The Pittshurgh Post Gazette wrote an article about fans on the set and talked to John. He apparently revealed he will be joining them in Amsterdam. Check out the article below!
-------------
They came carrying hardcover books, freshly ripped pieces of notebook paper and the occasional pocket-size U.S. Constitution.
-------------
They came carrying hardcover books, freshly ripped pieces of notebook paper and the occasional pocket-size U.S. Constitution.
If a student has the copy of the historical document signed by someone
famous, she or he gets bonus points. And, as confirmed by the knot
of teens outside the Church, writer John Green more than
qualifies, as do actors Shailene Woodley, Ansel
Elgort and Nat Wolff.
Word that
"The Fault in Our Stars" had landed
at the church spread through Instagram, Twitter, texts and talk among middle and high schoolers
walking along the road.
Students who skipped or postponed dinner and homework and waited into
the darkness met the author, a publishing and vlogging rock star. One
declared, "This is, like, the best day of my life."
Mr. Green, 36, signed everything politely pressed into his hands, begged
off photos due to a quickie lunch break around 8 p.m. but later returned for
selfies with his fans.
Clad in jeans and Harry Potter Alliance T-shirt, he
efficiently volunteered to hold each phone at arm's length, smiled for every
picture and thanked everyone for their support before turning back into the
church.
Yes, he has clearly done this before (earlier that afternoon, in fact)
and will be doing it for a long time to come, based on the popularity of
the novel and, now, anticipation for the 2014 movie.
"This is totally consuming and has been since it came out, which is
the best problem I've ever had in my life," he told the Post-Gazette.
Sitting on a padded wooden pew near a side entrance to the
church, under the green felt bulletin board announcing "Parish
News", Mr. Green fielded questions in hushed tones as filming continued
elsewhere in the building where the characters of Hazel and Gus meet at a
support group.
In a (mild spoiler alert) tweak to the novel, they run into each other
on the elevator, and she then goes into the restroom to compose herself. But
readers need not fear that the book, about whip-smart lovestruck teens who
happen to have cancer, is being mangled.
"When people really love a book, what they want to see is the book
come to life. They want to see the book visually, and I'm sympathetic to that
desire. I felt that desire about books that I loved, I felt that about 'Harry
Potter,' I felt that about 'Revolutionary Road,' I felt that about a huge
variety of books.
"But, you know, my hope is that it can be a good movie, not that it
can be a good visualization of a book," he said, adding that some details
on the page can seem hokey or ridiculous on screen.
"That said, the screenplay -- in my opinion at least -- is just
phenomenally faithful to the book. Almost every line of dialogue in the movie
is from the book. It's very, very faithful."
Josh Boone is directing the screenplay by Scott
Neustadter and Michael H. Weber, who adapted or wrote "The
Spectacular Now" starring Ms. Woodley and "(500) Days of
Summer."
With weekend breaks to return to Indianapolis, his wife, their
3-year-old son and 3-month-old daughter, Mr. Green has been
in Pittsburgh for almost the entire shoot and will join the
production when it heads to Amsterdam for a few days later this
month.
"Usually book writers are on the set for one or two days. I'm lucky
to have a really great relationship with Josh the director, and he's the kind
of relaxed, laid-back, confident guy who doesn't need to worry about that
stuff," he said.
"And hopefully I'm the kind of writer who doesn't butt in. I don't
want it to be my movie. I don't know how to direct a movie."
After all, he didn't immediately appreciate the brilliance of Ms.
Woodley when she sent him "a very, very long email, 30 pages long or
something" about the book, her passion for it, how important it was to
find a way to get the movie made and how much she longed to play Hazel.
His response? " 'That's very sweet, but I'm not a casting
director.' I probably would have been a little bit nicer to her if I'd
understood what an incredible genius she is," he said, then backtracked
that maybe he was a little more polite.
After watching her audition tape for Hazel, a 16-year-old
whose thyroid cancer damaged her lungs, he immediately contacted Mr.
Boone and producer Wyck Godfrey.
"Is it going to be helpful if I get on the phone? Should I email
her, can I text her, do you have her phone number? Can I fly out to L.A. and
hang out with her? What do I need to do to make it happen? She was just
amazing; she's so talented."
When he later saw Ms. Woodley paired with Mr. Elgort, he picked up the
phone and again asked, "How can I help?"
Just as many readers now think of Daniel Radcliffe as Harry
Potter or Kristen Stewart as Bella Swan, they will picture the
youthful stars as Hazel Grace Lancaster and Augustus Waters, a handsome charmer
who downplays his "little touch of osteosarcoma."
"The good thing from my perspective is they both take that
responsibility very seriously. ... They both love the book and they want to
honor it and honor the story," said Mr. Green, who shot a cameo for the
movie.
The story is set in Indianapolis and will stay that way, with locations doubling
for the city 300-plus miles away and even for a bit of Amsterdam.
The challenge, however, was finding flat terrain in hilly Western
Pennsylvania, but Mr. Green bought the illusion.
"When I saw both Hazel and Gus' houses, I just felt like, wow, this
is the house I imagined. It was surreal. Hazel's house looked like it could
have been next door to my house, which is where I set Hazel's house in my book.
That was really cool."
He had been familiar with Pittsburgh thanks to his wife, Sarah Urist
Green, a contemporary art curator. She curated the show "Andy
Warhol Enterprises" for the Indianapolis Museum of Art in
2010, and that meant trips here to The Warhol Museum.
But it was the reputation, experience, professionalism and size of the
crew in Pittsburgh, along with the tax incentive, that landed the project
here.
Mr. Green sees the relationship between writer and reader as two halves
of a whole.
"It takes two to make it work. It takes the writer putting the
right words on the page, but it also takes a reader who's reading generously,
reading thoughtfully, paying attention. We all know that there's different ways
to read newspaper stories, there's different ways to read novels.
"They read them distractedly, they read them with a chip on their
shoulder, they read them with a bias, they go into them angry. For whatever
reason, my readers have been so generous to this book and have read it with
such kindness, and that's made all the difference."
Ask the teens on the sidewalk what they love about the novel, and
heartfelt sentiments tumble out like emotional endorsements for a book jacket:
"So moving ... inspirational and written so well ... feel very connected
with the book ... very relatable for teens ... a universal love story." A
few confessed to sobbing in Spanish or literature class when they came to the
end.
David Happe, 14, lives "a five-minute run from here," he said,
late Thursday in explaining how he had managed to score all the key autographs
-- even when his dad appeared inquiring about homework and insisting he stop
home for a bit. David had arrived by 4:30 p.m., when Ms. Woodley greeted a
small band of early birds, and later got the writer plus Mr. Wolff and Mr. Elgort
to sign their names.
For girls, the actor who plays Gus inscribed their books with
"To Rachel [or Alyssa or Grace]" with a heart and then Ansel E.,
while Mr. Wolff, whose Isaac is losing his sight and fickle girlfriend, also
sprinted over when summoned by the teens.
Some current or former cancer patients will turn up as fellow support
group members, and fears that Mr. Green was co-opting their story proved
unfounded. "The response has been overwhelmingly positive, and I'm so
grateful for that."
In a world of teen superheroes and vampires who are invincible or
immortal, "TFIOS" is remarkable. "I can't remember the last time
we had a movie where pretty much all the central characters are living with
serious disabilities," Mr. Green said.
But readers appreciate that the story allows sick people to have full,
rich lives. "You are still a complicated person, you're still capable of
the same love and joy and grief that anyone is."
No comments:
Post a Comment