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May 25, 2012

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Paul W.S. Anderson’s Rules Can Be Deadly

British action director Paul W.S. Anderson shares his Golden Rules for Making Movies


1. Bodycount, bodycount, bodycount.
2. Remember to kill someone or blow something up every 12 minutes.
3. Paint with broad brushstrokes. “Finely observed” and “elegantly crafted” are for Swiss watches, not American action movies.
4. Never make a movie in a country where they don’t have Starbucks. It is hard to get your blood/caffeine ratio to the required level without a venti triple shot.
5. Drink Red Bull on set, but never in the editing room. It will make you feel like you are having a heart attack.
6. Never have a driver who looks more tired than you do. Closest I ever came to being killed on a movie was when my driver fell asleep at the wheel and almost drove us off a cliff. Fortunately, I was still awake. This is where adhering to rule #4 really pays off.
7. Always learn some of the local language. Most of my movies are made abroad; “please” and “thank you” in German/Chinese/Spanish/Italian/French go a long way.
8. Always shave during the shoot. It makes you look prepared and in control.
9. Never shave during post-production. An unshaven, slightly disheveled look reassures the studio that you are putting in long hours in the cutting room.
10. Try and wrap early once every week. Finishing just 10 minutes early earns forgiveness for all those hours of overtime every other night.
11. Always book a super techno crane—60-foot, not 30.
12. Never shoot with 12 cameras when 15 will do.
13. Whoever said “less is more” was wrong. More is more.
14. Never apply these rules to anything other than action films. The results could be disastrous.

Paul W.S. Anderson first gained recognition in his native England when he wrote and directed Shopping, starring Jude Law, in 1994. Though the film was banned in several British cinemas and released only in an edited, direct-to-video version in the U.S., Hollywood took notice of the newcomer’s talents. Anderson became a go-to action director after adapting the video game Mortal Kombat for the big screen and subsequent works have included Event Horizon (1997), Resident Evil (2002) and AVP: Alien vs. Predator (2004). On August 22, Universal will release Anderson’s long-awaited remake of Death Race, starring Jason Statham, Ian McShane and Joan Allen.


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COMMENTS | POST A COMMENT

Comment by Club Chairs on 12/04/08 at 1:16 am

Great piece if writing and i appreciate Paul W.S. Anderson thoughts.

Comment by Life Insurance on 12/14/08 at 6:21 am

We know Paul W.S. Anderson was a great director. So thanks to you for sharing with us such a great piece of topics.

Comment by Buy Hyalgan on 12/17/08 at 8:10 am

No doubt that it’s a Great piece if writing. Really admirable. Thanks for sharing with us.

Comment by steve on 12/31/08 at 7:30 pm

thanks for sharing paul, your golden rules of making shitty films

Comment by Leather Chesterfield on 1/13/09 at 3:02 pm

Well these rules surely are deadly..cool!

Comment by casininio on 2/22/09 at 2:38 pm

good rules

Comment by Jose on 3/07/09 at 5:13 pm

this guy is an idiot

Comment by kate1215 on 3/20/09 at 4:16 am

Louis Vuitton is luxury gifts, French fashion,

Comment by Sell House Fast on 3/24/09 at 6:57 am

Paul W.S. Anderson is a great director. Thanks for share with us this 14 rules

Comment by Netbook Case on 6/30/09 at 3:35 pm

Stupid stupid comments people. Have some respect for MM. K?

Comment by Buy Disney Netpal on 6/30/09 at 3:39 pm

I think Paul Anderson has done a great job in most interviews I’ve seen previously, however he needs to get a bit more serious imo.

Comment by critical illness cover on 3/18/11 at 6:19 am

I have to fully agree on all the points that have been raised, and would like to take the time to thank you for sharing this information. critical illness cover

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MovieMaker Magazine

Magazine cover: Summer 2008This story was published in the Summer 2008 MovieMaker Magazine. The headline was:

My Golden Rules

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