Rob Zombie Talks "The Lords of Salem", Woolite Commercial, and Next "Dark, Crazy" Record
Rob Zombie really can do it all.
He's  one of the most versatile artists in history seguing from making music  to making movies seamlessly and always creating unique, unforgettable,  and undeniable art no matter the medium. Right now, Zombie's busier than  ever. 
He's gearing up for what's bound to be a legendary tour  with Slayer aptly titled "Hell On Earth", he just wrapped up a  commercial for Woolite, he's contemplating new music, and he's about to  get started on his next feature, The Lords of Salem. Even though he's  beyond busy, he preserves that palpable passion for every nuance and  detail that made White Zombie records like Astro-Creep: 2000 - Songs of  Love, Destruction and Other Synthetic Delusions of the Electric Head  classics. Zombie approaches each work with a pure enthusiasm that's  infectious when he speaks and even more infectious when the finished  product is ready?
In between all of this, Rob Zombie sat down for  an exclusive interview with ARTISTdirect.com editor and Dolor author  Rick Florino about the commercial, touring with Slayer, The Lords of  Salem, and what he keeps learning along the way.
Did you get to  apply a lot of your personal storytelling techniques to the Woolite  commercial? You have to tell a story in about 30 seconds so it's not  that different from what you normally do.
Somewhat! It was an  interesting situation to handle. It was just one of those projects that  came to me. I wasn't searching out shooting a commercial. A lot of  directors do commercials, but most of the time they don't talk about it  so you don't realize it. I just thought it was cool so I'd been  mentioning it. I was on tour in Australia when it came up. I got a call  that this ad agency had pitched this crazy idea to Woolite, and they  wanted me to direct it. They essentially wanted a commercial that the  first half resembled a horror movie trailer. They needed something along  those lines, and they thought I could handle it. It was fun. We shot it  over two days in Vancouver. My director of photography who worked on  Halloween II came in and worked with me. I like doing things like that  for the experience. It was like when I did CSI, I wanted the experience  of doing a television show. You just want to have it under your belt.  Also, the more direct gigs I can get between films, I always learn  something from everything.
You can take everything you learn and infuse it into the next feature as well.
Yeah,  there's always something because every situation calls for a different  set of techniques, and it's just a good experience. Experience is the  one thing that you always want to be gathering. I don't know how this is  useful, but it will be at some point someday.
Your career is a testament to that. Each art form you immerse yourself in will inform the next.
Exactly!  It's always good to shake it up and step outside of what you would  normally do because it forces you to think about things a different way.  If you're always doing the same thing, you fall into a big rut.  Whenever these opportunities come up, I'm intrigued. With this  commercial in particular, I was more interested in shooting the moments  that weren't supposed to be dark and scary because that's a different  type of challenge for me. It's something that I wanted people to see.  Sometimes, people pigeonhole you. They think, "We didn't call him for  that because he doesn't do that." It's nice when you have more diverse  things on your resume so to speak.
Where there any commercials you remember being inspired by as a kid?
I'm  sure there was stuff, but it's all sort of a blur. Some commercials are  absolutely horrible, but some are absolutely brilliant. Like you said,  you have to tell a story in about 30 seconds. That's how long this spot  was. Some are really funny and cool. There was that famous commercial  during this past Super Bowl with the little kid as Darth Vader. It was a  great commercial. You're selling a product, but it's cool when it can  be done in a skillful, artful way that's actually entertaining as  opposed to being just crass like so many commercials are. When they come  on, you just groan.
A commercial is even shorter than a song so the narrative is genuinely compact.
If you break it down, we probably told the whole story in a matter of 15 shots or something like that.
Where are you at on The Lords of Salem?
We're  in early pre-production. It's a very effects-heavy movie so the effects  department had to start much earlier than they have on my other films.  They've been working for a month or so now, building and working on  things. Once I finish the tour with Slayer, then we'll go into  full-blown pre-production with everything. The difference with film as  opposed to the other films I've done, the producers on this are the guys  who did Paranormal Activity. They have a different company and they run  it a different way. I've been working on this movie for a while in  different ways. Usually, you're not working at all and the studio goes,  "Okay, green light! We need it done by this time" and you're in complete  madness. Whereas this time, I've already location-scouted many times so  I have a lot of locations. It's a more drawn out process which is good  because you get to dig deeper into the project. From the moment  Halloween II started to when it was in theaters, it was a period of  about seven months. That's complete madness. You're just racing like  maniac every single day to get it done. It's nice to have a little more  time to reflect on what you're trying to accomplish. We'll start  shooting at the end of the summer.
Are you going back to Massachusetts to shoot?
For some of it probably.
Salem has so much history that has never been really explored in a movie.
And  it's a very unique-looking town when it comes to the architecture of  the buildings and the streets. I had kind of forgotten. I hadn't been  there since I was a kid, and I went back there recently to do some  scouting. I forgot how interesting the houses and the buildings were.  It's very cinematic. It's a great back backdrop for something like this.
Is the film deeply connected to your song "The Lords of Salem"?
Not  really, the film idea actually came first. I had the idea for the movie  a long time ago. I started writing the script and, at one point, I was  possibly going to do it as a comic. I just get ideas, and I'm never  really sure how they're going to manifest themselves eventually. I  shelved that for a while, but I still liked the title. Then, it became a  song. The song is actually sort of about the Salem Witch Trials. In the  last year or so, it popped back up. I found the script, and I thought,  "This is pretty cool" so I went ahead with trying to get it made.
You and Slayer do very different things, but you speak to the same audience.
I  think it's a good match because it's not unlike the tour with Alice  Cooper where both acts are very different, but there's a certain  sensibility that crosses over in both audiences. Rather than two full  sets of being pounded over the head with the same type of thing,  musically we're so different and we complement each other well. It feels  like it's going to be a really great tour.
Have you begun working on any new music yet?
I  was actually talking about it with John 5 the other day for a long  time. We're very excited to get back to it. I feel like it's been a  journey back. It's like the long way around. Educated Horses was sort of  this weird reformation of the band. Hellbilly Deluxe 2 was edging back  to the old days. Now, with the new band, we really want to take it back  to the beginning in a weird way?just a dark, crazy Zombie record. It's  almost exactly like what I think people would want us to do.
ZOMBIE INTERVIEW
Diposting oleh Ed'Gar Whilseon di 22.59
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