Source: San Francisco Examiner (CA) Contact: http://www.examiner.com/ Pubdate: Sun, 22 Mar 1998 Author: Jonah Raskin "HOMEGROWN" IN HOLLYWOOD Reefer Madness vs. the Studio System When it comes to controversy, Hollywood usually runs scared. I've known that for almost as long as I've been going to the movies. That began in the late 1940s, around the time of the blacklist and the Hollywood Ten. My father, who was a Communist, a lawyer and didn't like stool pigeons, explained that if you were a screenwriter like Dalton Trumbo or a director like Jules Dassin and you tackled sensitive subjects like anti-Semitism, homosexuality or political corruption, you usually didn't last very long in the movie industry. Not that much has changed in the past half century. I found that out first hand when I went to Hollywood in 1980 and tried to sell the idea of a picture about marijuana growers and dealers in Northern California. Cheech and Chong's zany comedy "Up in Smoke" had come out in 1978, and though I found it very funny, I envisioned a more serious take on the subject, and characters who weren't complete buffoons. After all, I knew potheads who were judges, lawyers, doctors, and school superintendents and they seemed perfectly capable of keeping their heads out of the smoke when they needed to. I'd also spent a couple of years poking around the pot scene in Sonoma, Mendocino and Humboldt Counties, and I'd written about it for newspapers and magazines, including The Examiner's California Living. What I saw, and mostly tried to convey to readers was a story of hypocrisy. Main Street businesses and Main Street merchants - bankers, real estate agents, car dealers - were feeding on an illegal, underground economy at the same time they insisted that there was no big-time marijuana in their neck of the woods. They were law-abiding citizens. If it did exist, they'd be the first to root it out. What I found in Hollywood was a slice from the same hypocrisy pie. At Warner Brothers, at Columbia and in the comfortable mansions of maverick producers - some of them former '60s radicals who had made pictures about the counterculture - I met genuine potheads - grown men and women who not only loved to smoke dope and to get high, but who thought that pot was a sacrament. At least to these folks, the dope dealer might as well have been a messenger from God. Almost every night, these screenwriters, directors, actors and producers would roll a joint or two - or three - and get stoned. The next day, they'd be back at work making movies. Without naming names, some of them were nominated for Academy Awards, and others won awards for best actor and best director. Marijuana was an essential part of their lives - along with gourmet food and fine wine - but they weren't going to risk their reputations by making a movie about it. Moreover, they insisted that no one would finance a marijuana movie. It was the 1980s, and few Hollywood filmmakers wanted to tangle with Nancy Reagan and her "Just Say No" anti-drug campaign. Even if my movie could be made, there would no end of protest from the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA), the industry's own self-policing agency, and from every church group in the country. It just wasn't worth it - or so I was told. I was about to give up and go back home to Sonoma County. Then I met Stephen Gyllenhaal, a young director who didn't smoke dope, hadn't cut his eye teeth in the drug culture of the '60s and '70s, and wouldn't have been able to tell the difference between Mexican weed and California sinsemilla if I had blown the smoke in his face. Since then, Gyllenhaal has directed "Paris Trout," "Losing Isaiah," "Waterland," and "A Dangerous Woman," but in the early 1980s he was looking for a script that would help him climb to the top. By the time I met Gyllenhaal, I'd been around the block a few times. I realized that if I wanted to make a marijuana picture I'd have to think the way Hollywood thinks, and not like a crusading journalist who wanted to out everybody who smoked a joint or laundered a pot dollar. So I came up with a 45-second high concept sales pitch. The movie, I explained, would be a remake of John Huston's 1948 classic "The Treasure of the Sierra Madre," which stars Humphrey Bogart as Fred C. Dobbs, the desperate American drifter, and Alfonso Bedoya as the stereotype of the Mexican bandit in the big hat who spits out the immortal lines: "Badges? We don't need no stinkin' badges." In my picture, there would be marijuana fever, not gold fever, hippie farmers, not gringo prospectors. There would be pot thieves disguised as cops. At the end, the marijuana would be confiscated and burned by the sheriff, and the wind would blow the smoke back to the mountains where the marijuana had been cultivated. There would be something for everybody, and everyone would be satisfied - even the Motion Picture Association of America - because the picture would not show the marijuana growers getting away with their crime. Granted, they wouldn't go to jail, but they wouldn't get rich either, and getting rich through crime is ostensibly something Hollywood tries not to celebrate, though there have been some notable exceptions, especially Coppola's "Godfather" trilogy. As everyone connected with the movie business knows, directors usually don't buy ideas. They buy screenplays and treatments of possible stories, but Gyllenhaal bought my idea - probably because it was so tidy - for a small piece of change, and the promise that I'd receive story credit. With the help of Nick Kazan, the son of the legendary director Elia Kazan - who was ostracized by the Hollywood Left for naming names in the '50s - we came up with a polished screenplay. But the project went nowhere fast. Then in 1996, California voters approved medical marijuana, and marijuana buyers clubs opened their doors for business all over the Bay Area. Suddenly, the world of marijuana once again seemed like an intriguing for a movie. We found financial backers, assembled a cast and shot the picture quickly, quietly and without violating any drug laws. I spent nearly a week in Santa Cruz, where the outdoor scenes were filmed and learned a lot about how movies are made. Some of the dialogue was changed even as we were filming. What was written down on paper was sometimes stilted, while the improvised dialogue usually sounded a lot more realistic and relaxed. Almost everyone in the cast approached me, and asked whether I had made up the story and characters, or whether the movie was based on real people and real incidents. That was a tough one to answer. Whenever possible, I shrugged my shoulders ambiguously and left them to wonder about the truth of the movie we were making. I developed an appreciation for the art of acting, especially by "Sling Blade's" Billy Bob Thornton, who plays an intense pot dealer named Jack. On camera, Thornton was a totally different person than he was off. He walked and talked with a swagger, and sometimes exuded a more menacing personality. And when he wasn't acting, he'd also keep us entertained with hilarious imitations of stars he had worked with, including Burt Reynolds. When I was invited to be in the last scenes, I jumped at the opportunity. If you watch the final minutes of the picture closely, you'll see me. I don't have any speaking lines, but I wear sunglasses and a Miami Hurricane's cap, and think I do a good job as a very stoned spectator. This month, 18 years after I first went to Hollywood to pitch the idea for it, "Homegrown" is finally coming to movie screens, courtesy of Columbia/Tri-Star Pictures. My original idea is still there, and so are a few of the big scenes I had in mind, and when the credits roll my name is up there in big letters, along with Billy Bob Thornton's, and such big box office stars as Ted Danson, Jamie Lee Curtis, John Lithgow and Jon Bon Jovi, all of whom make cameo appearances as marijuana growers and dealers. There are also major differences from my original approach. There's a "Girl," of course; in a Hollywood picture there has to be a "Girl." In "Homegrown," her name is Lucy. She's a feisty, feminist drug dealer, and she's played by Kelly Lynch, who co-starred in "Drugstore Cowboy." The picture has sex and betrayal, and a marijuana kingpin named Malcolm, who is killed off in the opening scenes of the picture. And then there are Mafia guys with names like Gianni who seem to have wandered onto the set of "Homegrown" from an old gangster picture. There's recycled cliches from half a dozen movies, including Antonioni's "The Passenger," in which Jack Nicholson takes on the identity of a dead man. There are scenes of a marijuana plantation the imitation plants cost $1,500 each - and actors smoking something that looks like marijuana, scenes that don't make the MPAA happy, but that the teenage sons and daughters of '60s hippies will no doubt think are cool. (Some of the imitation plants were "liberated" from the set. Abbie Hoffman lives.) What I've learned from my 18-year love/hate relationship with the project probably won't shock anyone, though it still makes me shake my head. Hollywood people can be greedy, as greedy as pot farmers and dealers. Hollywood can be crass, commercial and cowardly, too. Getting the MPAA to approve the trailer for the picture was pure hell. Apparently you can show all the violence you want, but wave a joint around and the industry's self-appointed censors go ballistic. Along with everyone else who worked on the picture, I'm supposed to get a percentage of the box office receipts, but somehow I doubt I'll ever see the money, whether the picture is successful or not. My students at Sonoma State University will be impressed, but then anyone remotely associated with Hollywood impresses them. Most of them smoke pot - or so they tell me privately - and they'll probably conclude that a movie that shows pot smoking somehow or other condones behavior that the college authorities, their parents, and folks with badges disapprove of. In a way then, I suppose that "Homegrown" has a subversive message. What the picture has taught me is that to make a movie that deals with a controversial subject like marijuana, you have to fight for it every inch of the way. In case you've still forgotten, marijuana is still illegal; doctors don't prescribe it for fear of prosecution by the federal government and many of the marijuana buyers' clubs have been closed down for violating the law. "Homegrown" is an exception. Indeed, Hollywood rarely makes movies about illegal activities unless it makes it absolutely clear that it disapproves of them. Prohibition, and speakeasies and bootleggers didn't make it to the screen in a big way until the Volstead Act had been repealed. Only in the 1930s did it become fashionable to romanticize gangsters, and even then there had to be a final scene in which the tough guy with the machine gun, often played by Paul Muni or George Raft, confessed his crimes and asked for forgiveness. "Homegrown" neither condemns nor condones marijuana. It's ambiguous on the subject. I suppose that's progress of a sort for Hollywood, and maybe worth the price of admission. If you were a card-carrying member of the counterculture and grew a plant or two in your backyard, you might want to check it out for the sake of nostalgia. Then, again, if you love black-and-white classics, you might want to rent "The Treasure of the Sierra Madre" once again, and watch Bogart go insane with gold fever, and listen to Alfonso Bedoya as he tilts his hat and cries out, "Badges." My father, the lawyer and the Communist, who grew and smoked his own marijuana after he retired from the bar, would probably say I sold out. Maybe so, dad. But if you want to make a Hollywood movie, you play by Hollywood's rules or you don't play at all. Despite all the difficulties, I'd do it all over again. In fact, I'm already working on my next picture. Just maybe it'll be out, 18 years from now. Jonah Raskin teaches film at Sonoma State University, where he is the chair of the Communication Studies Department. He is the author of For the Hell of It: The Life and Times of Abbie Hoffman. )1998 San Francisco Examiner Page MAG 20