With most people the name Harold Ramis probably doesn’t ring a bell instantaneously, but if you ask them to go back a few years to a movie called “Ghostbusters”, most start to remember. Harold Ramis was playing Dr. Egon Spengler in Ivan Reitman’s outrageous action comedy and its sequel, and although he has slowly left the spotlight of acting since then, these days Ramis acts as a successful writer and more importantly as an acclaimed director. Films like “Multiplicity”, “Groundhog Day”, “Caddyshack”, “National Lampoon’s Vacation” and many others carry Ramis’ signature and many of the projects he was involved in have literally become popular culture since. His latest movie “Analyze This” has wowed audiences and critics alike and when we hooked up with the director for this interview, he was actually busy coordinating efforts for a home video release of this particular film through Warner Home Video, including a DVD version. Despite his success Harold Ramis is still a true comedy lover who is very affectionate about the genre, and “Analyze This” is just another example for his talents. |
![]() |
|
|
|||||||||
Starting out as an actor in the TV series “Second City TV” in the 70s, Ramis went on to become an acclaimed screenwriter before he finally started directing his first film, “Caddyshack” in 1980. This progression gives Ramis a lot of insight into the needs of these different professions in order to get the best results on celluloid and it inevitably begs the question, which of the professions he personally enjoys the most. “Directing is the most challenging because it uses everything you know,” he says without deliberation. “About life, philosophy, psychology, all these things. The range of decisions you have to make as a director is so interesting and wide. From the look of the wallpaper all the way to cinematic decisions, it all has to be done and it is extremely challenging. |
![]() |
||||||||
No matter whether he acts, writes or directs a film, one common denominator is always persistent. All his films are comedies, the hardest genre a filmmaker could possibly be in. It is one of the few genres that constantly evolves as people’s tastes and sensibilities change, and cultural events shape our environments. It is also |
||||||||
Never second-guess the audience and dumben them out |
||||||||
![]() |
||||||||
one of the hardest genres as the delivery and the right technique is nothing you can learn by the book. While comedies are obviously his personal preference, Ramis is also eyeing other genres. “There are other things in development in my production company,” he explains. “As a producer I’m very interested in doing other kinds. As a writer it just never happened. Maybe some time.” Interestingly all the films Ramis has been associated with have been hits around the world. While traditionally some movies have a tendency to relate |
||||||||
well to US audiences, Ramis’ films always hit the right string with a variety of cultures. It is not just a matter of finding the right taste, but also of finding the right people to work with. “Part of it is working with people you respect and who have talent,” Ramis confides. “Analyze This is a perfect example. My main actors were both directors, which made it very easy for me to work with them, because they know how to make it work.” This is without a doubt one of the most important aspects when creating a comedy because the subtle delivery of a line of dialogue can make all the difference, just as a subtle gesture or change in pose can.” “We also have a motto, which is, always work from the top of your intelligence. Never second-guess the audience and dumben them out. When I started I did a lot of broad comedy, but there’s a big difference between broad and stupid comedy,” the director explains. “I also always try to maintain some philosophical and moral ambition in my films. There always needs to be something to be learned from it.” |
|
|
||||||||||||||
Aykroyd,” he remembers excitedly. “We wrote the script together and we were on the set together. Being on the set as actors too, allowed us to shape the material as we went along. It was very funny. And then of course there was Bill Murray, who is a phenomenal improviser. It was a lot of fun to watch the scenes go down.” |
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
following. It would have been completely disloyal for me to leave,” Ramis explains. |
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Director of Photography who helps a lot, there are great production and set designers who take up the slack. Usually I just sit back, let them do their work and let people bring questions to me as they arise. It’s a very collaborative process. I’m no expert in the technical aspects of filmmaking so I don’t even try to interfere with their expertise.”Although there seems to be a tendency in Hollywood that the director is supposed to know everything, Ramis has learned early on that sometimes it is just as important to be able to say “I don’t know!” at times. “There is this auteur feel around directors these days, the impression the director needs to know everything, which I think is not true.” |
No pre-visualization can account for proper preparation when it comes to hard-hitting action scenes however and Ramis agrees that preparation is indeed required there. “The action scenes in my films are usually fully storyboarded, shot by shot. It’s just too dangerous not to and I don’t want to take any chances.” |
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
medium came around, the industry panicked. When video showed up, again they thought it would kill movie theaters, and it didn’t. Now the industry adapted to it and today we have day & date releases and it doesn’t hurt the theatrical runs of movies at all. Movies are a great social experience and nothing can replace the feeling of being in a movie theater with others.” |
“Analyze This” has so far been Harold Ramis’ most successful film - at least from a monetary standpoint - and it is the film he is most proud of at this point, but he is also very fond of his previous film “Groundhog Day”. Observing that sometimes the work he is the most satisfied with is not necessarily the most successful one, he mentions that it is in part because viewers just don’t have the chance to notice all the details that were put into the film and that were important to the filmmakers. |
|
|
||||||||||||||||||
Tribeca, with Robert DeNiro in mind and it traveled from there. Usually you start out with a dream cast in your imagination. In this case when I was handed the project, it already had a dream cast.” |
“Analyze This” started its life as a spec script by playwright Kenneth Lonergan and quickly found its way into Billy Crystal’s hands who hired Peter Tolan to do another draft. As he read it, Crystal immediately saw Robert DeNiro in the part of Paul Vitti and approached Tribeca Productions so that DeNiro and his partner Jane Rosenthal could take a look at it. From there things just started rolling. Although slightly concerned whether he should really parody himself, Robert DeNiro took the chance because he was very intrigued by the concept. Making sure not to turn the film into a flat parody however, he approached the project with the same integrity with which he approaches everything. He insisted that the film accurately and authentically reflect the world of the character he was going to portray, which was in complete accord with Billy Crystal’s vision of the film. To bring in Harold Ramis as the film’s director was easy, as he turned out to be everyone’s first choice. But Ramis was not exactly happy to go to New York to shoot the film after having relocated from Los Angeles to Chicago shortly before. |
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
think I’m funny enough, will they respect me as a director, of course these questions flipped through my mind, but I simply turned that noise off. My first meeting was with Bob alone in a restaurant and he was very down to earth, enthusiastic and immediately responded to my ideas. This meeting took away a lot of the anxiety.” |
“I was much more anxious to please Billy Crystal to make sure it’s as funny as he wants it, that it has the right balance he wants, things like that. After all, Billy had been developing the project longer than anyone else.” |
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
wanted to show that the cycle of violence can indeed be broken. “Yes, the film is a comedy,” Ramis points out, “and we were never going to lose sight of that. But a comedy can still say something meaningful.” With “Analyze This” completely wrapped for a home video release, Harold Ramis is now turning his attention towards several new projects and a big rewrite of one of his 20th Century Fox projects, but can’t tell any of the details. When “Analyze This” will hit DVD later this month, I am sure many people will agree with his vision and that of Billy Crystal and Robert DeNiro. The film turned out to be an incredibly intelligent comedy and a highly successful one. If Harold Ramis the actor is best known for his part in the “Ghostbusters” movies, Harold Ramis the director will certainly be best known from now on for his achievement on “Analyze This”. |
© 1997-99 by “DVD Review”. All rights reserved. |
||