+ Mulholland Drive review
"Kill your television"
Justin Theroux wears all black. Black jeans, black
t-shirt, black leather jacket, heavily black-rimmed
glasses. He smokes cigarettes he rolls himself. He's
sort of hipster-punk, exponentially cool and more than
a little wary of the business he's in. All this makes
sense, if you know that he came up in and around
Washington DC's punk scene, listening to Black Flag,
Minor Threat, and Fugazi. Nowadays, the Bennington
College graduate is a New York-based actor, probably
best known for his work on CBS's The District,
but more inclined to talk about his other work, on
stage in NYC and in films, for example, Mary Harron's
I Shot Andy Warhol and American Psycho.
Theroux isn't eager to be a movie star, and so he
picks parts that appease his restless sense of art,
for instance, his latest, in David Lynch's
Mulholland Drive. As Adam, the film director
within the film, Theroux plays essentially two roles,
the first a hapless victim of Lynchian circumstances,
the second a skuzzy Hollywood player, sleeping with
his leading lady, Rita (Laura Elena Harring), egged on
by his insider mom, Coco (the alarming Ann Miller),
and resented by his girlfriend's girlfriend, Betty
(Naomi Watts). Though Adam has some of the stranger
scenes in the film (see especially, his encounter with
The Cowboy), it is focused on and through the women's
perspectives. And that's where Theroux and I started.
PopMatters: What's your take on Lynch's "women
characters"?
Justin Theroux: I know he gets flack for the way he
portrays women, but if anything, I think he puts them
on pedestals. He loves women. I think he's of the
school of say, a Fellini, in that he realizes that he
is male and has a strong libido, and so he's exploring
that. It's all done very respectfully, and in
the case of this movie, it's two women who love each
other. He's very disappointed at the fact that it's
getting all this "hot lesbo" press, because that's a
really boring way to think about the film. I mean, the
number of times I've been asked, "Hey, were you on set
for the girl on girl action?" For chrissakes, it's so
boring.
PM: That might play the other way too. The second time
I saw Mulholland Drive, was with a queer film
festival audience, who seemed to appreciate the strong
characters and at the same time, the camp aspects of
the film.
JT: I think that people have gotten over themselves
since the Basic Instinct days, especially in
the gay community, as far as being oversensitive not
sensitive: there's room for everything at this point.
To me, this is a tragic love story, between one
character who's very powerless and another who's very
powerful. I think it's an interesting set-up, whether
it's male-female, two women, or two men.
PM: These two women seem especially aware of their
embodiedness, their own relations to their bodies and
the ways they are perceived as bodies.
JT: Exactly. And Lynch gets flack for having these
dolled-up, red-lipsticked women, but if you look at
his films carefully, you see that they're not just
that. They're sweater girls, big fat girls, Laura
Dern, a whole gamut of women in his movies. Same
again, as Fellini, the mothers, prostitutes, and nuns,
a whole spectrum.
PM: How did this movie happen for you?
JT: I'm not a big Lynch-head, and my house isn't
covered with Lynchiana. But I obviously was a fan, and
so I was excited. But it was a circuitous route to get
the job. I had to be put on tape in New York just sort
of answering questions, like "Where'd you go to
school?" "What do you read?" General interest, boring
questions. Then they sent him that tape and months
went by. And I almost didn't even make that tape,
because I thought, they're looking for a personality,
you don't even audition. Then I got this call to go to
LA, the next day, to meet him at his house. And I
thought, well, if nothing else, I'll get to meet David
Lynch. We had coffee, and it was the most wonderful
meeting, because there was no one else, no casting
directors, no other actors, just literally, coffee
with David Lynch. We didn't even talk about the film,
but about his painting, because I used to be a painter
in college (I was a double major in drama and visual
art). He showed me his photographs, and then he gave
me the job. It was completely stress-free.
PM: And at that point had you read the script?
JT: Yes, I had read it on the plane going out. Knowing
his canon, I wasn't fearful about how it would turn
out. I knew it would be something wonderful. His
scripts themselves are kind of flat, they don't leap
off the page. What he does is sound, tempo, color,
that's where it fills in. And after I had the job, I
got to ask all the questions I wanted to ask, which he
just didn't answer. And I like that about him: it's
your job to figure it out. I thought, as an actor,
that you'd be let into that door, where he'd help you
figure something out, but no. He actually does the
actor a tremendous service, because in life, we don't
know what's going to happen or how you might react to
something. In a perfect world, David would probably
not even let us read the scripts ahead of time. He'd
just give us the scenes that day. All the intellectual
aspect of making a film is stripped away. I mean,
he'll answer questions that seem really pertinent when
you're shooting, but for questions like "Who is The
Cowboy?" or "Is Adam making a good film?" , he won't
necessarily answer those. It's all whittled down to
sort of Acting 101: just be in the scene, play the
emotion, and react to what's being said. If he had
been a first time director I might have been a little
skeptical, but again, there's nothing courageous on my
part about being in this film. I imagine that for the
guy in Eraserhead [Jack Nance], that was a
courageous performance because he didn't who the hell
David Lynch was!
PM: There's a perpetual sliding in Lynch's films,
between male and female characters and
characteristics. Here that takes a structural form,
because at first, it looks like it might be Adam's
story.
JT: Right, and it ends up being the women's film, and
more specifically, Betty's film, from her perspective.
And, it takes this turn at the end that leaves
everything leading up to that, which is the majority
of my work, in question. So it's not just David
projecting his ideas on what Hollywood is, it's really
David projecting through this girl, her ideas of
Hollywood, the City of Dreams. There's a communion
back and forth between the audience, David, the
characters. It's a never-ending rotation of moods and
impressions.
PM: Do you have a different process as you work inside
that than for a straight-ahead narrative?
JT: I think actors protect themselves, especially when
they're working with bad directors. They want to have
as much control over their performance as possible, to
clearly express certain things, because they're not
sure what's going to happen in the editing. With
David, you trust him so implicitly, that all that can
kind of fall away. And you can just trust that
whatever he edits in or out is going to be valuable.
So it was a totally different way of working. It was
like working with a painter, or just an artist,
because at the end of the day, that sort of what he
is, an auteur, a composer. Most directors are
technicians, they come from the world of music videos
or car commercials, or the stage. So they're good at
getting the right angles and finishing on time, which
can be frustrating. Whereas David really takes his
time and doesn't let any of the technical end infect
the creative part. He's on such a one-to-one basis
with everybody on the set, there's no pecking order,
none of this big trailer, small trailer, or "You're
the prop guy," and "You're the PA," or "You bring my
coffee." Everyone is on the same footing, and he tunes
everyone into that frequency. He's an incredibly calm
presence, and is able to focus people, as to what
we're all doing together, to the point where the film
almost makes itself. It really is an amazing process.
It's almost like, when you do see the film, you're
impressed, that you were part of making it. And it
doesn't really ring true to what was on set, you know,
you see and think, "That's really dark!"
PM: But it doesn't seem particular to Hollywood, the
darkness in this film.
JT: David doesn't have an axe to grind. He's a very
Zen guy, he meditates a lot, he's very in touch with
who David is. So what he's really exploiting , I
think, with all the aspects of his films -- violence,
love, compassion, lust -- are things that take place
in his subconscious. When he writes, he dictates into
a recorder. He tries to clear his mind and catch
ideas, that's how he puts it. Like, "I'm a fisherman
and I put a net into the water, and I pull it.
Sometimes there's fish and sometimes there's nothing."
He really is kind of culling his subconscious. His
films move like dreams. There's a logic to dreams that
doesn't necessarily follow linear narrative. You don't
know why things happen, it's your subconscious pushing
you, to give you information. David's films, like
dreams, do tell you something with incredibly powerful
imagery. Mulholland Drive in particular, is
this woman's take on Hollywood, and the way in which
Hollywood moves her around and the way she moves
Hollywood around. And at the same time, there are
scenes you could call non-sequiturs or Maguffins, if
you're sort of being cynical: what is the blue box,
who is the woman in the veil? But these are just
symbols that your subconscious gives you all the time
-- not these particular symbols, but the general sense
of symbols. Although they don't necessarily add to the
narrative content, they do add to the tonal content of
a dream life.
PM: His films and the performances in them also seem
very economical.
JT: That's true. In terms of just practical direction,
he's very simple. He won't create massive back story
and doesn't want you to do it either. He's more like,
"In this scene, your film is being taken away from
you, and you'd be really angry." Or you can get even
simpler: "David, on a scale of 1 to 10, how angry am
I?" And he'll think for a minute and say, "You're 8
and a half, maybe 9." Which is perfect, if I'm
thinking, "Who is the Cowboy?" the scene isn't going
to play.
PM: Not everyone would feel fine with that kind of
minimalism. How did you come to this sense of
yourself, as an actor?
JT: Well, I grew up in DC, was tossed out of several
schools, and then I found this great sort of liberal
arts boarding school in Williamstown, Massachusetts, a
chop-wood, carry-water kind of environment, a
wonderful socialist environment, where the students
made the meals and cut the grass. And then I went to
Bennington and studied drama and visual arts.
PM: Did you know early that you wanted to act?
JT: No, I sort of did my first sort of
professional-ish job in Washington, a play, when I was
about 14, and then at this high school in
Williamstown, we did a lot of plays and toured with
them. Great plays, not Lil Abner type shows,
but Gogol and Rhinocerous, pretty highbrow.
We'd take them to Washington and to Mexico City. And I
was interested in painting, so in college I decided to
pursue both. Then when I got to New York, I thought, I
have two very useless talents, I'll see which one
sticks. And actually, painting was paying the bills
first. I was doing murals and billboards. Then I got a
job in a play and that started taking over my life.
PM: I have to ask you at least one question about
The District, which, on its face, seemed like a
really bad idea when it first aired. And while I still
have doubts, I have to say, when you started sleeping
with Ensign Ro [Michelle Forbes], the show took a turn
for me.
JT: [laughs] Well, I've been released from my
contract, but in a good way. It was mutual . I'm doing
six episodes this year. It's fun to work at that pace,
in tv, but it's frustrating, because there's a glass
ceiling as to how creative it can be. So quality-wise,
it suffers a lot. It has to do with where my interests
lie. I'd much rather be doing a good play for $300 a
week than episode television for a bazillion dollars a
week. I did it, I made some money last year, and the
show's good, but it meant uprooting from New York and
going to Los Angeles, and they didn't really know what
to do with my character. So I was sort of standing in
scenes holding cups of coffee, saying, "I can't spin
this," or, "You may not want to hear this, Chief," and
I sort of became high-paid furniture. So I think it's
better that they have me on an episode by episode
basis, because then when they do use me, I'm used in a
way that's more meaningful.
PM: So it sounds like you're not looking for the next
Jim Cameron movie?
JT: It's such a tightrope that you walk, as an actor,
because you have no choices, until you are Jim Carrey
or someone like that. Even then, when you're at a
certain height, the fall can be even greater, so you
start choosing really safe projects. It's just
because, film is an expensive medium. So I'm getting
by right now on a lot of faith, thinking, okay, I'll
be all right, hoping that something will always
materialize.
PM: It also seems like there are options that aren't
mainstream, on cable or wherever.
JT: And that's just beginning to be cracked, there's
more room to grow there, as the medium hopefully will
become less and less dependent on commercial breaks,
and more on subscriptions. Which would mean less money
for actors and producers, but at the same time,
quality can skyrocket. It's a terrible thing -- I'm
pointing out the obvious, but -- when soda companies
determine content.
PM: How can you tell when you look at something that
you want to do it? I mean, with Lynch, you see his
name and you sign up.
JT: Right, because he always has control over his
material, you know there's quality control. But 99.9
percent of the time, the script is nothing to go by,
because it's all subject to change, and will change.
You do one week on The District and get seven
drafts of the script before you shoot. It's
mind-boggling, the things you can and cannot do. We
had one line that was about Starbucks, that you
couldn't say, and I had a line where I was supposed to
say "NRA," and I couldn't say "NRA," and it wasn't
clear if it was going to piss them off or make them
happy or piss off anti-gun people. I don't know what
it was. But anything that might alienate anyone
is removed from the script. And you can't really make
good art without alienating people. Any strong or good
or worthwhile art movement alienates people first, and
then sort of includes them. People have gag reflexes
first, they're resistant to change, especially when it
comes to art.
PM: And that raises the next question, what does it
mean to "sell out"? Is there an identifiable line that
you cross?
JT: I grew up in the punk scene in DC, which was a
pro-active movement. It was fun and you felt like you
were being edgy and you were sort of weird --
this was when Mohawks and piercings were sort of the
norm, you know. But eventually, they get found out,
these good things, by corporations, by MTV. I remember
when I used to go over the water, from DC to Virginia,
and the kids would change. There would be mullets and
Iron Maiden t-shirts, just a 20-minute walk over the
bridge could completely alter the environment. Now,
when I go around, in airports and malls or on the
streets, it's all completely the same. The
corporations have figured out a way to link them all,
make them all want the same thing, but still think
that there's choice. We used to take great pleasure in
taking our white t-shirts and a big magic marker and
writing "Dead Kennedys" or whatever on them, then
putting them on and marching down the street and
pissing people off. And if someone had actually gone
out and bought a Dead Kennedys t-shirt, it would have
been heretical. Now, kids look at that and say, "How
could you make a shirt? It looks like shit." So now,
kids have these $45 shirts, and my mom bought it for
me. So there's a difference. Even the alternative kids
love a brand new pair of Nikes. It's unfortunate:
unless you hit your television with a sledgehammer,
you're not going to be able to be an individual.
PM: Do you think it'll swing back at any point?
JT: All the stuff with the WTO, the kids in Seattle
throwing a bricks through Starbucks windows -- I see
it as a good thing. It's saying, like "Fuck you." As
long as no one's killing one another, I don't think
there's nothing wrong with throwing a brick through
the window of McDonalds. Obviously, it's against the
law and you go to court, if you get caught, but at the
same time, I'm sort of inspired when I see people
thinking like that. Obviously you don't want them to
be hyper-violent, but any time you can bite at the
ankles of people who are dictating your lives… You
need to be reminded. It happens to me. I live near
SoHo, and when you walk around, you're advertised to a
thousand times a day. And now -- you might not know
this -- but they're advertising on the urinals in
men's rooms in New York. It's the thing you piss on,
saying, like, "Piss on me, but buy me!" They're
willing to literally be defecated on in order to sell
a product.
PM: And of course, the kids who protest the WTO know
how it works too -- they get themselves on tv.
JT: Yeah, they know! Really the only way to do it is
to have, in essence, a publicist. And that means
you're reduced to a sound-bite. I remember at one of
the conventions at the Staples Center in LA, they had
a "riot area" -- like they say, "You guys can riot
there," and they bring the cameras over and say, "See,
there's the rioters." It's Brechtian. You've got to
put on a show, to make people believe that they're
"the best." It's all choreographed. That's why I say,
kill your television, because you can't not be
influenced. No one has a powerful enough mind. When
you watch tv, you're on that ride. It becomes more
real than reality. I think that's why the World Trade
Center bombing upset people, because there were six
different camera angles of the plane hitting the
building, and within a day, they had theme music to
it. And then they shelved the Schwarzenegger movie,
right away. You know, I'm not a fan of shelving movies
-- I mean, I'm a fan of shelving that movie --
but I'm not a fan of shelving movies that have that
content. So what? I think we need to tell stories that
reflect our world. It's the old story of Michelangelo
meeting the Pope, who was upset at the images of
"Hell," and Michelangelo said, "My job is to paint the
world, yours is to change it." We can be reflective in
movies and television, but we can't be irresponsible.
PM: So, there is a function for what you do.
JT: Yes, I take it seriously. I don't take it
over-seriously. It's not going to feed starving
nations or quell riots, but I do take it seriously
when I choose roles. Obviously I've made decisions
that could be considered "sell out" decisions, to do
television, and those are things that I didn't think I
would ever do when I was graduating college. It came
down to: do I eat or do I not? But more and more, I'm
starting to think, "No, just don't eat." If a role
doesn't come along, generate something for yourself
that doesn't just feed into the rest of the system.
I've been fortunate to be part of movies that I'm
proud of, like Mary Harron's movies: I did two already
and I'm in her next one. I've done numerous plays that
I think are important. So I don't feel like I've
completely compromised, though, I've contributed to
selling numerous products that I don't necessarily
subscribe to. I've sold cheeseburgers. But it's a
question of how bad a sell out you are; there are
degrees. It's the system we have, capitalism.