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Interview with PJ SOLES who is standing to the right of HALLOWEEN co-star Nancy Loomis |
After Brian De Palma's CARRIE you worked on HALLOWEEN with director by John Carpenter... How does Carpenter’s directing style differ from Brian De Palma?
Brian
allowed as many adlibs as John but Brian was definitely in control, you
know. When we did go those three weekends to his house, I was just
amazed that his entire dining room, all four walls were covered with the
entire movie, in storyboard form, of CARRIE...
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PJ Soles with Nancy Allen with Cindy Daly behind them |
Every single shot had been
drawn, and penciled, by Brian... And I was just amazed. It was a “comic
book” of the entire movie. So it was very pre-planned, except for those
little incidents. One
scene comes to mind when he pulled me in…
When Amy Irving is hanging a
star in the gym, getting ready for the prom and Nancy and I are standing
there, and whispering, and she’s telling me she has a secret, and I’m
telling her, “Come on, tell me, I’m your best friend.” He gave us five
minutes to do that scene. He said, “We’re gonna break for lunch, but if
you can think of something to show that you guys are best friends, and
she knows something you don’t, then go for it.” And we shot that, and
got it in one take. I never thought he was going to keep that in because
it went so fast. It went “Whoosh” and yet, you know, he really didn’t
need to do that but he let us do it and it was fine.
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An iconic PJ Soles "final moments" in John Carpenter's HALLOWEEN |
John Carpenter on the other hand was very collaborative. He would talk
about your character. And “What did you want to do here?” And “We’re
thinking of this” and “Whatever you want to add.”
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HALLOWEEN's John Carpenter |
And, like in the
beginning, walking out of the schoolyard, there was no dialog there; it
was just directions in the script when they were walking out of the
school. But he wanted to put something. And when he got it, he would
say, “That was great” or, you know… He was very enthusiastic. But Brian
would kind of grin and smile and move on.
For
Brian it was the bigger element of how the scene was gonna look. The
cinematography of it and the effect of the scene, but not so much the
tiny, tiny little details even though he invited those. But for John I
think it was the little tiny details that made the thing the bigger
picture.
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CARRIE Director Brian De Palma |
So he really enjoyed the collaboration we were giving to him.
And we all felt like part of the team...
At the end of the shot we all had
to go out and pick up all the leaves because… there were no leaves…
And
they’re on the ground and we had two big garbage bags full. We all
picked up the leaves. And
it’s not like we could comment on other people’s scenes but you were
responsible for, in your own scenes, whatever you wanted to contribute.
John was very gracious and excepting more times than not. And he’d go
“That was great.” But you never got a “That was great” from Brian. You
just got a smile. And an, “Okay, let’s move on.”
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Jamie Lee Curtis, PJ Soles and Nancy Loomis in HALLOWEEN |
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