Pakistanis angry over detentions in Times Sq. case Monday, May 24, 2010
ISLAMABAD – Relatives of three men detained by Pakistan for alleged links to the suspect in the attempted Times Square bombing say the men are innocent.
They
AFP - Thursday, August 6TAIPEI (AFP) - - Taiwan's Beijing-friendly government on Wednesday denied boycotting an Australian film festival amid a row over the e
BERLIN (Reuters) - Chancellor Angela Merkel suffered a double blow on Thursday as a senior party ally in east German
Minister seeks closure of anti-Berlusconi websites Wednesday, December 16, 2009
ROME (AFP) - – The Italian government moved Tuesday to close down Internet sites encouraging further violence against Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, who
By ELAINE KURTENBACH,AP Business Writer AP - Wednesday, March 18SHANGHAI - Asia's stock market rally seemed to be running out of steam Wednesday, despite an
Navigation
Primary Navigation
Home
Singapore
Asia Pacific
World
Business
Entertainment
Sports
Technology
Top Stories
Most Popular
Secondary Navigation
Asia Pacific
World
Search
Search:
Screenwriter floors it with 'Gran Torino'
By JEFF BAENEN,Associated Press Writer AP - 2 hours 54 minutes ago
MINNEAPOLIS - Working at a liquor store or a construction site, Nick Schenk developed an ear for realistic dialogue. Eventually he wrote a script on scrap paper while sitting at a blue-collar bar in northeast Minneapolis.
That script was turned into "Gran Torino," a new movie directed by and starring Clint Eastwood. The film went into wide release Friday after getting critical raves and National Board of Review awards for Schenk for original script and Eastwood for best actor.
Heady stuff for a former fruit truck driver.
"It's the jackpot," the 43-year-old Schenk says about the first movie ever made of one of his screenplays.
In "Gran Torino," the 78-year-old Eastwood plays Walt Kowalski, a racist, retired Ford worker and Korean War vet living in a decaying Detroit neighborhood. A Hmong family moves next door, and their teenage son tries to steal Kowalski's vintage 1972 Gran Torino as part of a gang initiation. Gruff and snarling at first, Kowalski mellows as he gets to know the family and defends the teenager, Thao, and his sister, Sue, against the gang.
Schenk's father, Marv, was in Korea, but Schenk says Kowalski is a composite of other guys. He compares the character to your gym teacher, coach, shop teacher or "dad when you're putting your bike back together wrong and he's waiting for you to screw up so he can roll his eyes. We all know who that is."
Schenk, who grew up in the Minneapolis suburb of Fridley, already had experience as a writer and producer for "Let's Bowl" on Comedy Central and on a mixed martial arts TV show. He had co-written another screenplay that was sold but never produced. That only "whetted my beak to never quit," said Schenk, who moved to Los Angeles in June.
A military history buff, Schenk talked with a friend about the Korean War, often called "The Forgotten War." That morphed into the story of a Korean War vet. The two outlined the story, and Schenk _ who did not own a laptop _ would write the script with pen and paper at Grumpy's, a neighborhood bar.
Schenk wrote "98 percent of the first draft, and he's fast," says Dave Johannson, 39, who shares story credit on "Gran Torino." It took about three months for Schenk to write the screenplay, which he and Johannson then honed.
Eventually Schenk got the screenplay to executive producers Jenette Kahn and Adam Richman, who shopped it to actor after actor until Eastwood said yes.
"He didn't change a word," Schenk said.
Schenk intended "Gran Torino" to be set in St. Paul, which has a Ford plant as well as a large population of Hmong, the hill people who emigrated from Southeast Asia after fighting for the U.S. in a CIA-backed campaign during the Vietnam War. But he says Minnesota couldn't compete with Michigan's 42 percent film rebate.
Schenk had worked with Hmong families in a factory job and visited a Hmong cultural center in St. Paul. He also got authenticity from the veterans he ran into on the job.
"I had guys tell me their stories, their war stories, because they could trust me or I was sympathetic and respectful. So they would tell me stuff that they could not tell their wives and would not tell their kids."
Grumpy's owner Pat Dwyer, a friend, calls Schenk "a solid, blue-collar, hardworking guy" who's also erudite _ someone "you can sit and talk about ice fishing or the Vikings (with) or you can talk about art and literature."
And success has not changed Schenk, Dwyer said. "I know he's justly proud and really happy but he's not putting on airs or anything," he said. "He's still Nick."
___
On the Net:
http://www.thegrantorino.com
Email Story
IM Story
Printable View
Blog This
Recommend this article
Average (0 votes)
Sign in to recommend this article »
Most Recommended Stories »
Related Articles: Entertainment & Lifestyle
French filmmaker Claude Berri hospitalisedAFP - 1 hour 14 minutes ago
Party like it's not 2008: Golden Globes returnAP - 1 hour 25 minutes ago
Foreign-language Globe contenders meet, greet fansAP - 2 hours 24 minutes ago
Screenwriter floors it with 'Gran Torino'AP - 2 hours 54 minutes ago
'Slumdog' favorite as Globes launch Oscars countdownAFP - Sunday, January 11
Most Popular – Entertainment
Viewed
Britain's Prince Harry apologises for racist language
Is Tintin gay? Cartoon birthday boy dogged by rumours
Israel pounds Gaza City after threatening war escalation
Citigroup: 2-billion-dollar exposure to LyondellBasell
US Treasury slammed over handling of financial bailout
View Complete List »
Search:
Home
Singapore
Asia Pacific
World
Business
Entertainment
Sports
Technology
Top Stories
Most Popular