AGGIELIFE Tiii sday, February 1,2000 THE BATTALION Page 3 Director, producer Coulter returns to B-CS former resident to visit campus to speak to A&M students about his career, successes in Hollywood »CHHEI0CX Matt D'Amic recn BY JEFF WOLFSHOHL The Battalion B ryan-College Station does breed success. Allen Coulter, director and producer of the Golden Globe-winning HBO show, “The Sopranos,” is speaking at Texas A&M this week about his experience ill the film business. ■ Coulter is briefly returning to Bryan-College Station to educate Aggies abou,t the world beyond college. ■ “1 want to show students how things work in the world outside of school,” Coulter said. ■ A former resident of College Station, he attended A&M Consolidated high school. After graduation, he rejected local scholarships and went to the Universi ty of Texas. ■ “I was more interested in the arts and more interest ed in theater, and at that time there was not a strong the ater department at A&M,” Coulter said. “Also, there was the desire to get away from home.” I Coulter said that A&M w as a different school at that time. ■ “It was compulsory military, it was not co-ed, it was aftmal 1-town school,” Coulter said. “Now College Sta tion is overwhelming — I get lost when I get home.” ■ While attending University of Texas, Coulter w ent through the typical process of choosing his field of study. He said his next-to-last year at UT he was able to find his path through an epiphany. ' “I saw an article about the movie 2001: Space Aiyssey by [Stanley] Kubrick, and there was just some thing about the pictures from that that was something I wanted to do,” Coulter said. I “1 was trying to find something where I could take advantage of the different areas of interest that I had,” Coulter said. “I was interested in music, 1 was interest ed in photography, and I was interested in theater.” Directing was the profession that Coulter understood to be the culmination of his interests. “I realized that if I direct in film and television 1 could be involved w ith all of these things,” he said. Coulter said fellow students helped form his career decision. “I was around people who knew w hat they wanted to do, or if they didn’t, there was a constant inquiry,” he said. “These were like late-night conversations, drinking beer and doing all the things you weren’t supposed to do.” His professors also had a hand in molding his decision. “I would gravitate toward the professors who only seemed to take an interest in me, but have something that I wanted,” Coulter said. “And being around that and seeing their focus, 1 was envious in the fact that they seemed like they knew what they were doing.” His last year in school, after Coulter had found his direction, he made sure to independently study film to prepare for his career. “I went to as many movies as .1 could go to, as a form of research,” he said. "Just like how you study all of the great books of literature to be a writer.” “Seeing movies as a kid, like Sierra Madre, I was floored, but they left deep impressions and in college it came back to me,” Coulter said. After graduating from UT, he said he went directly to New York, with $90 in his pocket and a few crates that contained his belongings. Coulter said that since money was an issue, he moved around several times and worked various jobs. “It was about four years of scrambling around until I saved enough money to make a short film that took about three years to complete,” he said. “One of the reasons it took so long was that I had run out of money at one point,” Coulter said. “We also had to do some reshooting because I had decided to change the ending.” This film became known as The Hobbs Case, de scribed as a comedic detective story, and it went on to re ceive numerous awards from festivals around the world. Coulter said in the ’70s it was possible to make an offbeat film. “Even major studios were making offbeat films,” he said. “It’s not like now [when] the studios make Ar mageddon and consider that a good film.” Many of the films that were made years ago are ac tually something that would be difficult to see today, Coulter said. "’Rosemary's Baby was a very popular film at the time, like Blair Witch Project, [being] the hot horror film of the time,” he said. “Well, if you look at that film now, it is completely avant-garde.” “I think that films have dumbed down,” Coulter said. “People are growing up with television and the subject of newer films are affected by that.” Coulter said television today tends to spoon-feed the idea that the audience is idiotic. “Contrary to popular opinion that people are more visually sophisticated now, the truth is it is exactly the opposite,” he said. Coulter was able to put his own personal touch to See Coulter on Page 5. PHOTO COURTESY OF MSC FILM SOCIETY/Thi Battaijon iiu many veep' ailah/c — fat- ncMcr long pi* i'tknov> where hard to know good opportr' o." Waltman* U :ed. dates K» Gran Turismo 2 System: Playstation Genre: Racing Developer: Sony Computer Entertainment s i> a holitfr. For any racing fan, the name Gran to recognize. Turismo is synonymous with extreme- story,” Ron :'iy realistic racing. The second edition ■ at the 66 celf lost 10 yearsl emerican Sou" , the first ; :an student I team, h T McElroyt s the first Africa idem to start# I team. .-gardsto the««f tan-American^ Vergel L. Ga; said. “Thisisa ’ is becomingt# sensitive, w ere vet.” further expands upon the original’s great ambitions. El Gran Turismo 2 (GT2) features nearly triple the amount of cars and tracks featured in the first game. This is an amazing achievement when a person considers that the first one had 166 cars. One addition many racers will dread is the addition of another 35 driving tests to the 24 so-called “li cense tests” in the game — meaning it takes a whole lot more time to get a license this time around. On the bright side, the game is supposed to allow players to use their memory cards to import their licenses from the first game. Hopefully, this Id in, Editor in Cliit Mtnaging Editor i Community Fits fampus Editor , \ggielife Editor ' >, Aggielifc Editor ' >. Opinion Editor i pinion Editor ' it News Editor ( ■ports Editor i . Radio Producer 1 , Web Master i . (Graphics Editor :l > iraphics Editor , no Editor i Editor ience and TcdinolK, i 55-4726) is pubfeW Mi t! i nd spring semesters iror session (except ] A&M Umvesty iO. POSIMASIER: Sendai i McDonald Building, te-- 1 Mill. ; department is managed!!'^' Division of Student WEi- n. News offices are in Ml^ one: 845-3313; Fat n; Web site: iittp://batlat(f-' of advertising does notnpii" alion. For campus. tal.aK'i' 16. For classified adveitSf 3 015 Reed McDonald, and ^ irough Friday Fax: 845# the Student Sendees Feetd? i single copy of ffie Balt*" ail subscriptions are ester and $17.50 for fie# over, or Amencan Express# — 1 CTTuck’s Piz.z.A PIZZA STROJV1BOL1 HOAGIES Medium One Topping Pizza *3.50 * Order 3 for free delivery “B93-BUC Over 94% of Princeton Review students enrolled based on a friend's recommendation. April GRE classes start Satruday! / Ti (h The Princeton Review (409) 696-9099 • www.review.com The Princeton Review is not offilioled with Princeton University or EIS. will save many players more time. GT2 also adds a new rally version of racing in which players can try their skills in an offroad setting. The arcade version itself is actual ly not as good as the arcade version of the original, however, with all the new additions to the simulation, the game is still very cool. The only problem is that GT2 is- too similar to the first one in so many respects that unless a person is a hard core race fan, playing the original is still a better deal. For those hardcore race fans who will appreciate the new courses and new cars, GT2 gives those people a brand new challenge. (Grade: B) — Matt McCormick Tony Hawk's Pro Skater System: Playstation Genre: Skateboarding Developer: Activision This game rocks. Plain and sim ple. Graphics, sound and playability all come together to make Tony Hawk s Pro Skater one of the best games of 1999. The premise of the game revolves around skateboarding. 1 low can you make a game about skateboarding interesting? By putting in tons of tricks and stunts, excellent camera angles and perspective and a top-notch sound track that includes bands like Primus, Goldfinger and Rancid. There is also a two player option for players to compete with each other. 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