Splicetoday

Pop Culture
Mar 29, 2013, 07:52AM

It's Full of Executives

A 2010 Vice interview with director Terry Gilliam vs. a 1974 Paris Review interview with late novelist Joseph Heller.

Screen shot 2013 03 29 at 11.51.07 am.png?ixlib=rails 2.1

Matthew 70

Terry Gilliam: The last proper job I had was on the assembly line at the Chevrolet plant in Sacramento Valley on the night shift when I was working my way through college.

Joseph Heller: Some writers invest in Canadian uranium stocks; others change agents or wives or commit suicide.

Gilliam: But to me that's liberating. It's not the same as reading a book.

Heller: Every once in a while I can identify an audience.

Gilliam: It's full of executives.

Heller: That's not enough.

Gilliam: I know. And so many people have walked out of screenings of this movie saying things like, “I’m still tripping.”

Heller: They come to me in the course of a sort of controlled daydream, a directed reverie.

Gilliam: They were abstract and beautiful and they make your brain spin a bit.

Heller: I couldn't take my mind past a certain point.

Gilliam: Yeah. Things are less surprising.

Heller: It overcomes those noises that might distract me—a leaking faucet, my daughter’s rock music in the other part of the apartment, or someone else’s radio across the courtyard.

Gilliam: Rather than fighting it, I just go with it.

Heller: You can't have it both ways.

Gilliam: But none of it made any difference to me. I went up and knocked on the door of his suite, and it wasn’t Harvey in there, but Willie Elder and Al Jaffee and Arnold Roth.

Heller: I think about that as I walk the dog or walk the twenty minutes from my apartment to the studio where I work.

Discussion

Register or Login to leave a comment