Todd Phillips on Due Date, Mel Gibson and Why He Hates Snarky Blog Headlines

Todd Phillips, as I found out, is not afraid of confrontation. And maybe I shouldn't have been surprised that the director of The Hangover and this weekend's new release, Due Date, wasn't afraid to push the boundaries, even in an interview setting. Phillips makes it clear from the start that he's not particularly a fan of Movieline. And to be honest, knowing this now, I actually respect the fact that he went ahead and did this interview, even though, yes, we did get off to a rather rocky start.

As you know from the incredible marketing push, Due Date stars Robert Downey Jr. as Peter, a man who just wants to get from Atlanta to Los Angeles to witness the birth of his new child. Zach Galifianakis, a Phillips favorite, stars as Ethan who is on his way to "Hollywood" in an effort to fulfill his dream of staring on Two and a Half Men. These two unlikely travelers find themselves driving cross-country together after an unfortunate kerfuffle that lands both of them on a no-fly list. I spoke to Phillips (after some initial, well, let's just call them, unpleasantries) about his love of Galifianakis, why Malcolm X jokes can be polarizing, the sequel to The Hangover and what really pisses him off about this Mel Gibson situation.

Thanks for taking the time to do this.

This is for Movieline?

Yes.

This website's the worst, but, all right, let's do it.

Oh, no. Why do you say that?

No, honestly, I'm teasing, but you guys just hate every movie. So it's like, "Ugh, really, I have to do this and open myself up to some snarky, clever title?" You know what I mean? There are movie sites that love movies and there are movie sites that are just bitter people that just hate movies. I find Movieline to be in the latter. The tone is bizarrely hateful.

Really? I wouldn't call it hateful at all.

In print. You're right, in person I've only had great experiences with [the writers]. And I'm not even talking about my own personal things, I'm saying that when I go on that site and read about other movies, it just seems like one of those sites.

Would it make you happy to get Mel Gibson out-of-the-way early? I'm not really sure what you can add at this point. Do you have a favorite Mel Gibson movie? I'm a bit partial to Bird on a Wire.

I think Apocalypto, probably. Have you seen it?

I have.

I mean, the guy is a masterful filmmaker. That's easy.

Where were The Dan Band?

In Due Date? Yeah, we didn't use them in Due Date. You're right, they do not make an appearance. That is correct.

I didn't think about it until after the movie, but it always a treat to see them.

I love those guys.

Why did you make Peter and Ethan each so individually frustrating? The second you start to like one of them, one of them does something like spit on a dog...

I think that's a good question, that's kind of what made the movie interesting for me. To not take that studio note mentality of, "OK, let's make them likable." I think what Robert Downey brings to a role is the ability to spit in a dog's face, lose the audience for five minutes, and then win them back. Quite straight with you, not kidding, that was what the challenge was of the movie and that was made me want to make the movie with the guys. And I think what made them want to do the movie was kind of f*cking with the tone of it in a way -- it's not a very linear tone. The structure might be a linear story but, tonally, we go from really f*cked up stuff to sometimes sad stuff to sometimes something way out of line. It's just shifting of the tones that made it interesting and I think the same thing goes for the tone of each character. Ideally, to me, that's what makes the movie special. Like you just said, we didn't make one guy the good cop and one guy the bad cop or one guy the straight man and one guy the crazy man.

You make a good point about Downey. He spits in the dog's face and I hated the guy, but I forgot about that pretty quickly.

That dog was a total as*hole, too, don't forget that. You know, I was spitting in his face between takes.

Has Zach Galifianakis become your go to guy? Is he to you like DiCaprio with Scorsese?

(Laughs) I was trying to think of a funny one, what immediately came to my head was Pesci for him, but I couldn't think of something funny for me. You know, people work like that -- in no way are we comparing ourselves, you said that one -- but people find each other and you find the shorthand as a director and a filmmaker and a writer, I find myself, when I read scripts, working on an idea, my head goes to Zach because he's just somebody that I have such a shorthand with. Somebody that I know can do anything. And I'm talking about stuff that he hasn't done yet in any movie yet that I still know he's capable of.

Where did this movie come from? Is this from a personal experience? I will say that a road trip when you're 21 is a lot more fun than when you're in your 30s.

Right! Yeah, it's a little more of a hassle. But to me, really, the road trip element is the structural element. But what the road really represents is the ability to take your main characters out there and put them out there without a safety net. They don't have their family or friends or personal belongings. When that element shows up in movies, that's what it represents.

Were you at all inspired by other movies with similar themes? I sensed a little Planes, Trains and Automobiles in there except, like you said, the characters aren't quite as likable as Neil and Del.

Well there was a lot of movies -- and Planes, Trains is, of course, a movie I've seen many times and loved -- but we talked about Midnight Run. We talked about Rain Man. Rain Man we talked about all of the time. The road trip element of Rain Man was something that we talked a lot about that relationship and that kind of tension and a weirdness that those two guys had.

No offense to Mr. Creepy, but I enjoyed your cameo in Due Date.

(Laughs) Thank you. I'll tell him when he gets back from the peep show.

Please do that. You share that scene with Juliette Lewis. I interviewed her for the first time a few weeks ago. There's a lot of crossover, in a good way, in her personality to what you see on-screen. Does that make sense?

That makes absolute sense. She's a live wire and she brings so much energy and so much sunshine to every role that she does. I have no other way to explain her, she's just like sunshine when she shows up on set. Everything changes, I love her so much.

In a movie you can never have enough masturbating jokes.

(Laughs) That's funny.

In college, when you have a roommate, you get used to falling asleep with those kind of noises in the background. The scene in the car reminded me of that.

I actually never had to deal with that. For me, that scene is about representing how unaware Ethan is and unaware of the social norms.

And the Malcolm X scene caught me off guard. I let off an embarrassingly loud laugh.

I know, it's such a bizarre joke out of nowhere. Yeah, it's a little ridiculous but I'm glad that you dug that one. Not everyone loves it (laughs).

I can see that one going both ways.

Well, you know, that's how all comedy is. Comedy is so subjective. You could be in a room with 400 people laughing at a joke and you could just not think it's funny. You're just sitting there like, "Am I in the twilight zone? Why is everyone laughing?" It's such a personal thing. People have such a personal visceral response to comedy.

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Comments

  • Scraps says:

    I always thought Seinfeld should have had an episode or two exclusively of Kramer driving across country to fulfill his dream of acting and starring on 'Murphy Brown'. The Synopsis of 'Due Date' reminds me of that. Plus, Kramer would undoubtedly be on the "no fly list" in the post 9/11 world.

  • NP says:

    How could someone who writes comedy completely fail to understand Movieline's sense of humor?

  • Gideon says:

    The criticism about the hateful tone for Movieline is not necessarily unwarranted (see "Movieline's Stephanie Zacharek vs. Inception") but you have my permission to shit on Todd Phillips all you want. The guy knows how to get butts on the seats, so kudos for that, but The Hangover was a huge missed opportunity.

  • Peter Atencio says:

    I don't understand the point of this interview, it seems to just be going over a bunch of (potentially plot-spoiling?) jokes from a movie that isn't even out yet.

  • Kirk says:

    Amazing how his uncomfortable humor comes out even in an interview. Loved reading this!

  • SunnydaZe says:

    Todd, you come across as a hypocrite by creating antisocial comedy films and then saying a movie site can't be snarky. Can dish it out but you can't take it? Some of the writers and commenters on this site are the best joke writers in the business. When so many movie sites are run by high school kiss-asses this is the one place to find the true biting sarcasm the current film industry deserves. Of course we don't like a lot of movies or tv shows because most SUCK. But Movieline is champion to films like yours and shows like Mad Men. Here is your snarky headline> "Todd Phillips is a Douche". Wrote that myself and didn't even have to ask for my English teacher's help....

  • SunnydaZe says:

    BTW, where's Old No. 7 when you really need him?

  • Relaaaax says:

    He clearly understands the "humor" of Movieline. He was merely expressing his opinion (the same way Movieline writers express their opininions). I found his candor refreshing. I also respect the fact that he did the interview even after finding out it was for Movieline. A lot of "hollywood assholes" would have just been like, "next". He is far from a hypocrite. Kudos.
    You guys did a great interview. Good job.

  • Mike Ryan says:

    To tell the truth, I really enoyed talking with him. His honesty was refreshing. I'm glad that you picked up on that.

  • SunnydaZe says:

    High School kiss-ass. (Sarcasm alert. Maybe we should put all sarcastic remarks in red so people don't get confused cause I damn sure ain't gonna do this> 😉
    But, really, he insulted this site in the worst way and you found that refreshing? Do you think he would have found it refreshing if you had said his films are offensive, juvenile tripe?
    He said we are all bitter people who hate movies!

  • Mike Ryan says:

    If that's how he feels? Yes, I have no problem with him stating his opinion. Personally, I think his opinion is wrong, and I told him that -- but I'll take a discussion like that any day of the week as opposed to a pre-packaged statement created in a PR department. The insult itself wasn't refreshing, but his honesty certainly was.

  • anna says:

    Zach Galifiankis and Todd Phillips Talk "Due Date," Their Playlists and Lilith Fair @ARTISTdirect http://bit.ly/90RylQ

  • SunnydaZe says:

    Well said. The issue is this> If you are going to be a "nothing is sacred go-for-broke" comedian don't insult others of your kind. If Christopher Nolan had made the same remarks it would have been understandable.
    This is like (get ready for some hyperbole) Richard Pryor saying George Carlin is a bitter, snarky bastard.
    And that's just my opinion, man. 😉

  • Patrick McEvoy-Halston says:

    Re: Would it make you happy to get Mel Gibson out-of-the-way early? I’m not really sure what you can add at this point. Do you have a favorite Mel Gibson movie? I’m a bit partial to Bird on a Wire.
    I think Apocalypto, probably. Have you seen it?
    He responded to your dance of herring by smacking you (Apocalypto-like) with a sword-fish. It's a bit Jon Stewart to Tucker Carlson on Crossfire, except without Carlson's retort. Regarding high school, I wonder if the problem he most has with Movieline is that it smacks of being mother-loved, front-in-center, cheerful preppy-playful / skeptic, when he's bonding in the back with unspoiled sons of the father-spanked, working class.

  • Brad says:

    Your interview spoiled a bunch of stuff and plot points. It's one thing if he does it in his answer, but your questions were like "This part was cool, don't you think?"
    Try a spoiler warning at the start of the thing plz?

  • Kristen says:

    He kind of comes off as an abrasive guy with an insensitive demeanor yet I can’t help but like him. Whether or not individuals rank him high on the list of “quality directors” in Hollywood, he certainly gets the job done and has developed a virtuous rapport with many of the actors he’s worked with. Maybe not Mel Gibson, though.

  • sissi212 says:

    It's unbelievable how honest and straightforward this Director is. I loved the interview and can't wait to see the movie.

  • KevyB says:

    Should I be surprised that he writes while smoking too much pot? Because I laughed maybe twice throughout The Hangover. I seriously cannot see what was so funny about that movie. It's all been done before. And this one doesn't appear to be any different. If it wasn't for Zach's serious awesomeness, nobody would've thought twice about that movie, and he wouldn't even be around to bitch about Movieline.

  • Vijay Prince says:

    how sweet is corny that much sweet are corny jokes