Yesterday I received an e-mail from Doug Bryan, credited as film editor, music editor and sound effects editor on R.O.T.O.R. Doug is a friend of my former THE ONLY THING ON partner John Riley, and I asked John to help me get in touch with Doug so I could learn more about the film. A big thanks to John and, of course, to Doug, who graciously allowed me to reprint portions of his email:
It lives!!!! That was the first feature I ever cut. It was a disaster from the word go. Every frame they shot is in the movie, because their budget was so lean, they would often shoot just one take. The lead actor [Richard Gesswein] was one of the investors and spoke with a really annoying nasal tone. Toward the end of post-production, they decided to loop his lines using a "professional" actor. I had to edit in all of that shitty re-recorded dialogue that rarely synched up properly, giving all of his scenes a Japanese feel. Boy, that guy was pissed off.
The director, Cullen Blaine, was a character designer for Hanna-Barbara and did some of the design work on JONNY QUEST. The movie sucked complete and total ass, but was a great/weird experience. A few weeks into editing, the writer, Budd Lewis, showed up. Turns out he was one of the main writers for the Warren comic mags CREEPY and EERIE that I loved so as a kid. I got the real dirt on many of my favorite artists. I have to say that Budd and Cullen were really cool people, and we had a lot of laughs. They just shouldn't have been making movies. I don't think they ever did again.
My band at the time, Larry's Dad, contributed 2 songs to the soundtrack, and to this day I receive royalty checks for up to $1.21 from places like Burma and Thailand.
I should mention that when ROTOR re-charges, they didn't have any money for FX. He was basically just holding a set of jumper cables. I cashed in a favor down in the film lab and pulled an interpositive of that scene. I cut back and forth between the print image and a negative image to have SOMETHING going on. Jeez...
How anyone could sit through that God-awful mess is beyond my scope of understanding. Hats off, mate!
I don't mind if you put my comments out there as long as you mention what great guys Cullen and Budd were. Budd and I got drunk together one night and talked comics endlessly...
Doug and I have never met, but he did participate in one of my life's shining moments. John and I were preparing to tape another episode of THE ONLY THING ON, a weekly TV gig we were doing for KBSI-TV in Cape Girardeau, Missouri. I knew who Doug was and that he was working as an editor in Dallas. This day, John mentioned that Doug was cutting the latest Fred "The Hammer" Williamson movie, it might have been STEELE'S LAW. So, for the heck of it, John called Doug at work.
"How's Fred?"
"Fred's great. You wanna talk to him? He's sitting right here."
So John and I each spent five or ten minutes just chatting with The Hammer. He and I talked a lot about Super Bowl I, in which Williamson played as a member of the Kansas City Chiefs, but I had just recently seen THREE THE HARD WAY, and I told him how great it was. He brought up the "sequel", ONE DOWN TWO TO GO, which he claimed was the most-stolen videocassette from video stores in the world, apparently because it was so awesome that customers had to own it for themselves. I have no idea whether that's true (a lot of what the colorful, charismatic Williamson says should be taken with a grain of salt), but I like to believe that it is. And now you can get ONE DOWN TWO TO GO on DVD, complete with an audio commentary track by The Hammer! I wonder if any of those are mysteriously missing from video store shelves?
Posted by Marty
at 10:16 AM CST