Jeffrey Combs - Interview Videozone
Source: "Videoscope" , Winter 1997, #21 Title:
"JEFFREY COMBS -
  ACTING ON THE EDGE"


as told to The Phantom, Debbie Rochon, Peter Schmideg & Tom Weaver. This interview was done in 1997 on WBAI's late-night radio show Lurid Details, done by Debbie Rochon and Peter Schmideg, scribe Tom Weaver and The Phantom.

(Boy, I sure hope I didn't forget to mention anybody ...)
Jeffrey Combs in The Frighteners:
A Fox Mulder on bad drugs.
An alumnus of Stuart Gordon's Chicago-based Organic Theater, Jeffrey Combs first caught genre fans' attention via his intense portrayal of H.P. Lovecraft's mad med-school student Herbert West in Gordon's 1985 film debut Re-Animator.

More recently, Combs played Lovecraft himself in Brian Yuzna's
Necronomicon and scored a major role as a paranoid FBI paranormal investigator in Peter Jackson's high-profile horror comedy The Frighteners.
"I remember being scared to death by The Brain That Wouldn't Die."
Jeffrey Combs
PETER SCHMIDEG: Is it a lot of fun to play a mad scientist?

JEFFREY COMBS: Yes, absolutely. The meatier parts in anything, either a movie or a play, are usually the ones who are out of the orm, who are not your everyday run-of-the-mill persons. You have a coat rack with a lot of hooks on it; you have a lot of things to play with.

PS: Well, of coruse, you play a mad scientist in one of the classic horror/science-fiction films of all time, Re-Animator, and in Doctor Mordrid.

JC One of the first things, at least for me, and I think for a lot of actors, we don't go at it saying "OK, I'm going to play a mad scientist." That's not anything that's even in the equation. I don't think of Herbert West as being crazy or insane; he's merely brilliant and gifted and egocentric and arrogant and ambitious and lets nothing get in the way of his goal, and it's everybody else's labeling that he is mad.




PS: It also has something to do with vision.

JC: Yes. At least for me, with Herbert West, and the way that it was written, the vision is paramount. Even when you see the old Frankenstein movies - nothing is going to get in the way of the goal tht the mad scientist is trying to achieve. And the whole dramatic content of the story is here's someone with a strong purpose and conflicts come his way and what is he going to do? How is he going to react to it and how is he going to solve the problems of achieving his experiments? I think the scientists in films can know that they're brilliant, they can know that they're gifted, they can know they're egocentric, they can even know they're arrogant. But I don't think that they ever say that they're mad. It's everyone else who
just doesn't understand. That's the way I sort of approach it.

TOM WEAVER: What mad scientist movies did you grow up with? Did you take any tips from the performances you saw in those pictures?
JC: I don't know if I took particular tips, but maybe the spirit of them. Most of my work tends to have a bit of theatricality about it and part of that, I suppose, is because of my theater background, but I think even more than that is the spirit of those older movies; those people were theater-based. You must, pardon my pun, inject tht kind of spirit to bring these people to life because they are bigger than life, because they are dealing with bigger-than-life issues, therefore everything is heightened to them. I remember, of course the old Frankenstein movies - "it's alive!" - and I remember being scared to death by The Brain That Wouldn't Die. The spirit of their commitment to the role, that's what I try to achieve when it came my turn: how can I match that pitch and that amount of commitment to it. I don't wanna go halfway with it.
PHANTOM: In Re-Animator, the character physically was sort of against type. He wasn't crazy-looking, he was sort of cleancut.

JC: Very sort of
pristine, almost.

PH: Very young.

JC: That's sort right out of the H.P. Lovecraft story; however, in the Lovecraft story, he's very blond and blue-eyed, and I'm certainly
not that.

TW: Did yo actually read the story for leads on how to play your characters?

JC: Yeah, I did. It didn't help me too, much, except the all-pervasive nothing's-going-to-et-in-the-way-of-his-work; that sort of spirit does come through. If you've read the stories and you've seen the movie, there's really not too terribly much similarity.

PS: The thing about all these mad scientists is they're not really villains, are they?

JC: No. In fact, an actor, if he has a straight-ahead villain role, he cannot look at it as a villain. In order to be successful, you have to look at it as a human being with a certain set of perceptions about the world, a certain goal that they have in mind, and everything's totally and perfectly justified, given that. Things can get terribly melodramatic if someone says, "Okay, I'm playing a bad person." Well, then all they're doing is playing a bad person and not a human being. So even if I do come across as maybe scaring you, that's good, but I didn't go at it saying, "I'm going to scare you."

PS: Herbert West is
obsessed.

JC: He's obsessed. He's gonna be the sperm that's gonna fertilize the egg and nothing is going to get in his way.

DEBBIE ROCHON: It almost seems as though these films with the mad scientist-type characters, a lot of times they start off with understandable goals and by the end of the film it just got way out of hand.

JC: And that makes them human, doesn't it. And that's their downfall. In some ways, that's sort of a tired, tried-and-true kidn of motif that continues to be repeated in movies. It's almost like a cliche. But I think there's something in the human psyche tht we're titilated by the person who flies too close to the candle and their wings get singed. We're compelled and repelled by them. It's almost like we are having lessons in how far as humans we can go in the pursuit of whatever it is we want to pursue. Yes, it's good to e brilliant and gifted and yet if you indulge yourself too much, it's going to come around and destroy you. That seems to e one of the basic themes behind every mad scientist that seems to come along.
TW: Humor is an integral part of a lot of your characters. I was just wondering if you really thought the humor in Pit And The Pendulum enhanced the movie.

JC: See, I had a problem with that movie.

TW: I did, too.

JC: - and that humor. It was like this is a movie about torture.

TW: - and religious fanatics.

JC: - and religious fanatics. And really a lot of the humor that's in that movie sort of fell to me and the other actor, Steve Lee, who played the gravedigger. But the problem that I had was I have to be funny and yet if you note at the end of that movie, I take over the kingdom. So I was always talking to Stuart that I can't be too stupid and too silly here because I have to have some credibility when it comes to the end of this thing. So it was a fine line for me and I don't know if I particularly suceeded because that movie is quite disturbing. I don't know if it ultimately succeeds in what it wants to say.
It was sort of rushed in front of the cameras. When you tie in art with business, sometimes - not sometimes, most times - art loses in terms of how well things come off. The second one was kind of a hodgepodge of what was left over from the best of the Re-Animator stories. If you go and read the stories, you can see whatever was not in the first one, they sort of threw together into the second one. However, I was five years older and hopefully wiser and it ws very interesting to get back under the skin of Herbert West again. Every once in a while in tht movie, I am allowed to sort of explore other nuances of Herbert West, and I appreciate that, but the story didn't really have the same immediacy and overall tone as the first one. There's no question about that.

PH: I recently caught
Love and a .45 which I enjoyed.

JC: Good. Not many people saw that because it didn't get a wide release.



That movie was nothing but a joy for me. I had never done anything like that. I'd never had that look, those sideburns, and that moustache. It was a wonderful director (C.M. Talkington), and I thought it was quite a good script for the first time out for this guy.

PH: I think what happened was some of the critics compared it to Natural Born Killers because of the timing.

JC: Yeah, some of the critics said, "Here they come. Here come all the Tarantino wannabes" - when in reality that movie was made
before Reservoir Dogs ever really hit it. So it can't be blamed - that's a gifted writer, and he's very unique, and he certainly in no way, shape or form set out to be a clone of Tarantino. But for critics, sometimes they can kind of be cynical. In fact, they delayed the release of that movie because of Natural Born Killers. It was due to come out just about the time Natural Born Killers did and they backed off because they didn't want that comparison, which I think ultimatively couldn't be avoided. Even here, the L.A. Times said that Love and a .45 wasn't as pretentious as Natural Born Killers. I just thought it was a big, violent MTV video.
"When you tie in art with business, sometimes - not sometimes,
most times - art loses ...""
Jeffrey Combs
DR: Do you still work in the theater?

JC: I did a Moliere play a couple of years ago but I must say film was always my first love and theater came along simply because that was where you learned your craft. But once film required more and more of my time, I can't help but be enveloped in it, and I love it. I'm very excited to be doing the films that I'm doing and I really don't have much time for theater anymore.

DR: Was there a great difference working on
Bride of Re-Animator as opposed to working with Stuart Gordon?

JC:
Bride of Re-Animator was directed by Brian Yuzna, who produced the original Re-Animator. And Brian and Stuart are totally different directors. But above and beyond that, there really wasn't a whole lot of time allowed to get the script for the second one in any really fit shape.

PS: How do you avoid camp?

JC: If I knew the answer to that question, I would be a wiser person. Quite frankly, I try not to think about it too much. I always try to make my characters people, and yet I always want to entertain. One thing that I see a lot on television and even in film is people tend to sit back with their roles and even in their direction. There's no leaning forward. Tonight, for instance, I was watching - and I'll probably get in trouble for this - the new
Star Trek. And I was sitting there and I was going: "What is wrong? Why am I not engaged? Why do I feel so cool and detached?" Yet, when you go back and see the original Star Trek, what is it about this, even though the sets are so cheesy, that I really like. Shatner was leaning forward. Whatever it is, he embraced it totally and fully. He didn't care if he made a fool out of himself, it ws the material and it's like someone gave him a costume - "Make this live." I think that therein lies the essence of what I try to do also. I try to lean forward. I look at this material and go, "What can I do to make this breathe? What can I do that makes this not just me standing on a mark and  saying lines and collecting a paycheck?" I'm really not interested in that. I'm interested in bringing it alive. And entertaining. I mean, we can't take ourselves too seriously and we can't sit back. That's why I do what I do, ultimatively - to entertain, hopefully enlighten and make people feel things in the dark. That's really all it is. It's just stories around the campfire.
"Tonight, for instance, I was watching - and I'll probably get in trouble for this - the new Star Trek.
And I was sitting there and I was going:
What's wrong? Why am I not engaged?
Why do I feel so cool and detached?"
Jeffrey Combs
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