(2011, on Deep Blue Sea) Another disappointment for me. I wanted to do something with the leading-man-type character of Carter Blake, and... y'know, it's just so hard to do something within the studio system. It's so hard to break the mold. But it's a movie that never dies. I mean, they're still playing Deep Blue Sea on cable all the time. And it was my first experience at making a big studio film. We shot it at the old Titanic studio, down in Mexico, and it was five months of eating fish tacos next to the big water tank in Rosarita. It was gorgeous, so beautiful, and so much fun to do that movie. I'm sure it'll never die...When we first screened it in New York City, we thought... Well, unfortunately, Warner Brothers had already kind of given up on the film, so when we screened it, they didn't assign a whole hell of a lot of publicity. They didn't assign a lot of advertising dollars to the movie. But then we had a premiere in New York City where, after Samuel L. Jackson got eaten, the audience didn't stop howling or screaming for five whole minutes. The scene after Samuel L. Jackson got eaten was completely lost, because you couldn't fucking hear a thing, which... I was thinking to myself, "Well, that's good, 'cause that's a shitty scene." But people loved, loved, loved the movie, so Warner Brothers tried to catch up by pumping more dollars into it, but the movie was already going to open, and since they hadn't pushed it as hard as they wished they would've, it was too late. So we opened second to The Blair Witch Project. We opened at No. 2, and-this was the first time this had happened in the history of film-a tiny little independent, low-budget film named The Blair Witch Project opened at No. 1 at the box office and beat out an $80 million studio film. And to make it doubly painful for me, The Blair Witch Project was shot in the woods of Maryland, which is my home area. They shot in my back yard, basically. I literally used to play in those woods where The Blair Witch Project was shot. So, yeah, that was a fun time.
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