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![]() School of Cock Liam Lynch, Tenacious D's third wheel, squeaks
Tenacious D plays at being the ultimate rock-blockers: shredding metal
music mainline, making fun while giving a big hug to the largest, lamest
excesses of fans and musicians.
In the origin story that scampers from Los Angeles to Sacramento to
the gates of Hell in "Tenacious D in The Pick of Destiny," Jack Black
(JB) and Kyle Gass (The Kage) dispense with subplots in a quest for the
pick used by the greatest of guitarists, carved from a busted tooth of
the devil. Talking to the slim, sly offstage creator of "The D," I
had
to wonder what he thinks is the essence of the act. "How would I
describe `The D?' Oh, God," 36-year-old musician-writer-director Liam
Lynch (also behind "Sarah Silverman: Jesus is Magic" and "The Sifl &
Ollie" MTV show) moans. Are they satirists? "They're
Satanists," Lynch deadpans. After the shortest of beats, he
continues: "They have a classic chemistry that you will see in every
single duo, and that goes from Laurel and Hardy to Abbott and Costello
to Ren and Stimpy, which is, the guy who moves a lot and the guy who
doesn't. It's this funny, animated one, and the straight [guy],
basically. It's a winning combination; it doesn't matter if their
thing
is rock or whatever, just in general. But they also have another level,
which is they have the everyman sort of quality, because they aren't
good-looking like... Well, they're both handsome guys, but they're
not
the in-shape, typical, movie-star type of duo. I think that that makes
them more relatable, and on top of that, and because of that, you root
for them in their dreams. Everybody has something they'd like to be.
Everybody's got a song they've sung in front of a mirror to a brush.
That sort of dream, it's easy to get sucked into with these guys."
The movie's sung-through opening is a cannonball, with a young JB
(Troy Gentile) singing in his bedroom, with Ronnie Dio chorusing in
from
a poster on the back of the door, and then Meat Loaf singing back at
him
as his disapproving dad. Why not a sung-through musical? "I think that
seriously limits your chances of more people liking it. Because if you
don't like the music, you don't like the movie. What's nice is that
we
have all the humor and action around things that kind of is just the
sugar around our rock pill. But of course I really want to do a rock
opera, hardcore, like `The Wall.' But y'know, `The D' isn't about
just
that. When you go to see `The D' live, you go home with your ears
ringing and your stomach hurting from laughing. And it has to be that
mix, y'know, when you go to see the movie, you should feel like you
went
to a concert."
The movie and "The D" are a shared enterprise. "It's different
from a regular movie anyway. In [other] movies, Jack hasn't been able
to
do as many takes as he would like to. Directors that aren't his best
friend, who don't know him as a person, they get something really
funny
on film and they're satisfied. It's like a radio dial where
performance
is like, you've gotta go and hear where the station is loudest and go
past it, y'know, where you lose the station to realize where it was
the
strongest. You have to go until it sucks. Then you know where it was
the
funniest. [I stayed] aware of their energy and knowing when to hold
Jack
back and when to let him go and when to amp Kyle and when to bring
him down. It's not like I'm going to tell them, `Can you be
more
like JB? JB, can you be like JB?' I mean, they are the guys
that
are in the movie! They're not having to act!"
A staple from the act and the HBO series is a little ditty called the
"Cock Push-up." Not only does Kyle educate JB in that fine skill, it
saves the day late in the picture. "Jack and I just thought of that
one
night. Just like, what could cock push-ups do but strengthen your cock?
And then you've got to use it like a tool. That's every man's hidden
thing, is, like, god, if I could just fuckin' nail in this nail with
my
cock, I would be almighty. Using the cock as a tool is mighty
powerful thing. The cock push-ups were so part of the lore of `The D,'
you've gotta give it up for that. Yeah. It was fun. It was borderline
embarrassing to film, because you have all these monitors up with this
giant cock. I'm looking at the monitor at this big dick going across
screen, that fuckin' thing is going to be twelve feet long! We had all
these rigged, robotic cocks and things like that." The "funnest"
part, Lynch says, was when they scored the scene. "We were working
with
a choir, a twenty-one-[voice] choir singing, `COCK! COCK! COCK!' and
you're looking at the music they're singing, and it's quarter notes
with
the `cock' over it, like two full pages. It's like, `Here's your
music'
and then the whole room just busted out laughing, `We're about to sing
"cock" over and over again!' Meanwhile, that big screen is behind us
[with those images]. That, for me, was classic, just getting all these
people to have to sing `cock' over and over again. Awesome." "Tenacious D in The Pick of Destiny" opens Wednesday.
Also by Ray Pride Children Afraid of the Night
Craig, Daniel Craig
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A Chicago Like No Other
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Tip of the Week
After the Headlines
Reeling In the Years
The Beauty of All History
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Tip of the Week
I Want Candy
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