Glover clears up why he was not in the BttF sequels.
http://www.avclub.com/articles/crispin-glover,67635/
CG: It started with Back To The Future. That was the film that I still have questions about. Essentially what led to me not being in the sequelsI havent talked about it a lot until recently. The reason Im starting to talk about it, specifically, theres a person named Bob Gale who was a co-producer and co-writer on it whos been lying about me, as to why I wasnt in the second film. Hes been saying that I asked for the same salary that Michael J. Fox was getting. Total fabrication. The reason hes making that up is because he does not want to talk about what he did that washe is probably the prime architect as to that illegal thing that happened. [Glover won a landmark lawsuit over use of his likeness when the filmmakers replaced him with previously shot footage and an actor in prosthetics for the sequel. ed.]
The reason that that happened, essentiallyits more complex than this, but when we were working on the first Back To The Future, Michael J. Fox wasnt the original actor. It was Eric Stoltz. He was fired right before Christmas vacation. We had shot about six weeks. Id shot most of my character with Eric Stoltz playing it. And the last thing that we shot with Eric Stoltz was the alternate return to the future. In the original screenplay, I wont say what it was, but there was a slightly different element in the ending. And Im sure I wasnt the only person that said something about it, because it did get changed. But I said, Look, if we have this in our characters, if this happens, it will not be liked by people at large. They did change that element. But I went on beyond it, because it was related to this subject matter. I had a conversation with Robert Zemeckis about it and I said, I think if the characters have money [in the updated timeline at the end of the film], if our characters are rich, its a bad message. That reward should not be in there. People love the movie, and of course who am I to sayI was 20 years old, though. And again, I was stepping into it from a time period of questioning. But Robert Zemeckis got really angry. Essentially, he did not like that idea. He was pissed.
Wed shot a slightly different interpretation of how I played the character, in the returning alternate future. Eric Stoltz was fired, and the next thing we shot with Michael J. Fox was that alternate future. Robert Zemeckis had been nice to me in between [those shooting segments]. But he made it very clear to me that he was not happy with how the character had been played. I was 20 years old, and of course they had just fired another actor. The lead. So I didnt want to get fired! I wanted to work! I was scared when we shot that alternate future. Essentially, I would call it acting from the spinal cord. It was different from how I had interpreted it initially, and essentially, I was re-auditioning. I felt that if I didnt do it exactly as I was being instructed, that I would get firedwhich is fair enough. But I was acting from a point of view of fright, basically, which is not exactly my favorite way to work.
I dont know that anybody would notice it. Ive only seen the film once since it came out. I was working on At Close Range when it was released, and that summer, it was actually a very fast release. I saw it that one time, and I still think the same way. I know there are all kinds of people that would disagree, and people love the film and all that, and I understand that. Its not that I dislike the entire film. There are things about the structure that are very solid, and theres good writing behind it. But I still would argue all the things that people love about the film would still be there, and I think there would be a better message if, instead of the son character pumping his fist in the air or whatever, jumping up in the air because he has a new truck [in the new timeline], if instead the reward was that the mother and father characters are in love with each other. And that theres the potential that money comes in. I think [equating their new riches with moral success] is a bad message. And this is aligned to those things in film that Im saying serve the interests of a corporate element.
Now, I dont know that Bob Gale or Robert Zemeckis necessarily intellectualized that, although that conversation has started to mention, on some levelI do think theres an intellectualization. Theres an understanding that if that portion, that kind of carrot dangled out in front of the American populace that money is going to make you happy, you should borrow money to do things, this serves corporate interests. Whereas being in love with somebody, on a pure level, doesnt necessarily serve corporate interest. Somehow that was an understanding, a knowledge, that if that interest didnt serve the people that were hiring the movie, that maybe it wouldnt be as well-released by those interests. I still believe that that film, if it was just people in love, if it were released as well as it was, my hunch is that it would still have made as much money as it did. But its more about whether the interests were served by the people that were releasing it would be served.
AVC: So did you not come back for the next film because you were uncomfortable with the message, or did they not invite you back because Zemeckis was angry with you?
CG: It gets so complex. It would take a long time to go through all the details of what happened. But suffice it to say, the reality was that they did not want me back in the film. And it stems from that. There was an understanding that I had questions. The fact was, by the time the second film came aroundand this is the lie that Bob Gale was tellinghes saying I was the reason for it, and he wants to take the onus of the responsibility because there was a lawsuit. And because of my lawsuit, there are rules in the Screen Actors Guild that nobody can [recreate an actor with technological means] again. Bob Gale was really, Im quite certain, the initial architect of it, because hes the guy, if youI listen to these things because Im incredulous as to how much people say negative things now because of me, because he said all this stuff on these Back To The Future trilogy films which are not true, to make people have negative thoughts about me, and that it was right for them to do what they did, this illegal thing. And so this is why Im talking about it more vocally. I didnt talk about it at all, but I have to defend myself.
So what they did was, they offered meI hate talking about this. It sounds so crass, but because they made it into this issue, Ive got to say what really happened. They offered me $150,000 to be init was a long screenplay. Like, a 200-something-page screenplay. I could tell they would split it into two movies. But Lea Thompson was making something like $650,000, and Tom Wilson was making something like $325,000 or $350,000, so it was less than half of what my fellow actors were making, coming back for similar-sized roles. And my agents knew it wasnt fair. It wasnt like I was saying I needed to make more money. I just basically, at that point in the negotiation, I just wanted to be fairly compensated. Also, if you look at the character, George McFly, in the sequel, the characters hung upside down. Its been said that thats an obfuscating technique. [In one scene, Glovers character is dangling upside down, supposedly as an orthopedic treatment; its been claimed that the filmmakers thought it would be harder to tell that the impersonator wasnt Glover if his face was inverted. ed.] Well, if you think about it, when I read the screenplay, that was in there. And the characters supposed to have a bad back, and hes hung upside down. Why would you hang somebody upside down if they have a bad back? What was apparent to me was, if I was going to return to be in the film, they wanted to make me physically uncomfortable, and monetarily, there was a punishment too. Because I had asked questions.
I would have been okay with doing the hanging-upside-down part, if I was fairly compensated for it. I actually switched from my agencyI was at William Morris agencyand I was paranoid. I didnt understand why there was not a normal negotiation going on. And I found out that my agent was, her roommate was working at Universal Studios, and she was, I guess, in some part of the negotiation. I switched over to a completely different agency, where I remained for 20-something years. Gerry Harrington was my agent. He called upBob Gale was the person doing the negotiationsBob Gale made it exceedingly clear that they felt they had paid Lea Thompson and Tom Wilson too much money, and he even said they were paying Michael J. Fox too much money. And that they were not going to make the same mistake by paying me what they thought was too much money for Tom Wilson and Lea Thompson. The only person that brought up Michael J. Foxs salary was Bob Gale, and I know this from my conversation with my agent. I wasnt in on the conversation, but he reported it to me.
They had, before this conversation, split the screenplay into two different films. Two different screenplays. They came back and said, The offer is now $125,000. They went down $25,000! It was very clear they didnt want me in the film. It was clear they already had this concept that they were going to put another actor in prosthetics. They thought that was funny. They knew that they could basically torment me, either financially or by this mean-spirited, what ultimately was an illegal thing to do. Im sure they laughed and joked about it. In fact, I shouldnt go into so much detail, but there was testimony that specifically had to do with my name being used asagain, this is not the proper platform. But its not a pretty picture. And its not somethingIve been very careful to not talk about it. But at this point in time, especially since this person is continuing to do itit would be one thing if hed stopped doing it after the first thing. But he did interviews as recently as last year, and its total falsification. And Ive gotta respond.
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