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The Cult of
Bruce: Hail to The King Baby, X-E's
Exclusive Interview with Bruce Campbell
Robert Berry 09-03-01 |
Bruce
Campbell is one of those actors who's impossible to hate. When
you look at his trademark chiseled jaw, it's hard to wonder
why the folks at Warner Brothers never cast the guy as Batman.
Through The Evil Dead films, The Adventures of
Brisco County Jr., and numerous appearances in other
movies, Campbell's quirky cool personality makes you wonder if
he was genetically engineered with the DNA of Elvis, The Three
Stooges, and Clint Eastwood. Whatever it is that makes him go,
he's worshipped by a rabid Cult of Bruce that have elevated
him to levels of cool that perhaps only Christopher Walken can
match.
I was able to share time with Bruce at a recent
book signing and screening of The Evil Dead 2. As the
final showcase of the First Annual Trash Film Orgy at Sacramento's
famous Crest
Theater, the event drew over a thousand fans and sold the
place out hours before show time. With the die-hard fans
waiting hours to sit with Bruce for a minute, get some
autographs, and have a few pictures snapped, it was easy to
see that people love the hell out of this guy.
I've
been to plenty of celebrity autograph signings where they herd
you through like zombie cattle, and the guy barely looks up at
you after scribbling their name in a jiffy. Not so with
Campbell. He took time to ask questions to the fans, permitted
a little chit-chat, and posed for countless goofy ass pictures
as enthusiastically with the last as he did with the
first. It's Not an efficient way to get autographs done
on a tight schedule, but when he told the crowd that he'd stay
as late as he needed to get everyone, and offered to sign
books that people left behind if they had to leave early, you
had to tip your hat to the guy.
Bruce Campbell loves
his fans, and they love him.
A genuinely funny guy,
Bruce kicked things off with some Q&A from the audience.
Aside from the expected "When you gonna make Evil Dead 4?",
"Is Kevin Sorbo gay?" and "Why did Jack of All Trades Get
Canceled" (cause nobody watched it), there was some
totally fun and hilarious ones that were exchanged.
Quick on his feet, Bruce was able to roll with some pretty off
the wall ones, as well.
When a woman asked if she could make out with
him, he remarked, "I don't think your on the list my wife made
of approved girls I'm allowed to kiss." And after being asked
what his favorite color was, he replied, "Yellow...jeez, good
thing there's a lot of pictures in my book for this Sacramento
crowd!"
After a heckler teased him about being in
Congo, Bruce turned the tables on him and said, "OK,
smart guy. Listen here. Let's say you get offered a project
written by Michael Crichton and has the cinematographer from
Steven Spielberg's movies" and rattled off other impressive
credits, "would you take the part? Of course you would!" to
the cheers of the crowd.
In a
situation reminiscent of the Simpsons episode where Homer
answers fan questions at an Itchy and Scratchy panel, one guys
held up the Hail to The King videogame, and asked
Bruce, "How do you find the bug spray in this game?"
Bruce said while filming the upcoming Servicing Sara Matthew
Perry would tease him, "Man...this game sucks, cause it's too
hard!" To which Bruce replied, "Well maybe it's just
because you suck at it. When Bruce was impressed that
Perry managed to find a PS2 when they were in short supply,
Perry bragged that he had SEVEN of
them.
When asked about his role in
Spider-Man, Bruce replied, "I have a very small part,
as a wrestling announcer, but it's the most important part in
the movie, because my character gets to come up with his name.
He comes to the ring with this really awful name, so I decide
that he'd be better off called "Spider-Man".
He
talked about his upcoming film Bubba Ho-Tep where he
plays an aging Elvis who's stuck in a retirement home who
becomes friends with Ossie Davis who's convinced that he's
Jack Kennedy, but was dyed black and brainwashed. But that's
not the only trouble. JFK is convinced that an ancient Mummy
is coming into the home at night and killing off its
residents. When it turns out that he's right, about
everything, the unlikely duo end up having quite a bizarre
adventure.
Bruce also beamed with pride about his book,
and rightfully so as it's a great read. Impressively peaking
at #19 on the New York Times Bestseller list, he's come a long
way from chopping his hand off with a chainsaw for
kicks.
But
Bruce hasn't forgotten that people love the groovy chainsaw.
Sacramento stand-up comedian, and Trash Film Orgy host, Keith Lowell
Jensen, helped give everyone a big treat when he brought
Bruce on stage for some more fun right before Evil Dead 2
started. After introducing Campbell to insane applause, he
took the stage with someone else dressed as Ash in full Army
of Darkness attire. Keith told the crowd that he wasn't sure
which one was the real Bruce Campbell, and after picking the
wrong one and telling Bruce to take a hike, Campbell pulled
out a trick knife and gutted the fake Ash on stage with blood
and bowels flying out galore. As the cheers subsided, Bruce
then did another Q&A with the corpse at his
feet.
Bruce also took time to let a fan come on stage
to see if his chin was real.
With
Bruce there 'til midnight, and only 30 minutes to eat dinner
in his dressing room (while being interviewed by a TV crew on
top of that), I only had time to ask him a couple questions in
person, but he graciously agreed to handle a few more via
email for X-E exclusively. I tried to avoid the usual Evil
Dead questions he's been asked a million times already, but if
you really want to hear about those you can always check out
his website (bruce-campbell.com) and see plenty. Just
look at the top toolbar under "EVERYTHING EVIL", and trust me,
you'll learn more about those films than you ever wanted
to.
X-E: So what was it like working with Herbie The
Love Bug?
BRUCE: (laughs)
Herbie was great. I really liked working with Dean Jones and
loved all of those Disney movies he was in growing up. You
know once in Arizona, I ran into this guy who had a Love Bug.
And he says, "Bruce...look!" And I said, "Wow, that's a good
looking Herbie." He replied, "No...this just isn't a Herbie,
it's THE Herbie. The one you drove in the movie." He wanted me
to sign his dashboard, it was pretty
funny."
X-E: How jarringly
different of an experience is it to work on a self-produced
project like The Evil Dead, versus a Disney film like The Love
Bug remake?
BRUCE: Night and
day. We were making it up as we went along on Evil Dead with
no unions, etc. Disney, on the other hand, is a well-oiled,
multi-national machine. It's fun to see how different two
movie sets can be.
X-E: The
photos you collected for this book alone are incredibly
extensive. How much work was it to get all of that
together?
BRUCE: As much as
you can imagine. Because the rights were such a nightmare, I
wound up taking a bunch of photos myself, which made it much
more reasonable. It was more about assembling the hundreds of
photos I had access to and figuring out where to put them. CDs
and e-mail really helped.
X-E: The Evil Dead trilogy has become an
important piece of world zombie film culture, alongside George
Romero's Living Dead series. Why do you think there's such a
long term appeal to zombie films?
BRUCE: I think fans like the "monster
movie" aspect of zombies. They also like stuff that sends them
scurrying under the couch - it's just human nature - it's like
a roller coaster ride or anything else that horrifies and
thrills at the same time.
X-E: We learn a lot about the films you and Sam
Raimi made on Super 8 in your early years. How do you think
the increased use of camcorders has made it for budding
filmmakers?
BRUCE: It's made
it too damn easy! I am glad that every day folks can now run
to Best Buy and get enough digital stuff to make a film, but
anyone who is serious about making films still has to learn
their craft - let's not forget that...
X-E: Do you think we'll ever see some of those
Super 8 movies you made with Sam released on
video?
BRUCE: Would you
release the first picture you ever took on your
website? X-E: (laughs)
Yes!
BRUCE: Seriously,
they're pretty choppy and the main problem is that we used
music in them that we didn't really have the rights to, so
we're not legally allowed to do it anyway. But they're out
there on bootleg if you really need to see
them.
X-E: What are some of
your dream film roles that you've always wanted to
play?
BRUCE: I don't have
one. Never did. I try and make anything I do the best that it
can be. I try not to live in a "what if"
world.
X-E: It's great that
you've made a documentary about fandom (Fanalysis, which Bruce
is showing on his book signing tour and convention
appearances). What's one of your more unusual experiences with
a Bruce Campbell fan?
BRUCE:
Well, now that Evil Dead seems to be firmly ingrained in cult
films lovers, I've seen Ash tattoos, met kids named after the
character, and had fans follow me from city to city on the
book tour. Fear not, no restraining orders have been
issued...yet...
Thanks
again to Bruce Campbell and his publicist for bending over
backwards for us to make this happen. And it you're
interested in some awesome Bruce Campbell books, movies, and
more, check out the X-E Bruce Campbell Shopping zone below,
for damn good deals far below retail, and Amazon throws a few
dimes our way in the process!
X-E
Bruce Campbell Shopping Zone
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CD Soundtrack |
BOOK |
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All photographs in
this article are (c) Robert Berry and may not be reprinted in
any fashion without permission.
- Robert rberryxx@pacbell.net AIM:
liquorhead
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