‘You Could Bankrupt Us’: Bill Pullman Reveals Steven Spielberg Told Him He Could Cost The Studio $100,000 If He Made One Wrong Move Filming Casper

(Image credit: Universal Pictures)

The family film wasn’t as easy to make as it looked.

Source: ‘You Could Bankrupt Us’: Bill Pullman Reveals Steven Spielberg Told Him He Could Cost The Studio $100,000 If He Made One Wrong Move Filming Casper

There are some great Bill Pullman movies, many of which are still enjoyed by audiences today. But none are quite like the 1995 supernatural family classic, Casper. The film follows the eponymous friendly ghost, who haunts a mansion in Maine and befriends the young teen (Christina Ricci) that moves there. In the film, Pullman played the young lady’s dad, who is doubtful of the ghostly presence in their abode until he encounters it himself. The movie was experimental at the time, as it utilized early technology we now know as CGI to create the ghosts. And, due to the tech being new and underdeveloped, Steven Spielberg gave Pullman a warning about watching his movements on the film.

A specific scene in Casper sees Bill Pullman on a staircase, sword fighting with the ghosts. The scene was quite tricky to film, as the While You Were Sleeping actor was expected to execute fight choreography without a battle partner present. The plan was to put the ghosts into the film in post production. This is common practice now and is frequently used in films that require a less-than-human character. However, at the time, it was very difficult and incredibly expensive to pull off. Steven Spielberg, who was an executive producer on the film, warned Pullman about costing the movie excess money. Pullman told Variety:

Really, the sword fight with the ghosts, the three uncles, is up a huge staircase. I just had a toilet plunger that I was battling them with, but it was in the early days of CGI. In those days I would have to do this elaborate choreography with nothing there, but taking those stop points off of aspects of the room. And if I didn’t do it right, if I moved it through something where a ghost was supposed to be it was $100,000. This is what Spielberg said, ‘Be very careful Bill, because you could bankrupt us.’

That’s a lot of pressure, especially for an actor who hadn’t performed opposite CGI before. With the advanced technology used for movies now, there’s a lot more room for error. A lot can be corrected in post production, so a star can more so focus on their performance. However, the classic ’90s flick was somewhat of a testing ground, with the cast having to essentially adapt on the fly. Despite Casper’s occasionally nonsensical plot, the movie was a box office hit, grossing over $250 million. So, ultimately, one would think that Steven Spielberg and co.’s risky investment paid off.

Having the Jaws director on as an EP was surely invaluable for the Brad Silberling-helmed production. The auteur was a pioneer of visual effects, helping to facilitate one of its first ever large-scale uses in Jurassic Park. The dinosaur epic was a turning point  for filmmaking of this kind, and it naturally led to directors wanting to experiment with it themselves. The staircase scene alone used more CGI than the entirety of JP. Steven Spielberg’s knowledge was crucial on a logistical level, as well as financial, as he was abundantly aware of how costly it could be. Hence, the warning to Bill Pullman.

All in all, the team was able to make it work and the Sleepless in Seattle star’s movements are spot on. The scene still holds up today, and you can’t even tell the Spaceballs actor was worried about his footwork and the production cost. In the modern days of Avatar and Marvel movies, it’s hard to imagine a world in a producer would have to worry about the placement of a sword so much as to send a warning to an actor. I’d love to hear Bill Pullman compare Casper to the CGI-heavy Independence Day: Resurgence, in which he also starred. Chances are there probably wasn’t a $100,000 production budget concern.

You can revisit Bill Pullman’s performance in Casper, which is currently available to rent on Amazon.

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Foxtel Magazine, May 2024

Foxtel Magazine, May 2024

 

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Bill Pullman Is a Proud Dad Amid Son Lewis’ ‘Lessons in Chemistry’

Lewis Pullman is starring in the hit Apple TV+ series opposite Brie Larson.

It’s no secret that Bill Pullman is one proud dad! The 70-year-old veteran actor is thrilled that his son, Lewis Pullman, is having such a major breakout year, thanks to his success with the hit Apple TV+ series, Lessons in Chemistry.

Lewis plays chemist Calvin Evans opposite Brie Larson’s Elizabeth Zott in the TV series adapted from Bonnie Garmus’ bestselling novel.

ET’s Dedire Behar caught up with Bill at the Lifetime For Your Consideration event on Wednesday in Los Angeles, where the Murdaugh Murders: The Movie star gushed about his youngest son.

“Let’s talk about Lewis. I love that!” Bill told ET, lighting up at the mention. “I don’t know if it’ll ever happen again, but we’re both doing this Emmy thing at the same time.”

Bill had a proud dad moment when the Pullmans took over Los Angeles billboards, sharing, “Lessons in Chemistry, that came out in October the same weekend that [Murdaugh Murders] came out. Billboards in L.A., you’d go down it’d be Lewis, me, Lewis, me. All the Pullmans!”

Bill also praised the — for lack of a better word — chemistry between Lewis and Oscar winner Brie, noting, “It’s been great to see! He’s gotten quite a bit of recognition for that part, and it’s been great, real magic between he and Brie Larson. I think that’s kind of like lightning in a bottle.”

As for Bill, he has received quite a bit of acclaim for playing real-life South Carolina attorney Alex Murdaugh in the TV mini-series. The Casper star said he has not heard from any members of the Murdaugh family since taking on the role.

“No, no, don’t tell them. Keep it secret,” he quipped. “I haven’t had any contact with them and I think probably it’s going to be better for both me and for them.”

Lessons in Chemistry received two Golden Globe nominations and is eligible for this year’s Emmy Awards.

In addition to Lewis, Bill shares daughter Maesa Pullman, 36, and son Jack Pullman, 35, with his wife, Tamara Hurwitz.

 

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Bill Pullman & Raymond Lee to Star In Taper Legacy Reading Of THE TRIAL OF THE CATONSVILLE NINE

Center Theatre Group has announced “The Trial of the Catonsville Nine,” featuring Bill Pullman (Independence Day, The Sinner, Oleanna, The Goat, or Who Is Sylvia?), and Raymond Lee (Quantom Leap, Kevin Can F*** Himself, Vietgone, Tokyo Fish Story), as the first in a series of Taper Legacy Readings on Saturday, May 18 at 7 p.m. at the Mark Taper Forum.

Source: Bill Pullman & Raymond Lee to Star In Taper Legacy Reading Of THE TRIAL OF THE CATONSVILLE NINE

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Bill Pullman on working on “While You Were Sleeping” with Sandra Bullock: “She was [a] great spirit, clearly gonna have a good career ahead of her.”

 

 

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Bill Pullman on the direction Antoine Fuqua gave him while shooting a scene in “The Equalizer” with Denzel Washington

 

 

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Bill Pullman (‘Murdaugh Murders: The Movie’) on playing a sociopath: ‘It’s nice to live on the other side every once in a while’ [Exclusive Video Interview]

Ray Richmond
April 18, 2024 12:30PM

Bill Pullman probably isn’t the first actor you’d think would be cast to portray a drug-addicted sociopath who is convicted of killing his wife Maggie and son Paul, as he does playing A…

Source: Bill Pullman (‘Murdaugh Murders: The Movie’) on playing a sociopath: ‘It’s nice to live on the other side every once in a while’ [Exclusive Video Interview]

 

Bill Pullman probably isn’t the first actor you’d think would be cast to portray a drug-addicted sociopath who is convicted of killing his wife Maggie and son Paul, as he does playing Alex Murdaugh in the Lifetime two-part docudrama “Murdaugh Murders: The Movie.” This is, after all the same guy who played the heroic President of the U.S. in the 1996 blockbuster “Independence Day,” and his impressive career has found him playing an assortment of characters similarly defined by their inherent decency. This is also a man who has been married for 37 years – to the same woman. Not that Pullman necessarily sees himself as having a brand. “Everybody says, ‘Oh, you do’,” he admits. “But I think I’m available for (the whole of) human behavior. And it’s nice to live on the other side every once in a while.” Watch the exclusive video interview above.

To be sure, Pullman – whose impressive film career has included roles in everything from “Ruthless People” (1986), “Spaceballs” (1987) and “The Accidental Tourist” (1988) to “Sleepless in Seattle” (1993), “Casper” (1995) and David Lynch’s mega-bizarre “Lost Highway” (1997) – may be one of the few people in America who had never heard a thing about the Murdaugh case when he was presented the “Murdaugh Murders” script and offered the role of the South Carolina lawyer who was convicted of double homicide in March 2023. “I didn’t have any clue about it,” he says. “I feel like I’m reading all the friggin’ time and don’t go for a lot of clickbait.”

Fortunately, there was (and still is) a truckload of video about the case and of the trial itself, since South Carolina is one of the states that allows cameras in the courtroom. “And so you get to see all the characters in the life of a person like Murdaugh,” Pullman emphasizes. “There’s this wealth of information there, but at the same time it’s a lot of heavy data, and at a certain point it has to organize itself if you’re going to portray somebody like that. Eventually, I kind of organized it.” But once he said yes, Pullman had only six days to prep before shooting began, as producers were trying to get it in the can before actors and writers went out on strike.

The one caveat Pullman had when accepting the role was that he wouldn’t simply perform as a mimic, copying the quirks and precise movements of the man he’s portraying. “People were talking about certain moments in the Netflix documentary series (on the Murdaugh case), like about how he said this, how he turned this way,” he recalls. “I could see myself in some kind of bad nightmare of having producers (order that). I had to get some elbow room and say, ‘Look, I’m not going to do that. If you want that fine, go get somebody (else). But our director Greg Beeman and (executive producer) Stacy Mandelberg were very supportive.”

Pullman was also excited to portray an addict, as Murdaugh was, particularly a pill-popper because he typically doesn’t drink enough water on the set and “it really allowed me to get my daily portion of liquids.”

This doesn’t mean the portrayal wasn’t also a significant acting challenge for Pullman. He was tasked with hooking into the deceptive speech pattern of a known sociopath during the trial sequences, with dialogue hewing closely to the actual trial transcripts. “(Murdaugh) would be talking about different things, and then you realize, in the middle of a sentence, he’d change. That’s kind of like how it is now with politicians.. They don’t finish their sentences. They fix them in the middle.”

Pullman finds it fascinating how the appeal of the Murdaugh murder tale captured the obsessive interest of pretty much everyone, cutting across all demographic groups. “It was compelling all across the strata, from working-class people all the way up to brainiacs,” he observes. He points out how in its end-of-the-year overview at newyorker.com, the website revealed that its most-dead article of 2023 was one about Murdaugh. His theory is that people – all people – are enthralled by the secrets that especially the rich and famous among us harbor. “This kind of story pulls back that curtain a little bit,” he maintains, “and it’s quite unnerving to have people close to you carry a whole chapter that’s unknown.”

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Bill Pullman (‘Murdaugh Murders: The Movie’) on playing a sociopath: ‘It’s nice to live on the other side every once in a while’ [Exclusive Video Interview]

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Bill Pullman probably isn’t the first actor you’d think would be cast to portray a drug-addicted sociopath who is convicted of killing his wife Maggie and son Paul, as he does playing A…

Source: Bill Pullman (‘Murdaugh Murders: The Movie’) on playing a sociopath: ‘It’s nice to live on the other side every once in a while’ [Exclusive Video Interview]

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Bill Pullman On How He Found The Syntax Of A Sociopath For Lifetime’s ‘Murdaugh Murders: The Movie’ – Contenders TV

Bill Pullman speaks on a panel for ‘Murdaugh Murders: The Movie’ at Deadline Contenders Television

Rich Polk

Pullman used court video to help him prepare for his role in ‘Murdaugh Murders: The Movie’ for Lifetime’s ripped-from-the-headlines made-for TV film.

Source: Bill Pullman On How He Found The Syntax Of A Sociopath For Lifetime’s ‘Murdaugh Murders: The Movie’ – Contenders TV

Bill Pullman thinks he was the last person on earth who hadn’t heard of Alex Murdaugh, the personal injury attorney who was found guilty in the double homicide of his wife, Maggie, and son Paul.

Fortunately for the veteran actor, there was gobs of video to help him prepare for his role in Murdaugh Murders: The Movie for Lifetime‘s ripped-from-the-headlines slate of movies last fall.

“South Carolina allows video in courtroom. There was hours and hours of behavior, that 911 call, the body cam of the first officer arriving on the scene,” Pullman recalled Saturday at Deadline TV Contenders. “It’s really interesting about real transcripts. You realize how sociopaths have this cauterized morality. The way they are moving through a sentence. They talk one way at the beginning at the sentence and then they sense there is somewhere better to go. You would never write that as a writer. You can get a lot into the psychology by the syntax they use…things aren’t polished.”

Pullman had only six days to prepare for the role before production began (the film was shot in six weeks right before the writers and actors went on strike). “I was nervous,” Pullman recalled about doing the movie that was written by Michael Vickerman and directed by Greg Beeman. “How are we going to do this?”

But he remembers how that conversation helped him to get into Murdaugh’s head. “I think Alex loved his wife and his son. How do you kill someone that you love? How does that happen? It doesn’t occur to you up until the time you do it.”

“The moment when he took the stand, that was a bad mistake,” Pullman said of Murdaugh’s trial. “He was so certain that he could really talk and the jury would hear. All you need is one.”

Check out the panel video above.

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