I am really excited to have the opportunity to interview the very prolific an energetic Andy Rausch. Husband, Father, writer and producer. . . this guy is one busy fella.
Andrew J. Raush is the author of The Suicide Game, Riding Shotgun and was the screenwriter for the movie Dahmer vs Gacy. He is also author of Turning Points In Film History, Making Movies With Orson Wells, The Films Of Martin Scorsese And Robert De Niro.
He is also author of The Stephen King Movie Quiz Book, and editor of The Wit And Wisdom Of Stephen King.
INTERVIEW
Talk Stephen King: Hey, thanks for agreeing to this interview. Tell me a bit
about yourself.
Andy Rausch: I'm 39, married and have five children. I love writing, and
I write every day, from screenplays to novels to non-fiction books to film
criticism. I read a lot, and I watch a lot of movies. I don't know, I'm pretty
boring. Not really much to say here.
TSK: You've done everything from producing to casting to
acting. What is your favorite part of the filmmaking process?
Andy Rausch: Nothing beats the first time you see the final film. It's a
rush, even when the film is bad.
TSK: What is the most challenging aspect of filmmaking?
Andy Rausch: Dealing with fifty different people, all of whom have their
own ideas of how the scenes should be shot and how the dialogue should be
spoken. There are many egos at war on a movie set. Lack of sleep is pretty
challenging, too.
TSK: Do you have an all-time favorite movie?
Andy Rausch: My ten favorite films in no particular order are: Pulp
Fiction, GoodFellas, The Godfather Part II, Sunset
Boulevard, Yojimbo, Rolling Thunder, Citizen Kane, Casablanca,
The Thin Red Line, and Solaris. I enjoy chop-socky movies, chick
flicks, spaghetti westerns, samurai pictures, horror, you name it.
TSK: You've written two books about Stephen King. Is he your
favorite writer? What other writers do you read consistently?
Andy Rausch: Stephen King is in a three-way tie for my author along with
Elmore Leonard and Kurt Vonnegut. I also read a lot of Max Allan Collins and
Richard Stark.
TSK: Do you have a favorite work by Stephen King?
Andy Rausch: I love Pet Sematary. It was the first book that
really scared the shit out of me. I was only eleven or twelve at the time, but
it scared the bejeezus out of me. I've read it several times since, and have
loved it just as much every single time. I'm also a big fan of The Shining.
And Blaze. And Cujo... The list goes on and on.
TSK: What is your favorite Stephen King movie?
Andy Rausch: The Shawshank Redemption, hands down. I'm also a big
fan of Kubrick's The Shining. I know that's blasphemy to King fans, but
I really love that film. Stand By Me is pretty damned good, too. But if
I'm being truthful, I have a soft spot in my heart for just about all of the
King adaptations—even the crappy ones. Not the sequels, though. Most of those
are garbage.
TSK: So long as we're dealing with Stephen King movies, I
might as well ask: What King movie do you absolutely hate?
Andy Rausch: Hmm, tough one. How about the original Children of the
Corn? And maybe all of its sequels. They're all pretty terrible.
TSK: The new Carrie trailer just came out. Did you see
it? What do you think of this project?
Andy Rausch: I think it will be a good movie, but I think it's completely
unneeded. The original is a very good film and the TV remake wasn't bad,
either. Do we really need another Carrie film?
TSK: I see you've done some acting. If you could play any
character from a Stephen King book on the big screen, who would you portray?
Andy Rausch: I'm no great actor, although I was relatively proud of my
performance as a drug dealer in Evil Ever After, which virtually no one
has seen... Usually I'm the guy in the horror film who gets one scene and then
promptly gets killed. I got my heart ripped out and eaten in Zombiegeddon;
I died a pretty gruesome death in Evil Ever After; I think I got killed
by a scythe in The Ancient... So sure, if I had my choice I'd play
someone like Jack Torrance in The Shining, but if I'm being realistic I
would probably be that guy who shows up and dies immediately; the character
whose name we don't even know!
TSK: Are there any King books that you think would adapt well
to the big screen but just haven't made it yet?
Andy Rausch: Again, I'm really fond of Blaze. I know that one
tends to get lost in the shuffle, but I think it's really great.
TSK: You seem to focus your writing energy on quiz books or
compilations. This seems like it would be quite a different process from
writing a novel. How long does it usually take you to put these projects
together?
Andy Rausch: I've written almost 20 books. I'm currently working on my 18th
and 19th books. Five of those are quiz books. I really hate to be
pigeonholed as a quiz book writer, even though it's my fault for having written
so many of them. Quiz books are kind of the ghetto genre of literature, maybe
two steps below Harlequin romance novel. As for the compilations, those were
interview collections, and I wrote those because I really enjoy meeting people
whom I admire. For my book Fifty Filmmakers I got to meet all kinds of
directors, from Budd Boetticher to Frank Darabont, and that was an amazing
experience. I interviewed 79 directors for that and then whittled that down to
the 50 that appear in the book.
I've also written some more serious books that I'm really
proud of. I wrote a book called Turning Points in Film History that was
used as a textbook in college film classes. Usually you have to be a professor
to write something like that, so I really lucked out with that one. Another
book I'm extremely proud of is The Films of Martin Scorsese and Robert De
Niro. Both of those were difficult books to write and they required tons of
research.
Every book is different. I once wrote an entire book in six
weeks. But then the Fifty Filmmakers book took eight years to complete.
I worked on my first novel for seven or eight years. It really just varies. It
could be six months or it could be six years, depending on the book.
TSK: What made you decide to write quiz-style trivia books?
Andy Rausch: Well, my buddy and mentor Stephen J. Spignesi had published
a couple of extremely successful Stephen King quiz books. I was still trying to
break into publishing at the time and I thought, I could write something like
that. I was still trying to find my footing and was unsure at that time about
my abilities as a writer. But I thought, I know I can do this. So I wrote The
100 Greatest American Films: A Quiz Book, and it sold to the first
publisher who looked at it. I really didn't want to write anymore quiz books,
but the publisher offered me a contract for two more quiz books, Hollywood's
All-Time Greatest Stars and The Greatest War Films of All Time. I
was still new to all of this, and I thought, well, I may never get the
opportunity to publish another book. A bird in the hand, you know? So I wrote
those books. Then years later I got suckered into writing a fourth quiz book, Obsessed
with Hollywood, and that book made me a ton of money. You would not believe
how much money I made from that book, and it was funny, too, because I
initially considered turning the project down. So that's how all of that
happened.
The
Stephen King Movie Quiz Book was mostly written way back around 2001, but I
had never published it. It would have been my second book, but my publisher
hadn't been interested in the idea. So I tucked it away. Then, years later, I
came across the manuscript and thought, Why hadn't I pursued publishing this
one? So I convinced a writer pal of mine, Ron Riley, to watch the last ten or
so films and write quizzes for them. He did it, we found a publisher for the
project, and the rest, as they say, is history.
TSK: Which of the books you've written is your favorite?
Andy Rausch: My novel, The Suicide Game, which was published last
year by Taylor Street Publishing, is my favorite. It took me nearly a decade to
write it, and it is a much more personal experience than writing non-fiction.
My favorite non-fiction book is Making Movies with Orson Welles, which I
wrote with Welles' cinematographer, Gary Graver. That was a great experience
and I had the good fortune of becoming close friends with Gary and his wife,
Jillian, before they passed away.
TSK: Which of the films you've worked on is your favorite?
Andy Rausch: Dahmer vs. Gacy, which I wrote. That one just turned
up in Maxim magazine this past month. That was pretty cool. Working with
producer Chris Watson and director Ford Austin was a great experience.
TSK: Since you participated in the Welles book, I'll ask you
this... I've always been fascinated by the 1938 War of the Worlds
fiasco. Do you think anything like that could ever happen again?
Andy Rausch: No. Today we have so much information—maybe too much
information—at our disposal at any given moment. I think you could maybe fool a
few people here and there, but convincing that number of people that aliens are
attacking seems unlikely.
TSK: What projects do you have coming up?
Andy Rausch: I'm currently working on books about both Ed Wood and Tony
Scott, who passed away a couple of months back. I'm also preparing to write a
screenplay based on my book Making Movies with Orson Welles. It will be
about Gary and Orson's friendship and the making of The Other Side of the
Wind.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Books By Andrew J. Rausch:
- The 100 Greatest American Films: A Quiz Book
- Hollywood's All-Time Greatest Stars: A Quiz Book
- The Greatest War Films of All Time: A Quiz Book
- Turning Points in Film History
- Fifty Filmmakers: Conversations with Directors from Roger Avary to Steven Zaillian
- Obsessed with Hollywood
- Making Movies with Orson Welles (w/ Gary Graver)
- Reflections on Blaxploitation
- The Films of Martin Scorsese and Robert De Niro
- I Am Hip-Hop: Conversations on the Music and Culture
- The Suicide Game (novel)
- The Wit and Wisdom of Stephen King
- The Stephen King Movie Quiz Book
- Dirty Talk: Conversations with Porn Stars
- Riding Shotgun (novella)
- The Godfather of Gore Speaks (w/ HG Lewis)
- Gods of Grindhouse
Movies (incomplete list, but the better ones)
- Zombiegeddon, executive producer, actor
- Minds of Terror, executive producer
- Slaughter Party, executive producer
- Evil Ever After, executive producer, actor
- Dahmer vs. Gacy, screenwriter
- Dead in Love, executive producer
Anybody who's got "Solaris" on their list of favorite movies is alright in my book!
ReplyDeleteI finally got both of Rausch's King-related books. They're both excellent, especially "The Wit and Wisdom of Stephen King."
ReplyDelete