Leonardo DiCaprio & Quentin Tarantino Break Down Once Upon a Time in Hollywood’s Main Character
Released on 07/31/2019
Hello, I'm Leonardo DiCaprio.
And I'm Quentin Tarantino.
We're here to do notes on a scene.
We're going to break down the character as best we can.
Of Rick Dalton.
Everything that me and Leo talked about to get us
to form who this character was and is.
And I do wanna establish that
he's the one with the photographic memory.
So if I can't remember some names.
It's why I'm here, it's why I'm here.
It's why he's here.
Rick Dalton, Sam Wanamaker.
Hey Sam, sorry about the wet hand.
Oh don't worry about it, I'm used to it with you.
I just want you to know, I'm the one who cast you
and I could not be more delighted that you're doing this.
Well thank you Sam, I appreciate it, it's a good part.
It's the day in the life of a man
going not only through an emotional breakdown
and a transition in his career and a realization
that time has passed him by, that culture has passed him by,
but creating a character that is literally on set working
on a job that, for the first time, he's being challenged.
Yeah, yeah.
[Sam] Now Rick, about your hair.
What about my hair?
[Sam] I wanna go with a different hairstyle.
What? Something more hippy-ish.
You want me to look like a hippy?
Rick Dalton represented a certain type of actor
that came out in the late '50s and the early '60s.
Few spots on some television shows,
few smaller parts in military ensemble,
in the background of submarine movies and stuff.
People that are comparative to him would be people like
Edd Byrnes, George Maharis who was on the show Route 66,
Ty Hardin who was on Bronco, and then eventually
he landed on NBC on a TV show called Bounty Law.
On the same year over on CBS, Steve McQueen
landed on a very similar show about
a bounty hunter called Wanted Dead or Alive.
And for a period of time, they were similar
in fame and popularity.
Then, both of them proved to be popular enough
that during their hiatus, they started doing some film,
like a feature film.
Eventually, doing that hiatus time,
McQueen did Magnificent Seven, and that was that.
He was a movie star.
But Rick was still Jake Cahill, the guy from Bounty Law.
But when Bounty Law was finished, I think Bounty Law
came on on the '59, '58 season
and ended in the '63, '64 season.
Went and made a contract with Universal
and did about four feature films.
However, none of them really quite worked out,
some of them were okay but he never pulled off
the TV to movie star transition.
And so now, it's 1969 and things haven't worked out for him
so now he's guesting on other people's shows,
like The Green Hornet or Land of the Giants
or Lancer or Ron Ely's Tarzan.
Bad guy of the week on this show versus that show
and he's thinking about going to Italy
to start a spaghetti western career.
They were a certain type of leading man
that was promoted back then, handsome, rugged guys,
spent their whole careers running pocket combs
through their pompadours, but by 1969,
they never saw this happening, the culture had changed.
Yep.
And now, the new leading man is not He-Man
macho guys that put pomade in their hair,
it's skinny, androgynous, shaggy haired type guys.
So now it's Michael Sarrazin, now it's Christopher Jones,
now it's the hippy sons of famous people
like a young Michael Douglas,
even Arlo Guthrie starring in movies.
Now if Rick's gonna get a part in one of their movies,
he's probably gonna be the cop who's busting them.
Right.
And everything he's been taught about being likable
and being a leading man, people have to like you
if they're gonna wanna get you into their homes.
Rick doesn't understand any of this stuff
as far as new Hollywood is concerned.
If he was offered Deliverance, he'd turn it down.
What, no one wants to see that.
Who the hell wants to see that?
He's wrong but he doesn't know that,
it's the Hollywood he'd been taught.
It's official, old buddy, I'm a has been.
It was interesting with Quentin to be able to work on
this emotional breakdown that Rick is having,
this realization that time has passed him by.
I think in a similar way that McQueen
wasn't coming from this place where, say, Paul Newman was.
Rick's doesn't come from the method
Of course not. concept.
He probably thinks, oh that, in fact,
he does think, oh that's ridiculous.
But what's interesting about when you see him
do this Lancer show, where he's playing this bad guy
with a director who actually believes in him,
and he's not just a standard issue heavy,
the whole thing the director wants to do
is change Rick's look, and Rick has never
changed his look his entire career.
Very much like a '50s leading man.
The way he wore his hair then is the way
he's gonna wear his hair forever.
This director wants to change your look
and one of the ways he does it,
is he puts a long haired wig on you
and he puts a mustache on you, and he wants you to play
the leader of these rustlers as if he's
the leader of a Hell's Angels gang or something.
But what's interesting is, you have only seen yourself
one kind of way, and we've only seen you one kind of way,
and even the audience of this world
has only seen Rick one kind of way.
But when you see you in that wig, you don't have to be
a relic of 1959, you could be a modern actor.
And make the transition.
You could be in a new Hollywood movie,
you could be in a movie directed by Bob Fosse or Scorsese.
You don't eat lunch?
I've got a scene after lunch.
Yeah?
Eating lunch before I do a scene makes me sluggish.
I believe it's the job of an actor, and I say actor
not actress because the word actress is nonsensical.
And you and I had a lot of discussions
about whether these pivotal scenes with the young lady
in the movie, who is this young Meryl Streep,
who's telling Rick, hey things aren't that bad,
step up to the plate, you're a working actor
and I take my job seriously.
By the way, this other actress he's talking about is nine.
Right, exactly.
It's the actor's job
to avoid impediments to their performance.
It's the actor's job to strive for 100% effectiveness.
Naturally, we never succeed
but it's the pursuit that's meaningful.
Who are you? You can call me Marabella.
She inspires him and pushes him
to really take his job seriously.
We had a lot of discussions about whether,
whether to play through this cowardly lion,
drapery that Rick has of this giant wig and this mustache
and him feeling miserable about himself and his life,
and we weren't sure whether to do this predominant,
this huge chunk of Rick's character in this makeup
but it really turned out to be amazing
because you see, visually, on his face that he's making
a huge pivotal transition in his life through that makeup.
And we had a lot of different talks about,
how do you portray this character of Rick Dalton,
the humanity of him, while he's on set.
[spits]
The line?
I mean, right away we watched
a tremendous amount of westerns.
Not only westerns, but a lot of B westerns
that I wouldn't even be able to have access to
which of course Quentin is able to screen
in his screening room and has an archive of.
The show that's the closest to Bounty Law
would be Wanted Dead or Alive.
So I watched about 13 or 14 episodes
of Wanted Dead or Alive, which I had no problem doing,
to pip six or seven
that I hand-picked for Leo for him to watch
and I thought he would enjoy and like.
All right, this has gone far enough,
hand over the mansion.
Sorry.
Don't make me kill you, mister.
And it was also kind of interesting
because Leo wasn't the biggest fan of Steve McQueen, which
is rare for a young male actor
'cause mostly young male actors
worship at the alter of Steve McQueen.
And it worked, he actually liked the episodes
and he actually liked McQueen in the episodes,
he liked him as Josh.
So it was my job to show him enough
so that he'd have a really good knowledge.
A lot of these TV shows and a lot of these
very talented actors that were maybe gonna
make the transition to film in this new era
but got stuck in that realm.
Ralph Meeker was an actor that we looked at a lot
because I think we both had this amazing afinity
towards him because obviously Quentin is a cinephile
but he's a lover of these actors that maybe
an entire generation hasn't heard of,
and he really puts them, talent wise,
as far as how they affect him as an audience member,
up with the best of the best.
Oh, if you're talking about Ralph Meeker,
he's one of my, literally my favorite actor of all time.
Of all time.
Sure, you'll make a deal for her
like you did for Christina.
You held her under custody in a hospital
and you let her get away, you let her get killed.
And then you start to say wow, this guy,
this guy was immensely talented
and maybe time and history had passed him by.
He is one of my favorite actors
and so the idea that Leo wasn't that familiar with him
but then the next day, all he wanted to do
was talk to me about Ralph Meeker.
I couldn't be more happy that you were so excited by him.
Well, I have more of that where that came from.
Get me more!
Well because, to me it was, why he was so pivotal
I think, was because we were in discussion
with what kind of actor Rick is.
That he had been trained in the world of television,
that he had been trained, not formally trained,
but there is a real talent that lies within him
that needs to be brought out, that needs to be pushed.
And Ralph Meeker was.
Whereas some of the other actors, I felt,
didn't have the talent level that I feel,
or the potential that Rick Dalton did have.
Ralph Meeker did.
And all those things that he gives us,
not only do you get a plethora of
films and television to watch, you get a massive back story
and history of who the character is and who the man is,
and the relationship that he has had with Cliff in the past
which was important for both Brad and myself
because there was this immediate understanding
between Brad and myself of what we've been through.
It gave us this ability to fit naturally
into our character's shoes and improvise,
knowing this history that Quentin had created.
If every actor could be blessed with that type of back story
going into a movie, it's every actor's dream really.
To my right is Bounty Law's series lead
and Jake Cahill himself, Rick Dalton.
And to my left is Rick's stunt double, Cliff Booth.
I could talk about all the different movies that Rick did
and all of his credits that he did before then,
and this and that, and this career versus that career,
I could chapter and verse.
At some point though, you're not doing a film book
about Rick Dalton, you're playing a character
that has to actually be alive and carry through in scenes.
In a very nice way, Leo would say, all that's well and good
about all this minutia, I need something to act,
what am I doing in this scene, stop talking about
what he's done in the past and tell me who am I.
And what was really interesting, was we found that together,
and the way we found it, rather than me just
coming up with a bunch of stuff, I still went to the past,
I would talk about this actor, say George Maharis
or that actor, I'd tell something about their life.
But in talking about it, all of a sudden
I would say something that Leo would kick into,
and when he would kick into that,
oh hey, that's an actable thing.
That is something, that's a character,
that's not just information, that's a character.
And we were able to come up with a few bits like that,
that now, actually, we had a character
that we didn't have before.
And the biggest example of that is,
I told Leo about this show from the early '70s
that I was a big fan of, and actually Brad was a big fan of
when we were both kids, Alias Smith and Jones.
And I told him about the actor Pete Duel
who was on the show.
You're right Sheriff, it isn't going
exactly according to plan but we couldn't
let you take Penny out that door.
You see, we promised to take her with us.
And somewhere in the second season, he committed suicide.
I remember that really well back then
because I was a big fan of the show
and it was probably the first time I ever
understood the concept of suicide.
Oh my god, he died, well how did he die?
Well, he committed suicide.
What's that?
Seven, eight, what's that?
He killed himself.
He killed himself?
Why'd he kill himself?
I don't know, I guess he was depressed.
What has he got to be depressed about?
He's Hannibal Hayes.
He's the coolest guy on television.
I did a little bit of research and found out a little bit
that he had a bit of a drinking problem.
It sounds like the guy was undiagnosed bipolar
and he had mood swings, and the reason that he was drinking
was to self medicate himself.
Leo got that.
Sam, Sam,
you've got me covered up in all this junk.
How's the audience gonna know it's me?
They don't.
We already had Rick a drinker,
but the whole thing of undiagnosed bipolar
and not knowing how that works,
and the weird pendulum swings of emotion
that you would have, especially if you don't have
a medical understanding of why you feel that way,
that became a really interesting thing
that we thought that Rick could deal through.
And that gave Leo a good, solid ground
in which to work and to build a character,
and to have a sub-text going on inside of scenes
that doesn't have to revolve around the story of the scene.
Or doesn't need to be told overtly to an audience,
we can just show in the day of the life of Rick Dalton.
We never say the words that he's bipolar, it's just.
Look, I think he said it the best
it possibly could be said.
I could add onto that, but that was the part
of the discovery for me, with you,
of how to bring that sort of emotional rollercoaster
to Rick in that short period of time and I think we.
The emotional weight that grounds you to the floor.
Yeah.
That was the best acting I've ever seen in my whole life.
Thank you.
Rick fucking Dalton. [cocks gun]
Starring: Leonardo DiCaprio , Quentin Tarantino
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