-MOVI*S 0 0 w 9 COL U Iq After 'After Hours' budgets, they have made the movies that they wanted to make, the way they wanted to make them, with the people they wanted to make them with. On top of that, they live and work in New York, far from the movie making haven of the world, Hollywood. Their latest movie is After Hours, written by Joe Minion. The critically acclaimed movie deals with a down- to-earth guy, played by Dunne, who gets caught in a nightmare of an evening. Robinson was given the script by a professor when she was lecturing at the Sundance Institute. "I thought that it was very funny and unique. I liked the homor and the nightmare aspect," said Robinson. "When I first read it, I thought that it was a great part for Griffin." "I never read anything quite like it," commented Dunne, "It detailed By Seth Flicker Griffin Dunne and Amy Robinson may well be called "noveau" producers. On extremely low such a specific type of evening, I felt like I've been in that position before." "I told the director that I wan-- ted the part of Paul and that was the end of that," Dunne commented. "Paul is the best part I've ever had, and the best work I've ever done." Robinson and Dunne met at a party eight years ago and ended up working together six or seven months later. Their first movie, Chilly Scenes of Winter, was released as Head Over Heels and then rereleased with its original title. Their second movie was Baby, It's You. After Hours, their third film, stars Teri Garr, Rosanna Arquette and Cheech and Chong, and was directed by Martin Scorsese. "From the third page on, Martin loved it. He was looking for something to do," said Robinson. "Martin is great. He's very creative and open, and very responsive to the actors." "I think Martin liked the sex and guilt that existed in the script," said Dunne. "He's a great director. He makes people do good work and creates an atmosphere on the set where acting is the most important thing. There was a lot of concen- tration and a lot of laughter. It was a great experience." "He's demanding," Dunne added, "but he makes the actors demanding on themselves. He'a a great audience for his actors." After Hours was filmed entirely at night. Though, according to Dunne and Robinson,they were very quiet, it caused some disruption in the wild SoHo area of New York. "During the scene where Griffen gets down on his knees and screams, 'What do you want from me?', a lady yelled out her window, 'Who cares?"' said Robinson. After Hours had an extremely low budget, by Hollywood standards, of four million dollars. "We budgeted a specific cost and kept it at that," commented Dunne. "We picked a figure that we felt com- fortable about. You just have to keep an eye on the budget." The fact that Scorcese directed helped keep costs down, Dunne said, "because most ac- tors would jump at the opportunity to work with him." Lines, & OSinkers 'VE ALWAYS thought that people who searched for companionship through personal ads were slightly off. They had to be hiding something. But after examining many personal ads, as a sort of crazy hobby- cer- tainly not because I needed to- I found out that many of these anonymous authors live on a wholly different plane from the one in which we mere mortals meet and mate. Some of these authors have achieved personal perfection, like this deity, who is doing everything in his power to find an equal, and wrote in a wCrLS ACADE the Day by Mike Fisch DUNNE: Prefers acting to producing "We paid actors according to scale rate. No actor worked more than two weeks, except for Griffin," said Robinson. "As for the actors, we get everyone that we wanted." Robinson, who graduated from Sarah Lawrence College, was an ac- tor before becoming a producer. She appeared in a television movie, an off- off Broadway show and worked with Scorsese in Mean Streets. She says she enjoys producing more than ac- ting. "Producing is an all-encompassing job. You work from start to finish. Ac- ting is only one aspect of a movie," said Robinson. "To produce something, you have to be passionate about it," continued Robinson. "The trick to being a good producer is to take a lot of care, to pay attention to everything, to be con- scious of every detail and to be on the set at all times." Originally from Los Angeles, Dun- ne moved from home when he was 18 years old to go to New York. He studied at the Neighborhood Playhouse along with waiting tables and other various jobs. Dunne has dif- ferent opinions about acting and producing than his partner. "I like them both. Acting is more - U But the heart-rending lines of "DWM" are rivalled by the playful wit and effortless rhymes of this divorced white female who wrote in the August issue of the Washingtonian: BANG & OLUFSEN, see it at the Museum of Modern Art,... N ...Buy it atHIF .HIl~i . W 618 SOUTH MAIN STREET VISA ANN ARBOR, MICH. 48104 L _ TELEPHONE: (313) 769-4700 BG-RX ow Only $259 FA BUYS creatively satisfying but it can also be very frustrating if your part is not so great and you have to make the most of what you've got," said Dunne. "I like feeling responsible from beginning to end. I like having a little bit more control, which producing allows, more than being an actor. The trick to good producing is having a love for your material and putting the right people together to make the best movie." Because Dunne played the lead character in the movie, he was ex- cused from the burdens of producing during the shoot and was treated as an actor. Compared to the anxiety of acting, going back to the role of producer after the shoot was a little different for Dunne. "There's nothing relaxing about making movies," said Dunne, "but it (producing after the shoot) was less physically demanding. It required a bit more personal neurosis, worry, and anxiety." Although all three of Dunne and Robinson's movies have been well received, After Hours is the most suc- cessful, according to Robinson. "It reached a wider audience and was more humorous than the other two," she said. "I loved all three of the movies so it's hard to choose which I liked the best," commented Dunne. "They're all made in the same spirit. All the movies deal with obsessive behavior and we try not to repeat ourselves." He continued, "(In After Hours) I want the audience to laugh them- selves sick, to feel exhausted, like they've really lived through the whole night. They should have a real emotional connection with the movie and relate to Paul's journey. Everyone in their life has had a bad day at one time or another." "I want the audience to havea good time. It's an interesting movie, not boring. The audience should identify with it and be shaken up by it," said Robinson. Robinson and Dunne Already have three subjects lined up for the future: ,Ie Foreigner, a comedy now playing off-Broadway by Larry Shue; an un- titled project about 60's radicals; and The Moonflower Vine, another producing venture. It's plot is quite different from that of After Hours. It deals with the lives of a Missouri family over a span of 50 years. BOERSMA TRAVEL recent Open University course guide 'Annexmates' column: "WHEN GOD created woman, he/she made two types: the "attractive" ones and those that are beautiful, gorgeous, and drop-dead good looking. If you fall into this second category, then I would like to meet you. My assets: unequivocally han- dsome, common sense, great legs, outgoing personality, and confidence. If you're as confident about your assets as I am about mind,. then briefly tell me about them. Your pic- ture is worth 1,000 words... so include one." If this "god" is "unequivocally handsome," and justifiably proud of his assets, why, may I ask, would such a specimen need to advertise? Maybe it's because he's attracting the wrong type of woman... you know, the "at- tractive" kind. Or how about this man's modest query, also from this fall's 'Anex- mates': "Are you a thin natural redhead? Or slender auburn-haired or strawberry blond? And are you a S/DWF (single or divorced white female), 33-40, 5'8", attractive, with a sense of humor and engaging per- sonality?" Call the FRIENDLY AGENT Need more time to hit the books? Let us take some of the load off... We do typing and wordprocessing at competitive prices. 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And once in a while, as in this example from the July issue of The Washingtonian, they become poetry: DWM tall attractive retired (operate automobile sales business) ISO intelligent pretty S/D/WWF 40-50 The line breaks are mine, but the courage to write such an impassioned plea for love is something I could never claim. How does our anonymous poet say so much with so few words? Only the masters know for sure. but never before has one been so com- pletely conscious of sounds and the way they resonate. Say the words, "lunch," "hunch," and "bunch," to yourself softly. Damn, that's good. "INTERESTS I have many. Time-I have plenty. If you're tired of ;TV, write a letter to me. We'll meet for a lunch and I have a hunch no more TV You'll like me a bunch." word choice-impeccable. have been many great poets, I ha' sonals, of it-I to. I cc persor classi money SWI dynan most meter specia above hopele 5'7"o much mohav neat. photo, Petrai Weeke Daily, 48109. 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