Clowes (left) and Zwigoff (right), pretty as a picture (Photo by Kevin Scanlon)
As in a dream, Jesus brings me
a side of scrambled eggs. He wears a big smile and a shiny name tag,
every hair in place. Brings me coffee, too. All around us are ancient hardwood,
marble and finery, windows looking north onto the sidewalks of downtown Beverly
Hills, high ceilings mixing a hundred hearty, rumbling conversations and delicate
clinks of porcelain and silver into a genteel cacophony that wreaks havoc on
my cheap-ass microphone.
I thank Jesus, dig into my eggs and return my attentions to Terry Zwigoff, acclaimed
director of
Crumb,
Ghost World and now
Art School Confidential,
whom Jesus has already provided with a Spa Breakfast: seasonal smoothie, egg-white
omelet, turkey bacon, bran muffins, coffee or tea for $25.
Just a few minutes into our short relationship, I sense in Zwigoff’s countenance
— a pallid mix of Charlie Chaplin and Gene Wilder, set off by a black shock
of Tim Burton top-hairs — a healthy distrust of anyone hired to ask him questions.
Fair enough: In the past, the press widely misreported Zwigoff as having fallen
out with his longtime friend, the cartoonist R. Crumb, which was probably pretty
annoying. I wouldn’t trust me, either. Still, he offers me his turkey bacon,
which is awfully kind and awfully delicious, and throws in a muffin as well.
Finding oneself suddenly breakfasting with famous strangers in the Regent Beverly
Wilshire dining room following two hours’ sleep in a cold garage is not an effective
way to convince oneself that one is, in fact, awake. Then there’s the issue
of tables. Instead of one big breakfast with muffins and coffee for all, the
interview has been divided into two interviews at two tables: a short one here
with Zwigoff, followed by an even shorter one across the room with Daniel Clowes.
I suck down multiple coffees, attempting higher levels of vigilance, while Zwigoff
relates one of the pleasant complications of working with John Malkovich, who,
in addition to playing
Art School’s coddling Professor Sandiford, produced
the film (like
Ghost World before it) through his Mr. Mudd production
company.
“John has this quality about him that is very unsettling to me,” says Zwigoff,
slowly and evenly, partitioning his egg-white omelet with an extremely expensive
fork. “I used to think it stemmed from his body of work, and the fact that he
often plays villains. But then I realized that it’s because I always think he’s
being sarcastic. The bigger he smiles and the more polite he is, the more I
interpret it as sarcasm, even though I’ve come to learn that it’s sincere.”
A
rt School Confidential’s progenitor was a four-page comic-book story
created by Clowes, one of the past few decades’ most revered and accomplished
cartoonists, as part of his popular
Eightball periodical series (which
also spawned, in serialized form, Clowes’ utterly engrossing graphic novels
Like a Velvet Glove Cast in Iron,
Ghost World and
Pussey!).
Art School Confidential the comic is a series of character studies connected
by a conspicuously Clowes-like narrator, a “freelance undercover agent” whose
mission is to reveal “the shocking truth about the biggest scam of the century!”
— art school.
In the film, that mission has been reduced to a pleasant undercurrent in a script
that blends cold satire, bildungsroman and murder mystery. A school-yard bully’s
fists start things off, eclipsing the screen of its light and giving the audience
the perspective of the victim. Sensitive young Jerome Platz (Max Minghella)
emerges from that beating to embark on the path of the American artist: more
beatings, followed by enrollment at Strathmore (as in the ubiquitous drawing
pads) University, a small, Pratt-like private school located in something resembling
Brooklyn on the outside, and UCLA’s North Campus on the inside.
Like the characters in Zwigoff’s earlier films, the protagonists of
Art School
Confidential are unsettled souls, isolated, eccentric, defining themselves
by their relationships with mainstream culture. The Crumb brothers steer clear
of it — voluntarily or otherwise — as does
Ghost World’s Enid Coleslaw,
though doing so means parting ways with family and friends. But Jerome’s emotional
isolation eventually takes a physical form that brings about, in a delightfully
absurd way, respect from the corrupt art world, and money from the abominable
mainstream. It even (sort of) gets him the girl.
There are wonderful performances from Malkovich, Anjelica Huston, Steve Buscemi
and Jack Ong among others, but I — a crotchety, penniless art-school graduate
myself — was especially drawn to the character of Jimmy, a withered but fast-tongued,
crotchety, penniless, Slivovitz-swilling once-upon-a-time Strathmore student,
rendered superbly by veteran character wizard Jim Broadbent. It’s a connection
Zwigoff admits that he shares too.
“I always think of myself as a bitter, failed artist,” he says. “Mr. Broadbent
was one of the most extraordinary actors I’ve ever had the privilege to work
with. For some reason, he popped into my mind as soon as I read the script.
I like his mild-mannered appearance and, obviously, he’s a great actor. I think
the studio at that point was less enthused — I’d just cast two other British
actors [Minghella and Sophia Myles], and they thought I was putting together
some sort of Royal Shakespeare Theater Company.”
Just as I’m about to ask my next question,
I’m extracted from Zwigoff and whisked across the dining room to another table,
where Daniel Clowes patiently awaits, blessed with a semi-angelic face that
betrays a bad case of the
humanitas. Warmth, humility, intensity and
oblique calm — all that good stuff, right there on the front of his head, for
all to see. And he claims to be drinking a $27 glass of juice. We talk art schools
— his Pratt, my UCLA and CalArts — with an emphasis on the drawing instructors
who were so very unhelpfully positive about everything.
“I was the character like Jerome,” says Clowes. “One day, I thought, ‘This is
just not helpful — being complimentary all the time — so I’m going to actually
be
critical.’ And I was very, I thought,
constructively critical
of somebody, who then got absolutely crushed and started crying over the mildest
criticism. And from then on, I was the one that everyone was ‘allowed’ to criticize.
They all kept complimenting each other, but it was like, every week, whatever
I’d bring in . . . ‘Okay, well
yours is . . .,’ and they would just funnel
all their critical ire toward my thing. So of course I learned to never do that
again. Just go back to the ‘Yes, it’s nice’ crap. ‘Keep going in that direction.’”
“We had a guy at UCLA who was disturbingly similar to your undercover-cop character,”
I say, referring to
Art School’s clean-cut, unwitting savant Jonah, played
by Matt Keeslar. “He was like a Christian guy. He wore a gold cross, Polo shirts
and snappy pastel slacks. And he talked like John Wayne.”
“Wow! We had a Christian also,” says Clowes. “He’d come in and do these kind
of Thomas Kinkade paintings, and was so out of place that he was absolutely
The Weirdo. He would wear golf pants to class. ‘What are you doing? It’s
Brooklyn!’
You know, ‘We’re all punks. What are you?’ It made us feel like maybe
we’re
the conformists.”
“Our guy — he was a really nice guy, actually, and probably a better artist
than me. He just looked like Houston aristocracy.”
“Yeah. That’s what this guy was like. Like a rich guy from Orange County.”
“And we used to wonder if maybe he was a narc. But then, no. No narc would go
undercover at an art school like that. Unless he was a genius.”
We move on to the subject of financing the scam. “That was a thing I didn’t
have to go through,” says Clowes. “My entire college education was $8,000 for
four years, because it was so long ago, and I got little scholarships.”
“Jesus! Pratt must be 20 or 30 thousand a year now.”
“Yeah. Eight grand was still a lot of money, but I eventually did pay that off.
Now, if you’re, like, $80,000 in debt from art school, good luck! You’re going
to be in debt forever. Forget it. You better marry a doctor. That was an element
I almost put in the film — the outrageous outlay of cash involved. But I sort
of implied that however much you’re paying, it’s probably too much.”
“At CalArts,” I say, “I got the idea that most of the students had family money.
There were some people making interesting work, but most of it was like a country
club for film-industry spawn. On the plus side, though, they did have a naked
swimming pool.”
“Did they really?”
“They did. I’d heard about it, but never experienced it until I went looking
into student housing. I got lost, and ended up getting directions from two gorgeous,
nude sunbathing girls. They had nipples and everything, even though CalArts
is a Disney school.”
“That must be quite a draw. Unless they’re just doing that during, you know,
sweeps week, when they’re trying to get people to come.”
“Yeah. ‘You girls go out by the pool and look naked, until we get enrollment
up.’”
“So the film — it’s kind of made for people like you, I’m afraid,”
says Clowes. “Which doesn’t speak well for the box-office phase.”
“On the contrary,” I insist. “Most Americans are ex–art students soon to be
fired from the L.A. Weekly for their poor interview skills. Mark my words:
Clowes and Zwigoff make a killing and retire to suburban Houston and Orange
County, where they take to wearing gold crosses and pastel golf pants and are
never heard from again. The end.”
Clowes eyes me for a moment in silence. “Where are you from, originally?” he
asks at last.
“Champaign, Illinois.”
“Is that right? Like John Malkovich.”
“Nearby. I think he’s from Franklin County.”
“I have a friend in Chicago, and you remind me so much of him. I feel like I’m
talking to him. It’s very weird. You guys have the exact same sense of humor.”
“Same cadences, even?”
“Yeah, identical. And you look a little bit like him. It’s eerie. Of course,
he also went to art school.”
“Yeah. That’s how it happens.”
Art School Confidential opens
in selected theaters on Friday, May 5.
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