Tag: Drama
I make Simon Helberg from Florence Foster Jenkins and The Big Bang Theory laugh
I had just screened āFlorence Foster Jenkinsā, a well acted and decidedly entertaining film, when I was honored, along with a few others, to have a chance to then speak to one of its stars, Simon Helberg, most known for his work as Howard Wolowitz on the hit show āThe Big Bang Theory.ā Ā I say that I was honored because not only was Helberg courteous, friendly, open and honest but he was extremely attentive and gave a lot of thought to his answers, never once giving the impression that doing press for the film was the last place heād want to be.Ā He was warm and pleasant and very thorough in his responses; being careful to answer the question to its fullest.Ā Here is that interview.Ā
Q:Ā Outside of some other great films, your father, Sandy, was in “Spaceballs”, “History of the World pt 1”, “High Anxiety”, This is Spinal Tap, not to mention the great television he has done.Ā Once you saw this quality in him, was it his comedic talents that encouraged you to follow in his footsteps and would you encourage your children to follow in yours?
SH:Ā Encourage is a tricky word cuz I think you want to be supportive but Iād never want to suggest to my children (and my dad never did to me) in any sort of way, push someone into something.Ā Youād be kind of a fool if you did that because itās so hard to make it as an actor or a comedian or anything in the arts so, Iād be very supportive and my dad was very supportive of me and I think he was more inspiring.Ā I watched him at āThe Groundlingsā and, obviously, those were great movies that you named and I think it definitely shaped me in many ways and I also say that it was very hard to, sort of, get success and make it.Ā Even though my dad worked and did well, it⦠thatās kind of, thatās sort of grounding.Ā It kind of helped me as I went into it to have a pretty good handle on the difficulty of it and then to sort of be appreciative of the successes.Ā
Q:Ā You character and performance has tons of facial expressions theyāre a huge part of your performance; they range from very subtle to overt.Ā In the scene where you hearĀ Florence sing for the first time, were you already aware of what Meryl was going to sound like or were those expressions real?Ā
SH:Ā Both, I guess, which is kind of a trick in doing this which is, it has to be new, sort of, every time.Ā Sheās doing something every time and she made my job a lot easier.Ā Weād already rehearsed for about a week and a half with the music and weād actually recorded at Abby Road,Ā as well, which was amazing.Ā So, we had a lot of time to laugh and figure out what we were doing and then, of course, they ended up wanting to shoot it all live so all of the stuff that we had recorded was thrown out and because of that weāre playing all that music live as youāre seeing it and as it was being shot which I think both helped⦠well, it helped us contain our laughter and, sort of, focus but it also made all of it very authentic; so those reactions⦠that was really happening, for the most part, in real time.Ā I mean, obviously the editing is pretty masterfully as well, but what youāre seeing is actually what is coming out of us⦠for better or for worse.Ā
Q:Ā You speak in a higher pitched voice in this film and kind of change your speaking patterns, what was behind your decision to do that?Ā Was there something you pulled from your research of him?
SH:Ā Some of it⦠not from his voice, actually.Ā The most that I could find in doing this research was some fact and little tidbits of information that were in the movie but there is a recording of him, actually, but heās much older and he talks about that night at Carnegie Hall and I had a moment of thinking, āHmm⦠do I want to use this as inspiration?ā because he was probably, I think, in his seventies at that point and it was a bit different than I had pictured it and his outlook was very different than it was in the script.Ā I thought, āyou usually always want to start with the script.āĀ So, to me I just saw it vividly and heard him vividly in this way but as far as the voice, I saw him as being very pure and chaised and very innocent and having no sense of cynicism and hadnāt been corrupted in any way whatsoever like a little bird or a gecko or something.Ā And I thought, thereās something very childlike and I feel like heās probably unaware of his sexuality and, I donāt know, he didnāt seem to me to be⦠uh, thatās just how I guess I heard him.Ā I guess there are people in my life who I know kind of have⦠I donāt know, thereās something very chaised about him and very alien at the same time.Ā And then thereās also the fact that it was the forties and he was walking into this elevated high society, cosmopolitan lifestyle and people actually did take speech classes and there was this sort of dignified way of talking back then and itās just kind of all of those things combined, I guess, that led me to that.
Q:Ā Why did you choose to be in this film?
SH:Ā I couldnāt think of one reason why I wouldnāt be interested or want to claw my way into this movie.Ā Thereās the obvious people that were making it and involved with it who are probably the best, you know, ever at this.Ā Between Meryl and Stephen and Hugh and⦠Alexandre Desplat did their music, Consolata Boyle (costume design), Alan MacDonald (production design) did the sets. Ā I feel like Iām accepting an award.Ā But all these people who are the most brilliant at doing this, I mean that was in and of itself a dream.Ā I mean, the script was so unique and the scenes, I guess, really speak to me and not just the love of music but this idea of perception and sort of disparity between our perceptions of ourselves and what other people perceive and the question therein, I guess, being, āDoes it matter that we hear one voice in our head and other people hear a different one when we all leads to the same place?āĀ I donāt know, thereās just something that was beautifully poetic about her journey and I felt that the script did an amazing job celebrating this woman and celebrating this love and this joy that she found in music.
Q:Ā With it being a period piece and being based on real life events, what was the most challenging aspect of making this film?
SH:Ā Well, the most challenging part of it was combining the music and the acting.Ā Itās sort of being hired as an actor and having then kind of having the music take over in many ways because it was so hard and challenging and also it was such an enormous part of the film that I knew that ultimately whether I played the piano or not really wouldnāt matter.Ā People are going to see it in my performance as an actor but then it all got tied together because Meryl was going to sing and they want to do it live and for it to be live, they want the piano to be live and it was going to be different every time so, there was just⦠part of the pressure of getting this music done live while they were shooting us, working with Meryl and Stephen in this incredible movie and it was just built in pressure and it was just challenging and then on top of that to find this character and do it simultaneously.Ā It felt very, you know, itās very hard not to play piano with two hands so it felt like I had like eight arms and I was trying to do multiple things.Ā And then, of course, you want to be faithful to these characters because theyāre real but at the same time there wasnāt a ton of information on them so that was sort of liberating because the script was really the bible.Ā It was just ultimately great fun even when it was sometimes brutally challenging.
Q: Ā “Florence Foster Jenkins” is about someone who is an opera singer but not very talented.Ā Luckily there are a lot of talented people on this movie, yourself, Meryl Streep being one of the best actresses of all time and so on, how do you all bring out the best in each other?
SH:Ā (laughs) I was probably the odd man out in a sea of talent. Ā Well, it was both like every actors dream when you can jump into a part with, honestly, the greatest people working today and maybe ever because ultimately you are only as good as the people around you and these people make you even better.Ā I think thatās a sign of greatness⦠so with that also came quite a bit of paralyzing fear as well because you donāt wanna be the one that brings Meryl Streep down⦠not that thatās possible but itās scary to kinda get to work with people who are your heroes but then what you kind of realize when you, and I hope this is true for everything and everyone, when you get around people that are that great, usually theyāre there to make the best thing they can make and they bring their whole self to.Ā And in order to make something wonderful I think you have to be sensitive and you have to be generous and you definitely have to be passionate; in this experience I was very warmly welcomed and it was very collaborative and I feel like and hope and think thatās true of truly great people.Ā Ā
Q:Ā Thereās this great moment when Cosme McMoon (Helberg) asks St Clair Bayfield (Grant) about his arrangement with Florence at St Clairās apartment and later McMoon speaks to Florence at his own apartment and I thought McMoon really wanted to insert his opinion on Florence and St Claireās relationship but felt better of it and that he was protecting her like everyone else in the movie.Ā But near the end of the film, at Carnegie Hall, he says to her, āWe can do it!ā in a very confident voice and I think at that moment it turns from protection to support.Ā Is that how you see it or what do you think?
SH:Ā You have really tapped into so many things that I didnāt know anyone else would necessarily pick up on and (inaudible).Ā That is all that you said; and something at some point that I was cognizant of.Ā That being the moment in the apartment when Bayfield is there and he says, āI love her.Ā Do you love this woman?āĀ There was a real moment there when I thought, āHow dare you, sir, ask me?Ā Of course I love her!āĀ Because he is protecting her.Ā Florence comes to McMoonās apartment and he sees how broken she is by Bayfield and so this innocent little McMoon is now⦠heās been sort of somewhat corrupted by this harsh and strange reality of this love⦠this relationship these characters have with each other and all of the sudden he does have to step up and he does feel this protective desire and I think that in Carnegie Hall that becomes the moment, you know, sheās scared and itās just so beautiful the way the script and the movie, kind of⦠you can just see all the color in these people, I guess, and thatās his moment.Ā He has that bond.Ā McMoon is the only one who understands the music, really, with her. Ā Bayfield doesnāt.Ā They donāt play music together so hereās this transition from, āOkay, Iāll help this womanā to āYou know what, letās do this.āĀ Like, āthis is important not just for her but for me.Ā We have something greater than this kind of courier minded, reputation focused⦠you know, frame of mind. Ā We have the love of music and it doesnāt matter.Ā Nothing else matters.Ā
Q:Ā Itās amazing how everyone around FlorenceĀ continued to keep up her status.Ā She was well protected and people truly loved her but why do you think people loved her so much?
SH: Ā I think thereās a very human quality and I think thereās almost nothing more human than failure.Ā I think itās funny and itās tragic and I think itās comforting but only when itās done passionately.Ā Only when someone is putting themselves out there genuinely and un-ironically and (inaudible) kind of falling flat (no pun intended).Ā So, I think that is one element of it and the fact that she was so filled with joy and so moved by music and wanted to share that joy and that love of music with people⦠I think itās just magnetic.Ā Itās like watching a little child with total abandon singing out and dancing.Ā The part of your brain that had any kind of judgment or criticism is overridden by the joyous part.Ā Other people were laughing or their jaws were on the floor or; they were enjoying themselves.Ā Ā
Q:Ā The world is about to find out that youāre a very talented pianist from this.Ā I was wondering what else do you with the world knew about you and the things you bring to the table?
SH:Ā Iām not that much of a showoff.Ā Well, I donāt know, I guess I can answer sort of as opposed to what I want people to celebrate about me, because God forbid I am somebody looking for a parade, there are different things I want to do.Ā I love acting and the great thing about that, especially in a case like this is, sometimes that requires other talents and sometimes you donāt have āem and you learn to have āem.Ā Look at Meryl and the things that sheās done.Ā She has all the talent in the world but look at the things sheās learned to do for a film; violin and languages and she played a Rabbi and a man. Ā I think thatās whatās great about acting.Ā You get to know other people and find other interests and so, yeah, Iām interesting in discovering what else I might be able to do and when I find things I think I canāt do itās torturous sometimes but itās very gratifying to push through that.Ā This was no exception.Ā I didnāt expect that Iād be able to play all of these pieces.Ā There were times when I felt like, āIf Meryl can do itā¦āĀ I was working with that company and I felt, āGeez, sheās going to sing all of this live?!Ā I better do my best to get there.āĀ
āFlorence Foster Jenkinsā is enchanting! Ā The cast is delightful.Ā This is an absolute must see!
Miss Peregrine’s Home For Peculiar Children
Jake Portman (Asa Butterfield) is a young teenager living in Florida, with a deep admiration and affection for his grandfather Abe Portman (Terence Stamp). Abe would tell Jake many wild stories about a far-off school that Abe used to attend. The horrible death of Abe gives Jake and his father Frank Portman (Chris O’Dowd) the idea to visit the Isle of Wales to see where Abe grew up.
On the Isle, Jake wanders into a large mansion and it changes from broken down to tip-top shape. Jake has gone from 2016 back to 1943. It is the work of Miss Peregrine (Eva Green), who is the loving but strict leader of the Home for Peculiar Children.
Jake meets all of the children, but he develops a crush on Emma (Ella Purnell) who is one of the students. Jake finds out the Nazis would bomb that building that night, but Miss Peregrine has the ability to turn back time for 24 hours to create a safe ātime loopā for the children.
There is an evil man named Mr. Baron (Samuel L. Jackson) who is a shape-shifter and can appear to be anyone. He leads a group of crazy people who will attack the Peculiar Children and eat their ⦠eyeballs. Baron is also the cause behind the Hollows, invisible monsters that has earlier killed Jakeās grandfather.
Many of the Peculiar Children have unusual abilities. Emma can float and can control air, there is one who is pyrokinetic, another who is an invisible boy. There is one who can control and maintain plants, and another who has bees that live in his stomach, and a boy who dreams many future events. There is a young girl who is an amazingly strong child, and one who can control and direct the newly dead.
The story twist and turns back and forth between 1943 and 2016, and from the Isle of Wight to Florida and back again and also to London. There is a sunken ocean liner that is lifted with the forced air from Emma. There is another hidden Home in London that gets attacked by Baron and the evil crew. Miss Avocet (Judi Dench) has to run away and the Peculiar Children help her before Baron can kill her.
Jake has never found any special Peculiar ability that he might have. Except for the fact that he can see the Hollows, who remain invisible to everyone else. Miss Peregrine knows that Jake will be very helpful in the fight against the Hollows and against Mr. Baron. She will be able to use his special talents to keep the other Children safe.
So that is the direction of this new movie that NOT aimed for small children. There are some scary situations, along with many that are just down right odd. Yet, for a Tim Burton movie, it seems subdued and not as wild as many of his earlier ones. There is a bit of the darkness along with a crazy-quilt of characters. Just not as many as you might have expected in a Burton production.
Eva Green did a beautiful job in the role, and Samuel L. Jackson was very over-the-top as the big villain. Asa Butterfield was fair, but mostly bland, and there was not chemistry at all between him and co-star Ella Purnell. Judi Dench has a short role but is fun to watch, Terence Stamp has just the right look as the Peculiar grandfather.
This movie is available with 3-D, but except for a handful of scenes it does not lend itself to any great viewing. The production qualities were very clear and impressive. However the overly large cast and the odd shifting between time periods and places made the story very hard to follow.
By all means, leave your kids at home to go see this latest Tim Burton movie, especially if you have a taste for the Peculiar.
Arrival
When mysterious spacecrafts touch down across the globe, an elite team – lead by expert linguist Louise Banks (Amy Adams) – is brought together to investigate. As mankind teeters on the verge of global war, Banks and the team race against time for answers ā and to find them, she will take a chance that could threaten her life, and quite possibly humanity.
Starring: Amy Adams, Jeremy Renner, Forest Whitaker
Director: Denis Villeneuve
Deepwater Horizon
The ‘Disaster Movie’ from the ’80s is back, but in a more professionally produced package. There are no airplanes falling from the sky, but there is an Inferno, and it does tower. There is no sinking cruise ship, but a floating oil rig in the Gulf is in deep(water) trouble. The actual events of 2010 are recalled and given the up-close-and-personal treatment. “Deepwater Horizon” makes a statement about the strength of ordinary men and woman in a very extraordinary situation.
Mike Williams (Mark Wahlberg) is an oil rig engineer ready to take on another three week shift on the Deepwater Horizon rig. His wife Felicia (Kate Hudson) wishes for his safe return, as usual. He meets “Mr. Jimmy” Harrell (Kurt Russell) who is the supervisor on the rig. Mr. Jimmy is a no-nonsense leader who believes in safety first. Andrea (Gina Rodriguez) is a worker in the control room who helps keep the rig on target.
TransOcean is the company who owns the rig, and it is being leased by BP (British Petroleum). A few BP executives are on board, including Donald Vidrine (John Malkovich). They are worried that rig’s drilling has not been completed and tested in time, and now they are weeks overdue and millions are being lost. So there are reductions made in testing and not every normal regulation has been followed completely. The oil needs to be drilled already, dammit!
While running some functional testing, the results are unclear. The BP bosses, like Donald, want a quick retest done. But “Mr. Jimmy” and Mike and many other oil rig workers want every option completely tested. This includes Caleb Holloway (Dylan O’Brien) a guy on the main drill line floor. He notices that after the aborted test, there is some violent shuddering in the drill line. He starts to see the mud and oil oozing up from the drill. This is not a normal result.
Within minutes, the rig explodes with highly pressured oil and gas that had been trapped in the faulty drill line. Methane seeps into the air ducts, ready to ignite – and there is no place to hide. There are 11 people who do not make it out alive. But the remaining one hundred plus workers, engineers, pilots, cooks and everyone assigned to work on the Horizon are in trouble. There are many injured and people are in shock. The story of how the rest of them got out and helped each other makes for the second half of the movie.
Movies that are based on true life situations are interesting. There is a build up to an oncoming oil rig disaster or a double bird strike on a jet out of JFK. You basically know the story. But there so many details of the actual situation that the movie portrays, that you are still amazed to see the whole thing unfold.
Mark Wahlberg plays the smart yet humble oil rig expert, and he shows how average guy can become a hero in the right circumstances. Kurt Russell it a force to be reckoned with, and his character is devoted to by-the-book safety measures. “Mr. Jimmy” will not let the sneaky executives pull any fast ones, but when they get him out of the roomā¦
Kate Hudson does her best to act like the loving wife, and she is nervous when she hears the news. Dylan O’Brien plays a typical oil rig grunt, the guys who are there pulling the pipe and manning the drill at all hours. The money-grubbing monster had to be played by someone, so John Malkovich was the only logical choice.
The acting plays second fiddle to the visual chaos of the Horizon under assault by flaming jets of gas and oil. The action scenes are so realistic that you also feel under assault. Everyone is covered in oil and blood, and the horror takes a human toll. The means to escape are few, and pathways to survive are slim. Special effects, computer enhanced imagery, sound design and mixing are all on display.
Peter Berg has taken a eerie chapter from Americaās recent past with this event leading to the worst oil spill in history. But rather than focus on the long-term affects to the ecology of the Gulf, he instead narrows it down to the workers on the rig. We feel the confusion and despair of the men and women who made up that team. And at the very end, there is a fitting tribute to the 11 souls who perished on the disaster. With additional review (from this movie), perhaps there is some hope for changes and continued vigilance on the deepwater oil rigs.
The Accountant movie trailer #2
Christian Wolff is a math savante with more affinity for numbers than people. Behind the cover of a small-town CPA office, he works as a freelance accountant for some of the world’s most dangerous criminal organizations. With the Treasury Department’s Crime Enforcement Division, run by Ray King, starting to close in, Christian takes on a legitimate client: a state-of-the-art robotics company where an accounting clerk has discovered a discrepancy involving millions of dollars. But as Christian uncooks the books and gets closer to the truth, it is the body count that starts to rise.
In Theaters October 13
Interview with Mark Geist and John Tiegen of ā13 Hours: The Inside Account of What Really Happened in Benghaziā
Former Marines, Mark āOzā Geist and John āTigā Tiegen, were unable to quiet their minds and bodies on September 11, 2012.Ā They were in Benghazi, Libya, when what they were trained and ready to do, not what they were actually there for, kicked in; and luckily for anyone who survived because many wouldnāt have, had these men not been willing, ready and able to be, not in their words,Ā heroes.Ā Read more
Talking āThe Choiceā with Nicholas Sparks
Interview with Nicholas Sparks for the release of his film āThe Choiceā
By: Ā Shari K. Green
PHOENIX, AZ ā Nicholas Sparks, as you know, is the author of books such as,Ā Message in a Bottle, Ā The NotebookĀ and Ā The Best of Me,Ā Ā which have all been turned into big Hollywood money makers, not to mention the fact that these films widened his already immense and devoted audience with each movie; suddenly books had to be seen by his fans and the movies had to be read⦠pretty good deal for a Carolina Panthers fan.Ā When he came to town for a chat, I had to go there with him.Ā I asked and, yes, heās for CarolinaĀ in the Super Bowl this weekend, of course, and Iām for the Broncos.Ā Weāll see. Ā Anyway, he sat with me and a few others to discuss his most recent offering,Ā The Choice, opening in theaters starting February 5th.Ā
Ā Very bubbly and fun, he walked in the room and gave us a āHow are yaāll doinā?āĀ Then he grabbed himself a Coke, offered everyone else one, as well, before finding a seat and introducing himself.Ā He tells us that he generally has water the rest of the day, but touring means he usually has caffeine ātil noon and this throws him off his normal healthier schedule, and how can you blame him?Ā This is how he gets through these long days of interviews. Ā His energy was very nice to be around and I find him to be quite warm and genuine; a very kind soul⦠sincere.Ā He looks you in the eyes when he speaks to you, making sure that not only he is heard and understood, but to be sure to give you the feeling that you are heard and understood.Ā Heās a very easy person to talk to and one Iām glad I had the chance to spend some time with.Ā Here are some of the questions from our time together.Ā Enjoy!! Ā Ā
*FYI There will be SPOILERS
Shari: Ā You are one of the only writers to give us these deep romance stories from the manās perspective.Ā Do you get stopped on the street and get asked advice on romance all the time?
NS:Ā Ā No.Ā In fact, I donāt know thatĀ its ever happened before so how about that.Ā Iām not recognized by men.Ā Iām recognized by women sometimes, but never men.Ā Unless Iām supposed to be in⦠they know kinda where Iām supposed to be, Iām very seldom recognized at all.Ā Like, for instance if people know Iām in Phoenix doing stuff, they might see me in a hotel lobby and recognize me but had they not seen me on the news that morning, they might not.Ā So, in the history of my career as far as I know outside of my hometown of New Bern, North Carolina,Ā I think Iāve been recognized⦠less than a dozen.Ā I had a lady sit next to me on a plane, reading my book, staring at my author photo⦠and she didnāt recognize me. Ā So no; but to answer that question I do, often by journalists, get asked, ācan you give romantic advice?āĀ And I say, āI donāt think so.āĀ He laughs.
Shari: So youāre not going to start a column or anything?
NS: Ā Absolutely not.Ā I just try to write the best novels that I can.Ā
Shari: Ā Being that youāre going through some change right now, what advice would you give to students on making a life changingĀ choice?
NS.:Ā In general?Ā Iād say, āchooseĀ your struggles wisely because it is your struggles that will define the life you live.āĀ What do I mean by that?Ā If you ask people what they want, if you ask almost anyone what they want, everyone pretty much wants the same thing; they want a job they enjoy and great personal relationships, they want to be close with family and get along with friends, they want to be healthy, right?Ā Everyone⦠the answer is so common itās ubiquitous, however, if you ask someone, āHow do you choose to suffer?āĀ Thatāll tell you a little bit about the person.Ā I choose to write novels.Ā I isolate myself from friends and family for hours on end.Ā The time vanishes when one writes it feels as though you sacrifice a bit of your life.Ā Iām willing to put up with the torture of creation, you know, the struggles of writersā block, to get to the end, right?Ā Thatās one of the struggles that I choose.Ā So, choose your struggles wisely because how you choose toĀ sufferĀ will largely define the life you live.Ā
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Shari: Is the suffering worth it?
NS: Ā ThatāsĀ the question.Ā Most people donāt, I find, get what they want.Ā They really just didnāt want it bad enough ācause if you really want something, you really will do what it takes to get there.Ā
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Shari: Ā For someone who does spend a lot of time in their room, maybe on the computer or what have you, what would you maybe say to someone who needs to maybe break away from that mold and to kind of get into that āromancesphereā?
NS:Ā Ā I would say that unless thatās what they truly want, they probably never will⦠and to accept that.Ā And itās okay⦠to each his own.Ā (He thinks a moment and speaks again).Ā To⦠to step out of a box in which youāre very comfortable and put yourself in an uncomfortable position, you have to really want to do that and there areĀ certainlyĀ joys and wonders that can come about but thereās also heartbreak and sadness which are also part of the game.Ā You know, everyone wants a wonderful relationship; they pretty much want the view from the top of the mountain but ya gotta be willing to walk up the mountain.Ā Ya gotta be able to do the climb so, if theyāre not willing to then have them accept themselves and to make the most of the lives they can with the friends they have and lifeās about enjoyment.Ā Lifeās not only about work, itās about enjoyment so as long as theyāre good, Iām good.
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Shari:Ā Has anyone made a decision that youĀ didnātĀ like?Ā One that you had no say in; thatās the way itās going to be?
NS:Ā Ā Has anyone made a decision IĀ didnātĀ like.Ā Sure!Ā We can start with my children.Ā (Laughs)Ā Of course, you know?Ā And⦠I suppose it goes to the nature of the question that was up to require the decision, right?Ā Most of the time I try to live my life by simple words that my mom taught me, āIf someone says something you donāt like, or you disagree with, say, (And this is true though) itās your life you can do with it what you want⦠you can.āĀ Now how I deal with that, thatās up to me, but you can do whatever you want.Ā My childrenĀ hateĀ when I tell them that.Ā They hate it with a passion, like, āPut all the burden on me!āĀ But itās very true.Ā I donāt know how successfulĀ youāveĀ been at running someone elseās life, but I already found that itās not very successful so I try not to give advice.
Shari:Ā What are their age ranges?
NS:Ā Ā Fourteen to Twenty-Four.Ā But itās not just them, itās siblings and people you work with.Ā People are going to do what theyāre going to do and the only thing you can control is how you respond to it.
Shari: Ā Religion became a part of the narrative of the story, subtly and not so subtly; where Travis pulled away from his faith.Ā Do you think that after the story ended, that Travis would go back to his faith?
NS:Ā My opinion is that it would be difficult for TravisĀ notĀ to go back to his faith.Ā That would be my thought on that subject but, of course, thatās just my opinion on the matter.Ā And that was not an element that was within the novel.Ā That was an element that came about in the film⦠and so, I suppose an even better person to ask would be Ben Walker for his version of the character and the director (Ross Katz).
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Shari: Ā How did you bring Gabby (Teresa Palmer) and Travis (Benjamin Walker) together?!Ā They had such great onscreen chemistry.
NS: Ā First we cast people who we thought were immensely talented and then throughout the casting process, we look for chemistry.Ā How do they seem to get along, do they seem to be friends⦠and Teresa has one of these personalities that draws everyone in, and so does Ben, in fact.Ā And so, what they hadĀ was just magnetic, even in the read, so, when we put them on screen, when you get them in the big picture, it comes across as being incredible.Ā But itās something that we definitely look for.
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Shari:  The brother/sister relationship that you had occur⦠is there something in your personal life that you drew from because the sister is very likeable. Her character brought a lot to the film.
NS: Ā The sister in the novel was an even broader character.Ā Iāve been asked numerous times to write a story about the sister cuz she had it all together and she really did.Ā She was as comfortable as he was, withĀ herselfĀ and I find that a wonderful element to someoneās personality⦠just the comfort with who they are.Ā So, yeah, I was very close to my siblings growing up and Iām still incredibly close to my brother; we actually took a trip around the world and I wrote a non-fiction book about that called āThree Weeks with My Brotherā.Ā And, Iād say Iām close to my sister, too, but she passed away.Ā She passed away from a brain tumor about sixteen years ago⦠so⦠yeah, the relationship between Ben and his sister was very much inspired by the relationship that I have with my siblings.Ā I had parents that really stressed the fact that your siblings will always be around.Ā Your friends will come and go but your familyās there forever.Ā In many ways, they are the people that you can tell anything to and they still keep coming back⦠right?
Travis Shaw (Ben Walker) and Gabby Holland (Teresa Palmer) in THE CHOICE. Photo Credit: Dana Hawley
Shari: Ā Up to the accident, you have your love story⦠and then the accident happened and Iām in tears; multiple times throughout.Ā What about trauma do you think makes the story that much better?
NS: Ā Well, I write in a very distinct genre⦠itās really called a love story as distinguished from a romance novel; a romance novel is really about romantic fantasy and itās really supposed to be able to allow the reader to escape into a world and you go through conflicts but you pretty much know that the couple is going to get together in the end.Ā Thatās what itās about and thatās why you read them and itās certainly a very valid, you know, itās a wonderful genre; Cinderella.Ā I mean, it works every time.Ā Ā ThisĀ is a love story and a love story is not necessarily romantic fantasy, although there are romantic elements.Ā The purpose of that is to move the reader or the viewer through all of the emotions of life; to make it feelrealĀ so you might call it romanticĀ realismĀ versus romanticĀ fantasy.Ā And that realism requires the reader or the viewer feelĀ allĀ of the emotions of life, cuz otherwise somethingās missing⦠you know that; and the simple fact of life is that everyone goes through tragedy.Ā Thereās not one of us that will escape scot-free.Ā Ā So, we have characters that feel real then they go through emotions that feel real⦠and they allow you, the viewer or reader to live someone elseās but to feel like it was a full life; like you got itĀ allĀ even though it was just a snippet⦠a point in time.Ā
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Shari: Ā You have romance down, for sure, have you ever, even if you did it under a pseudonym or something, considered writing maybe a horror novel ala Stephen King; try a different genre?
NS: Ā No.Ā I donāt.Ā Iām very happy writing the kind of novels I write.Ā One of the wonderful things about the genre in which IĀ work, is that Iām able to pull elements from all sorts of genres and build them into my novels.Ā For instance, āSee Meā, is my latest novel; itās a love story; these two opposite characters meet, itās my first Hispanic character and sheās a lawyer and this guy is a reformed bad-boy and, okay, theyāre going to make it work⦠overcome these obstacles.Ā And somewhere around the halfway point the novel starts devolving into a very twisty mystery thriller.Ā Something like my attempt at what Harlen Coben would do.Ā And Iām not saying I did it but it was my attempt to do what he does so expertly well⦠and part of the fun of that novel is, the tension is increasing and youāre not even sure whatās going on.Ā The reader is as confused as the characters in the novel.Ā You can just feel the tension growing and growing.Ā So, I can put elements of mystery into my novels.Ā I put elements of the supernatural in āSafe Havenā⦠take that for what itās worth⦠itās very light.Ā Uhhā¦Ā Epic.Ā Iāve doneĀ epicĀ sweepingĀ stories like āThe Longest Rideā.Ā So, all of these elements that are particular to various genres, Iāve been able to put into mine.Ā
Shari:Ā Have you ever or are you now, writing with a specific actor in mind?
NS:Ā Ā No.Ā The only time I did that was for āThe Last Songā.Ā If the movie got made it would be for Miley Cyrus and thatās because I worked with Disney on the project.
Shari:Ā Never??
NS:  No. No. (Laughs) I never⦠never⦠no. (Laughs again)
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Shari:.Ā I love the cast, especially the side characters, Tom Wilkinson and Tom Welling are terrific⦠umm⦠were there any jokes on the set or how was Ben feeling about stealing Supermanās girlfriend?
NS: Ā There werenāt any particular jokes about that.Ā It was a very familial set because we asked all of those characters to have arcs; even the father had an arc, you know, the sister had an arc.Ā So, because they all had arcs, we all asked them to do various things emotionally and⦠we wanted them to be very comfortable, really experimenting⦠pressing themselves, going out on a limb, really (allowing) them to evoke these emotions in the viewer in a real way and we did that by having it become a family setting.Ā When theyāre filming the backyard for the bbq, things like that, it was like we were at a backyard bbq.Ā The dogs were running around, the kids were over there⦠the sun, itās beautiful, itās warm, youāre in your shorts, youāre cooking on the grill; it was like, āI canāt believe weāre working.āĀ It was more like that.Ā
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Shari:Ā Whatās it like seeing your novels come toĀ lifeĀ from a producerās point of view?
NS:Ā Ā Itās a lot of thought.Ā I love the fact that viewers are going to see a new way to hear the story that I conceived.Ā I have my chance to tell the story the way I did in the novel⦠but letās see how someone else does with my story, you know?Ā What kind of colors, who are we going to cast, how are we going to frame this⦠what elements do we keep, what elements do we change to capture the whole spirit of the story and the characters.Ā ForĀ me itās a wonderful way to experience the story in a different medium.
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Shari: Ā Have you ever thought of just skipping the whole novel thing and just writing the screenplay and producing films yourself?
NS:Ā Ā Sure I have and Iāve chosen to do that in television not as far asĀ film.Ā Television is a bit more like a novel so you have a longer opportunity to tell a specific story.Ā Iām currently, for instance, writing a pilot for HBO but thatāll give me ten episodes to tell a full story.
Gabby Holland (Teresa Palmer) and Travis Shaw (Ben Walker) in THE CHOICE. Photo Credit: Dana Hawley
Shari: The big ending, whether she lives or dies⦠what was the deciding factor for you? Was there a deciding factor?
NS:Ā Ā Well, it was during the course of the novel and, of course, thatās what happens in the novel is what Iām trying to say there; and I knew all along that she would come out.Ā I knew.Ā I didnāt⦠I didnāt want toā¦Ā uhhh, I just knew but it was to bring the reader through all the emotions on the way to get there because⦠because sometimes these things happen; sometimes theyĀ donāt.Ā When they do, thereās a really magical and wondrous feeling with it.
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Shari:Ā The husband in a film calledĀ 45 YearsĀ that just came out, says āAll of the big decisions that we make, we do when weāre young; big decisions /choicesā.Ā And he had a real defeatist attitude which I donāt agree with.Ā What is your take on that?Ā I think we can make life changing choices every day.
NS:Ā Ā Of course.Ā And at the same time, thereās some validity (in it), when youāre young is usually when you choose your career, you might choose a partner or a spouse to be with; you might choose whether or not to have children and there are certain points in time when some of those are no longer valid.Ā If youāre a woman and all of the sudden youāre fifty and you never had children⦠you canāt bear them.Ā You might be able to adopt, but you canāt bear them.Ā So, some choices, just by the nature of time itself⦠yeah, they come and go and theyāre focus is more when youāre young.Ā However, thereās always major choices that one can make because thereās always the kind of life that youĀ wantĀ to live and the newĀ strugglesor the newĀ sufferingsthat youāre willing to experience to get there; right?Ā You want to go climb Mount Everest?Ā Sure.Ā Someoneās done that in their seventies.Ā Alright⦠youāre willing to do that suffering; all the training⦠are you willing?Ā Do you really want to climb Everest?Ā That would be one example, but sure itāsĀ possible.Ā
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I know what else is possible⦠you running to the theater this weekend and checking out Lionsgate presenting a Nicholas Sparks / Safran Company / POW! Production of Ā The ChoiceĀ starring Ā Benjamin Walker, Teresa Palmer, Maggie Grace, Alexandra Daddario, Tom Welling, Brett Rice, and Tom Wilkinson.Ā Donāt forget to come back and let me know what you think of it!!!Ā Have fun and Go Broncos!Ā *Although, I have a feeling SparksĀ will win this one⦠just like his film will. Ā Bring a tissue! Ā