ARTS Wednesday, December 2, 1987 Page 7 The Michigan Daily 'Automobiles' stars shift gears By John Shea Special to the Daily LOS ANGELES-There they sat, from left to right. John Candy. Steve Martin. John Hughes. Three men who have become staples of American Comedy in the '80s, gathered together in the back lot of Paramount Studios to hold a press conference for their new film, Planes, Trains and Automobiles. How unlikely. Candy. Martin. Hughes. As different as morning, noon and night, yet sitting here re- flecting on a project they had col- laborated on together. Just consider the staples: Hughes. The whiz-kid director, the one-trick pony whose films about teen-agers (Sixteen Candles, The Breakfast Club) have grossed hundreds of millions of dollars. Martin. An icon of the '70s, he is a man who has made his mark in the world through an arrow sticking in his head and parading around concert halls with his animal bal- loons. Now well into his 40s, he's undergone an unexpected metamor- phosis - from The Jerk to Cyrano de Bergerac - that is a shade darker and strikingly more mature. And Candy? Well. Okay. Maybe he's more of a thumb tack than a staple. But within the body of his work, aside from the failed efforts to establish himself as a lead actor (read: Summer Rental, Armed and Dangerous ), lies a series of memo- rable supporting roles, including the role of Tom Hanks' brother in Splash. Automobiles, released nationally this Wednesday, follows Murphy's Law of Transportation. It is a light- hearted comedy about two ill-fated travellers who experience the horrors of travelling during the holiday sea- son. Martin is Neal Page, an up- tight advertising executive. Candy is Del Griffen, the loveable but loud- mouthed shower ring curtain sales- man who is eager to offer his travelling expertise to Neal. Hughes stays behind the camera. The magnet that brought them together was Hughes' script. "Any actor is interested in good scripts," Martin said, when asked what drew him to work with Hughes. "If you have to write it yourself (as he did with this sum- mer's Roxanne ), it doesn't neces- sarily mean it's going to be good. "I had the luxury of time with Roxanne. It took me two and a half years to write it. I don't want to have to sit down everytime and write for two and a half years." Candy was offered the script while working on last summer's Spaceballs. "I read the script and was knocked out by it. I was just going in to film another movie and all I could think about was this one." Hughes, who wrote, directed, and produced the film, came up with the idea from his days of travel as an advertising executive. "I left Chicago for New York and ended up in Wichita, Kansas," he said. "Three days later I ended up home." The three men went on to share travelling nightmares. "We lived this movie," Martin echoed. "We encountered the same problems (the characters encounter) in filming this thing." He thought about something and laughed. "I was once flying into Bocatella, Idaho," Martin recalled. "It was foggy and everything. We were landing and there was these blue lights at the end of the runway - but we were on the wrong side of them. We were off the runway. As we were getting out, we asked the pilot, 'Were you scared?' And he said, 'Ssssshhhit."' There was a smattering of laugh- ter. And when the room fell quiet, porter said. "Some?" threw back Hughes. No. All. Such criticism should not come as a great surprise. Hughes penned Automobiles in five days and cranked out The Breakfast Club in three. This contrasts rather sharply with the two and half years Martin spent on Roxanne. But Hughes waves off any criticism he might get from the critics for being "rushed." "I try and write the script as fast as I can to see if I like the idea," Hughes said in a manner-of-fact fashion. "Then I go through maybe 25 or 30 rewrites. I'm not going to let something go if I'm not sure of it. I can't write dialogue (for an en- tire movie) over a 12-month period. I just write dialogue as fast as I can type it." Say this for Hughes: he knows how to reach the teen-age crowd. He captures what we have all gone through 'in growing up: the pain of being rejected by others, identities that somehow got lost, dreams that never came to be. And always emerging from these darker themes is a glimmer of hope for better things to come; positive things are to be found. But as a director he has no delicate touch, no sense of gen- tility. He uses a sledgehammer to get his point across, and the critics turn and use the same instrument to crush his work. Automobiles is the first film Hughes has directed where the lead characters are older than he his. Per hays working with such veterans as- Martin and Candy will serve as tourniquet for the rush of negative press he has gotten. But it probably won't. Hughes, with a cold de- meanor and air of indifference, in vites abuse. Whatever. The bottom line is, the film is very entertaining. And Hughes - the writer, director and producer of the film - deserves a tip of the critics' cap. In their immediate futures, Mar- tin is going to New York to begin rehearsal on Waiting for Godot, with Robin Williams; Candy is working on a couple of films right now, including Big Country ; and Hughes is starting his own record label, while putting the finishing touches on his next film, She's Having a Baby (due out early next year.) "Will you guys ever work to- gether again?," someone asked the three of them. Martin looked at Candy, Candy, at Hughes and Hughes at Martin. The three of them shrugged their shoulders in unison. "We have no idea," said Martin. 'And with that, the press confer- ence came to an end. Afterwards, there was a brief photo session and then they politely dismissed them- selves. Candy. Hughes. Martin. Three men whose paths merged to do this one film left for the airport; going on three different planes heading in decidedly different direc- tions. Writer/producer/director John Hughes (right) discusses a scene with Steve Martin (center) and John Candy on location for 'Planes, Trains and Automobiles.' Martin waited for either Candy or Hughes to assert himself and take the stage; neither did. Martin flashed disgusted looks at the both of them. "I'm out here trying to be funny and I'm not getting any help. You guys are worthless," he com- plained, jokingly. Worthless? Hardly. But if jokes were money, Candy and Hughes would have to pitch in for a piece of Bazooka bubble gum. Candy, who was ironically late for the press conference because his plane from San Diego was delayed, looked tired. Hughes, who slumped deep down into his chair and responded to questions in a droll, monotone voice, looked like he wished he were somewhere else. No clever stories were to come from either. It was Martin's stage alone. He neither relished the situation nor shunned it, and as a hundred re- porters focused their eyes on the comedian, he sat back in his chair and said this: "Didn't you all think this was John Candy's greatest performance ever?, I felt so lucky to be there. I felt as if I had the best seat in the house." Martin. Always gracious, always quick to compliment and always ready with the right line. He's al- ways on, bubbling with such en- ergy and enthusiasm that he had enough for the three of them to- gether. But the banjo and arrow in the head are long gone. And with recent efforts such as All of Me and Roxanne, and with playing the straight man to Candy in this film, some might say he is mellowing; pursuing more serious roles in the hope of being remembered for something more than his "happy feet." . He denied this. "I'm not looking for dramas," Martin said. "Part of the difference of this character than anything I've ever done is the seri- ousness of the character sets up the comedy. "Pennies from Heaven couldn't have come at a worse time," he said, shaking his head. It came right after The Jerk. "Hey, here's a surprise for the audience," he said, laughing about it. Ask any veteran performer what is the most important thing to him or her and they will most likely say, "creative control." Not so with Martin, who says, "You only need 'creative control' with people you don't trust.". All he wants is a good script. John Candy wouldn't mind a good script or two, either. A Second City and SCTV alumnus, Candy has enjoyed only moderate success in supporting roles and no success whatsoever as a lead. He's just "that funny fat man," as it were. A reporter from Japan preluded a question to Candy by saying, "We are a country of small size and we admire... big size."' "Yeah?," said Candy. "I was just wondering. Do you ever think of dieting? I hope you don't." Candy had fielded more than his share of stupid questions all day, from his weight to Canada-U.S. trade relations. The opportunity to put-down the reporter or throw a witty line back at here was there. But, for some reason, he held back. "My problem, which many Americans have," Candy said with dignity, "is a lack of exercise." Candy quietly refused to play the funny fat man. Sitting on the edge of his chair, he looked quite content watching Martin spin anecdotes. And even though he was exhausted from his travels, Candy fielded the handful of questions he got with thought; he is not a buffoon. Martin is among his admirers. "I was knocked out not only by his comedy, which we all know is good, but his drama." Candy? Drama? Stop laughing. He can do it. This film is the best vehicle Candy has had to date, giv- ing him the opportunity not only expand upon his comedic talents, but uncover a more dramatic side as well. He's not just a funny fat man anymore. Hughes. How sweet this all must be for him. Once a "geek" at his high school in Illinois and having a less-than-loving relationship with his parents ("I think I liked them more than they liked me," he said), Hughes proved his doubters wrong. He is somebody. Now, he has new doubters to prove wrong. Critics say his films are virtually identical and that they have an assembly-line quality about them. And he stay slumped in his chair, because he knew it was com- ing: "Some of your critics have said that your films have a rather 'rushed' quality to them," one re- Special Student and Youth Fares to EUROPE& SCANDINAVIA from New York on Scheduled Airlines! DESTINATIONS OW RT LONDON $185 $370 PARIS 206 412 FRANKFURT 220 440 ROME/MILAN 238 476 VIENNA 245 490 ZURICH/GENEVA 225 450 From New York OW RT Copenhagen $230 $525 Oslo 230 525 Stockholm 230 525 Helsinki 270 605 From Chicago OW . 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