AP Film Studies: Punks In Space

Repo Man's Alex Cox blasts off with Bill, The Galactic Hero.

ON ANOTHER PLANET: In Bill, the Galactic Hero, humans go to war with space reptiles.

Repo Man
Bill, the Galactic Hero
Repo Man
Straight to Hell
Sid and Nancy
Bill
 

Now a professor at the University of Colorado Boulder, Cox has finally brought Bill to life. It's a student film—shot, cut, acted, you name it—by the school's film department and funded by a $115,000 Kickstarter campaign.

Cox hits the Clinton Street at 7:30 pm on New Year's Eve for the West Coast premiere of this bizarro tale about a reluctant astronaut battling space reptiles. He talked to WW about Bill, student filmmaking, and how his version of Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas would have looked. 

 

WW: What drew you to Bill, the Galactic Hero?

Alex Cox: It's an authentically anti-war sci-fi novel. There are others—The Forever War is one—but generally sci-fi movies take a very militaristic position (Starship Troopers, Ender's Game, etc.). Unlike Orson Scott Card, [author Harry Harrison] had actually served and knew what bullshit it all was.


It's billed as "the largest student film ever made."

Harry and I came up with the idea as a way of making Bill inexpensively after our efforts to raise money via the conventional route failed. The deal was, nobody was to be paid while working on the film, and if a big studio came along and wanted to make their own version, they could do so simultaneously.


What roles did the students play?

Undergraduates and recent graduates of CU Boulder did everything—produced, acted, edited, did production design and sound design. I share the director credit with six former students. The stakes were higher since no one apart from me and Iggy Pop [who wrote the theme] had ever worked on a feature film.


How did these students compare with you as a young director?

I don't see much difference. They go fast, try to keep a happy atmosphere on set, are respectful of their cast and crew, know they don't know everything, yet press forward anyway. They reminded me of me, as John Wayne said of Mattie Ross in True Grit.


Repo Man might be one of the era's most enduring cult movies. Why do you think so?

It was authentically of its time and place, unlike the studio attempts—think Streets of Fire—to monetize youth culture.


You were slated to direct Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas until Hunter S. Thompson famously lost his shit over a proposed animated sequence during the "wave speech" segment. How would you have done things differently from Terry Gilliam?

It would all have been shot in single takes, because that was my style during those days. The cinematographer would have been Tom Richmond, who shot Straight to Hell, and I would have done the visual effects and animation with Tippett Studio [Robocop, Jurassic Park]. And I would have fired Johnny Depp on day one—the most overrated and childish actor I have ever met—and hired Alex Feldman or Jaimz Woolvett for the part.


Also Showing: 

  1. Sequel Month kicks off with Die Hard 2, wherein the same thing happens to the same guy, just with more explosions and blood. Academy Theater. Jan. 2-8.
  1. Blade Runner returns to ensure that despite the fact we’re inside, there are still tears in the rain. Hollywood Theatre. Jan. 2-7.
  1. The theater lacks the necessary equipment to screen The Interview, but as its own little statement, the Clinton Street shows The Great Dictator, Charlie Chaplin’s “fuck you” to Hitler. Clinton Street Theater. 10:30 am and 1, 3:30, 6 and 8:30 pm Thursday, Jan. 1.
  1. Andrei Tarkovsky’s final film, 1986’s The Sacrifice, follows a group of friends whose party on an isolated island is interrupted by the beginning of World War III. NW Film Center’s Whitsell Auditorium. 7 pm Friday-Saturday and 4 pm Sunday, Jan 2-4.
  1. B-Movie Bingo presents T-Force, about an elite group of cyborg counterterrorists with awesome haircuts. Hollywood Theatre. 7:30 pm Tuesday, Jan 6. 

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