
Director Rob Cohen shot the third instalment of The Mummy series out in the Chinese desert. We talked to him about making action movies and how to motivate a cast in such harsh conditions.
Q: Can you tell us what Tomb of the Dragon Emperor is all about?
RC: The seed of the script was that this Emperor and the Terracotta Army of Shi Haung were the mummies and if he comes back alive, he’s going to raise the army and conquer the world again.
The idea that I could bring the Terracotta Army of Shi Haung up above ground, and back into battle and that they would be the mummies and that Brendan Fraser, Maria Bello, Luke Ford, Isabella Young and Michelle Yeoh would have to find a way to battle them was just too tempting.
The idea that I could bring the Terracotta Army of Shi Haung up above ground, and back into battle and that they would be the mummies and that Brendan Fraser, Maria Bello, Luke Ford, Isabella Young and Michelle Yeoh would have to find a way to battle them was just too tempting.
Jet-Li plays a shapeshifter and at a certain point in his “reboot” as a mummy, he gets back the ability to become a three-headed dragon as well as this big pit-bull temple guardian dog! Plus we have the Yeti and all the undead that built the Great Wall of China that were buried underneath.
It has 949 visual effects shots, all very complex 3D work, I have 338 to go. It’s a movie that’s different in tone from the others, it’s not so goofy, it’s got humour but it not jokes. Brendan is much more real, he’s struggling with a son and the son is struggling with a dominant dad. Old bull, young bull. It’s got a lot of cool stuff in it!
It has 949 visual effects shots, all very complex 3D work, I have 338 to go. It’s a movie that’s different in tone from the others, it’s not so goofy, it’s got humour but it not jokes. Brendan is much more real, he’s struggling with a son and the son is struggling with a dominant dad. Old bull, young bull. It’s got a lot of cool stuff in it!
Q: Did you have any concerns about taking on the franchise and resurrecting it?
R: No, not really. I’ve never done a sequel to my own movies and I don’t like the sequels that have been done to my movies. The point is, I think there is always new and fresh stuff to do. And that’s what made my career, looking for the new thing that would be challenging and exciting trying to figure out. Once I read the script, I knew what I wanted to do with it, which was to change it a lot.
Q: How did you go about changing the script?
RC: I went to see the producers, including Stephen Sommers, and I said, ‘look, it has to be a movie of mine, not a movie that’s sort of a movie of yours’ and I wanted it to be clear on what that would mean. I laid out my 10 talking points about the script and the casting and I said if you like these ideas then we should go to the studio but if you don’t like this then let’s not. They talked and they felt comfortable.
Q: And what was different about the movie you had in mind?
RC: I don’t like goofy humour or slapstick. I like adrenaline-inducing action, not people making jokes in the middle of the action. I just like there to be jeopardy and tension and I like it to be a ride and fun. I’m not trying to turn it into The Bourne Identity, but it’s got to be closer to the Raiders (of the Lost Ark) model. Everyone was behind that.
Q: And what were the biggest challenges?
R: Well the special effects were a big thing. But the biggest challenge was to get a script and get a cast and get a story that made you really invest in the people. That’s always the hardest thing. I learned from Stealth, I made a profound set of mistakes.
I got caught up of with doing a movie in the air at mach 3 and I worked so hard on solving these impossible technical challenges that seemed so difficult that I lost the people and when you lose the people, the effects just become nothing. If you got great characters and then there’s some flashy action or special effect stuff, then everybody is cool because they are invested in the characters.
I got caught up of with doing a movie in the air at mach 3 and I worked so hard on solving these impossible technical challenges that seemed so difficult that I lost the people and when you lose the people, the effects just become nothing. If you got great characters and then there’s some flashy action or special effect stuff, then everybody is cool because they are invested in the characters.
Q: There is a wealth of acting talent on show in this movie, what was it like working with such a fantastic cast?
R: We worked our asses off and we suffered through some pretty intense conditions in the deserts and in China. I mean, daily I had to find a new place to use as the bathroom! It brought us closer together, we lived in a dingy Chinese two star hotel at night and it took over an hour and a half to get from the set to the hotel each way.
There were pot holes in the roads to the point that you had to go one mile an hour so you don’t break the axles! China has a very unique energy and it’s very visually rich and I tried to make the film have that cultural richness. The first 10 minutes of the film are in ancient Mandarin with no English.
There were pot holes in the roads to the point that you had to go one mile an hour so you don’t break the axles! China has a very unique energy and it’s very visually rich and I tried to make the film have that cultural richness. The first 10 minutes of the film are in ancient Mandarin with no English.








