Really,
Ed Wood (1994) could not have come out at a better time for me, personally. I was 19ish and headed into the production track for Film at Univ. of Texas. The movie landed with a thud in theaters (less than $6 million at the box office on an $18 million budget), but I think found its audience on home video. Maybe not a huge audience, but I'm not really sure what anyone expected from a biopic about an unknown figure of questionable contribution to humanity, shot in black and white, that involved staunch support of cross-dressing, and, arguably, it's biggest star circa 1994 was Bill Murray who was in a smaller part.
The movie meant a lot to me at the time as a wanna-be filmmaker - especially as I realized I would always be one of questionable talent and choice-making, and even today I rank it pretty highly not just among my favorite Tim Burton movies, but among movies in general. And, as we went through film school, it basically gave us a script to quote from, not the least being "Let's shoot this @#$%er!"
If you haven't seen it, and don't know what I'm talking about,
Ed Wood tells the story of Writer/ Actor/ Director/ Producer of B-pictures, Edward D. Wood, Jr., who was considered, for many years, the worst director to ever make movies. And if you've seen his most popular offerings,
Bride of the Monster and
Plan 9 From Outer Space, they make a pretty strong case for that supposition.*
Ed (Johnny Depp) is a man of big Hollywood dreams, who wants to create the same movies that inspired him, like
Dracula and
Citizen Kane, but his stabs at creative work via live theater aren't really panning out, and he can't get funding until he hears about a small studio thinking of making a biopic of Christine Jorgensen, one of the first Americans to undergo gender re-assignment surgery. Ed lands the job by revealing he understands Christine as he, himself, likes to dress in women's clothing. Of course, Ed's actually a cross-dresser, not transgendered in the same way, and so he delivers a completely different movie with
Glen or Glenda?, which is basically his own story.