From Ninja To
Breakdancing Interview with Sam Firstenberg by Ian
Sam Firstenberg is one of the
most beloved B-movie directors of the eighties and nineties. His work with the
legendary production team of Golan-Globus for Cannon films resulted in some of
the finest b-movie action films of the decade and his work with action stars
such as Michael Dudikoff and David Bradley is just as fun and exciting today as
it was when it was made.
Sam was kind enough to take
some time out of his busy schedule to answer a few questions about his work,
his life, his background, and his career for us, and here are the results!
You were born in Poland and
soon immigrated to the USA where you went to school. Can you give us some brief
biographical/background information? What were your early years like in the
industry?
I
was born in Poland, but grew up in Jerusalem, and obtained my higher education
in Los Angeles, California where I now resides with my wife and three
daughters. In 1972, I worked my way up the ranks, starting as a stagehand
and production assistant and then as an assistant director. During this time I
completed my higher education, earning my B.A. and M.A. in Cinema, and at the
same time directing numerous shorts which eventually led to my first full
feature directorial debut. In the fall of 1979, I was working towards a
Master's degree in Film at Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles. Walking
down the hall during a break between classes, I spotted a fellow film student
dressed as he was, in typical Israeli garb - shorts and sandals. This was the
beginning of my partnership with David Womark, which would lead to the student
production of a full-length feature film, the first in the history of the film
school. With school facilities, equipment and classmate crew available to us,
and plenty of chutzpah and ingenuity, David and I convinced the faculty to let
them expand my half hour master's thesis into a full-length movie. Based on my
own script, I recruited then-unknown actors Kirstie Alley (of Cheers),
Johnny LaMotta (of Alf), and Michael Pataki.
Everyone volunteered their
time and the project took off. Now we had to somehow find money for developing
the negative. We took $15,000 in student loans, and deposited it in the bank as
credit against the cost of processing the negative. As soon as the lab checked
with the bank and gave us a line of credit, we withdrew the money for shooting
costs, and started depositing film in the lab. We figured out that if we didn't
pick up the negatives, we wouldn't be billed. Using this ploy, we shot without
looking at the dailies, depositing miles of film, until one day a call came
from the head of the lab's warehouse - "Either you come pick up this film
or I'm throwing it out!" We went down to the lab where we found seventy
cans of film and an angry manager who presented us with a bill for $30,000 and
a demand for the money. After he calmed down a bit, we explained the situation
to him, we convinced him that the only way we could pay the bill was for him to
release the work-print to us so we could edit it and find a producer to bail us
out. I think at some level he must have liked our chutzpah - at any rate, he
agreed!
At this point, after one
year of shooting weekends, and living on sandwiches and coffee, we had an
unfinished film on our hands and no way to continue. I turned to Menahem Golan,
an Israeli film producer who had just become the head of Cannon Films. Although
I had only worked as an assistant for him,
Golan was impressed with my
energy and ambitious drive, and seeing potential in what had been shot so far,
agreed to finance the rest of the movie.
In 1975 you worked a second
unit director on Diamonds, starring Robert Shaw and Richard
Roundtree and directed by Menahem Golan. How did you end up working with Cannon
Films and the Golan/Globus production team?
The association between myself and
Golan had started six years earlier, in December of 1973. As a twenty-three
year old film student at Los Angeles’ Columbia College, I met Golan at a New
Year's Eve party, suddenly found myself in the room with him, and during the
party I learned that he was about to embark on the production of Lepke.
I expressed my desire to be part of it, or more exactly, just to be around.
Learning that I was willing to work even without a salary, I was invited to
join the production the next day. For the next few years I worked for Golan and
Globus off and on as general “go for” office runner, second assistant director,
and finally my first AD job. AmeriEuro Pictures did not last long and they
moved back to Israel, but later in the 80’s, after purchasing Cannon, Golan and
Globus became the most successful, most famous independent producers in
Hollywood, defying the studio system. My career in the 80’s was connected to
the development of Cannon and its chief creative director, Menahem
Golan. The director of photography on Lepke was Andrew
Davis, (who has since become a director of such films as The Fugitive and
Under Siege) who encouraged me to move up to a position of
assistant director as a step towards directing. Golan was pleased with my
enthusiasm and dedication, and kept me on to work on future productions and
office chores. Working on films and studying at the same time, I earned my
Bachelor's degree in 1975, and I continued to work, now as an assistant
director, in fifteen pictures over five years.
Your first English language
feature as a director was One More Chance. This film remains
fairly obscure compared to your later, better known work. What can you tell us
about this movie?
While at Loyola I directed
my first full length feature film. It started as a twenty-five minute student
project and grew to become One More Chance starring Kirstie Alley
and John LaMotta. I wrote the script for the writing class first as a short,
then expanded it into a full length feature. It is a social drama about an ex
con just released from prison, trying to mend the broken relationship with his
son whom he has not seen for six years. The producer was David Womark, a fellow
student, and the entire crew consisted of inexperienced students caught up in
the fever of my enthusiasm. They showed up every weekend for the year and a
half it took to shoot the movie.
There was of course no
digital video in those days; we used 16mm film and edited on a flat bed. After
one and a half years most of the script was shot, but not all of it. We ran out
of money. We had used every penny we had, all the grant, loans, and private
funds had run out. We couldn’t buy any more film and we owed the lab several
thousand dollars. We came to a dead end.
With about an hour of edited
work print and a trailer, David and I started shopping around Hollywood’s
production and distribution companies seeking completion funds. We needed money
to pay the lab, to shoot another week,
and for post production, editing, sound, music and so forth. Every place we
went we encountered a brick wall – no one was interested in a small project
with not even one recognizable name actor and a straight drama, with no action,
no horror, and no sex. We faced the business side of movie making, a reality I
was not familiar with. It was harsh and bleak, and the future of “One More
Chance” was not promising.
The turning point came when
we walked into a meeting with Menahem Golan in the offices of Cannon Films.
Earlier that year Menahem Golan and Yoram Globus had purchased the New York
based ailing production company with its considerable library of sexploitation
movies. They moved the operation to Hollywood and started producing low budget
horror flicks. I had known the two heads of the company as I had worked for
them as an office runner and assistant director before they purchased Cannon.
By then, used to rejections from everywhere, we were surprised and elated when
we learned that upon viewing the material, Golan and Globus expressed a
willingness to finance completion of the production and thereafter to take it
for distribution.
With the financial burden lifted
we set off to produce the remaining third of the movie and start editing. The
operation moved from the university to the Cannon offices on Sunset Boulevard
in the heart of old Hollywood. The production was upgraded from student film to
semi-professional, with a budget, schedule, and more. We had money to rent
needed police cars, pay for locations, feed the cast and crew, and even get a
huge crane. A professional editor started cutting the material and after nearly
two years it was shaping up to look like a movie. There was one more hurdle we
had to overcome before reaching the end, and it caught us by surprise. Upon
viewing the first rough cut of One More Chance Golan and Globus
lost faith in our movie and decided to pull the plug which meant no more salary
for the editor and her assistant, and no more rented editing machine. I was not
ready to give up at that point when we were so close to finishing.
After some begging, it was
agreed that we could keep the office and editing machine if the editor would
agree to stay on and recut the movie without pay, which she did. A few weeks
later, after reshaping the film at a new screening, Golan saw a potential in
the new cut. We were sent to the MGM lot in Culver City to prepare the sound
while a young composer, looking for his break, wrote and recorded the score and
three songs. The film was mixed and color corrected at the MGM studio, and in
its film lab it was blown up from 16mm to 35mm. Everything was falling into
place; after all the hopes and hardships we were seeing the light at the end of
the tunnel. I was finally privileged to view the final print. This in itself
was a happy ending and quite an achievement for a novice young director, and to
top it off, I was working in a legitimate Hollywood major studio lot,
MGM.
In the meantime the Cannon
publicity department got working on the artwork and publicity materials. The
people involved believed that they had a sleeper in their hands and that is how
they conceived and presented it. It was 1981, and the heads of Cannon decided
to premier the movie at the Cannes Film Festival. They agreed to take the
producer and me with them to help promote it in France. I found myself in
Cannes that year doing screenings and interviews and then invited to bring the
movie to the Locarno Film Festival in Switzerland. The most exciting festival I
attended was the Chicago International Film Festival, where One More
Chance won the silver plaque.
Cannon sold it for
distribution to ten countries around the world but in the US it never opened
theatrically and home video was not a player at that time. So, since we did not
win any critical acclaim, the movie quietly slipped into oblivion and did not
become the sleeper as predicted. It would take some time before Kirstie Alley
would become a famous star and before I established a reputation as an action
director. Thus came the end of the first chapter of my directorial career. At
that point I did not even imagine the direction the career would take me.
That same year, Ninja-mania
hit the big time and after the success of Enter The Ninja, you directed Sho Kosugi in Revenge Of The Ninja and then Ninja III: The
Domination. What was it like working on these movies and working with
Sho Kosugi?
Completely
unexpectedly my next movie was to be the hard core action flick Revenge of the Ninja, a twist of fate that shaped my
future career. But before we go there, let me offer a few words about the
Cannon Film company, and its principals, Menahem Golan and Yoram Globus. As I
said, I met Menahem when I was a film student at Columbia College in Los
Angeles. By then Golan was the most famous and most prominent filmmaker in
Israel, a household name. Like every other Israeli, I had heard his name and
saw his Hebrew speaking movies, but I had never met him before. He had just
arrived in Hollywood with his partner and cousin, Globus, to produce and direct
his first American movie, Lepke with Tony Curtis under the banner
of AmeriEuro Pictures.
While I was busy editing One
More Chance Golan got involved as a producer and director of the first
of a new breed of action movies. It was Enter the Ninja the first martial arts movie to
introduce the Ninja phenomena to western viewers. The idea to make a western
style Ninja movie was presented to Golan by Mike Stone, a prominent American
karate champion and formerly Elvis Presley’s personal trainer. Golan got
excited and committed to produce the movie in the Philippines. Mike was the
choreographer of the fight sequences and Franco Nero the star, with newcomer
Japanese champion Sho Kosugi as the bad ninja.
The completed movie enjoyed
a moderate success in the international and US markets so Golan decided to
produce a sequel entitled Revenge of the Ninja this time with the impressive
fighter Sho Kosugi as the star. Just at this time I had finished One More
Chance, and I was done with the festivals and with school. I received
the Masters degree in film and did not know what would happen next. The movie
did not get a theatrical release nor TV sale, and back then these were the only
two venues for showing a movie – home video and cable TV had not yet arrived. I
did not have the slightest idea how Hollywood operates nor how one gets a
directorial assignment, nor did I know what should my next move be. I decided
to invest my time in writing another script, The Bus Ride hoping
that once it was written I would be able to convince someone to produce it and
let me direct it. It was 1981 and after a few months of writing with no clear
view of the future I got a phone call to come and see Golan. At the same time
Golan had commissioned writer James R. Silke to write a script for Revenge of the Ninja.
The script was ready and
Golan decided not to direct it himself but rather, to hire someone else to
direct, and the someone else would be me. Golan was willing to take a chance on
me. He knew I could put a movie together; I had proven that I could construct a
scene, shoot, and edit logically. The big question was whether I could handle
action, could I tackle a fight sequence or a chase. Clearly I did not have
experience in these areas, but when he asked if I could do it, with utmost
confidence I gave a positive yes. I knew I was not going to let this once in a
lifetime opportunity slip away. Apparently my self confidence assured them so
the next question was what kind of salary I would demand. I told Golan to pay
me whatever he saw fit and so the deal was made and I was given the script and
asked to start pre-production immediately, with David Womark as line
producer.
I was ecstatic, after all the
years of school and working as an AD, I finally had a real directing job in a
full fledged Hollywood production. A long time dream had come true. Not only
was I going to do what I love, someone was going to pay me to do it.
So here I was, ready to
tackle the challenge of my first big action flick. I was handed the script and
introduced to Sho Kosugi, the tallest Japanese person I had ever met. Sho was
the spirit behind the project, an accomplished martial arts fighter and Ninjitsu
expert who had come a few years earlier to Los Angeles with Hollywood on his
mind. Although I was familiar with Japanese samurai movies - I love the films
of Akira Kurosawa, I knew very little of the Hong Kong Kung Fu genre and
nothing about Ninjitsu. Sho introduced me to both martial arts and Ninjitsu. We
bought a few books and together watched many Chinese movies, without subtitles
in theaters full of Chinese speaking audience members. Trying to digest all the
information as fast as I could, I started to work on the script and construct a
story board. Sho was working with the writer, Jim Silke, and me. He was the
Ninjitsu advisor and in this capacity he made sure that every known Ninja
weapon and every Ninja fighting trick, method, custom, ceremony, and
accessories, would be included in the script.
It was exciting and I
understood it was important to the success of the movie, but my first decision
right away was not to follow in the steps of the Hong Kong flicks, but rather
to approach the movie as a straight Hollywood action movie with a martial arts
slant, and the Ninjitsu mysticism the icing on the cake. As the script was
evolving, I realized that the major part of my work would be devoted to filming
action sequences, major martial arts fights, non martial arts fights, smaller
action and physical scenes, acrobatics, pyrotechnics, foot chases, vehicle
chases, stunts, and special effects. Aside from starring in the movie, Sho was
also the fight choreographer. He was already busy creating the major fight
sequences with his students and rehearsing them. I needed a stunt coordinator,
a stuntman to stage and execute both simple and sophisticated stunts. I met
Steve Lambert, a young stuntman looking for a chance to coordinate his first
action feature. It turned out to be a very fruitful pairing with Steve, since
we went on to make not only this but many more movies in the later years. I
asked him to read the script and come back to me with more ideas, to enhance
the action.
The story of Enter the Ninja took place in the Philippines – this
time around Golan wanted a story that takes place in America. The script was
urban American, taking place in a city revolving in large part in between two
tall buildings. I urged the producers not to send us to the Philippines since
we would never be able to create a credible and believable American environment
out there. They were convinced, and we started location scouting in Los
Angeles. Besides the two tall buildings we also needed a Japanese temple and a
few other typical urban sites. We soon found out that Los Angeles came with a
price. City permits, mandatory police officers, fire marshals, location fees,
parking, and a long list of other expenses grew. At the same time, the Utah
Film Commission was trying to get Cannon Films to bring some productions to
their state. A representative promised that there would be no permits
necessary, no location fees, and no unions to deal with. The local crew works
for lower salaries, and the state film commission help to smooth out all
production wrinkles, Cannon was eager to try it out. So Sho, David, and me were
sent to Salt Lake City to find locations.
The capital of the Mormons
seemed like a very conservative and puritan place for us to bring our R rated
script full of nudity and violence. We were sure that after reading the script
the state film commission would reject the project but to our surprise they not
only asked us to bring it, they also assured us that as long as we were not
filming porno, we could do whatever we wanted. The city had all the locations
we needed, including two adjacent tall buildings and a Japanese temple. We went
to Utah with skepticism but the trip was
a success. The two tall buildings had just finished construction and were not
yet occupied, a location manager’s dream. We would not have to deal with issues
of tenants, noise restrictions, working hours, electric wires, and so on. We
agreed that if the city could deliver permission to use the buildings for free,
we would bring the production to Salt Lake City. They came through and we moved
it, using mostly local talent aside from some key positions and key cast
members. Virgil Frye was cast to play the police chief, Arthur Roberts to play
the bad ninja and Mario Gallo as the head of the local Mafia. The storyboard
was advancing with great ideas contributed by Steve and Sho, and we all moved
to Utah.
The two buildings were
secured and we found an empty supermarket in the center of downtown that the
art department turned into our warehouse and shooting stage. We started the
task of filling cast and crew positions with local artists and technicians, as
well as scouting for all the locations. The cinematographer, David Gurfinkle,
came on board, along with special effects make-up artist Moni Monsano and stunt
coordinator Steve Lambert. We hired an expert weapons maker, who specialized in
martial arts tools, to make duplicate weapons out of plastic, wood and aluminum
for the fight scenes. The rest of the crew came from the local pool of
technicians and production people. For several years there had been a
television show, Grizzly Adams that had been produced in Utah – a
few months before our production arrived the show was discontinued, so the
local crew that had been working on that show was available and we were
fortunate to have an experienced and talented group to work with.
Meantime, casting was also
going on. The co-star of Grizzly Adams, Don Shank, happened to
also be an accomplished stunt man so he was cast as one of the thugs as well as
help out as stunt coordinator assistant and stunt double. Only one glitch
occurred during that period. The actress cast to play the lead was not able to
come from Los Angeles to Utah and we were forced to cast the part locally.
Unfortunately the pool of actresses in Utah is considerably smaller than the
choices in Los Angeles, and our top choice was a local model, Ashley Ferrari. I
called Golan to inform him of our decision and to let him know that her acting
abilities left a lot to be desired. “Never mind her acting,” he replied, “how
is her body?” As a model she was clearly well built, although, as I told him,
“Her breasts are clearly inflated with foreign substances.” All he wanted to know
was whether she would be considered sexy on the screen, and when I said that I
thought she probably would, he replied “Then she is hired.” So Ashley was cast,
and eventually did a pretty good job with the part.
The first day of shooting
was a street scene. A thug arrives in a limousine to a city square, to get
information from a local informer. The first shot was of the limo arriving,
stopping by the curb, and the actor getting out. I was determined to impress
and surprise the crew, so after setting up the shot, which involved a complex
dolly move on a mounted crane, I took the cinematographer aside and asked him
to cooperate with me and get the shot in the first take. It is standard
practice to shoot a few takes of a complex shot just in case something goes
wrong with any of the takes. But we rehearsed the limo, dolly, and crane
movements a few times, and then started. Without anyone knowing my intention,
we rolled sound, turned on the camera, and I shouted “Action!” The driver got
the signal and started toward the curb. I hoped he would not miss the mark and
he came through, hitting the spot right on.
The door opened, the actor
emerged, the dolly grip pulled back, the crane operator lifted the camera, and
the focus puller followed the actor as he moved to the fountain the in square
to meet the informer, just as we had rehearsed. I shouted “Cut!” and looked
over at David the cinematographer, who gave me an approving wink, meaning it
came out perfectly. So keeping the act going, I didn’t ask him if the shot was
right, and instead very confidently turned to the script supervisor and said
“Print.” This means that she circles the take in her camera report to be
printed; to save money, only good takes are printed. Then, with further
confidence, I declared “Next” which means we would be moving to the next set
up. I moved to the next place in the square without even looking back. The cast
and crew were indeed shocked. They turned to one another with puzzled looks,
probably thinking I was crazy. They later learned that this was well lanned,
and that I am actually very conservative and cautious when it comes to coverage
and takes.
Because
of the vast number of action sequences, and because I believe in lavish
coverage which means shooting the action from various angles to give the editor
variety to create fast and visually exciting sequences, I developed the
following method of shooting. The production had three cameras with three
camera teams at all times. The main unit had the cinematographer with a full
crew; the second unit team had a second cinematographer with a minimal basic
crew; and the third camera had an operator with an assistant. Every time we
started a new action sequence all three camera crews would be standing
together.
While
I was staging the scene with the fight choreographer (Sho Kosugi), the stunt
coordinator (Steve Lambert), and the special effects coordinator (Joe
Quinleven), the three units were watching us. By the time we were ready to
shoot the sequence segments I would have a comprehensive shot list ready,
consisting of all the individual shots needed in my view to transform the
action performed on the set to the screen. The individual shots are the
elements or building blocks used in the editing process to create the illusion
of continuous, flowing action. In consultation with the cinematographer I
placed the three cameras in key positions to capture the action in three unique
ways. In certain cases, when the action was very involved and included
dangerous and costly pyrotechnics, or when the action could only be executed
once (like a major crash or explosion that destroys a structure) we used up to
five cameras. Once we successfully shot the segment I would cross the shots we
had achieved off my list. Typically, we covered the wide shots first, and once
those were completed were then covered the lead actors with medium shots and
close ups. As we go through my list, I delete or add shots that I think will be
needed to enhance the segment. Once a particular segment is complete, we move on
to the next segment and do the same thing until we finish the entire sequence
or scene. This could take between one and three days, depending on the length
and complexity of the scene.
Once
the whole sequence is complete, I would move on with the main unit to the next
set to shoot a non-action scene while the second and third unit cameras stay
behind with the stunt coordinator, fight choreographer, stunt doubles, and
special effects, to finish the rest of my shot list. Usually these would
consist of “tight’ shots of individual pieces of action without the lead
actors. If the two sets were not far from each other I would hop to the second
set whenever I had a spare moment to check on their progress and if needed,
direct certain shots so that they would fit perfectly in the editing process
with the scene they belonged to. Every night after work I would watch dailies.
This was all the material that had been shot the day before and developed in
the lab. I checked every shot from the first and second unit against my list,
crossing off the ones that were done and adding to the list of what was yet to
be shot or had to be shot again.
After the main unit had shot
a few dramatic scenes and the second unit finished my shot list for the action
sequence, we would all meet again to start the process all over again on a new
action scene. This process continued in cycles until we finished shooting the
entire script. Usually, after all the actors had finished their work, I would
stay on location a few more days with a small unit to clean up the list of left
over shots – we would supplement inserts, drive bys, establishing shots,
etc.
On Revenge of the Ninja we shot for eight weeks (48 days).
Some of the action sequences were very involved and demanded many days to
complete. It took two weeks, with all three units, to execute the final fight
scene between Sho Kosugi and the “bad” ninja on the rooftop of one of the
towers. The scene contains many effects, pyrotechnics, and mechanical rigging.
There were many safety considerations to cover the sword fighting choreography,
elaborate camera positioning, including hanging 20 stories high outside the
building, and even shots from a helicopter, to create the excitement and
tension that resulted in the final shot of the movie.
The ninja movies, like many
of the Cannon films of the day, were made fast and on a reasonably low budget.
Did this sometimes hamper what you wanted to do creatively on any given film you
worked on?
The Cannon movies were not very
low budget, and the
schedule was usually eight or nine weeks. There were always two units sometimes
even three and a week of additional photography after rough cut editing. The
budgets were two to three million at the time so it was not mega budget, but it
was not bad at all.
The popularity of the Ninja continued and you made Michael Dudikoff a household
name for a while with American Ninja. This film was hugely successful and
inspired four sequels, only one of which (American Ninja 2: The
Confrontation) you directed. How do you feel about this film, twenty
years later? What did you think of the sequels?
American Ninja was a great fun: well balanced movie
with good main plot some mystery, good secondary plot, nice romantic story,
great back story, a handsome innocent hero and a terrific sidekick. But best of
all lots of exciting action beautifully choreographed and executed in an exotic
location. The first sequel was not bad and was well received but the rest did
not keep the promise.
Any memories of working with
the late, great Steve James?
Great human being with a big heart, very discipline hard
working actor and martial artist and tons of fun to have around.
Michael Dudikoff appears to
have retired from acting after 2002’s Quicksand, which you also directed – do you
have any information on why he chose to do this after a fairly long and
successful career? How was your relationship with the American Ninja himself?
I don’t know why he left but
our friendship was excellent!
You teamed up with Steve
James and Michael Dudikoff one more time for ninja-less Avenging Force,
where the two titans of action moviedom team up to take on a racist group. Was
there a political message to the film underneath all the shoot outs and
explosions or was this simply a convenient plot device?
The script for Avenging
Force was written by James Booth It was so good that I did not do any
changes to it. If there is a message in there, it is his.
In between ninja films, you
found time to direct Breakin’ 2: Electric Boogaloo. This time
capsule of the eighties remains popular to this day and the title has kind of
been absorbed into pop culture. How did directing a break dancing movie differ
from the over the top action movies you’re best known for?
Directing action and directing dancing
are similar
except that in action films I maintain harsh filming and in
a musical I can create a lighter atmosphere.
You returned to feature
filmmaking and Cannon again in 1991 with Delta Force 3. This was the first film in the
Delta Force series not featuring Chuck Norris in a lead role. Is it true that
Chuck decided to opt out of the film because of the death of a stuntman on the
set of the second film?
The Delta Force 3 deal was done before I was invited
to direct the movie so I don’t know the answer.
American Samurai was the first of a few films that
you made with David Bradley. How was Bradley to work with compared to Dudikoff,
and what was it like working with Mark Dacascos in one of his first feature
film roles?
Bradley
and Dacascos are trained martial artists, Michael Dudikoff was not. He was very
athletic and learned the martial art choreography moves very quickly. Bradley
was more involved in the fight choreography and staging.
In 1999 you directed Motel
Blue, starring Soleil Moon Frye and Sean Young. What was it like
directing a thriller rather than an out and out action movie?
I enjoyed if very much the challenge is different. Less excitement and
more suspense to create.
Which movie of your films do
you consider your personal favorite and more importantly, why?
I
like Breakin' 2: Electric
Boogaloo because
it is full of fun has a positive attitude and is full of electrifying energy.
Also American Ninja, which has a special
quality of innocent, true friendship,
love and youthful idealism.
In hindsight, how do you
feel about some of the stereotypes in the Cannon films and how do you feel
about some of the over the top violence that was in so many of your movies?
I
did not intended the Cannon movies to be serious,
they are fun movies. So the stereotyping and the over the top action is
intentional so action fans can just watch and enjoy and have good time.
Who are your favorite
directors and which directors had the biggest influence on your career?
I
would say John Ford and Akira Kurosawa. I have always been attracted to
mainstream American cinema - the type of movies made by Hitchcock, John Ford,
and Akira Kurosawa. I see my responsibility as a storyteller, using cinematic
means rather than lengthy dialogue. I like fast paced attention grabbers and
dramatic, exciting stories
What is you opinion on the
status of the b-movie/action industry of today? Does you think it will ever get
back to the glory days of the 80s or is
this era gone forever, lost in a void of political correctness?
After
the eighties the studios have discovered that genera of the b action and
adapted them to big budget, that development killed the low budget Bs which can
not compete with the big boys.
A lot of the Cannon films
that you worked on in the eighties are no becoming regarded as cult classics in
a sense. How do you feel about the way that some of your films are remembered
now, twenty years after they were made?
It is a good feeling, I receive a lot
of
emails from fans and request for interviews just like yours. So it is good to
know that we did something right and millions of movie fans are still enjoying
these movies, even today.
What current film projects
are you working on and what can we look forward to seeing from you in the
future?
I am constantly
looking to direct more movies that will bring joy to viewers like yourself, so
what the future will bring? We will just have to wait and see.
And that concludes our talk
with Sam. Thanks again to the kind Mr. Firstenberg for taking the time to talk
with us, and special thanks to DVD Maniacs own Swedish Joe for his help with
questions suggestions and his encouragement. All pictures were supplied by Sam
Firstenberg and his answers to these questions remain his property. This
content is used here with his permission.
http://www.dvdmaniacs.net/features/interview_sam_firstenberg.html