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From The New York Times, this is The Interview. I'm David Marchese. The long-awaited Emmy Award-winning series Severance returns for its second season next week. I've seen a bunch of the new episodes, which have some real surprises in them. And I can say that I'm very eager to see other fans' reaction to how the show has moved forward with its story. By way of a reminder, that story is about a rebellious group of employees at the mysterious and probably malevolent Lumen Industries.
Those employees are office drones whose consciousness has been artificially separated between their work selves, also known as their innies, and their outies, their selves away from the office. That sense of a divided self is one to which Ben Stiller, who co-directed and co-executive produces the series, can probably relate.
It's actually one of the things that's most intriguing to me about him. He's a hugely successful comedic actor from mainstream hits like Meet the Parents and Night at the Museum, who's gradually stepped away from acting in favor of his first love, directing. As a director, he's a much more subversive and distinctive stylist than his biggest acting roles might suggest.
Take, for example, more serious projects like his crime drama series Escape at Dannemora, as well as Severance, of course, and also his off-the-wall comedy satires like Cable Guy and Zoolander, the latter of which he also starred in.
So I don't think I'm overreaching in suggesting that there is some innie, outie, Severance-style tension, if you will, running through Stiller's own story. As I found out while speaking with him at his Manhattan office, that's something he was trying to make sense of, too. Here's my conversation with Ben Stiller.
You know, I was thinking about severance and sort of where it fits in the arc of your career. Are there specific things that working... on comedy gave you the tools for when it comes to working on something like severance, which I would describe as maybe comedy adjacent. It's funny because I don't categorize it specifically. And I think I find that stuff very funny. I mean, I think whenever anything is very specific.
it's always funny and um i feel like the show sort of has its basis in the workplace comedy like the office or office space or parks and rec but Where it goes off, I think this season, we probably went to some stranger places, but I felt like that was also just part of what the show is. The show has to continue on its journey and can't just stay and doing the same thing. But I love that stuff.
second season is still in the vein of a workplace comedy the second season probably gets a little bit stranger than that yeah but it is but it is based in the idea that started the show right that these people are in a workplace doing a job that they don't understand they don't know who they are or what they're doing or why they're there and that to me has always been sort of the you know that's the sort of like the blueprint for the show
You know, there were a couple news stories that came out about Severance being a difficult production with delays and creative differences. Was it a particularly difficult production? Do you find that there is any link between how difficult something is to make and the uniqueness of that thing? Because Severance is sort of a unique show, and I wonder if it just is going to be trickier than if you're doing...
like a traditional sitcom or something. Yeah, I've never really believed that idea of like, you know, you have to have friction or something on a set. Or, you know, I've heard directors talk about that to keep sort of tension on set. I think just the nature of making this show over the last, I mean, it's five years now, has been a learning experience.
Yeah, sometimes, you know, creatively, it's been the questions of like, which way do we go with it? And I really believe that the show... comes out of the the different creative perspectives of the people who work on it and so yeah it's not always perfect um we went through patches where there were difficulties but it's also
I think it all came out of everybody wanting something to be as good as it could be. And I really believe that all those different points of view ended up making the show what it is. Yeah, there was some stuff that happened, but it wasn't a big deal. Do you know how the series ends? Do you have the arc all plotted out? We have the end. Yes. Would it be a spoiler to tell me the ending? Yes. Of course. You know the answer. You know what you're working towards. Yes.
We definitely have an end. I think we now know exactly how many seasons, which I won't say at this point. But, yeah. Can you say something enigmatic that seems like it reveals a clue to the ending? I mean, in my mind, the series has always been about Mark and, you know, his Indy and his Audi. And what happens with this Indian and Saudi? And what is the ultimate sort of destination for both of them? I knew it. Yeah. So what you were saying a beat before about people being at work.
And on some level sort of mystified about the fact that, you know, things seem opaque. You don't really feel like you have control. You don't know who's really making the decisions. I was thinking that maybe Hollywood is like that in some ways. It's not clear who's calling the shots or where the power really lies. Did your work experience inform the show in any way?
Yeah, that's a good question. I mean, I do think what you said is true, that at a certain point, there's always somebody making a decision who is not making it. to your face or telling you or you even know who that person is and it can be really really frustrating i think in show business even probably more than i mean just from my own experience the How something happens, why it happens, why someone gets rejected, why a decision is made is never explained to the artist or the creative person.
Or if it is, it's usually not the truth. You know, it's a cliche in Hollywood, but it's kind of true is that everybody, you know, will say yes. And it doesn't mean yes, it means no. Or let me think about it. Or yeah, great. This was a great meeting. And then like. a day later yeah they're passing more than ever honestly these days because it's very you know it's a very tough environment now to get
things made. I think just with post the strike, post COVID, it's more expensive to make things. And I think the decision makers are, you know, trying to keep their jobs and trying to figure out how to make things work. for them, which means constriction and choices that are safer. You know, hearing you say that brings to mind, you know, sort of in the late 90s into the 2000s, sort of the...
Your bread and butter were these big Hollywood comedies. And in a lot of those films you played, it was kind of a type, you know, like you were sort of a well-meaning, often outsider in some sense. who is made to suffer a bunch of indignities, but ultimately kind of comes out on top at the end. Was there any part of you that felt like you understood? why audiences responded to you in that role in particular?
Like what, was there any part where you're like, why do they want to see me again? Honestly, I, yeah, I never, I had no, I mean, it's funny because at the time, I remember like a moment in time. When like people started having that reaction, like I would like open up a newspaper and be like, why is Ben Stiller in every movie?
like i like i remember opening up the la times and a guy like wrote it was actually a funny uh inside joke with ricky drew base for a long time because there was this writer who wrote like a letter to god dear god stop putting ben stiller in comedies And it was like, yeah, but I wasn't thinking, I was just like, I don't know. I'm, you know, I'm here. I'm doing it. I love doing what I do. But, you know.
It's only in retrospect more to look back and go, oh yeah, that was like, wow, there was like, you know, a thing happening there that, you know, I was very fortunate to be a part of, but I don't know what the zeitgeist was or what. And you can look at 2000s comedies now and go, okay, they were a specific kind of thing, a tone. And there were a lot of great things in those comedies, too, that we don't have now. But I don't know if you can recreate that now. But at the time, I really wasn't.
analyzing it too much i was kind of just trying to figure out how to navigate it you know you did have this this real string of big movies uh from like something about mary sort of like through the night at the museum um Did you feel like because those movies were hitting, you kind of got swept up in something that was sort of out of your control a little bit? Like, what was your thinking about the work in that period?
It's not something when you're in it that you are really able to analyze, you know, because it's happening. I sort of don't believe you when you want to say that, because I suspect you were very strategic throughout your career thinking about what was going to potentially work at different times.
What do I know? I don't think so, because I don't think I'm that smart. Really. I think I would make decisions based... Like, I remember very clearly Night at the Museum was a decision because I grew up near the... Natural History Museum. And I thought, oh, I love this. Like if I was a kid, I'd love this and it'd be fun to do.
But then the Night at the Museum 3 decision is a little different, right? Yeah, but it's also, you know, at that point, you know, you've got a team together and those were all fun to do. I'm like, you know. I'm not going to not want to work with Robin Williams or, you know, Sean Levy getting this group together. But, you know, when I was in that period, I don't think I had the ability to kind of like hover over and go like.
How am I looking at? And a lot of actors and filmmakers do have that ability. I just wasn't at that place. So, you know, the only part of it that. was sort of like nagging at me. It was like, I like to do other kinds of movies as a filmmaker. And I just never really stopped to make the time to do that. I was directing a lot of those movies myself.
directing myself in them and a lot of times getting movies made as a director because i was in them they say well if you would be in it then we'll make it and also i think it's just sort of like something that happened and you don't have control over that
The tension between knowing that there were movies that you wanted to make, and then you also had opportunities to be in other movies. How alive was that tension for you at the time? Do you remember experiences where you might have been thinking like, oh, I... I want to make this, but this offer to do Along Came Polly or whatever the movie might have been, I'm going to go with that one. Yeah, sure. And, you know, that's a personal choice you make at the time. I mean, I think fear.
is always a big thing as an actor, I think. I saw a Q&A with Jeremy Strong, that movie The Apprentice, and somebody asked him, why did you want to do this role? He said, fear. And I totally identify with that because, you know, fear is what drives you sometimes to go away from something or sometimes to jump into something, depending on where you're at. So what was a fear driven decision?
i mean i think so many decisions are based in it's it's underneath it's like whether or not the fear is going to push you away from something or you're going to jump off the the cliff with it i had a chance like to do glengarry glenross on broadway probably around that long came poly time. I decided not to do that. I look back, oh, maybe I would have liked to have done that. But it's also just where I was at at the time. And has what you're afraid of changed over time?
Yeah, I mean, I think as you get older, it changes everything in terms of, you know, what you look at as what's ahead of you. in terms of the things you think you want to do than really looking at, okay, well, I'm at this point in my life, I'm at this age. You have to think more about, well, do I really want to take this chance right now? How much do I care about?
what the the quote-unquote bad result is and i think as you get older you for me it's like you care a little bit less about that if you want to do something because you're like well what do i why am i letting this intangible thing which is like fear of what it's fear of people saying i suck fear of people uh not going to see it or saying i mean what is that that's still like and i've experienced that because i've as you know i've had successes and failures and um
you know the day after something doesn't do well or if it you know gets batteries or people don't go it's not like anything in your literal life has changed you know your real life your tangible life it's just how you feel you know i mean you feel embarrassed Do you feel like I, you know, I, damn, I wasn't, you know, I want to be the winner. But, you know, winning doesn't always happen. Usually doesn't happen. So, you know, how do you live with that? And when you take the chance.
it's still important that you took the leap and you went for it. And failure can be in not taking the chance. And as you get older, I think that's something that you start to feel. It's like, well, I just want to have this experience while I'm still here. Just hearing you talk about your thinking in the context of the audience and also what you want to do, I was just, in my mind, I remember how I did one of these interviews with Eddie Murphy. And he said...
He only wants to do projects that he knows will work. Like he's not interested really in doing something that might be off-putting or alienating. Like he wants to, if he's going to spend time on doing something, he wants to feel confident that it's going to work, which doesn't.
quite sound like how you think about it yeah i mean sometimes the audience has to sort of have time to i i feel like this has happened to a bunch of movies i've done which is it takes the audience a few years to get it like zoolander or something like that you know like zoolander when it came out was was not a big hit yeah um because what a weird world what a weird character but once they became acclimated to it then you know then it became something that they really you know liked um
Reality Bites was the first film you directed. Yeah. That's a film that really seemed to speak to Gen X both then and still continues to speak to them. Do you think that film is representative of any... specific generational values that you hold? I feel like the film is a timepiece of where we were at that moment in time.
as put through a kind of a pop culture lens. And it was written by Helen Childress, who was taking her experience and trying to kind of encapsulate the issues that she was dealing with. I think I was coming to add more as my character, honestly, you know, the Michael character who was the guy kind of trying to commodify it a little bit and was outside of it a little bit.
In a way, I feel like that's what the movie is. Helen was Lelaina and I was Michael. And we improvised a lot as she was rewriting the script when we were working on it. So that was my... experience of making that movie. I do feel like generationally, though, the issues in that movie are kind of evergreen sort of issues. Oh, I strongly disagree. Really? Yeah. Really. Well, why do you think they're evergreen? Well, I just think it's that moment in time.
where you're having to figure out how to, if you have parents who've supported you or whatever, you're having to cut the cord and figure out how to go out into the world and find yourself. Well, no, I 100% agree with that aspect of it. The aspect of the film that to me feels very much like a time capsule and representative of a specific Gen X attitude that has basically disappeared is the...
anxiety about the possibility of selling out. And I think now, young creative people, it's like, maybe it's just because they've realized it's so hard to actually make a living. The concept of...
selling out is a total phantom that doesn't exist for people anymore. Because it's almost like... It's like, anybody's going to give me money? Of course I'll take it. But I think a lot of that is because of how social media has changed how people can... upload their lives to everyone directly you know and i know what's the connection i don't just that she was making a little documentary on her video camera that then she had to give to michael to
put on, you know, the MTV version of what that was. And now you... just go straight to the internet. And I think young people are expected to do that now and to create their own movie and get it out into the world. And I think it plays into what you're saying, which is, it's almost like if you're not selling out, you're not doing what you should be doing.
And I feel that with my kids, I see that pressure on them when I see their friends and what they post and their image of what they put out to the world. And it's a responsibility. And if you don't do that, you're not. part of what's going on. So I feel like there's almost a pressure to have to do that. And, you know, another project I think you wanted to make for a long time was...
an adaptation of What Makes Sammy Run? Yeah. Bud Schulberg novel? Yeah. You tried for years to get that made. Yeah. And I thought, this... So for people who don't know the book, it's a story about a Jewish character named Sammy Glick, who's sort of a conniving, amoral striver in Hollywood and his unquenchable thirst to... succeed in that world. And I thought that's an interesting movie for a young, successful Jewish man in Hollywood to want to make.
What was it about that book that resonated with you? Well, I thought the story was kind of, you know, it's this... prototypical story of a guy who comes from nothing to do whatever it takes to get to the top. And I think Bud Schulberg always saw it as kind of a metaphor for anybody who wants to get to the top.
that that mindset of it doesn't matter you just do whatever it takes that's why i think that novel resonates i think there's always been a resistance to it and i can understand why for a long time i was very frustrated because i felt like well this story should be made but you know the flip side of it is that it can be looked at as you're shining a spotlight
on a jewish character who is this self-hating jew who is willing to do whatever and you know do you think that was the resistance to i think so i think i mean partly i think so i think um It's always been hard to make show business stories. you know, in Hollywood, because people in the business feel like the outside world isn't interested in the inside baseball of it, though. I've always been attracted to those kinds of stories. And I do, you know, it's funny, I think about it now, and...
I would love to see that story made. What I worry about is how people would interpret it on the outside, you know? And that's as a Jewish person. Do you think there are ways in which after October 7th... being Jewish in Hollywood has been trickier to navigate or have things felt different? I think just being a Jewish person feels different. And I think it's an environment that...
Growing up, I grew up in an incredibly sheltered Upper West Side environment. I never experienced anti-Semitism. I heard about it, but I was, you know, never around it. So the reality of that... to start feeling that now where other people have felt it their whole lives in other parts of the world and you know in other parts of our country um and to see the the spike and the rise and anti-Semitic violence is something...
that I never thought I'd experience in my lifetime, and feeling what my kids are feeling too, and how incredibly politicized it all is, and how complicated it is, because... With the social media universe and all of it, it's almost impossible to really... talk about it in in a in a really level-headed sort of way where you can hear other people's ideas because people are just kind of like shouting at each other on social media but the reality of it is really frightening yeah
But has any of that reality in any way filtered into your working life? I don't know. I mean, I think it's also a choice of... As a creative person, where you want to put your energy, you know, in terms of. The business, I think there have always been those misconceptions of how Jews are involved in Hollywood, and that's always been a thing. And a lot of that also is, I think, a result of the fact that there were a lot of successful Jewish people who started the Hollywood movie industry.
And so it's sort of like folded in on itself. But the reality of that world now is so completely different. It's just, you know, the Jewish population is so small. You know, it took me a long time to even realize that in my sheltered world, you know, what is it, 20 million Jews in the whole world or something like that? So the...
proportion of success i mean it's it's a very tough thing to navigate and i feel like right now in the world there's just so much hate and antipathy that's out there and It's not limited to anti-Semitism, but that's something Jewish people are feeling, but people are feeling it all over, too. I have no smooth segue to get out of the anti-Semitism portion of this conversation, so I'm just going to take a hard left there.
In my reading of your career, around 2010, there's a real change happens. Starting in 2010, you really did a lot fewer of kind of like the big broad comedies. And you started to do films like you did, I think, three Noah Baumbach movies. You did Secret Life of Walter Mitty, Brad Status. And these are all movies that are really about middle-aged guys working through the big questions.
Was doing those films the result of a conscious decision that you wanted to start doing a different kind of film and stop doing what you had been doing before? Yeah, I think around that time I moved back to New York. I'd been living in L.A. for 20 years and decided to move back here where I grew up. And I wanted to try to spend more time at home.
But also, it was, yeah, it was like a point where, for me, really, where it kind of changed in terms of my outlook was after Zoolander 2. It was the feeling of like, oh, okay, this is what... everybody wants this all right i'm gonna do it and i had fun doing it and then nobody wanted it and i was like well but you said you wanted it and really was it that bad you know that was where i really was like oh i have to make a choice here where like i'm not gonna
do that if I want to do these other things and wait for the right opportunity to come up and not go off and oh if somebody's offering me you know Zoolander 3 then I'm going to go do that. But Zoolander 2 gave me the gift of nobody offering me Zoolander 3 because nobody wanted it at that time. So it was like, okay, here's some space. I have to live with that feeling, the feeling of not winning.
And also, you know, my marriage wasn't in a great place. And there's a lot going on that really, for me, kind of, I think I got a little bit clearer. what i wanted and what my priorities were but i think 2010 was sort of like the beginning of that moving out of la yeah you you mentioned your marriage was in a bad place and you and your wife, Christine Taylor, separated for a while and reconciled. And I saw her talking on Drew Barrymore's talk show, and she brought up the idea of...
Sort of the separation and reconciliation being the result of what she called adult growth spurts, which I thought was a nice way of putting it. What was your growth spurt during that time? Well, when we separated, it was just having space to see what our relationship was, what my life felt like. when we weren't in that relationship how much i cared about my family how much i loved our family unit um i think we both as she said we both kind of took care of ourselves separately and um
And eventually, it was like three or four years, really, that we weren't together. But we always were connected. And in my mind, I never didn't want... us to be together and i i don't know where christine was you'd have to ask her but covid put us all together In the same house. It was an act of God. Yeah. And it was almost like a year of living in the same house before we were actually together. But I'm so grateful for it.
not that many people do come back together when they separate i mean a lot of people do i'm sure but there's nothing like that when you do come back because you really do have So much more of an appreciation for what you have, because we know we could not have it too. My understanding is you're working on a documentary about your parents, Ann Mira, Jerry Stiller, the comedy team. People don't know the comedy team, they certainly know that.
Your dad played George Costanza's dad on Seinfeld. And I was thinking about the fact you're working on a documentary about them. And it sort of occurred to me that kind of outside of like a therapeutic setting. There aren't a lot of opportunities for people to sort of in a structured way sit and think about their parents. So what has working on the documentary revealed to you?
about your understanding of your parents? Well, I think it's really made me look at my own relationship to my parents more than anything. Every time I want to make the movie about them, I'm realizing it's all kind of reflecting back on my own issues that I have with them. And how much...
You know, I mean, you're right. Like, I feel so fortunate that I have all this footage of my parents and our family from the Super 8 movies that my dad took and then I took and recordings my dad made hours and hours. and hours. Just talking into a tape machine? Talking with my mother as they were writing sketches or sometimes he'd just record us just because he wanted to have our voices. But I see my...
I see the world I grew up in. I see my father. I was just thinking about it this morning, just how much of... I love my father, but also... that tension of like not wanting to be my father, but everybody loves my father. And so like, I would love to be loved as my father is loved. Because he was a lovely person. But then there's also the thing of like, oh, but I'm me. And that was something I was feeling since I was, you know, a teenager. Really, the conflict between understanding that people...
People had affection for your father. And also you're not wanting to be your father, but wanting.
people's affection? I think, no, I think it was more just wanting to individuate from my father, wanting to be my own person, you know, like not being into their comedy and their thing. I, you know, I wanted to be a serious director. And then when I discovered comedy, it was, well, it wasn't like what they, did it was like i like sctv or saturday night live you know and not until i was older was i able to really just appreciate
what they did. But all the while, my parents were so supportive, especially my dad. My mom was a little bit of a... tougher audience. And I think my dad was very overprotective and concerned about the rejection in show business that you have to deal with. Yeah, I don't know. I mean... It's a hard thing when you look up to a parent so much in terms of just what their essence is. Jerry's essence was so sweet that you look at...
I look at myself and go, am I that person? Am I as good as he was? And maybe that's a good thing to want to aspire to, but I feel like that's what he was. Are you? I don't know. I mean, I try, I try, but, you know, also, by the way, he obviously wasn't perfect, but he, you know, he wasn't one of those guys who was like, you know, win, win, win.
That wasn't his drive. His drive was just to kind of create and to try to protect his family and to be loved. Because he came from a background of parents who were very... poor and there was a lot of fighting between his parents and depression and he wasn't nurtured like that but he didn't go on to not nurture his children he went the opposite way he was so nurturing so
You know, that's what he was. Wait, so you're sitting on a couch, so this is all appropriate. I'm going to lie down now. But that was your dad. Yeah. Your mom was a tougher critic? She was. She was. She was, you know, Irish Catholic. Very funny. I think I actually share more of my mom's sense of humor than my dad's. She was a serious actor.
who then my dad drew into comedy, who came up with the idea for them to do their comedy act to make money after they'd been married for five or six years in the 50s. And I think she never loved comedy. She was very good at it. I think she was more naturally adept at it than my dad, actually. My dad was funny, but his dream was to be Eddie Cantor or Jack Benny.
My mother was more of like a polished stage, you know, like a nightclub. She really just knew how to work a crowd. And she wrote plays. And she wrote plays. And she was more interested. in writing and reading and acting in different kinds of things she i think always was like when she saw me doing comedy she was like oh that's great but i like you know i liked greenberg or i like permanent midnight yeah
Yeah. There's a New Yorker profile of you from around the time of Walter Mitty. And the writer mentioned that you had been... developing a project. I want to say it was called The Mirror. Yeah. About a Hollywood success who... was worried he was a sellout and wanted to become like a truth teller or something. And kind of the writer made hay of this as like a parallel for you. But the little tidbit in there is that your mom vetoed the project? Yeah, right. What was that about?
Well, in the idea of the movie was, that's funny, I'd forgotten about that. My family had to play my family. And also there was a psychiatrist who sort of like kicks off the whole thing. I think it gives my character a pill or something. i wanted gene wilder to play that that guy and i sent it to my mom and to gene wilder and they both nixed it he's like i think you're great but this i do not like this project i thought it was really good um
My mother didn't want to go there. Now, that's very atypical of her because... when i was starting out like audition tapes or um i did an audition reel for saturday night live where i had my parents in it and they were in so many things that i did it was never a thing but for some reason that specific role and
And maybe it was what, I don't know. I wish I could ask her. Just, you mentioned Saturday Night Live. You were on it sort of famously or infamously for about four episodes or something like that. Because. you kind of wanted to make short films for them, and you could tell it wasn't going to work out. But the thing that I'm curious about is, what is the conversation like when you go into Lorne Michaels' office and tell him, I'm...
leaving the show that every young comedian in the country aspires to being on. What was his response? He was like, okay. That's my lore. Ben's going to do what Ben's going to do. It wasn't great, but I knew that I couldn't do well there because I wasn't great at live performing.
My mom would have been better on that show. I got too nervous. I didn't enjoy it. And I wanted to be making the short film. So in the moment, there were reasons why. And I had this opportunity to do this MTV show. And it had been a dream to be on Saturday Night Live.
Like looking back on it, I don't remember exactly how I had the, you know. Fortitude. Gumption. I was going to say, yeah. I know the word you're going to say. Gumption. Thank you very much to do that. But for whatever reason, I followed that instinct. Sorry to jump around, but I read your dad's memoir. Yeah. Oh, wow. Yeah. Married to Laughter. And there was a little segment in there that I wanted to read to you.
I have a question about it. It's nothing weird. This is supposed to be heartwarming and sort of whimsical here at the end. He wrote, what words of wisdom can I give my children? See past the hype and the glitz and ask yourself why you want to perform. It may take years to arrive at the answers, but understanding the reasons will help you to keep the dream alive and reach your goals.
Do you feel like you understand your reasons for why you do what you do? That's interesting, because when I hear that, I know that my dad knew why he wanted to perform. That's a good question. I think so. For me, I think it's about trying to get closer to expressing my true self.
Trying to somehow make something that feels truthful and real and maybe is just, yeah, more... opening up myself in a way that's closer to the bone and trying to have the sort of courage to kind of go to keep going for that for me it's figuring it out is like just what life is about
It's the big question. Like, what are we here for? I haven't figured that out yet. And I think as I continue to try to figure that out while I'm still here, I feel like that's what I want to try to make the work that I do about, too. I probably should have brought this up. One is more thematically appropriate, but I thought maybe it's a good place to end also. But I love a movie you made mid-90s called Heavyweights. Yeah. Which is about a lunatic named Tony Perkis. Perkis, yeah.
Played by you. Yeah. Who buys, you know, for lack of a better term, a fat camp. Right. And you know. This is a Disney movie, by the way. A Disney movie. They're not making this movie today. Essentially tries to torture the kids into losing weight. My sister and I used to watch the movie over and over again. We had the VHS tape. I still remember lines from it, which I'm not going to subject you to. And then about 10 years later...
You did a character named White Goodman, who's also the bad guy, who's trying to sort of professionalize a dodgeball league. Those are the, it's essentially the same character you transposed from one film into the other, right? No, they're not. They're totally different. One has blonde hair and one has really dark hair. One has a mustache. Even the voice is the same. The voice is basically the same. So it's not just me. Thank you. No, I mean, it was like, you know, like those are two like the...
most fun experiences I've ever had on movies, playing those characters. And we did the reading for Dodgeball. Ross and Thurber had written the movie and was directing it. And I was like, I don't know, like, what voice are you to do? I don't want to have that many different voices.
went into that voice and he's like that's great i was like well i kind of did that in heavy it's just like oh it's all right whatever and i honestly never thought not that i was like trying to like pull one over it's just like i never thought anybody would really like you know 30 years later be
talking to me on the new york times about like you know calling out heavyweights and dodgeball uh it just wasn't in my you know really you didn't think about that yeah so long-term thinking uh if i could go back But no, yeah, it was just sort of like, all right, I'll just go for it and do this one. Well, thank you very much for taking all the time today. I appreciate it. Yeah, it was great talking to you, man. And you know we're...
Talk. We're supposed to talk again. We do. We are. Yeah. Yeah. Right. You do the little follow up. Yeah. Right. Yeah. Yeah. Great. Please don't refer to it as the little follow up. Isn't it usually like a phone call or something? Yeah, yeah, yeah. But I take, I really think about it. I'm sorry.
After the break, I called Ben back with a few more questions about how comedy has changed. I think it was just like kind of a, I don't want to say a more innocent time 20 years ago because it wasn't that innocent, but weirdly kind of it was. This is A.O. Scott. I'm a critic at The New York Times.
What I do and what the other critics here do is part of the same project that all of the journalists at The New York Times work on every day to give you clarity and perspective and, above all, a deeper understanding of the world. When you subscribe to The New York Times, it's not just here are the headlines, but here's the way everything fits together. If you'd like to subscribe, please go to nytimes.com slash subscribe.
Hi, Ben. How are you? Hey, that's the follow-up, the little follow-up. Just because you said little follow-up, I'm going to rake you over the coals. Ben, I'm determined to... elicit a nugget of severance information that'll make the obsessives on the internet go nutty. So without giving too much away, there's an episode in the season, in the upcoming season, where someone, and it's not clear who,
is walking and whistling a melody, which I believe is the melody of Gordon Lightfoot's The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald. Is that correct? I don't think that's a spoiler to say that. Wait, but do you deny that that song's lyrics are perhaps a Rosetta Stone for deciphering exactly what Severance and Lumen are up to? I'm not going to say anything. And, you know, I want to leave all options open. But also, no, I'm a Gordon Lightfoot fan. I think he's incredible.
Oh, my God. Yes. And I used Carefree Highway at the end of Escape of Dynamora. Oh, yeah. And I will hopefully always be able to use his music in movies because I think he's just one of the great artists of our time. Let me shift gears. I was thinking about how when you came back to a certain kind of comedy with Zoolander 2, the way you put it was, you know, that was an example of
You thinking people wanted something, you gave it to them, and then it turned out they didn't want it. And it made me curious if, sort of despite Zoolander 2, if you have gotten or still get pitches for a new Fockers movie. Yes. Yes. The interesting thing is it came out a couple of years ago, I think, that I was like the same age that De Niro was when we did the first movie.
And kind of like what would have evolved in that, you know, that now that I my character that Greg would have kids, maybe one of them's getting married. So it kind of, you know, was an interesting sort of mirror to the first movie. But for me, I guess. I look at it differently as a director than as an actor. And if there was something that came together on Fockers that everybody liked that was fun, you know, I'm open to that. But I think maybe for me as a director.
It's my head is in a different place, you know, probably even post Danimora and Severance and stuff. Basically, are you saying sort of the stakes feel a little bit lower when you're just acting in it? No, it's just a different creative experience for me, I think. It's really more like my personal interest as a filmmaker, I think.
right now is like kind of like i don't know like i think it's i think it's really hard to it's really hard to make a comedy you know you know in a way like when i'm as a you when you're directing uh I kind of like the freedom also of not having to direct a comedy where you can, any comedy that comes into something that's dramatic is usually welcome if the tone is clear.
But it's sort of like a bonus, you know, and not an expectation. And if I'm really being honest, like that's that's part of it, too. And I was thinking about how when we were talking about your comedies from the 2000s. You said there were a lot of great things in them that we don't have now, and also that you don't know if that can be recreated. But what don't we have now in comedy that we did have back then?
I think it's just the freedom, you know, the freedom to, like, not worry about how something was going to get interpreted. And I do think it was sort of, in a weird way, was a more... It was a freer time because there was less analysis given even to the people who were making the comedy. I think it was just like kind of a, I don't want to say a more innocent time 20 years ago because it wasn't that innocent.
But weirdly, kind of, it was, you know? You know, I just was thinking about this lately in a different context and thinking about how there's like this whole universe of comedy podcasts now where people are saying whatever the hell they want to say. seemingly with no regard for who's going to be upset about it or not. I just wonder, is it your experience that comedy feels trickier?
Well, I can only speak from my own experience, which is I definitely am aware of that. But again, I also never really thought about it that way back in the 2000s, too. I don't think I was ever... I think I'm the same person I was on that regard, like in terms of, you know, I wasn't as I wasn't the guy who was going to go out there and, you know, say whatever. And like, I think I always had that self-awareness that probably.
just was you know part of who i am um let me try and uh i'm trying to sort of wrap things up with a bit of a bow here but i i i saw somewhere that you're ambition early on was to try to make movies as good as Albert Brooks' movies. Have you lived up to that? Oh, God, no. I mean... He just basically created it all on his own, and I think he had a persona that he developed. I guess you could say Woody Allen did it too, but...
For me, there was just something about the tone of his humor that is so unique. So, yeah, for me, the answer is no. been able to make some things that i feel proud of and i and i love being a movie director and actor and all that but i feel like what he did is unique and and really has not ever been equaled do you have specific ambitions for what you do with your career? I mean, I really just want to keep on getting closer to making something that I feel is as good as it can be.
And as honest as it can be, that to me is, you know, really satisfying. Ben, thank you very much for taking all the time to talk with me. I appreciate it. Yeah, I've enjoyed it. And this was a good follow-up. I feel like it wasn't like a little whatever, you know. Well, good luck with your little TV show. My little thing. Your little New York Times thing you got, Dave. Good for you. That's Ben Stiller.
The second season of Severance airs January 17th on Apple TV+. This conversation was produced by Wyatt Orm. It was edited by Annabelle Bacon. Mixing by Sophia Landman. Original music by Dan Powell, Diane Wong. and Marion Lozano. Photography by Philip Montgomery. Our senior booker is Priya Matthew, and Seth Kelly is our senior producer.
Our executive producer is Alison Benedict. Special thanks to Rory Walsh, Renan Borelli, Jeffrey Miranda, Nick Pittman, Matty Maciello, Jake Silverstein, Paula Schumann, and Sam Dolnik. If you like what you're hearing, follow or subscribe to the interview wherever you get your podcasts. To read or listen to any of our conversations, you can always go to nytimes.com slash the interview. And you can email us anytime at theinterview at nytimes.com.
Next week, I talk with Curtis Yarvin, a controversial blogger whose ideas have gained traction among powerful Republican figures. The question of basically, is democracy good or bad? is, I think, a secondary question to, is it what we actually have? I'm David Marchese, and this is The Interview from The New York Times.