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A
Conversation with Peter Becker,
President of The Criterion Collection
When
home theater enthusiasts hear the name Criterion Collection they
instantly think of the highest quality presentation of films. For 15
years, Criterion has been providing fans with the best quality
classic films on DVD and laserdisc, and their well-earned reputation
is second to none. In fact, Criterion pioneered the special edition
format that we've all come to love, enjoy and expect. Today, every
major studio is doing special edition discs. But no one does it as
well, or with as much dedication, as The Criterion Collection. Just
ask any DVD special edition producer out there today -- they would
all site Criterion as the standard they strive to meet.
Criterion itself is represented by a team of the medium's best
producers of special edition discs. Each has their own favorite and
because of it, the Collection is diverse, eclectic and probably the
most rounded group of films on DVD that you can find under one
label. From Suzuki's poetic Tokyo Drifter
to Warhol's Flesh For Frankenstein
to recent hits like Armageddon,
pretty much every genre is represented, with more on the way. It
would take forever to talk with every member of The Criterion
Collection about what they do. With any luck, the Bits
will feature interviews with a number of the different producers
over there in the future (we're working on something even now). But
first, we're proud to present our chat with Criterion president
Peter Becker...
Todd Doogan - The Digital Bits:
Peter, when did you start working with Criterion?
Peter Becker - The Criterion Collection:
I started about six years ago. The first discs that I had a hand in
on the laserdisc side were Silence of the
Lambs, Robocop, the
original edition of Lord of the Flies
and Robinson Crusoe on Mars.
The last big title before I started was probably Bram Stoker's Dracula.
Doogan: When did Criterion
come into existence?
Becker: A fellow named Bob
Stein started the ball rolling. He saw some potential on laserdiscs,
particularly when it was connected to a Macintosh which led to the
Voyager CD-ROM line as well. Bob wanted to do some interesting stuff
with laserdiscs, particularly because they had still frame capacity.
He saw it really as a merging of a film in a book. Bob was very
interested in the capacity of still frame and fairly early on --
also in alternate sound tracks -- and he commissioned a few of them
and got things going. He needed films to work on, and he couldn't
seem to get any Hollywood studios interested in what he wanted to be
doing, so he came to New York to meet with Janus Films, which has to
be one of the larger privately held film libraries in the United
States. That was how Criterion born.
Doogan: When did Criterion
come up with the idea of presenting the film image in its original
widescreen format?
Becker: Letterboxing was
virtually unknown at the time. Criterion was certainly the first
company to make a commitment to present every film in its original
aspect ratio. We made that commitment very early on, right when we
started in the early 80's -- 1984 or so. We started with Invasion
of the Body Snatchers -- that was the first scope film
that we did. It had a letterbox on it and letters poured in from
people saying, "I think my disc is defective, I can only see a
third of the picture." It's amusing now, but letterboxing was
something that people said the public will never ever buy; they
don't want the picture smaller on their television set, they wanted
the picture bigger. They want to see the faces. And there are still
people who feel that way. We just felt that it was important right
from the beginning to make a commitment to presenting films as
filmmakers wanted them seen, and that meant respecting their
framing. And it meant respecting the composition that they had
established in the first place.
Doogan: Criterion seems to
really invest in its special editions. It has to be expensive, both
financially and time-wise, to do the work you guys do.
Becker: There are certainly
easier ways to make DVD's, and there were easier ways to make
laserdiscs. You don't have to go scour the world for elements every
time you want to do a transfer. The pleasure of working at
Criterion, is the pleasure of being able to do it right. We're
working in a company where the first principle is that you have to
respect the films that you work on, and then you have to make the
best possible discs you can. Our goal is to make a disc that is the
closest thing we can to a film archive for the home viewer. We never
talk about "added value" around here. The whole phrase
just sticks in my craw. The idea that you're adding extras to
increase sales is just bogus. That's a waste of time, I think. In
fact, we are finding that there are large audience of people out
there who will, as a result of the work that we do, take chances on
films that they might not otherwise have looked at.
Doogan: What would you say is
the overall mission of Criterion and the producers you have working
there?
Becker: Our mission is pretty
broad as far as the kinds of films that we want to present. What we
insist on, is that all of them be worthy of our attention. We really
do see ourselves as a label, and we want to be as broadly appealing
as possible. We would like to meet as many new friends as we
possibly can. But we also see ourselves to some degree as
representing a constituency of our viewers who do trust us, who do
trust our judgment, and we do regularly get letters from people who
are saying... you know, "I bought this picture on the strength
of the Criterion bar, and I'm not disappointed." Or
occasionally, "I don't understand why it's in the collection."
But even that very question indicates something about the work that
we're doing. The fact that somebody could say "I don't
understand why that's in the collection" is a little indicator
that there's a mission, that there are criteria, and that the
Criterion Collection has reasons for everything we put out --
different reasons in almost every case.
Doogan: All that process, and
all those steps, explains the price point issue that people have
sometimes with Criterion --
Becker: Yeah. The price-point
issue is actually pretty simple. We're an independent company. We do
a very specific kind of work, and the main price-point difference is
tied up in this question of added value. I mean, the added value
concept is "we're going to put something on this DVD that we're
going to give you for free, that we think is going it sell more
units if we put it on there" -- we don't really look at it that
way. We look at it as we're going to approach this film, we're going
to determine at the outset whether we think it is a strong vehicle
for additional study and for supplemental treatment. Most of the
films that we do are full-blown special editions. The cost of
creating those materials is substantial, and we have to ask the
marketplace to share in that cost. This is what we do, and it's --
that's just it. When we put out a fairly standard edition, they tend
to have a fair retail price, which I think most people are not, in
the end, having to pay because of the discounting in the
marketplace. But our SRP is $29 to $39, generally. And then when we
go to a two-disc set, we'll have to go to $49. When we go to a
three-disc set, we'll have to go to $59. And we'll try to be as
stable and predictable about that as we possibly can. When there's a
large amount of supplemental content or a reasonable amount of
supplemental content, we will keep the price at $39. When it's a
fairly straight edition, we'll bring them in at $29. And as far as I
can tell, that puts us essentially 10 bucks above market.
Doogan: Was it a bit
complicated jumping in after all the other studios?
Becker: When our first DVD's
came out in March of 1998, which was exactly a year after the
initial rollout, we were grateful for all that work that had been
done. There was something of a marketplace to release our stuff into
and also we had to be sensitive, honestly, to our laserdisc customer
base. And one of the questions was, "should we abandon
laserdisc and run for DVD? Or should we hate DVD, because it's
jeopardizing laser?" There was an awful lot of discussion going
on there. And our first concerns about DVD compression were
enormous. We were used to looking at an uncompressed video signal,
an analog. One big, fat analog signal, which when it was clean was
gorgeous and when it was noisy, it was noisy. And we worked really
hard on making sure that our pressings were as clean as they could
possibly be. In one case, toward the last year of laser when the
plant started getting a little bit more frantic and worrying about
converting over to DVD and so on, we started to see some messy
pressings. I think we caught it with the Shine
disc. I think there was a lot of discussion about whether DVD was
going to be able to be as good a laserdisc. And I think our concern
was that we didn't want to be in DVD until we felt we could make it
as good or better.
Doogan: What's your opinion on
sites like Ebay and how much some of the Criterion discs are going
for in the secondary market? How do you feel about that?
Becker: I think it is
certainly gratifying to see that some people really value what we do
very highly. I don't know how else I could interpret it. I wish that
it weren't the case, but titles occasionally have to go out of
print. Given that they do, I think it's incredibly flattering and
it's sort of an honor to see your work valued.
Doogan: Sure.
Becker: It's not like the
auction environment is the place that DVD, in principle, belongs,
and we'd love to keep them freely flowing out to the customer base
and so on. But occasionally, things do go out of print and, you
know, someone asked us, " Why did you put it out if you thought
it might go out of print?" And the answer to that one is simply
because we DID have a few years left on our license when we started
working on it, and we felt the DVD marketplace would be a better
place with our Killer edition
in it than without it. And so, you know, we put it out. I hope some
day we'll be able to issue it again.
Doogan: The
Killer, 400 Blows,
Salo, This
is Spinal Tap... what's the story on each of them? Why
did they fall out of the Collection? Was it all because it was the
tail-end of the license, and you guys thought maybe you can extend
it and put it out just in case?
Becker: We were probably still
working on extending, or on renewing, or renegotiating. We never
like to see anything leave the Collection or go out of print. A lot
of film libraries have changed hands in the last few years -- a lot
of distribution is consolidated, and every major company has
different corporate strategies for itself. We've had working
relationships with almost every studio in Hollywood at one time or
another, but always when it made sense for the studio. And at any
given time -- if it doesn't make sense to a studio, or they feel
that there is some reason that they don't want to be licensing, or
they don't feel it's an important initiative for them to start
developing these things themselves, whatever -- then there's not
much that we can do or say about that. There are other cases that
are just as simple as competition in the marketplace, or whatever.
Only one of the titles that you mentioned is one that we actually,
you know, lost rights to a competitor company [The
400 Blows], and that was very painful for Janus.
Honestly, we've been very dedicated to Truffaut for a long time. My
father (William Becker, founder of Janus Films) was very close
friends with Francois himself for a long time.
Doogan: Fox-Lorber -- not to
throw stones -- but how could Criterion lose to Fox-Lorber's DVD's
collection?
Becker: There are many
variables that go into someone's decision. I would like to think
that everybody can see the quality of the work that we do and
recognize it, and will take that into account when they make their
decision as whether or not they're licensing to us and working with
us on a continuing basis. But there are occasionally times when that
is not the sole or even primary concern, and there are times when
money makes the world go around.
Doogan: What was up with the
rumors that went around about Michael Bay pulling a bit of clout to
get the Armageddon disc out
from Criterion.
Becker: Armageddon
was actually an extremely easy, straightforward thing. The
back-story on the whole Disney working relations has been very
smooth. It was very smooth all through our laser life -- I think we
did about 16 or 17 titles on laser with Disney and Miramax. Among
those was The Rock. When The
Rock came up the first time, that was going to be a
monstrous amount of work, and we approached it with a little bit of
trepidation. Michael really wanted to see it happen and so we said,
"okay, let's do it." We hadn't done a major action film
like that before... well, we had done non-traditional action
films...
Doogan: Like Spartacus.
Sparacus is kind of an action
film. An epic, historical, spear-through-the-belly action film, but
an action film none-the-less.
Becker: Not really though, I
mean only in the same way that Henry V
or Passion of Joan of Arc is
an action film. What Michael does is a very specific, very current,
modern brand of adrenal entertainment, and we'd never really done a
movie like that before, and we didn't really know how to approach it
at first. We started to realize that we had to approach it on its
own terms. I don't know if you remember The
Rock LD box, but inside the insert, there was a quote
from Jerry Bruckheimer that basically said that there's a difference
between a megablockbuster and other kinds of film. A movie like that
comes out swinging for the fences. It's a whole other style of
filmmaking, and it was interesting for us. We approached it with,
like I said, a bit of trepidation.
Doogan: Were you guys fans
enough of The Rock that you
consider it a modern day classic?
Becker: We are. Honestly,
within the staff, we had mixed opinions. That's often the way it is
with modern stuff that we do with current films. It's much harder to
argue about the merits of a film when it just comes out in the
theaters, than it is 40 years later, after it's stood the test of
time. It's a lot easier to argue the merits of Seven
Samurai now than it probably was in the 50's.
Doogan: I have always thought
that The Rock was the perfect
brainless action film. Because it's perfect in that sense, I think
it's good enough for me to have a Criterion edition.
Becker: Well, you know, I
think the key to it is that the edition itself has to be a good
edition, and I'm very proud of what we did on The
Rock. I'm very proud of what we've done on both of
Michael's films. And we couldn't have done it without him, and
that's part of what our whole way of working is. We really try to
take our leads very strongly from the filmmakers themselves and the
people involved, trying not to leave any stone unturned. The story
on The Rock is essentially
that Michael really did wanted to do a Rock
Criterion laser, and he made that known to the folks at Disney. The
folks at Disney called us and said, "Do you want to do it?"
We asked if we could think about it overnight, and we had a long,
knock-down, drag-out about it. When it was all over, you know what?
We actually did want to do it. This was a pretty exciting project.
And from then on, we didn't really look back. We had a great time,
and it was a huge disc, not in terms of sales so much in the laser
market, although it was strong, but in terms of content. When
Michael made Armageddon, he
called us while he was shooting at one point and just checked in
with us along the way. There was a whole bunch of back and forth
between us subsequent to The Rock,
and when it came time for Armageddon
to go to home video, the only issue with Disney was being able to
work out arrangements to be able to do it on DVD as well as laser at
that point, because we were converting so much of our work to DVD.
Doogan: Did you expect, and
were you ready for the people who said, "Ooh... Criterion is
selling out doing Supercop and
The Rock"? A lot of
people said that you guys had sold out.
Becker: Criterion is an
on-going living collection. And every decision we make just sort of
adds to it, slow. I don't think the identity of the collection as a
whole is really defined by, or limited by, any single title in the
collection. For some people, the archetypal Criterion Edition might
be The Red Shoes on DVD or
laserdisc -- either one. Different people may have a different idea
of what Criterion is supposed to be. For many people, Criterion is
supposed to be The Seventh Seal
and Seven Samurai. And for me
Criterion is all those things. We aspire to present films that are
the finest possible examples of what they are. It has to have
original voices, and in some cases, be films that have been
championed by a trusted member of our production staff, who said, "Listen...
I really, really feel it's important to work on this."
And you know, Seven was such
a title originally. It was something that one of our key producers
here wanted to work on. I worked very closely with David Fincher,
and at the time that we did Seven,
we were a little bit concerned about it because here it was, this
commercial success, and it had a somewhat lurid and sensationalistic
plotline and it was graphically, if not violent, at least it showed
the graphic aftermath of violence. It was a very disturbing movie. I
think every time you do something, it's always easier to go back and
feel confident when you're going back. It's an odyssey. It's 50
years later and the British Film Institute is naming The
Third Man the number one British film of all time. You
don't have any doubts about that -- nobody is going to ever get on
your case about having done it in The Criterion Collection. It's
going to be a great DVD. It's a great film. The
Rock, on the other hand, is an important contemporary
film, if for no other reason than so many people saw it and that it
is an excellent example of the body of work that Simpson/Bruckheimer
have created. They have a really dedicated audience in the United
States. And you know, in this case, Michael Bay is now a Criterion
director. He will, if he wants to, work on his next film with us --
we have a working relationship there, and we would certainly look
forward to working with him again. He has been very interesting to
work with -- I think we've learned a lot working on his discs. I
certainly learned a lot more about special effects working on a
Michael Bay disc. I think there was probably more special effects
related information on Armageddon
than there's been on anything that we've done since... God, the
original Ghostbusters disc,
Blade Runner, Close
Encounters -- stuff like that. You know. I think that's a
great disc. It's a throbber as they say. So as far the short answer
to the sell out question goes, I can't remember anybody ever really
telling me they thought Criterion had sold out with a straight face.
Doogan: What about Supercop?
Becker: I had wanted to work
on a Jackie Chan film for about four years before we did Supercop,
and I hadn't been able to secure rights to do Project
A or any of the other Jackie Chan films that were coming
out of Asia. We had the Miramax relationship, and Supercop
afforded us the opportunity to work on a Jackie Chan film, and
that's what it really boiled down to for us. We saw an opportunity
to make available footage that was missing from the version that was
released in the theaters in the United States, but we weren't able
to integrate it into the film because of the remix of sound and
there were all kinds of complicated issues on Supercop.
The sound had been beautifully remixed, in a way that Jackie Chan
had been pleased with from all that we knew. We wanted to be able to
avail ourselves with that new soundtrack and you couldn't possibly
cut in the footage that had been missing from the American release
without switching sound tracks. We had to make them available for
the supplemental scenes. But I think they were grateful even for
that.
Doogan: Yeah. It was good
enough. I love the disc, and it's one of those discs I can't get rid
of my LD player for.
Becker: Well, I would have
loved to have presented it in its original form -- either as well
as, or in edition to -- but we didn't. If we had to do over again,
maybe I would. Not every decision we make is always perfect. Films
should be exemplary in some way.
Doogan: Has there ever been a
film that you or anybody on your staff just had to have and everyone
said no? And it was not just a matter of the studio not giving you
rights, but nobody wanted to be involved and there was no point in
doing it?
Becker: On Strangers
in Paradise, we recorded a Jarmusch commentary which we
couldn't use, if that's what you're looking for --
Doogan: Why couldn't you use
it?
Becker: In the end, Jim didn't
like it. We recorded the commentary, we edited it several times, and
we kept reworking it and reworking it. In the end, he just couldn't
get comfortable with it, and we dropped it.
Doogan: That's a shame.
Becker: It's rare. But it
happened. He still supervised the transfer and helped with a whole
bunch of supplementary elements and things like that.
Doogan: Any whole films like
that? Where maybe somebody looked at the film and went, you know I
don't want this put out? Does Criterion still have stuff in the
vault that's never been released but has been mastered,
special-editioned and, in the long run, you couldn't do anything
with it?
Becker: No. The closest to
that was The Prince of Tides.
With the problems we had many years ago on the laserdisc. That was
simply a matter of Barbra Streisand quite rightly having found some
typographical errors in the supplement and thinking better of a
couple comments on the commentary track and asking us to change it,
which we laboriously did over the course of a year-and-a-half. It
lead to some delays, but in the end was more or less the identical
disc to the one that we had originally produced with a couple of
errors corrected and one or two (not terrifically significantly)
comments lost from the commentary track.
Doogan: Didn't this same thing
kind of happen with Brazil?
Didn't Gilliam make some comments that you guys had to end up either
re-recording?
Becker: No, no. Universal is a
class act. They are amazing in this regard. They did not infringe on
the content of the Brazil disc
one bit. In the end, we -- actually prior to my arrival -- we had
started to work on the Brazil
disc, and through an error the disc was announced in the catalog
prior to the final execution of the contract, and that caused a
major delay. Universal felt that we had jumped the gun. You must act
in partnership with these people. To their credit, they understood
that we needed to retain our editorial independence, and that we
needed to be seen as a free from fundamentally distorted censorship
of any kind. We agree in general. Obviously they have review of our
material and things like that for the purpose of protecting
themselves legally, and also for protecting themselves from libel
and slander. Neither Universal nor Disney, for that matter, has ever
made us pull a punch on something like that. They were concerned, on
the Brazil disc, that we make
as well-rounded a version of the story as we could, and we talk to
as many people as we could, which we were doing. All the way along
they've supported us in it, and I think to their advantage -- it's
lifted the air of mystery that surrounded the controversy and made
it all very clear. It's completely understandable now, and it's not
a secret. It's just something that is out there. It's part of
history. To Universal's credit, they didn't make us cut a word,
change a comma -- you know, as long as all the clearances were clear
and everybody had spoken their peace -- they didn't change a thing.
There's another example with Disney, where in the liner notes in
one of the films that we put out on laser, there was a comment that
essentially referred to what may have been a strategic error in the
release pattern of the theatrical release when it came out, and what
was opposite the film. And it was in the liner notes, and I got a
call back from my contact at Disney saying, "Do you think it's
a good idea, putting this in here? " And I said, "Actually
I sort of do", because the film didn't perform as well as
anyone had hoped it would at the box office. We're making the case
this film has lasting value, and is by filmmakers who are important
voices in the film community. And it's a very ambitious film that
needs to be seen and soon, and so forth. I talked it through with
them and they said okay, fine.
Doogan: What types of title
suggestions do you guys get?
Becker: We don't really
comment on them. Because as soon we say, "Oh, yeah that sounds
great" or "I'm really interested, we're actually pursuing
that" or "We're looking at that or we're working on that",
then that information would make its way through all of the usenet
groups, bulletin boards and all that stuff. Two bad things can end
up happening. One, is that we have four new competitors in the
marketplace, who weren't looking for it until they were reading the
boards and saw this excitement over the fact that Criterion was
trying the land the rights. The other problem -- which is even worse
-- is that very quickly it would go from "Oh, thanks for that
great suggestion, we're actually looking into those rights" or "We're
in negotiations for those rights now" to "Criterion has it
scheduled" or "Criterion has it coming out next month"
or even still, "I went to pre-order it my store, and my store
doesn't know anything about it." After that, 48 letters go to
Jon Mulvaney, me and to our sales staff saying, "Where is this
title? Why do you keep announcing this vaporwear?" That's the
fundamental reason that we no longer comment on title suggestions.
As much as we love to receive them, and tell people to keep sending
them (as helpful as they are), it very quickly feeds a rumor mill
that is already willing to believe that we're working on things that
we may not be working on. And that just causes disappointment in the
customer base.
The biggest disappointment for all of us right now is Eraserhead,
which is a title that we never announced. We were in year-long
conversations with David Lynch. And it's one of these things where
David Lynch is a very particular person. He has very peculiar ideas
about how he wants to do things. And he doesn't want to be rushed to
make up his mind. And he wants to do what he wants to do, in the way
that he wants to do it. He doesn't want his privacy infringed, and
he doesn't want to be reading about himself. We were in very
protective conversations with him about Eraserhead
that were all positive, over a long period of time. Suddenly,
there's a rumor on the web that we were actually doing it, and had
announced it. At some point, I even saw street dates posted for it.
You know, this is something that never even made it on to our actual
production load. It had been, at one point, penciled into a schedule
-- if we could finish up negotiations in time. But that's as close
as it ever come. We had certainly never announced anything about it.
That's upsetting.
Doogan: Let me close with a
question from the masses: will there ever be a Criterion DVD
released that meets the announced street date?
Becker: Well, in order to ease
the difficulties we have had in getting product to the customers on
street date, we've changed our whole solicitation method, so that
street dates won't be mentioned until they are a sure thing. This is
only because, as a company, we've refused so many check discs that
the reason we find ourselves lagging behind is because we found
something on the disc we didn't like. This is either in the
compression, in the audio or the authoring. It's sometimes something
that the regular viewer wouldn't necessarily see. But most of our
viewers aren't your average viewer. We hear from the ones that are
extraordinary on a regular basis, and they keep us on our toes.
That's why things slide, and we are doing something about it next
year. I don't mind people knowing what we're working on, but they're
going to have to be patient with us because we have to take the time
to make them right.
---END---
The Digital Bits would like to
thank Peter Becker, Claudia Sullivan and Johanna Schiller for making
this interview possible, and everyone else at Criterion for their
assistance and support. For more on Criterion, please visit their
website, at: https://www.criterionco.com.
The Digital Bits will be doing
more with Criterion in early 2000, and we'll have lots of exciting
news from them when the time comes to announce it.
In the meantime, clicking the link to the next page will take you
to a special preview of some of the titles Crtierion has in the
works for 2000, as well as a complete Criterion Collection DVD
checklist. Enjoy... |
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