Showing posts with label happening. Show all posts
Showing posts with label happening. Show all posts

Thursday, May 31, 2007

Zooey Deschanel Cast In Shyamalan's The Happening - A Look At Her Role On The Page

The two lead characters in M. Night Shyamalan's The Happening, formerly Green Effect, have now been cast. We have Mark Wahlberg as Elliot Moore, ostenisbly the lead, and Zooey Deschanel as Alma Moore, his wife, just one peg below on the billing. Both roles are abosultely crucial - indeed, their relationship is essentially the subject of the film.

The first scene gets things off and running nicely. Here's a little excerpt from the script draft I have, just to give you an idea of what I mean:

WE ARE STARING at a door to a hallway. A concerned man in his early thirties steps in like he's about to say something. He has a guitar strapped around his shoulder.

A six-inch replica of Degas' Little Dancer smashes into the bedroom door next to the man. Its ceramic bits shatter and fall to the ground.

ELLIOT MOORE stares down at the pieces.

ELLIOT
I don't believe you meant that.

ALMA MOORE stands half dressed. She looks like a librarian and has a kind face. She stares at him with exhausted eyes.

ALMA
You're in denial. I just threw something at you.

ELLIOT
You threw something near me. I saw the video of you playing softball in high school. You were an assassin. If you wanted to hit me you would have hit me.

Alma laughs even though a tear rolls down her cheek.

ALMA
You're driving me crazy.

She checks herself in the mirror. She is crying and fixing her makeup.

ALMA
Who wants to be treated by a therapist who looks like this? I'm like Frankenstein. (softer) You're going to be late for your class.

She gathers herself. She starts out the bedroom door. She has to squeeze by Elliot in the doorway. They are close. He stops here.

ELLIOT
See, you worry about me.

ALMA (whispering)
You know I keep trying to do this so you won't get hurt. You just won't let that happen. (beat) There are things you're not accepting here.

ELLIOT
Tell me one.

ALMA
How about the fact that you;re never going to be a musician. You;re a science teacher. (she shakes here head) A really good one.

ELLIOT (hurt)
And?

ALAMA
And us. (beat) We're just not a good fit.

ELLIOT
Anything else?

ALMA
Yes, I'm going to tell you one of those secrets you should never tell your spouse. When I walked down the aisle and you were waiting, I got this sudden feeling I was making a mistake. Do you hear what I'm saying, Elliot? I was waling up the aisle and I wasn't sure I was making the right decision. (beat) We fight all the time. You're a good guy. We're just not good together. You see that don't you?

Beat.

ELLIOT (whispering)
I don't believe a word you just said.

Her face hardens. She walks out into the hall and to the small foyer.

ALMA
I want you to know I'm not doing this to hurt you.

ELLIOT
Why are you acting this cynical? You're not this cynical.

She puts on her coat. Takes her purse. She pulls of her ring.

ELLIOT
Alma, don't -

She puts the ring on the foyer table.

ALMA
You believe me now?

She stares at him. He's wobbly for a moment.

ELLIOT
We'll talk about this later. We're angry.

ALMA
That must be it, Elliot.

She shakes her head before walking out. She closes the front door.

Alma hesitates on the top of the stairs of her brownstone. She turns back to the front door to open it. Stops. She looks at the door sadly and then starts down the stairs.

Elliot is alone with the guitar on his shoulder. He stands in the empty home.

ELLIOT
Okay, breathe.

Good scene, isn't it?

And that's how we meet them. Not a good match? Maybe that explains the casting of Mark Wahlberg and Zooey Deschanel. I don't think most of us would have considered them the obvious double. Indeed, when I was told Bryce Dalls Howard was up for the role of Alma, Wahlberg still seemed like an odd fit. That's the point, I suppose: we believe they don't fit, then as the story unfolds they convince us that, actually, there's a reason they got married.


I think both characters are well written, and interesting to get to know, and I could easily bear spending two hours in their company. If indeed the film is two hours long - this is quie a snappy script, and may well end up clocking in at no more than one hour forty or so.

There's a solid human relationship, or more than one, at the heart of every Shyamalan film - perhaps aside from only Lady in the Water, which may be the single most powerful factor in why it failed to resonate with so many people. The one at the heart of The Happening is a clearly drawn one - the couple that hit the rocky patch, get lost in a spiral of fighting as their faith in the relationship is put to the test and then have to discover if, indeed, they are meant to be together. And the way it has been written here, throughout the entire script, is never less than plausible.

There's another crucial relationship at the heart of the film too: between mankind and plant life. I'm sure you've read that the film is about an 'ecological apocalypse'. What that means, in practice, is that plants around the world begin releasing a deadly neurotoxin. Those who breathe it in end up breaking down and, quite quickly and certainly shockingly, killing themselves however they can: workers on a skyscraper just step off of the scaffolds and fall; a man lies down in a field to be cut to death by a farming vehicle; hair pins get thrust into throats. There's a shocking amount of violent imagery.

But, as I said, it might look like a thriller, feel like a thriller, be paced and often shot like a thriller, but it is also, and most importantly, a love story and the parallels between the eco-disaster and the troubled marriage won't be too hard to fathom.

Thursday, March 29, 2007

Wahlberg Really Is Happening

Variety have tonight confirmed JoBlo's story about Mark Wahlberg headlining Shyamalan's The Happening.

They say "Wahlberg will play a man who takes his family on the run when the world turns upside and a cataclysmic natural crisis threatens to end the world" which is no
t quite right. He goes on the road with his partner, two friends and that pair of friends' child. Not all of them make it very far at all. At least in the script I have, anyway.

The film has been scheduled for Friday June 13th next year. Sounds great.

Wednesday, March 14, 2007

Mark Wahlberg In The Happening?

JoBlo believe that Mark Wahlberg is in talks to appear in M Night Shyamalan's The Happening. For Wahlberg's sake, I hope so; for the sake of the film - I'll take Shyamalan's judgment as final.

Wednesday, March 07, 2007

And Then It Happened: Shyamalan On Top

Fox suddenly just woke up to The Happening.
When we last discussed M Night Shyamalan's Green Effect/Planet, it was being sent back from a round of the studios, rejected, dejected, tail between its legs. Shyamalan was down, but not out - one promised rewrite later and Tom Rothman at Fox has done the right thing. He has given the film a greenlight.

Shooting will begin this August in - where else? - Philadelphia, and the film should premiere next summer. Variety suggest the male lead is going to go to a very big star; we've heard that Bryce Dallas Howard is in talks to appear too.

Apparently, the major change from the previous draft is a slide towards a scarier atmosphere and harder-edged suspense. Indeed, this is now expected to be Shyamalan's first R-rated film. Another change, of course, was the title. The film is now named The Happening, doubtlessly after the superb song by The Supremes. If I like the film one half as much as I do the song, I'll be very happy indeed.

In case you don't know the song, the lyrics are at the bottom of this post. They've got a very clear relevence to the plotting of this nature-gone-wild disaster thriller, and it was quite fun to listen to the song again and imagine how Shyamalan must have felt when he picked this tune to fit into his story. It made me smile from ear to ear - he must have done a little dance.

As a footnote, note that The Happening - the song, not the film - was indeed the theme tune to a movie in the first place. Elliot Silverstein's hair-tastic kidnapping comedy starred Faye Dunaway, Anthony Quinn and Michael Parks and you really should check it out, if you can. Sadly, there's no DVD yet, as far as I can see, and the film is, to say the least, rather dated, so you might never get a chance, but do keep an eye out for cash-in programming on TV next summer.

Here are the lyrics, then - and no, the bit about 'Is it real? Is it fake?' does not refer to some last minute twist. Scout's honour.

Hey life, look at me
I can see the reality
'Cause when you shook me, took me, outta my world
I woke up
Suddenly I just woke up to The Happening

When you find that you left the future behind
'Cause when you've got a tender love
You don't take care of
Then you better beware of The Happening

One day you're up
When you turn around
You find your world is tumbling down
It happened to me and it can happen to you

I was sure, I felt secure
Until love took a detour
Yeah!
Riding high on the top of the world it happened
Suddenly it just happened
I saw my dreams torn apart
When love walked away from my heart
And when you lose a precious love you need to guide you
Something happens inside you, The Happening

Now I see life for what it is
It's not all dreams
It's not all bliss
It happened to me and it can happen to you
Ooh, and then it happened
Ooh, and then it happened
Ooh, and then it happened

Is it real?
Is it fake?
Is this game of life a mistake?
'Cause when I lost the love
I thought was mine for certain
Suddenly it starts hurting
I saw the light too late
When that fickle finger of fate
Yeah!
It came and broke my pretty balloon
I woke up
Suddenly I just woke up
To The Happening

So sure, I felt secure
Until love took a detour
'Cause when you got a tender love
You don't take care of
Then you better beware of
The Happening