Monday January 8, 12:42 AM
Novelists not always welcome in Hollywood
LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - Author Christopher
Buckley remembers clearly when his novel "Thank You for
Smoking" was first optioned as a film because he had an
excellent suggestion for a screenwriter: himself.
"In my callow, jejune way I said, 'I'll give it a shot!'
and you could hear the frost forming on the telephone lines,"
he chuckles. "They said, 'This will be a major motion picture.
We don't want to walk you through your first script.' Very
early on, I realized this was no place for me to hang out."
So it was, and so it almost always is: Authors write books.
Screenwriters write screenplays. And while there are strong
exceptions to every rule (Herman Wouk, Larry McMurtry), a savvy
author tends to know when to step aside and let the filmmakers
take charge -- or, in some cases, the sausage makers. For some
reason, authors tend to refer to pork products when discussing
Hollywood.
Zoe Heller, author of "What Was She Thinking?: Notes on a
Scandal: A Novel" (now "Notes on a Scandal"), shared a few
notes with screenwriter Patrick Marber but kept away from much
of the production. "I didn't want to be a fifth wheel lurking
around the set," she says. "It's a bit like that old line about
seeing sausages made: The sausage may be highly delicious when
it comes out, but I didn't necessarily want to be involved in
the sausage-making process."
Then there's "Little Children," which "Election" novelist
Tom Perrotta co-scripted with director Todd Field. "I was
involved right from the start, knew the people involved and got
to help make the sausage," Perrotta says.
If an author wants to keep his hands in the mix,
maintaining a relationship with a Hollywood production company
helps. Having had a good experience with Bona Fide Prods., one
of the firms behind "Election" (which was adapted by Alexander
Payne and Jim Taylor for a 1999 feature film starring Matthew
Broderick), Perrotta took his later novel directly to his
friends.
"The normal thing is to have your book optioned, and then
you have a meeting with producers, but you don't know them," he
explains. "In this case, they were my friends and longtime
collaborators. So, I didn't say, 'Let's get Todd Field.' I just
let them draw up a list of directors. Todd was on top of it."
Whether in the sausage factory or not, authors say they try
to detach their mental ownership of the stories from the film
versions. Assured that their novel is out on the shelves, they
do some self-convincing that what goes up on the screen is from
another universe.
Ultimately, watching a professionally made, well-acted
version of their story takes some of the sting away.
"I've seen the film three times," says Christopher Priest,
author of "The Prestige." "Only on the third time did I feel
able to watch it as a movie. Before, I was just looking at it
and thinking, 'Well, holy s---.' I was thinking, 'God, I like
that,' and 'Oh, I wish I'd thought of that."'
When a filmmaker can visually improve what an author
originally comes up with, it's a genuine compliment: Priest
says director Christopher Nolan's (who co-wrote the screenplay
with his brother Jonathan) choice to open the film by panning
over a bunch of top hats sitting in a snowy clearing was
"extremely good visual shorthand. It was a very economical
distillation of my idea into a visual image."
A film that lifts directly from the source material also
can be thrilling, as "The Good German" author Joseph Kanon
learned. "It's thrilling when you are watching it for the first
time and there are certain points in it that are truly taken
from the original text, and they become alive to you. That's a
thrill that every writer looks for."
"That said," he adds, "the film is certainly not the book.
It's (Steven Soderbergh's) film ... and my book."
Then again, authors who don't care for their adaptations --
or the buzz surrounding those adaptations -- tend to simply not
get on the phone. Sometimes, a film version can take on an even
bigger life than the book that planted the seed. Although that
hasn't been Heller's experience, she does acknowledge that
"there might be situations in which it would be highly galling
to be the humble author in the shadows. Movies do occupy this
huge place in the popular culture, which unfortunately,
literary fiction no longer does."
In the end, authors say they generally can sit in a
darkened theater without passing judgment on a script, whether
it originates from their own work or not.
"I'm just a moviegoer," Buckley says. "Reading is not an
innocent pleasure. You're always looking for what you can steal
or emulate, or you're comparing yourself to the master writers.
With a movie, I'm just the guy eating popcorn in the fifth row
-- ideally in an aisle seat."
Reuters/Hollywood Reporter
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