What Happens When the Author Directs the Movie: How Robert Rodriguez Recruited Frank Miller to Co-Direct Sin City

In the nine­teen-nineties, Quentin Taran­ti­no and Robert Rodriguez first col­lab­o­rat­ed on a movie. No, it was­n’t From Dusk Till Dawn, the Rodriguez-direct­ed crime-pic­ture-turned-hor­ror-com­e­dy in which Taran­ti­no plays George Clooney’s psy­chot­ic broth­er. It was an anthol­o­gy pic­ture called Four Rooms, whose sep­a­rate but inter­con­nect­ed sto­ries, all set in the same hotel on New Year’s Eve, were direct­ed by an all-star line­up of the “Indiewood” auteurs of 1995: Taran­ti­no, Rodriguez, Alli­son Anders, and Alexan­dre Rock­well. Rodriguez jumped at the chance to do short-form work and col­lab­o­rate with friends, but alas, the con­cept inspired much more enthu­si­asm from movie­go­ers than the result, to say noth­ing of the crit­ics’ judg­ment.

“Antholo­gies nev­er work,” Rodriguez said last year dur­ing an inter­view with Lex Frid­man. Even with the best film­mak­ers par­tic­i­pat­ing, “they bomb because peo­ple can’t quite wrap their head around it”: they feel like the movie keeps start­ing over and over again. Yet in the full­ness of time, Four Rooms took his career up a lev­el, not down.

“I real­ly want this anthol­o­gy thing to work,” he says, explain­ing his mind­set about a decade after that film’s fail­ure. “What if it’s three sto­ries, like a three-act struc­ture, not four, same direc­tor, not four dif­fer­ent direc­tors?” After all, “I had already done one and fig­ured out how I could do it bet­ter.” The result was Sin City, from 2005, his adap­ta­tion of Frank Miller’s acclaimed noir com­ic-book series co-direct­ed with Miller him­self.

By now, com­ic-book movies, or at least movies that make use of intel­lec­tu­al prop­er­ty drawn from com­ic books, have long been com­mon­place. What Rodriguez and Miller made two decades ago was some­thing dif­fer­ent: a film that looked and felt just like its source mate­r­i­al. As Dan­ny Boyd explains in the Cin­e­maS­tix video at the top of the post, Sin City was “not an adap­ta­tion, but a trans­la­tion,” which Rodriguez thought of less as bring­ing the page to the screen than “tak­ing cin­e­ma and turn­ing it into a book.” Iron­i­cal­ly, Miller had meant to avoid the whole Hol­ly­wood devel­op­ment process by delib­er­ate­ly mak­ing the orig­i­nal comics as un-filmable as pos­si­ble — he just had­n’t reck­oned on what tech­nol­o­gy and Rodriguez’s D.I.Y. ethos would even­tu­al­ly make pos­si­ble.

Hav­ing famous­ly bro­ken into Hol­ly­wood with his debut fea­ture El Mari­achi, the “$7,000 movie” on which he per­formed all tech­ni­cal duties, Rodriguez under­stood how dig­i­tal film­mak­ing could empow­er indi­vid­ual cre­ators. The green screen, which enables the place­ment of real actors into any set­ting imag­in­able, promised him a way to re-cre­ate the “lay­ers of unre­al­i­ty” that con­sti­tute a flam­boy­ant­ly styl­ized work of ultra-noir like Sin City. In the video just above, Boyd shows us how green-screen shoot­ing made it pos­si­ble to real­ize the comic’s elab­o­rate aes­thet­ic in motion, cre­at­ing not a cheap sub­sti­tute for real sets and loca­tions, as has since become dispir­it­ing­ly com­mon in Hol­ly­wood, but anoth­er real­i­ty alto­geth­er. And if you can bring Quentin Taran­ti­no in to guest-direct a sequence, as Rodriguez did, so much the bet­ter.

Relat­ed Con­tent:

Direc­tor Robert Rodriguez Teach­es The Basics of Film­mak­ing in Under 10 Min­utes

How the “Mar­veliza­tion” of Cin­e­ma Accel­er­ates the Decline of Film­mak­ing

When a Mod­ern Direc­tor Makes a Fake Old Movie: A Video Essay on David Fincher’s Mank

The Essen­tial Ele­ments of Film Noir Explained in One Grand Info­graph­ic

Every Spi­der-Man Movie and TV Show Explained By Kevin Smith

Niger­ian Teenagers Are Mak­ing Slick Sci Fi Films With Their Smart­phones

Based in Seoul, Col­in Marshall writes and broad­casts on cities, lan­guage, and cul­ture. He’s the author of the newslet­ter Books on Cities as well as the books 한국 요약 금지 (No Sum­ma­riz­ing Korea) and Kore­an Newtro. Fol­low him on the social net­work for­mer­ly known as Twit­ter at @colinmarshall.


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