AMERICAN
CINEMA PAPERS PRINT
ARCHIVE 1983
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ALEX AND
ILYA SALKIND – IN INTERVIEW SUPERMAN AND THE MUSKETEERS by Harlan Kennedy Is it a
bird? Is it a plane? No, it's Metropolis
and a hot-off-the-press Daily Planet Exclusive on the Salkinds. See it
leap tall legends at a single bound. Listen to it swoosh over language
barriers. Marvel as it spans three continents and dips back into the 19th
century... PARIS. "In my
father's day," says Alexander Salkind,
"and in mine, when we made films it was the actor's job to act, the
director's job to direct, and the producer was expected to serve the film
financially and realize as big a return as possible for the investors. If
that meant cutting it into two pieces or into twenty-two pieces and selling
it as a serial, then fine!" Alexander Salkind
thumps a frightened Perrier bottle in emphasis. "That was proper. That
was business. Today the industry has grown, expanded, and there are new
rules and proprieties. The cinema may be better for it – but the business is,
let's say, more 'complex.' " LONDON. Ilya Salkind, in Pinewood Studios, agrees. He and his father
are now completing Superman 3, putting Supergirl into production, and planning for Santa
Claus. "For us, as
producers," says Ilya Salkind,
"the point of making a film is that moviegoers looking through the
newspaper pages in any big city will want to see. .. one film! And
right now, we hope that's Superman 3." Compactly built, with
thick brown hair and a sliver of a Mexican accent, Ilya
is the third-generation whiz-child in the family of stateless wizards that
has been patrolling world cinema since 1924. Grandfather Mikhail (1892-1974)
and father Alexander, still flourishing, are his forebears. Ever since they
struck it rich with the Three and Four Musketeers, Alex and Ilya have been pursuing the One Film ethos like a
moving-target Holy Grail. Superman was the event movie of 1978, Superman
2 scooped a small fortune in 1981, and now three
further titles beginning with the talismanic "S" are lining up to
leapfrog each other into the Top Grossers pantheon. Back in 1922 things
were a little different. Mikhail Salkind, a
Russian lawyer, fled Minsk with his pregnant wife
and the family jewels sewn into his suit (the Bolsheviks had taken the rest
of their worldly wealth); stopped in Danzig
(now
Gdansk) for the birth of Alexander; moved on to Leningrad for six months'
directorship of the State Opera; and then fled Russia for Berlin to produce
his first films, among them G. W. Pabst's 1925 Joyless Street, starring Asta Nielsen
and featuring two little-known actresses, Greta
Garbo and
Marlene Dietrich. Movie history was in the making. Sixty years later –
and after many intervening troughs, several triumphs, and a catalogue of
self-confessed clinkers – the Salkinds are a
household name. But there are some bullet holes in the letters to mark their
baptism into the bully-boy world of big movie business. First in the Musketeer
films, later in the Superman saga, the irresistible force of Salkind entrepreneurialism met the immovable object
of artists' agents and lawyers. Contracts were pawed and pored over. First Raquel Welch
(for
Musketeers) and
later Mario Puzo, Richard Donner, and
Marlon Brando (for Superman) contested Salkind's right to cut one movie contract into cloth for
two feature films. All the disputes were settled out of court, however, and
the only lasting offspring they've left posterity is a legal rubric now known
as "the Salkind Clause." ● I meet Salkind père at his hotel in Paris,
where we eat and talk in a mélange
of languages: French, Spanish, English, Italian. First topic: the famed and
still unforgotten legal and verbal onslaughts of Brando, Donner, Reeve, Kidder, and others. "That's history
now," says Alex, batting the topic politely away in Spanish. "We
none of us lose any sleep over it. If you're in the business of big money productions,
everyone likes to make a little stir now and then with lawyers. It's part of
their career, part finding the rules of the game, and part genuine misunderstandings.
In the Musketeers dispute, it's my opinion we could have gone to court
and won the case, no problem. But no one wants to drag these affairs through
the courts; it's expensive, and it's a very long business whether you
win or lose. So with the Musketeers we agreed to give the people
involved a percentage of the second film, The Four Musketeers. The Superman
dispute, that too, though it was more protracted, we finally settled out
of court. "But still for me
this is a strange way to make films," he continues, modulating into
French. "I grew up in a world where filmmakers were free to put their
ideas into the camera, without being afraid of small print in contracts, or
this, that, and the other. It's good that there's protection for artists and
technicians, of course. But sometimes too much protection means too little
freedom for producers. "We've always
tried to stay free. We started off as a 'roving' company and we still are
that. We're not tied to any country or major studio. Right now, I believe,
we're the only big independent producers who finance and own their films. We
hire Warner Bros. to release and
distribute them, but we keep the rights and maintain a consultative status. I
give you an example. If I see something on the Superman poster I don't
like, I pick up the telephone to Warners and want
to know why it's there. And between us we decide whether or not it stays. "Right from when
we began in Europe, my father, Mikhail, and I made sure we never gave up
control over our films or the long-term rights to them. That goes for the
ancillary rights, too. And this was before TV and video, when you couldn't
predict the extra earnings a film might make from nontheatrical
showings. There used to be a sentence in contracts that contained the phrase,
"and any future rights that might arise." When I sold a movie, that
was the sentence I always crossed out! Why give away today what you
can sell tomorrow? So we still own all our movies. And right now I'm
negotiating video outlets with different countries for films like Joyless
Street, Austerlitz, and The Trial. Some
twenty titles have just been sold to EMI in Britain." Born in the free port
of Danzig, whisked off successively to Leningrad, Berlin,
Paris, and later still Cuba and Mexico, Alexander Salkind
is one of Moviedom's most amazing survivors –
virtually a one-man history of political cataclysm in the 20th century. Today
he lives partly in Paris, partly in Switzerland, where he enjoys diplomatic
status as an honorary representative of a Latin American country. "As a child I
learned to live out of a suitcase," he declares, "and that's how I
still live" – though the sumptuous surroundings of his hotel show that
he's now moved on to satin-lined Vuitton.
"Wherever we found ourselves back in those years, whatever city or
country, my father would set up business as if we had always been there.
After Joyless Street in Berlin, we were in Paris and Mikhail produced
Pabst's Don Quixote with Chaliapin, the
great Russian opera star, whom my father had brought from Leningrad. When we
left Paris – and there were many more pictures – it was in 1942, and the
Germans... well, that story has nothing to do with film. We got out on one of
the last, if not the last, boats to leave France. Our port of call was Cuba,
where my father proceeded to buy up the distribution rights for the very
popular films of Cantinflas. In those years Mexican
film production was beginning to boom and the market in South America was
enormous. And so we moved there and went into business producing about 20
films for the Latin American market." And Alex's own first
youthful step into the film jungle? We had begun an after-lunch stroll
through statue-studded gardens – a regular Salkind
Senior constitutional – and his eyes lit up in total recall. "I'll tell
you," he beamed, "I was 23 years old. And it taught me just how up
and down the movie business is. We had moved to Mexico, it was 1945, and we
had a comedy script called El Moderno
Barba Azul – Rocket to the
Moon. We wanted an American star for it, so I went to Hollywood
and I saw an actors' agent there who let me go through his books. I went
through the A list, the top stars – we couldn't afford them – then the B
list, then the C. And halfway through this, I found a name I recognized.
Buster Keaton! I said, 'Is this the Buster Keaton?' And
the agent looked at me and said, 'Yes, yes, but you don't want him, he's on
the bottle these days, totally unreliable, and he hasn't made a
successful film in years.' I said, 'I'll take him.' "And the next
thing, I was introduced to Keaton and the first sight of
him I'll never forget. Sitting very shyly, sheepishly, fiddling with a hat
between his knees, looking as if he never expected to be offered another part
in his life. We made the film. Keaton came to Mexico, never
touched a drop during shooting, and we paid him $5,000. Which even then was
ridiculous for a legend – people at that time didn't realize the impression Keaton had
made on the world. The film did well in every country where we sold it. Only
one country wouldn't buy Rocket to the Moon and never has. And that's
America. I'm still waiting for offers." ● Four decades on, while
Salkind père
minds
the company's money matters on one side of the English Channel, Salkind fils and production partner
Pierre Spengler sit in their offices on the other, putting the
finishing touches to the company's latest rocket to the box office, Superman
3. Catch Ilya on any average day, when the engines of his movie
enthusiasm are thrumming away, and he'll happily entrust you with the story
of the birth of Superman – the
film that, after launch-off with the Musketeers, finally shot the Salkinds into Outer Space. "When I first had
the idea," he said, "I took it to my father and he said, 'Superman?
Who's Superman?' He'd never heard of him. I explained, I showed him the
comics, and gradually he liked the idea. "Then of course
we didn't know it would be an obstacle course just to get to Day One of
shooting. First my father had to hammer out an agreement with NPP, who owned
the rights to Superman. Alex owns all the Superman film rights
for 25 years now, until 1999. One of their less exacting demands was that no Superman
movie should cost less than $5 million. Little did they know. Little did we
know! First we had a writer, William Goldman, who didn't click with the
project. Then we signed up a director, Guy Hamilton, who, as pre-production
dragged on, couldn't stay in England to make the film because of tax reasons.
Then we couldn't get stars to take the parts. Paul Newman was offered a
choice of Jor-E1 or Luthor and turned both down.
Burt Reynolds was also approached, and several others. "But once our
luck broke, everything started to swim along. An agent I knew suddenly
scurried up to me and said, 'I can get you Brando.'
I
said, 'Are you crazy?' Brando was then very big,
after Godfather and Last Tango. But somehow this guy swung it,
and two minutes after hearing that Brando
would
play Jor-El, I had Hackman
on
the telephone to say he would do Lex
Luthor." Soon, with Mario Puzo's first-draft script
for Superman revamped by David and Leslie Newman and Robert Benton,
only two things remained: the vexed blank space where a director's name
should be, and an empty cape and boots where newcomer-Superman should fit. "I saw The
Omen one night," says Ilya, "and I
liked Dick Donner's work and we signed him up.
Christopher Reeve we picked out of the proverbial hundreds – though Donner didn't
like him at first and needed some persuading
– because I thought he looked good, and I saw he could also
act. Once we had the cast and crew together and were rolling, it was always
our aim, Alex's and mine and Pierre Spengler's, to
have two movies in the can at the end of shooting. Not to economize on
actors, but so that we wouldn't have to rebuild the very expensive
sets." When did the hassles
start over Donner's direction? "The problem was,
he was just too slow. He would do retake after retake after retake. On an
intimate little film this is fine, when you're not spending millions simply
keeping the movie together technically – the sets, the effects. What happened eventually, of
course, was that the first two Superman pictures cost more than $100
million between them. So there were horrrible
aggravations between Donner and me. The atmosphere
on the set was poison. And finally I hired Dick Lester
in
a producer capacity, uncredited, to be a kind of
high-profile go-between. And he got things moving. But Superman cost
so much that if it hadn't clicked at the box office we'd have been totally
wiped out. Miraculously, the bloody picture worked. And it's my favorite,
ironically, of the two so far. But even so, and even after successfully
releasing Superman 2, we
still owe the banks money." The third corner of
the Salkind production triangle today is
Russian-born Pierre Spengler. He's the company's legal
eagle and administrative wizard. He specializes in preparing budgets and
schedules, helping to knock contracts into shape, and, with Ilya, supervising production. Spengler started
working for Alex Salkind "when I was 17, as a teaboy, answering
telephones and in general as a gofer. But Ilya and
I met six years before," he says. "Ilya's
mother, Berta Dominguez, had written a play which was being
produced in Paris. My stepfather was acting in it. And there was a role for a
little boy and my stepfather said, 'Ah!
I
have my son, who'd be ideal.' And so he brought me there and I met Ilya, who was auditioning for the same role! As it
happened, I didn't do the play because the role was that of a Mexican and as
you can see I don't look very Mexican. My only consolation is that Ilya, who was Mexican, didn't get the part either.
From that point we became friends." Spengler is
coolheaded about the legal tantrums of the Musketeers and Superman, though in both cases he
was the Salkinds' judicial specialist and the man plunged
into the boiling seas of small print, along with some expert lawyers. "The legal
arguments were really arguments of position, where the participants were
taking one stance and we another. You ask me, didn't the contracts
specifically state this or that? Well, the contracts say a certain thing but
in each sentence, in each word there are three or four different
interpretations you can make. In the American legal system, if you want to
take a case to court it costs only $52. But the real cost is time. A case can
drag on for three, four, five years. Our Superman disputes got settled
out of court, thank God, where finally – having gone through the whole
business of 'discovery,' the pre-trial written cross-questionings between
each party's lawyers – we worked things out to everyone's satisfaction." The precedent for the Superman
wrangle was the dispute during the Musketeers movies – another Salkind Special case of two films being hatched from one
production schedule. Alex in Paris:
"I'll tell you what happened. Midway through shooting Three
Musketeers we realized we already had five hours of picture. So what we
did, we got the screenwriter, George Macdonald Fraser, to
make another script for a second film, The Four Musketeers. And both
movies would be ready at the end of shooting. But when the actors heard about
this they weren't happy. Miss Raquel
Welch's
lawyer disputed our right to use her services for two films, and rather than
go to court and hold up the movie, we gave the artists a percentage in Four
Musketeers." ● Popular media lore in
recent years has depicted the Salkinds as a
father-son team of globe-hopping billionaires, each born with a silver spoon
– nay, a whole tea service – in his mouth. But a glance at the prolific pre-Musketeer
filmography of Ilya,
Alex, and Mikhail shows an awesome catalogue of money-losers. Ilya in London: "We
didn't have any big world-wide hits before Musketeers. We had a lot of
interesting films, some great actors and directors: Garbo, Jean
Gabin, Pabst, Orson Welles,
Abel Gance. And by selling the foreign rights to
our films on the best possible terms, we mostly balanced out the gains and
losses. But there were horrible flops. Romain
Gary's
Kill, a
disaster! Rape of the Sabines, terrible! If Musketeers hadn't
come along, then Superman,
we'd still be struggling from co-production to
co-production." But beneath the
appearance of chaos, the early Salkind movie
history is scattered with amazing firsts, and each film has a chunk of
fascinating life-history sewn into its lining. 1. Joyless Street (1925). "My father's first big
film," says Alex. "And that he survived to make it at all was a
miracle. Picture this man, a qualified lawyer. When the Russian Revolution
comes, he's stripped of his possessions and barred from practice by the
Bolsheviks. They take everything they set eyes on! Luckily they don't set
eyes on the family gems my father hides in his suit. When my parents flee Minsk they
have to stop in Danzig, because my mother was
in labor, and that is the beginning of me. "My father's six
months at the Leningrad Opera – that was his baptism into dealing with
creative people. Then we flee to Berlin with many other White Russian emigrés. It was
a time of upheaval you couldn't believe. In Berlin my father isn't able to
continue his law practice, because under German law at that time he would
have had to apprentice himself again for five years. So with the opera
behind him, he tried his hand at the new art of the 20th century. He produced
his first film. The great Pabst, Garbo,
Dietrich, Asta Nielsen
– quite a beginning!" 2. Don Quixote (1933). Alex: "Chaliapin,
who played Don Quixote, was a great friend of my father's. He brought him
from the Leningrad Opera. Here in this photo" – he searches in his briefcase
and draws forth a small sheaf of letters and photographs – "you can see
us together, me and Chaliapin in Paris, where
Mikhail made the film. Again with Pabst directing." Photo of towering Ivan the
Terrible-like singer-actor and tiny boy of ten. "These letters and
photos you see here are just the top of the iceberg. I have trunkfuls of documents and photos and
family letters from that time. Here, you see, is my father's birth
certificate in Russian. And a letter from Pabst, another from Garbo. One
day when there's a little time, a little space between pictures, I am
thinking of writing my memoirs. Not for my satisfaction only, but for the
memory of my father and his time. And most important as a gift to Ilya, who knew and worked with his grandfather." 3. Le Temps de L'Amour (1952).
Alex: "After we returned to France from Mexico – that was in 1948 – we
made this. Claude Dauphin and Gaby Morlay played the leads. And the special interest of the
movie is that we included extracts from a film we'd made 20 years earlier
with them, playing the same characters much younger. That was Nous Ne Sommes Plus Des Enfants.
We
thus solved the aging problem without any help from the makeup department!" 4. Austerlitz (1959). Ilya: "I was 11 years old; it was around the time
Pierre and I auditioned together for my mother's play. And I would wander
onto these huge glamorous Napoleonic sets, a little boy, and meet the great
Abel Gance, and Jean Marais,
Orson
Welles ....Austerlitz was
a very expensive movie, about a billion French francs, or 3 or 4 million
dollars, which was a lot in those days. Everyone had high hopes, not
least Mikhail and Alex. It was the first big international co-production in
Europe, with four countries involved: France, Germany, Italy, and Yugoslavia,
where the battles were shot. It was also the first time you had big American
actors in an international cast. So it wasn't an 'English' picture or a
'French' picture or an 'American' picture. It was a Mikhail and Alex picture. "But the picture
bombed. It was a big success in France and Belgium, but it didn't click at
all in the rest of the world. And for a film that had cost a lot, it was a
little bit of a disaster. But now, in the wake of Napoleon and interest in Gance,
my father and I are thinking of reviving it: perhaps devoted to my
grandfather. All the movies of this period were really his children. In those
years his participation was the mirror of mine today. Like me he was on the
creative side, the movie side perhaps, while Alex then and now was
more the financier. So while there's been a generation switch between
Mikhail and myself, Alex's role in the pattern of the partnership has
stayed the same." 5. The Trial (1962). Ilya:
"Most of the interiors were filmed in the Gare
d'Orsay, this giant disused railway station in Paris.
That was Orson Welles' idea. He was fantastic as a
director. And he did something that I really want to say because it's typical
of him. There was a scene we were filming in Zagreb in a huge office with
about a hundred typewriters. And Orson wanted more, but Mikhail had to say,
'There's no more money. We just don't have it.' Which caused Mikhail a lot of
pain, because that was his nature, his character. He was as depressed as
Orson. And Orson said, 'OK, I'll pay for it.' And he paid for 100 extra
typewriters. I mean, that's a great man. I've never heard of that in this
business. And he never charged for it. He's a gentleman and a very generous
man." 6. Rape of the Sabines (1962). Alex: "No
good." Ilya: "Terrible." 7. The Light at the Edge of the World (1970). Ilya: "This was my own big break. Before it I hadn't
made a film, though I'd come up with one or two ideas which gave my father
some respect for my judgment. I remember once we went to see a Japanese
sci-fi film – lots of color and action and flying monsters! And we were
really peddling in those years, buying a little film for $1,000 and selling
it for $1,500. It was a terrible time just struggling to pay the rent. And I
said to Alex, 'You should buy that Japanese film, I think it's
exciting, there's something for all kinds of audience.' So we bought it, and
the film delivered and made $20,000. I went all over France and Italy doing
my shtick and hyping the movie to local exhibitors and even
translating the English subtitles while the movie ran. "After that, Light
at the Edge of the World was a script I picked up accidentally in
someone else's office. I said could I read it, he said yes. And 1 liked it
straight away: a Jules Verne story, very exciting,
two great parts. "And I was
looking round for a star, and one day I was in Paris reading Variety.
Variety was not something Europeans read in those days; now of course
it's read everywhere. Maybe not Minsk, but everywhere else.
And I read that Kirk Douglas was in the south of France. Well, at this point
a whole lot of actors had said no to the movie. In those days they wanted a
written offer with a bank guarantee; it was a whole different ball game. So
Alex called Kirk and Kirk agreed to read the script, which Alex took down
personally to him. "And he was
extraordinarily positive. He said, 'I know you guys don't have a dollar.
Everyone in the industry knows that. I'm going to give you a chance. I'll
give you three months to promote my name with this picture if you will give
me $80,000. Then if you're successful, I'll take a million dollars.' And that
was our first million dollar pay-out. The film did well and we were on our
feet again." 8. Kill (1970). Ilya: "I produced
this one. Romain Gary, the writer and
director, was 50 and he was the great hero of the liberation. Jean Seberg, Stephen Boyd, James Mason were all in it. And
whatever hopes we had for it were dashed. The picture turned out to be bad,
extremely bad. I was in Rome and I took a girl to see it and the couple in
front of us, obviously married, were arguing, the husband saying, 'Why are
we watching this garbage?' and the wife, 'Wait, wait, it might get good.' And
the guy was getting angrier and angrier and started saying he wanted his
money back. And there I was with my date, sitting behind him and shrinking
down in my seat. After all, he was right. You can't beat the Italian public.
It was there in front of me. Anger and Hope springing eternal. But we've
sold it to television." 9 &
10. The Three and Four Musketeers
(1974/5). Ilya: "We were talking in St.
Paul de Vence, at the Colombe d'Or, and my father was there and Raquel Welch,
who'd
just finished a movie. And we were wondering what to do next. And I said,
let's do a picture with the Beatles. And there was a girl
there who said suddenly – why not do the Musketeers? And we said, but there
are three Musketeers and four Beatles. No, she said, there
are four Musketeers... no, there are. ...Well, it was an exciting idea
anyway. And then we thought, well, the Beatles
are
too modern. And I said why not do it with Jerry Lewis,
Danny
Kaye, and Bob Hope? My father gave me a look, and we kept on thinking. "And meanwhile I
started looking for a director, and I saw Tom Jones again, and I
thought, that's it! THAT'S IT! Very fast, colorful, snappy. And I had this
big list of directors, and I talked to Tony Richardson, but that didn't work
out. And the name I kept passing was Lester.
And
I thought, why not? He had the comic touch, and he could handle drama. He was
in a bad patch then, hadn't done a film in five years, was doing commercials,
and refusing movies. "Well, I called
him and first he said, 'Oh, come on, what the hell are the Musketeers –
that's for children.' And I said, 'Have you read the book?' He said, 'No.' So
I sent it to him, he read it, and the next day called and said, 'I'll do it.'
Because the book is quite different from what people think. Very rich, very
strong, very good characters. Not a kids' book at all." The Musketeers duly
crashed into daylight, rapiers flashing, minted money, and hurricaned the Salkinds' name
into instant transatlantic fame. And Mikhail Salkind,
82, lived to see the premiere of the picture. He died in 1974, having
completed the mighty journey from Minsk
to
Musketeer France. "He was a very
chivalrous, very charismatic old gentleman," Pierre Spengler recalls.
"And a great diplomat. The thing I remember most about him was,
whenever he arrived at a hotel when he was traveling, the first thing he
would do would be to go straight to the ladies at the telephone switchboard.
He would say to the operators, 'Hello, I'm Mr. Salkind'
– they usually knew his name already, but even if they didn't – 'I'm staying
in such and such a room.' And he would take little bottles of perfume out of
his pockets and give one to each of the girls and say, 'You're going to have
a lot of work with me!' And the girls were charmed immediately. After that,
no one else but Mikhail could get a call through!" Ten years later, not
all the duty-free perfumes of Arabia would be enough to go round the cohorts
of switchboard operators working for the Salkinds.
Superman 3 is about to fall bouncing into the world, with the Caped
crusader fighting evil once again and this time fastening the cockles of
his heart on the luscious Lana Lang, played by Annette O'Toole
"We're starting
preparations on Santa Claus,
like now, and I'm still in the process of delivering Superman 3
to Warner Bros.," continues Pierre Spengler. "So
I will be involved with Supergirl only in a consultative
capacity. Timothy Burrill will produce that one for
Alex with Ilya as Executive Producer. This is a
busy time and that's the best kind of news." Supergirl,
helmed
by Jeannot Szwarc and due
out Christmas 1983, boasts a promise of high-magnitude special effects, New
Yorker and graduate of the High School of the Performing Arts (See kids, it
can be done!) Helen Slater in the lead role – with new and startlingly different
measurements from Christopher Reeve – and a free-flying Faye Dunaway. No wire harnesses. And if you switch on Ilya Salkind on the subject of Santa
Claus (expected Christmas 1984), you need a fire extinguisher to put him
out. "It's mind-boggling... orgasmic....I'm waking up at night... 500
elves by Rambaldi or Freeborn.. . the world's top
box-office star [name not divulged so as not to disappoint other world top
box-office stars] as someone other than Santa Claus. .. a gift for children
they'll come back to every Christmas." Three generations of Salkind brio and resilience suggest that when Santa
Claus lands his sleigh atop the Variety charts chimney, Ilya and Alex will be snow-deep in at least three more
projects. Superman IV? Superdog?
Orson
Welles as The Four Musketeers? Reindeers of the
Lost Ark? COURTESY T.P. MOVIE NEWS. THIS ARTICLE APPEARED
IN THE JUNE 1983 ISSUE OF FILM
COMMENT. ©HARLAN
KENNEDY. All rights reserved. |
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