And that’s the way it is, you know. People don’t understand sometimes.

GALLOWAY How do you work with an actor who’s not doing it the way you like?

STONE It’s very hard. Very hard. And I’ve had that problem. There was one female who just never wanted to do that role in that movie. She just didn’t like it. I’m surprised she accepted the role. I guess you know who I’m talking about.

GALLOWAY And so how do you deal with that?

STONE Well, you can’t. You coax her. I mean, everyone on the crew — not everyone. Most of the people in my inner trust wanted to fire her after the first week. I said, “No, it’s going to work.” And I think it did. But it was always reluctant the whole time.

GALLOWAY So here’s what interests me about this film. You’ve been accused of having a somewhat Manichean view of the world.

STONE Hmmph.

GALLOWAY You know, there’s black and white and good and bad.

STONE Well, I put more gray in since then. (Laughter.)

GALLOWAY You mean in your films since then?

STONE The fact that you have this fellow who is played by Douglas talking about the reason, his ethos for greed, and justifying it — and there are many people who believe it, that that is the way to improve the American economy, is by whittling out the bad elements. Weed, weed the garden. Keep weeding the garden. There’s a whole argument for it. And that is not black or white. That’s gray. And it gets the sympathy of the audience. In fact, it won Michael the Academy Award. And people, many young brokers went to Wall Street to work, many whom I have met since, who have grown up and told me that they were influenced by my movie. They were going to go to medical school, and they were going to go off and do this or that. And now they went to Wall Street. So you understand, he was a kind of a counter-hero.

GALLOWAY Well, that’s exactly what I was coming to, because —

STONE Well, it’s not black and white is what I’m trying to say.

GALLOWAY Right. My point was, you have been accused of making things black and white. And sometimes you’ve done that. And my point about this film being different is what’s so interesting here is that the devil is so appealing. You know, you watch that film. By the way, when you did Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps, every time Michael Douglas is off screen, I wanted him back. And I realized, “Oh my God. We’re in love with the devil.” Is that dangerous?

STONE Well, he’s not the devil in the second movie. And that may have been an issue.

GALLOWAY Right.

STONE The audience wanted him back as a young — he’s 70 years old, or 65 years old at that point.

GALLOWAY Do you know that line that William Blake said about Paradise Lost? He said, “Milton is of the devil’s party, because he makes Satan so appealing.” So Oliver, are you of the devil’s party, so to speak? (Laughter.)

STONE No, on the contrary. Barnes does the same thing. People were mesmerized by Tom Berenger because he says things that are intelligent. He talks about a reality that he knows. Let’s say he is the bad guy, the villain of the piece. Well, if he gives [a reason] why he was doing what he was doing, then I think it’s much more interesting than he’s just doing it because he’s a sadist. That’s why in Natural Born Killers, Mickey and Mallory justify themselves in their way. And in the new movie, Snowden, you’ll see the NSA people have some very interesting arguments. And I think a lot of people in the audience appreciate that. So it isn’t black and white to me. If it were, that would be more of the comic book, Marvel kind of movie.

GALLOWAY I just want to briefly touch on Natural Born Killers, because it was a very controversial film.

STONE It sure was.

GALLOWAY For two reasons. One, you had some conflict with Quentin Tarantino, who had written it.

STONE Whoa, whoa, whoa. He wrote a script. We extensively rewrote it.

GALLOWAY Right. What were his objections, and have you ever reconciled with him?

STONE No. (Laughter.) No.

GALLOWAY OK.

STONE I don’t think he’s bothered to see the movie.

GALLOWAY Huh.

STONE We didn’t even have to pay him because the producers had the rights. It was a complicated story, but I insisted on paying him and being honorable with him. And —

GALLOWAY There was this other issue, which was —

STONE — It’s still painful for me. He did hurt the movie everywhere in the world with what he said, but he never saw it, so I don’t understand. I think it was about an ego, because you know, he’d been rewritten. I think that’s what it was about. And I don’t think he even bothered to reread the script. But in this business, having come from where I was as a writer, you know, I’ve been rewritten. But I didn’t go public with condemnations.

GALLOWAY Right.

STONE There’s a story in here about 8 Million Ways to Die. Now that it’s many years later, you saw how outrageous the behavior was in the rewrite. That happens in Hollywood. Sometimes people have no trust in the writer. I liked his script. It was the basis for which we bought it. I liked it. But it wasn’t going all the way where I wanted to go, which was a social commentary on our f—ed up system at that time. Which was getting crazier and crazier in 1993, ’94. The United States started to really get into a sensationalism that was beyond extraordinary to me. It was, from my perspective, it was like, “This is getting nuts now when we have all these sensationalistic trials in the news. We have no real news. We have just murder and sensationalism.” And the O.J. Simpson trial happened, which was the most prodigious event in television history in terms of money. O.J. Simpson was everywhere on every channel. It was insane. There was no perspective anymore. It’s like when Clinton, later on that decade, got impeached. It took over all the news. I mean, there was no policy discussions at a very crucial point in our history when we had to make decisions that were internationally impactful. Huge, huge impact. We were ignoring it and paying attention to the Clinton blowjob thing. You tell me. I mean, I think that is a major issue.

GALLOWAY I agree with you.

STONE That’s why I did Natural Born Killers. It is a real problem in this country. We have no attention span for news, and understanding, trying to go deeper.

GALLOWAY That intersected with a real-life copycat killing that resembled the characters in the film. Were you upset by that?

STONE No. There was no copycat killing. That’s what the press called it. There was never any proof that anyone had seen the film and acted directly upon it, any more than the guy who killed John Lennon was acting on the Bible. I mean, that was an easy shot to take. And John Grisham took it. And he supported the major lawsuit. And it went on for seven years or something like that. It was very expensive. And we had to defend our right to make the movie. Basically their argument was that the films were a product like a vacuum cleaner. And that if the vacuum cleaner blows up and hurts you, you get a lawsuit. So he was saying the movie had that effect on these people, and that we owed damages to the people that it killed, and so forth and so on. It’s an impossible argument. But he managed to string it out. And he took it all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court. They didn’t want to hear it. Went back to Federal, and eventually, eventually it was thrown out. But it took a lot of money. Also, I spent my money, too. And Warner Bros.’ money to defend this suit. It would have affected everybody in Hollywood. I mean, nobody was paying attention. They didn’t care. But you would not be able to make a movie, essentially, if you have a product liability against it.

GALLOWAY Is there any movie you’ve not been able to make because you feel the system has prevented it, as opposed to, well, there’s just not the money.

STONE Well, the system doesn’t gravitate toward criticism of America, as you know from the My Lai story. In the 1970s it was different. After that Vietnam period, there was this tremendous disillusionment. And there were critical films about the United States’ way of life. Very critical. That vanished. By the ’80s and ’90s, when Mr. Reagan came in and we were glorifying the Vietnam War again, et cetera, et cetera, and we were going back into wars, we started building up our military. We sent 500,000 people to this Middle East again in 1991, because Iraq had invaded Kuwait. All of these things grew and grew. And [now] we’ve reached another level in our society of almost insane patriotism again.

GALLOWAY You know, if you are foreign, as I am, it’s very evident.

STONE Those are the issues you can’t address in movies. That’s what you were asking. That’s one of the reasons that Snowden is about an American person who, whatever you think of him, he was an American story. And we couldn’t tell it. No studio would support this movie. Why? Because he was a hot potato in 2014. And although the script was admired and people wanted to make it, they said at the studio level, whatever, they said, “Well, I have to run it upstairs,” because they no longer are in charge of their own studios. You have to realize that. So they run it to the corporate boards that run these gigantic megalopolises that own these studios. And the lawyers always say, “No, no, no. This is going to be a lawsuit, controversial.” Or, “We have a pending deal with the U.S. Government Department of Justice. We want to merge with XYZ, and that merger’s worth $30 billion or $100 billion to us. We don’t want to have any problems with the government.” So it becomes self-censorship by the private corporations not to antagonize in any way Mr. Obama or the DOJ.

GALLOWAY You’ve made three films, I think three, about presidents: JFK, Nixon, W. Was it easy to raise the money, or difficult to raise the money for those films?

STONE JFK I sold as a thriller to Warner Bros. They were excited beyond belief to make it. But they made it and we got it made. It was a delightful experience. Not a delightful, but I mean, it was a supportive experience. Then, of course, it became very controversial and Warner Bros. defended the movie. But they did not defend Natural Born Killers the same way. They didn’t promote it the same way. So by that time, I think they were exhausted over me. So my best studio relationship was with Warner Bros., but it didn’t continue.

GALLOWAY I want to show a scene from JFK. And even people who don’t agree with you admire just the sheer filmic quality of this. This is quite a long scene. Here is the moment when John F. Kennedy is assassinated, which also uses, I think, the original Zapruder film, right?

STONE Yes.

GALLOWAY And you can tell everybody about that. So here’s that sequence. It’s really amazing filmmaking.

[CLIP]

[APPLAUSE]

GALLOWAY Wow. Not bad for a beginner, right? That is brilliant filmmaking. I know you don’t like hearing me saying nice things, because you say, “Oh, that sycophant” —

STONE I do. I do. Where do you get this idea?

GALLOWAY OK. I just think it’s extraordinary filmmaking, and I’ve watched that many times. It’s dazzling. How do you go about conceiving of a sequence like that that has so much going on in terms of narrative, sound, color, slow motion, music? I don’t know if that was the original Zapruder film. If so, how’d you get the rights to it, or if it was all the re-creation? Walk us through how you created it.

STONE Well, a lot of the source of this is anger. There’s obviously, you feel anger, your passion. Because I think the American public was blind. I mean, they accepted this bullshit, this Warren Commission. Anyway, aside from that, this was deep into the movie, so we had already developed this technique. It gets stronger and stronger as it goes. Remember, it’s context. So we start somewhere and this is the climax area. And by this time, we’re rolling on all cylinders, right? The staging was complicated. Yes. We had cameras all over the place. And we had to do it so many times. I have to tell you, that was hard for me, because we must have done it 20 times in downtown Dallas, with the full motorcade. So you could hear the shots —

GALLOWAY So you re-created, actually at Dealey Plaza?

STONE The karma involved. But I only would do that if I felt we were doing the right thing. If I felt this was a false narrative, I would not have done it. It’s just very difficult. Believe me. Those people in Dallas that year will always remember this movie company. And you know, we had to be very tricky, in the sense that we did get permission to shoot from the seventh floor.

GALLOWAY Wow.

STONE Not the sixth. Seventh floor. So our perspectives had to be realigned a bit —

GALLOWAY So Lee Harvey Oswald was actually on the sixth floor, and you shot from the seventh?

STONE Lee Harvey Oswald was not on the sixth floor. He was downstairs on the second floor at the Coke machine actually when this happened. And this is the great narrative that keeps getting spilled, that Oswald was there. But he wasn’t, because somebody saw him 90 seconds later at the Coke machine, and he could not have run down from those stairs and done what he did, stashed the rifle, did all this stuff. And you have to go into the Warren Commission to realize how phony it is. But it’s so upsetting. It still upsets me when I see it today. Yes. [Jim] Garrison brought out the Zapruder film at the trial. It was one of his great services. And of course, the trial, the people were found not guilty, but you know, there was so much evidence presented that’s outside the narrow confines of those people who worked for the government. It’s a much bigger story. And he allowed that can of worms a little bit of light on it. And I think that’s the greatest service he did, going public with that.

GALLOWAY But I wanted you to explain how you make this as a filmmaker? Does everybody know what the Zapruder film is that we’re talking about?

STONE The Zapruder film was shot actually there and then. That’s the real footage.

GALLOWAY It’s the real footage of Kennedy being shot.

STONE And some of the interstices, you can see that we’re using actors for some of the angles that we couldn’t get through the Zapruder film.

GALLOWAY So how do you obtain rights to the Zapruder film?

STONE Well, that was complicated. As I remember, we paid good money for it. And I don’t remember all who, exactly, but by that time, this was the second generation of JFK researchers. So there was a community of people who knew how to get these things.

GALLOWAY And did you map this out on a storyboard before you did it?

STONE Well, we did the storyboard, but it was in the script. A lot of this style was in that script. It elaborates, but the script definitely tells you where it’s going. In fact, that reminds me of a story I forgot. When we first gave the script to Warren Brothers, very smartly took out a lot of the intercutting because I realized that it was so f—ing confusing. So we tried to make it a little simpler. They loved it. And then we went back as we were shooting, and we put back the, you know, we did it that way. It’s a bit of subterfuge, but I don’t think they minded. Our budget and our schedules remained pretty good. We were on schedule.

GALLOWAY Do you let your editor have a first go and then you come in, or do you sit with him?

STONE No. First of all, there were four editors on this. All of them very good. All of them good. So we talked way before, and we’re talking, and they know what’s coming in. And generally speaking, during the shooting, they’re going at it. But no. This was a very complicated movie. Five months of editing. That was all. And we were coming out in December, which was in our favor because I said, “Listen, if we ever show this film in its completed format to the preview audience, or to the [studio], there’s going to be so many questions raised. ‘What’s this?’ ‘What’s that?’ It’s going to be a mess. We’ll never get out of a preview alive.” So by having that short Christmas turnaround, we were able to avoid that. We showed it to Warners. They liked it, except for a couple of executives who said that we needed a preview. And we avoided that death by guillotine.

GALLOWAY Wow.

STONE It took off like wildfire. I was quite stunned. I thought it was the end of my career. I mean, what the hell. Might as well go down in flames, right? Take a shot. Because you don’t want to go down for something minor.

GALLOWAY Your portrait, your sort of idealized portrait of Jim Garrison, the Kevin Costner character, was very criticized. Did you expect that?

STONE I knew Jim and, of course, I knew about his womanizing and stuff like that, but I thought he was a hell of a DA. And when I was in the streets of New Orleans — I think that he’s been judged unfairly by the elite press. And certainly the CIA played a huge role in that. And they were on this case from the beginning. They were out to derail him. But the truth was, wherever I went with anybody who — street people loved him. He was respected. And he had integrity. He was known in a very corrupt community as one of the best DAs they ever had. In fact, he was re-elected. After he had been sullied by the U.S. government, he was re-elected as a judge. Big Jim. He was a star in New Orleans. I’ll never forget that.

GALLOWAY When you thought, “My career is over,” how did you react? Did you think, “Well, I can make little indie films.” Did you think, “I’d better go back to writing novels?”

STONE You’re talking about if this film had failed?

GALLOWAY Well, you said, “I thought my career was over.”

STONE I mean, I was gambling. It would all have been a bit of a lark anyway. I’d had luck. I mean, Salvador was made under the worst conditions, with no money. You know my history of that. I mean, if I survived Salvador, I can — stumbled into Platoon, and that was very tough to make, as you know. And one thing after another. And then you know, you get a little luck, you keep riding away. Don’t stop. Don’t think. Keep moving. So I stumbled from here into Heaven and Earth right after, which was a big film. And beautiful. I love that movie. You mentioned it earlier.

GALLOWAY Yes. Very much.

STONE It did no business in the U.S.

GALLOWAY Why?

STONE There was no interest in the Asian side of the story. And then I did the Natural Born Killers, which was, as I said, really controversial, too. So by that time, I got to Nixon. When I gotNixon, Warners didn’t want to do business with me anymore. There was a divorce there.

GALLOWAY You had another divorce with your longtime cameraman, Bob Richardson.

STONE Later.

GALLOWAY Why?

STONE Well, there’s many reasons. One of them was, he and I had been fighting a bit sinceNatural Born Killers, because he had reservations about making it. He thought it was too violent. And Bob got into a phase of nonviolence. He’s always been a worshipper of Hindu, of Ganesh and stuff like that. And he was a sincere man, and very disgusted by violence. Ironically, we made Natural Born Killers, and he did a great job. And we also did U Turn, which he also hated. And he became very tough to deal with for me. Very outspoken man. And there comes a point when you know, you can’t — it doesn’t work any longer. We’d done how many films together? I don’t know. Ten. And the irony of the whole thing is that later in time, he goes to work with Marty [Scorsese] and with Tarantino, and makes some of the most violent movies I’ve ever seen.

GALLOWAY (Laughs.) I know.

STONE Obviously, he had a change of heart, but I have to say, I was stunned when I saw thisDjango. That was it. So many people were slaughtered in that.

GALLOWAY Django Unchained. But you also shifted your style somewhat, because you went from being a fairly classical filmmaker to more impressionistic. And then to an almost hallucinatory style in Natural Born Killers. I wonder if your drug period influenced that.

STONE No. No, you’re forgetting the film that I made called The Doors, you know. In the heart of this was The Doors. And I’m sorry it got rushed in there, but it really was a huge film. To makeThe Doors and JFK in the same year was pretty big. The Doors was extremely psychedelic. And I’d had quite a bit of experience already with the psychedelics. And I went on with it with the Indians, Navajo and Sioux. Took a lot of trips. Went to Brazil, to Ayahuasca. You know, so I’d always been interested in that. It didn’t affect my work habits. I always kept my nose to the screenplay. Always working. And I have to say, that’s another issue about drugs, that it’s I think completely misunderstood. The cliche predominates. Like Oswald was on the sixth floor. You know, that’s a cliche.

GALLOWAY Yes.

STONE I don’t think like that. I’m outside that rea

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