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![]() A Chicago Like No Other DePaul grad Zach Helm's "Stranger Than Fiction"
Thirty-one-year-old Zach Helm, screenwriter of "Stranger Than
Fiction," graduated DePaul's Goodman Theatre School as an actor in
1996. But it was his playwriting that led him to Hollywood, where a Fox
2000 initiative brought promising young writers into the system to
become, in Helm's words, someone who "euthanized" a lot of bad movie
and TV scripts.
"Stranger Than Fiction," directed by German-born, Swiss-reared Marc
Forster ("Monster's Ball," "Finding Neverland") relates the story of
Harold Crick (Will Ferrell), a lonely Chicago IRS auditor who sees the
world in numbers and patterns and who one morning--little did he
realize--hears a voice in his head relating his life. (The germ of the
movie was first called "The Narrator Project.") As the oft-blocked
novelist Karen Eiffel, Emma Thompson's performance is a new standard of
jitter and jangle (and fearsome to anyone who writes). Dustin Hoffman is
grandly eccentric as a literary academic who helps Harold suss what sort
of novel he might be in, and an audit of Uprise Bakery owner Maggie
Gyllenhaal leads to sweet complications. Helm's verbal and structural
wit is matched at each turn by Forster's magical, lightly surreal
details--keep your eye on the green apples--but he also knows how to
film a kiss.
Ironically, Helm had created an uber-city on the page, but it was
Forster who chose to shoot entirely in Chicago. "This city, it had
requirements that no city has," Helm ticks off to me. "Publishing
industry, a major university, plus a very specific transit system, plus
the IRS, so I knew this city was a composite, if you will, but my
influence as far as a metropolis is Chicago. There are elements that
were already hinted at in the script. There was also in the script, more
so than in any of my others, a sleekness, an economy to it and a certain
dance that Marc and I talked about, and then we referenced [Jacques
Tati's masterpiece] `Playtime.' He'd already been thinking about it and
talking about it with Roberto Schaefer, the cinematographer." As in
Tati, "there's always a window, there's always another layer of
activity going on, there's always a canvas being created for the actors.
I think it's phenomenal: it's monochromatic, it's modern, [but] our
focus is always on the actors and their movements and their relationship
to one another. Then there's the city at large, which many people can
recognize as Chicago, but it's a Chicago of our mind, it's a fictional
Chicago which I think underscores the fact that it's a piece of fiction,
[that the movie is] about perception."
Other iconic influences emerge. "When I was writing, I couldn't help
but think about early Woody Allen films, the Hal Ashby films of the
early seventies, `Being There,' even `Harold & Maude,' one of my
favorite films. The old Marx Brothers movies to a certain extent,
Krzysztof Kieslowski films, which I'm a big fan of, which have
enormously complicated plots if we're going to talk about them
[seriously], I mean, they're really constructed poetically. `Veronique'
and `Blue-White-Red,' but every decision, every sort of choice that
happens in those is rooted in what these characters want. Which is what
makes them so cunning, that you never feel as though it's Kieslowski's
work that is making the plot move forward, you think it's these people.
And if you can achieve that as a writer, then it's a whole new level of
storytelling as far as I'm concerned.
Cannily, like "Groundhog Day," "Stranger than Fiction" doesn't
trouble itself with a concrete explanation of how these bizarre
congruences could come to pass. It satisfies itself with being an
excellent, emotional, darkly playful picture. "We played with it a
little bit as to whether or not we needed to explain it. But because the
film takes place, actually without an omniscient voice, it only appears
to have an omniscient voice. My decision was that these characters,
these two people, Karen Eiffel and Harold Crick, would have no idea how
this happened; therefore, I'm not interested in explaining it."
One "debate" of the story, to use a term Helm favors, is "whether
or not one has a fate that they have to fulfill or whether or not they
can control it in some capacity, or whether or not it's a marriage of
the two. For the sake of being anecdotal, we had this great moment where
an agent called [producer] Lindsay [Doran] and said, `I have this actor
who I think would be great to play Harold Crick.' She said, I don't
think he's right for the part. The agent, being a very good agent, said,
`Well, it doesn't really matter what you think. Karen Eiffel wrote the
character for Harold Crick and this is the guy I think she would have in
mind when she wrote Harold Crick'! So Lindsay called me and said, you
have to handle this, so I called the agent and I said, `I'm Zach Helm
and I wrote "Stranger than Fiction.'" As the person who wrote the
character of Karen Eiffel, I wouldn't write a character who would write
a character that your actor would portray!'" "Stranger Than Fiction" opens Friday.
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