ROBOTS
ROBIN WILLIAMS: REANIMATED.
Robin Williams/Robots Interview by Paul Fischer in Los Angeles
Robots is released in the U.S. this Friday and in
the U.K.on 18th March!
The
more one interviews Robin Williams, the tougher it is to keep
a straight face. Anyone who has sat with the brazen comic
for as long as this journalist has, knows it's always a challenge
but while promoting his return to animation, as an anarchic
robot headed for the junk heap in Robots, Williams promises
to be in control. "It's just really good to see you,
so thank you. This is fun to do, an interview like this, 'Oh,
hi. Nice to see you again.' " Oh yeah Robin Williams
is in the house. Here he is in his element, having returned
to the cartoon world that almost reinvented him a decade earlier
with Disney's Aladdin. He responds unequivocally when asked
if he has fun doing animated films. "No shit, dad,"
he replies, laughingly, adding that it's all about letting
loose and riffing. "And when you have someone with a
sense of humour like Chris Wedge you know that he'll add more
and that he'll give the visual to this."
Of course,
a movie such as Robots might begin with the written word,
but Williams will take a script and go off on whatever tangents
he feels he can get away with, as he explains in his own inimitable
way. "Yeah, Chris goes in and says, 'Here are the lines.'
I'll go in and I'll take that and go, 'Alright, I'll go off
in this way.' Or you have to try different scams and things
because that character basically a street scam artist. So
you first just try to get inspired for what the voice will
be. At first I tried a kind
of Bowery guy. 'Are you crazy like that?' Then I'd try like
a little bit of a Homie-bot, like, 'Yo. Yo.'
Then I tried to bring it down and do a little crankpot. 'Yeah,
yeah, it's really good.' Then I brought it back and made it
slightly off, a little off, but then you kind of get it simplified
because you realize that kids are going to watch it. Then
you modify that for effect and then once you've got the base
you can go off. And with him and with real animations you
can build on it over a period of time and they add layer after
layer and layer. You see the early drawings and you go, 'Okay.
He's got a crank for a head. I like that.' Then, 'Okay. He's
falling apart. I can work with that.' And these parts are
from different people maybe, things he's found. You work off
all of that. Then you start to build off the fact that if
he falls apart he's still going to make it like an alcoholic.
[Drunk Character] 'Everything is okay. I'm fine. Shit happens,
happen. I have no drinking problem, there's just a lot of
alcohol around.' You build off of that."
For Williams,
his journey to Toon Town began with Aladdin which won him
a
special Golden Globe Award. "Oh yeah. That was the first
time that I could
really riff. It was like stand-up on film," he recalls.
What brought him
back to animation, he says, was "seeing them design the
world," admits the
actor who is all into computer games. "I love computer
graphics and have had
Pixar envy for a long time," he adds, laughingly. "I
guess after 'Aladdin,'
we had the falling out with Disney and then the reconciliation,
but I think that during
that time I missed a lot of chances to work with Pixar and
then this came
along and I caught a wave. I got to work with Chris, who's
good friends with
John
[Musker] and is, I think, equal on that level of creating
worlds, so I
wanted to be a part of it." The Robots experience may
have reenergised
Williams' interest in doing more animation, "but you
know, you have to pick and choose. You don't want to do so
much of it that kids go, [Kid Character] 'Is this you? Really,
I'd like to see a movie without you.'?" Not there's
any chance of that, with all the recent dark roles he has
taken on. "Yeah. I
got dark, psycho roles. I get nice letters from prison. It's
like, 'Hey, pretty boy', " he adds, assuming the voice
of a prisoner.
Williams has been
on top of his game for over two decades so it was no
surprise that he received the Golden Globe this year for Lifetime
Achievement, but cheerfully denies it had nothing to do with
sucking up to the much maligned Hollywood Foreign Press. "No
sucking up. It's just like I'd known them for twenty seven
years and they were like, 'Why did you bring up the Pia Zadora
thing?'
'Look, it happened. I know you, you're like my extreme extended
European
family. We come, we have a nice meal and we talk. Hello.'
I've known them
for so many years. It's kind of interesting because the Golden
Globes are so
much looser than the Academy Awards for better or worse. It
has an open bar
and you'll just see people half way through the awards going,
'This is
fucking great.' And the FCC guy is going crazy."
But
the Golden Globe and Oscar winner has a lot to be pleased
about as he continues to balance between the mainstream and
the off beat, as the actor prepares to shoot 'The Night Listening,
' which he describes as a "small movie in New York, where
I actually play a writer who finds out that there's a kid
who's a fan of his and the boy tries to meet him, and it becomes
very convoluted. It's nice to balance that with the animation,
so it keep the
kids off guard." Talking about animation, he has also
finished Australian director
George Miller's Happy Feet. "I play about six things
in that, such as a
couple of different penguins, a sea lion and a little Argentine
penguin."
There
also remains a possibility of Mrs Doubtfire 2. "They're
trying to write it. A friend of ours is writing it, and I
think that if she can do it right, it'll be okay. If they
don't do it right, it's not worth doing it. You've got to
find a way of doing the character. How do you take it on after
so long? You've got to be able to do her, do the character,
why is she dressing up again, and how did she get away with
it? The first one was so much fun because the conceit was
pretty good and the makeup was great. The really good news
now is that that makeup has come along. The make-ups have
just gotten better and better and better."
Paul
Fischer