Director Matt Reeves Dishes on Battinson, The Penguin, and His Nirvana-Coded Gotham
Devin Oktar Yalkin/The New York Times/Redux
Iâve written far too many words about 2008âs Cloverfield, the cult-classic, found-footage monster romp that reinvented movie marketing for the digital age. But youâre about to read an interview with the director of that movie, Matt Reeves, so Iâm sure as hell not stopping now. Not even two minutes after the fifty-eight-year-old popped up on Zoomâabout a week before the premiere of the HBO series (slash spin-off of his 2022 feature, The Batman), The Penguin, on which he serves as an executive producerâI had to ask about the trailer. Yes, that trailer.
If youâre unfamiliar: Cloverfieldâs first preview, which premiered ahead of showings for 2007âs Transformers, didnât even feature the title of the damn movie. Audiences saw clips of a birthday party from some dudeâs camcorder, the Statue of Libertyâs head crashing into the middle of Manhattan, and the release date (1-18-08). The Internet wasnât yet a place where you could Google answers to this sort of thing; it broke a lot of brains and went viral before you even called anything viral.
âWe were still shooting the movie when Transformers came out over the Fourth of July,â Reeves remembers. âSo my girlfriend and I went to the [theater] and we said, âCan you let us go in? Because actually thereâs a trailer for something that Iâm doing.â And then we went in there and watched the audience respond. It was really cool. But that was so scary for me because we were so early in making the movie. Weâre going like, âOh my God, everyone is waiting to see what it is, and weâre still making this movie!â â
Fast-forward nearly two decades andânot to criminally breeze past his revered Planet of the Apes trilogyâReeves has the keys to Gotham. In 2022, he debuted The Batman, which starred Robert Pattinson as the Caped Crusader. And Mr. Wayneâs notoriously hard-to-please fans…really…loved it? Pattinson flashed Batmanâs detective chops, ZoĂ« Kravitz shined as a wonderfully sly Catwoman, and Paul Dano delivered a QAnon Riddler who was downright chilling. In fact, the approval rating for Reevesâs Nirvana-coded Batman universe is so damn high that one of its charactersâColin Farrellâs Oz Cobb, aka the Penguinâis about to enjoy the small-screen treatment. Spoiler: Batman loyalists will love it, too. Its many triumphs include Farrellâs unhinged, Batman-fucked-with-Tony Soprano performance and more time in Reevesâs Gotham, which turns out to be far more intertwined with our world than youâd ever think.
In advance of The Penguinâs premiere on Max tonight, Reeves opened up about his Spielbergian origins, his inspiration for the upcoming Batman Part II, and what the hell possesses Colin Farrell when he becomes Oz Cobb.
This interview, presented in Reevesâs own words, has been edited and condensed for clarity.
The Origin Story When I was a kid, I made 8mm movies, like Spielberg. When I was thirteen or fourteen, I actually met J.J. Abrams because we were in an 8mm film festivalâwe became friends through that. And then we showed our films at a new art theater in Los Angeles. And Spielberg, who had that experience as a kid, was like, âI need to see these movies.â So they gave the program to him and he watched it. I heard back from his assistant at that time. She said, âHe really enjoyed seeing the films. Thanks.â She called again six months later and said, âWe just found all of these 8mm films. Because theyâve been in a hot basement for all this time, they need to be repaired. [Spielberg asked,] âCan you get them repaired?â And I was like, âWhoâs going to do that?â He goes, âThose kids.â â
So the war movie that theyâre making in The Fabelmans, thatâs Escape to Nowhere. Thatâs one of the films that we re-spliced together for him. Weâre just going, âThese are Steven Spielbergâs 8mm films!â And we were these kids. It was mind-blowing.
From The Pallbearer to…Cloverfield?I was born in â66. I grew up in a period of American film that really was inspiring. There were a lot of American directors who took other genres and subverted them. Chinatown is really a subversion of a noir. Itâs funny, because those movies tremendously influenced meâbut I donât think I ever thought that I would be a genre filmmaker. I started in the vein of thinking that I wanted to be someone like Hal Ashby and make these kinds of sad comedies. My first film [The Pallbearer] didnât light the world on fire. But it was very personal. When you spend your entire youth as a filmmaker, itâs like a bunch of kids who are getting together and they make their first album. If theyâre twenty-five, it really took twenty-five years to make. I spent the first twenty-five years of my life making that first movie, and then that didnât work. I started having opportunities where I was like, âWhat would it be if I tried to find a personal way into genre filmmaking?â And Cloverfield was one of those movies where it was like, âOkay, I need this to be about my anxiety. What would I do?â
The Inspiration for The Batman Part IIThe intense division that there is right now. On the one hand, you say itâs a thing going on in the United Statesâand obviously Gotham is an American cityâbut really itâs worldwide. Thereâs just tremendous division, the way that the world gets its information, its news. Everybody is in their own silo. That sense of the environment of today, where itâs just very easy for people to be completely separate and at complete oddsâthatâs definitely one of the things that weâre looking at in Gotham. Some of that is just the way that society is, but some of that is intentionalâand to the degree that thatâs intentional, and how that fits into the larger picture of what the motivations behind that might be, thatâs one of the things that weâre exploring as well.
How Oz Cobb Scored the HBO TreatmentI always said, weâre going to continue [the Penguinâs] story. Initially, the idea was to continue it in the next film. And then when we were talking about doing shows, I was talking to [The Batman producer] Dylan Clark and [HBO heads] Casey Bloys and Sarah Aubrey. Casey said, âLook, I just want to say, I hope youâre not going to save the marquee characters for just the movies. This is HBO.â And I was like, âOkay, let me tell you what this kind of Scarface-esque story is.â It isnât his origin story. Itâs sort of like Batmanâs storyâthe way that I did itâbecause thereâd been so many origin tales. Itâs the early days; itâs the origins of all of the roguesâ gallery characters. Because in the comics, those characters make themselves really in reaction to the arrival of this presence, this masked vigilante. So this is almost like a gangster movie. The idea was to see Oz reach for power in this moment.
The Metamorphosis of Colin Farrell Colin is a force of nature. Heâs just an incredible actor. And the way [designer] Mike Marino transformed him, that unleashed him. My experience with him in the movie and the show is that I feel like thatâs another person. Itâs uncanny. Thereâs something incredible going on. The idea was that then we found [showrunner] Lauren [LeFranc], and we started talking about doing this character studyâand to talk about that rise and the obstacles of that. And she came in and pitched the story for the pilot, which I loved. It was so illuminating to Ozâs vulnerabilities.
Macall Polay/HBOâMy experience with him in the movie and the show is that I feel like thatâs another person,â Reeves says of Colin Farrellâs Oz Cobb. âItâs uncanny. Thereâs something incredible going on.â
What Makes Reevesâs Roguesâ Gallery (and Batman) TickItâs important to me that all of these characters are doing what theyâre doing out of personal motivation. I love the comics, but sometimes thereâs an oversimplification. One of the things that I thought that we could do in the movie, and then what we did in the series with Lauren, was to make sure that we were looking into something that felt grounded and real in psychology. Obviously, thatâs what Riddler is doing. He thinks heâs doing the right thing. In fact, heâs inspired by this vigilante.
Lauren really was the one in the series who came up with that particular take as it related to Oz. All of it really stems from this idea that his ego is such that he desperately wants to be revered. He desperately wants love. And so that sense of wanting the neighborhood to revere you is to fill that void of never getting enough love….Thatâs the idea weâre trying to explore in Batman, too. Thereâs the simplistic version where he sees himself trying to save the city. But what is it heâs coping with psychologically? What happened to him? Itâs funny, as Mattson {Tomlin] and I are finishing writing the second movie, the thing that I always think about is how Batman is not just trying to do something for the greater good. Itâs the only way he can make sense of his own life. In a way, itâs saving him.
Why Battinson Sits Out The PenguinHeâs more of a specter in the city. I really wanted what we did in the first movie, and what weâre doing in the second movie, to be focused on Batmanâs arc. A lot of the other movies, once they do their sort of origin taleâwhich, of course, is Batman and Bruceâsâthen they almost pass the baton over to the roguesâ gallery in such a way that their story actually is the story. But I really want this to continue to be a Batman point-of-view series of movies. So one of the things that was really exciting about the opportunity to do a show was to let it really focus on that roguesâ gallery character and change points of view. The whole movie is done very deliberately from Batman and Bruceâs point of view. The only scenes that arenât from his point of view are from Riddlerâs point of view. And that was done to make you think for a moment: Wait, is that Batmanâs or Riddlerâs point of view? This was like: What if we could just go down that alley and follow Oz in the wake of what happened in the movie?
Courtesy of HBOWhy are characters like Cristin Miliotiâs Sofia Falcone so damn good in The Penguin? âItâs important to me that all of these characters are doing what theyâre doing out of personal motivation,â Reeves says.
The Secret Sauce of IP StorytellingI was very conscious about wanting to make the Gotham of The Batman a Gotham that was our world. Even though itâs a fictitious city, the idea was that it would be our Gotham. The interesting thing is: I had been approached before Batman and before Planet of the Apes about other franchises, and I couldnât do them. I turned them down because I was like, âI donât know what the way is.â I was really fortunate with Apes and with Batman that those two franchises, I can do something where I can connect personally. And then Iâm not handcuffed anymore. I can find a path.
As a producer, I make sure that Iâm working with people who have that same kind of personal connection to their work so that it isnât just the IP. Thatâs not any judgment. For me, thatâs survival….Thatâs what movies are, right? You go to a movie to have this empathic experience where filmmakers and actors put you in the shoes of people who you are not for a period of time. Then you go and experience it through them in this transportive way. To me, that is the ultimate goal. That’s whatâs exciting to me about movies.
The Next GenerationI just love movies so much. Getting that bug as a kid, expressing myself, and having a place to tell stories, it was really an escape from the craziness of growing up, my family, all this kind of stuff. I just hope that that tradition continues. When I was growing up, movies were so important. And now we have to fight to make sure that movies and streaming contentâwhatever we want to call it, showsâcan connect to people so that the next generation can be just as inspired to tell stories. I just hope that that happens, because Iâm excited to see what stories younger people have. I want them to tell it with passion.