Entertainment Weekly: Director David Slade Answers 5 Burning Questions About The ‘Eclipse’ DVD

24 Comments December 3, 2010 by Filed Under: David Slade, Eclipse DVD, Interview

Eclipse David Slade 320 280x210 Entertainment Weekly: Director David Slade Answers 5 Burning Questions About The Eclipse DVD interview eclipse dvd david slade Entertainment Weekly asked director David Slade 5 burning questions about the Twilight Saga: Eclipse DVD/Blu-Ray.  The most important is why there is no blooper reel!!  

1. Why doesn’t he do a commentary track? Slade is obviously well-represented in the feature-length making-of documentary and introduces and provides context for deleted and extended scenes, but he’s not on either of the two commentary tracks over the movie — he leaves those to Stephenie Meyer and producer Wyck Godfrey, and Stewart and Robert Pattinson (she’s in Montreal, jealous that he’s in L.A. eating In-N-Out). “It’s a choice I made after doing my first ever and last ever commentary on my first film Hard Candy,” he says. “I did a commentary for that and found it such an unsatisfactory experience, personally, that I vowed never to do it again, because I’m not very good at it. You work for a year-and-a-half, two years, however long it is on a film, and it’s a very personal experience as well as a very public experience. There’s so much catharsis that goes into it, and then you end up sitting in a little room and you reduce what was an intense amount of work down to a crappy, silly little anecdote usually. ‘It was raining that day.’ [Laughs] I just found it to be really disheartening, and, like I say, I’m not really good at it. I didn’t do one for my second film [30 Days of Night] either.”

2. Listening to Stephenie and Wyck’s commentary, you hear a lot of the discussions that went on on-set, like debating how Jacob should kiss Bella both times, and you realize what a collaborative experience making a Twilight film must be. Is that helpful or more challenging as a director? “If you’re in sync with everybody, the collaboration is second nature. What you’re doing is looking for the best ideas and utilizing them. Certainly there is a lot of collaboration, but there is also a lot of clarity that has to be had in the vision that you have for the film when you come in as the director. Without that, there’s no bullseye to be aiming for,” he says. “There’s all kinds of things that we can discuss, but at the end of the day, I’m the guy that has to go off and get the shot… Film is always a fight because you’re the person, as the director, with a clear picture in your head of what you think is really exciting, and you’re just trying to convince a bunch of other people to buy into that. That’s always gonna be a tough ride, particularly when there’s two very successful films that have gone beforehand. There’s a tendency to think safely. ‘We have something that works. Why would we change this or that?’ Anything that was changed, they took lots of discussion. But there was nothing that was like everybody disagrees. There were only discussions to get to a point where everybody was comfortable.” One example: The shattering vampires in Eclipse. “I was really fascinated with the pathology of the creatures. There’s one thing to write something from an emotional place when she imagined it, a dream of a man who’s made of diamonds, which is now the mythology and the lore that goes into how she describes Edward Cullen. But then to me, well, that’s esoteric. I have to make something really tangible. So let’s get pathological, let’s figure out why do they shine, and therefore what are they made of, and therefore why do they break?,” Slade says. “There was a certain balance that had to be struck between a really great visual image and also what would work for Stephenie. One of the things I remember was the size of the pieces. You couldn’t have biscuit-size pieces around because people might find them. Which is fair enough. We would have to then adapt our effects work to make sure there were no biscuit-size pieces. There were big chunks that broke off that could all be found and burned, because in the books, of course they continue to live. They’re not inanimate, those little pieces will crawl around, which we took cinematic license not to do.”

3. Why don’t we see all the deleted scenes described in the commentaries on the DVD? Stewart describes the first thing she shot on the movie — a “fairly ridiculous” sequence in which she imagined herself in the fireside flashback as the Quileute elder chief’s third wife, who stabbed and sacrificed herself to distract the vengeful female vampire attacking the village. Meyer and Godfrey describe people laughing when they saw it. Understandable that they would choose not to include it. Ditto the scene Bella imagined after her kiss with Jacob on the mountain. She saw them having grown old together. “There were a lot of issues with prosthetic makeup,” Slade says with a groan, then a laugh. “It gives me a bit of a shiver, as a filmmaker. As an idea, it was wonderful. What happens with a film is it becomes organic and it grows, and it tells you what it wants, and it was screaming loudly, ‘I don’t want that!’ to me.” Another scene described in the commentaries never actually got shot. “Stephenie really wanted to see Edward as a young man again, and we had this vision scripted for a while where Bella and he are together in Victorian times, as a kind of reverie,” Slade says.

4. Did he ever toss a grape into Taylor Lautner’s mouth between takes? The making-of documentary occasionally breaks into “Taylor Time” (there’s even a graphic) during which we see Lautner having fun on-set. Slade’s assistant and Stewart are seen throwing grapes that Lautner catches in his mouth from a good distance away. Did the director ever partake in that game? “Not me,” he says. “I watched in astonishment and photographed him backflipping from a standstill, which he does. I also got to witness how he terrorized, in a very good-natured way, the bodyguards that were hired to make sure that they were all fine. He would play practical jokes on them all the time. It was quite a lot of fun.”

5. Why don’t we get a blooper reel on the DVD? Kristen and Rob talk about how people fell a lot on the fake snow. That, for instance, we would have liked to have seen. “We had a blooper reel, but I think people were pretty potty-mouthed,” Slade says. “I think you can put that down to bad language.”

No blooper reel because of bad language!  *cries* 

[Source: EW via TwilightTwitter]

Category: David Slade, Eclipse DVD, Interview

  • Bellas<3SPIDERFLIPPY TmGarrett

    Aaaw come on.. Seeing people fall in the snow is funnyyy! (Even if I hate snow.. LOL)

  • http://www.youtube.com/user/CoraleComics?feature=mhum#p/f/5/rPmW58Bv7kg LegHitchThis

    No bloopers because of bad language?!
    -uses bad language- FKSHT!!!!!!!!

    XD It would’ve been funny to see! :P

  • amanda_cullen

    awww…. but they could’ve censored it. :(

  • Anonymous

    WTF? Come on no bloopers cuz of bad language? Just put a disclaimer extras not rated! UGH!

  • http://www.eclipsemovie.org/ Jaypat – Team Patsa!

    I know!! *cries*

    F*CK!

  • KL☼ W4E♥Ami♣BD1♂BD2♀Cptvs↑

    …then what the hell was the “BLEEEEEP” buttom made for?…
    Well, with Kristen it may have been a whole bunch of “bleeper” scenes, lol. That girl can $#!& with the best of them! ♥

    This sucks! I was so looking forward to giggling with them… ={

  • Mullet Mofowski (CF)

    That’s what I don’t understand. There is a mute button, use it!

  • Anonymous

    Well that’s just annoying.. They could have had a blooper reel.. and we all would have loved it.. BUT just cause some parents would get mad about them hearing “potty mouth” we have to live without it.. Bloody H3LL.. release it as an Unrated and let us adults enjoy it..

  • TaysWifey2010

    I would have liked to have seen Taylor terrorising the bodyguards. xD

  • http://www.fanfiction.com/~youroasis MCNutters [Team Renesmee]

    me too! we never see that side of him anymore. =/ but when i first read it i was like dawww yay! he’s such a guy. LOL adorkable.

  • Fanpire Cecy

    AWW, what the BLEEP! I BLEEPin’ wanna see some BLEEPin’ good as BLEEP bloopers! MotherBLEEPin’ people BLEEPin’ ruining it for everyone else. . .
    :|

  • http://www.youtube.com/user/CoraleComics?feature=mhum#p/f/5/rPmW58Bv7kg LegHitchThis

    -pats back-

    There, there. We’ll HAVE to get some bloopers for BD! There will be a child on set half the time. Oh a girl can hope… -crosses fingers-

  • http://www.youtube.com/user/CoraleComics?feature=mhum#p/f/5/rPmW58Bv7kg LegHitchThis

    They should’ve been creative and censored it with a wolf sound or something.. D:

  • Anonymous

    No blooper reel cuz of bad language? REALLY? thats what make bloopers funny! lmfaoo

  • Pikachu2937

    Wouldn’t it be great if they did a directors cut of the movies and put all the extended scenes in it

  • Thewolfgirl2010

    Yep or just people in general falling on their asses is so funny. One time when i was a junior in high school and we were going on a field trip to ice skating my chemistry teacher wrote how many people will fall down. Good times.

  • Thewolfgirl2010

    Anyway this is why I love David Slade because he is so honest with how he feels about things

  • Anonymous

    I dont give a toss, if people where laughing or whatever lame excuse there was. Ye should have put in those scenes, this is just STUPID, we wait for a whole year and ye release bits and pieces at a time for each movie, then the Movie Companion comes out and theres some deadly pictures in it or a music video comes out and theres cool scenes in it, then when we go to actually watch the movie NONE of the scenes are in it. Why do ye talk about them then never put them in. The best parts of the 3 novels that where made into movies where left out and i know its gonna be the same for breaking dawn. If it is PG13 then fine but follow the book stop leaving things out. >=/

  • Anonymous

    In the Neutron Star Collision”Love is forever” muse music video, there was a scene where Bella walks over to Edward and he looks upset its the lines “lie, i will never, cos our love will be forever”. Its there.
    Was that in Eclipse or even in the deleted/extended scene’s? Can somebody HELP and answer this question please! =).

  • bella ♥ vita

    Damn straight! If they have a problem with cussing then don’t watch it or put it on mute! Geesh. I’m going out on a limb here and guessing that the decision to not include it was all Scummit! God forbid they ever actually admit to themselves and the public that their actual demographic is really women ages 20 and up at some point before this franchise is finished. Still stubborn and in complete denial until the very end I see!

    Watch 20 years from now when they put out like some uber ultimate collector’s editions of the films they’ll probably still be claiming that Twilight fans were teens and tweens. Its just so sad to me that that’s what this series will be remembered by the media and public for is squealing teenage girls. Ugh…

  • Mullet Mofowski (CF)

    I know one thing. I was at Target first thing this morning buying Eclipse, and there wasn’t one damn teenager there. All women my age or older.

  • rHiz_patzz – ♥ dirty Robowski

    aww/ :( i loooove to see the bloopers!

  • http://www.twitter.com/veecia accv_LiKEOMG*RobLorElica!*<3

    aslkdfjalsdjfalsjdflasjlfkalfkladsfsadfasd!

    *rant continues, and fades into the background*

  • TaysWifey2010

    Lol that’s true, we don’t. I miss that playful slightly bad boy side of him. It doesn’t come out very often lately.
    Haha he is very adorkable. I love that kid. ♥

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