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What
do Deep Blue Sea and the upcoming slasher flick VALENTINE
have in common? Wayne and Donna Powers
co-wrote them both. The
Arrow had the pleasure to interview this screenwriting duo and
here's what the love birds had to say...
1- Is
it hard being a husband/wife screenwriting team? Does it sometimes
interfere with the marriage?
Donna:
The good thing about being a screenwriting team is that we get
to be together all the time; the bad thing is, we get to be together
all the time. It doesn't really interfere with our marriage;
everything else does (just joking.)
2-
Were you both screenwriters before you
met?
Wayne:
We were in film school (USC) when we met, so we were both
learning to be screenwriters. A professor of ours named
Margaret Mehring knew that we were going to get married and
suggested that we write together.
3-
How deep was your involvement with Deep Blue Sea? Was it originally your
concept or did you just come in for the polish? Also, are you happy with how it turned out?
Wayne: Duncan Kennedy wrote DBS as a spec script and it
was bought by WB, so it was his concept. After that about five
writers took stabs at re-writing it and another director was attached
for some of those drafts. After Renny Harlin came on, we were
brought in. The movie became essentially what we wrote. The
draft we were first presented by WB was much more of a military
espionage, high-tech action movie, grenade launchers, that kind of
thing. We wanted our team to include more blue-collar types and not
to have weapons to fight back, to play it more as a horror film.
4- Did you get to visit the DBS set or any
set for that matter? Any memorable experiences?
Donna:
We had a great time on the set, which was where they shot
Titanic. If it wasn't for Titanic they may not have been able to
pull off DBS because the sets there were tailored for our film. My favorite part was watching the scene where tons of water
come rushing into the wet lab. It was spectacular to see.
Wayne:
The actors were all very friendly; we'd hang out in their
rooms, talk. Except for Samuel Jackson, this film was the
first really big budget movie the actors had been in and they
appreciated and enjoyed the scope of it.
5- Wayne, you just hopped on
to the directing
bandwagon yourself with "Skeletons In The Closet",
starring Linda Hamilton and
Treat Williams. Could you tell is what the movie is about and when
we might be able to see it?
SITC is about a
father who comes to suspect that his son may have committed a series
of murders, or maybe the son is innocent and the father is a
paranoid man who may have committed a murder himself. It's a
psychological thriller, we never cut away to the killings, we see
the entire film through the father's eyes, yet we don't know if we
trust the father or not. You can see the film first at some film
festivals, and after that, I don't really know yet. I'll know
soon. Artisan is in charge of that domestic. Nu Image will
show it foreign. It will play in Park City as the closing
night film for the No Dance fest. on Jan. 25th at 8 pm. Their
website is nodance.com.
6-
And
how hard was it stepping behind the camera for the first time
directing veterans such as Williams and Hamilton?
When you direct a
low budget film on a tight schedule, working with seasoned actors
makes your life much easier. The communication is faster, they
understand what you're doing with the camera, etc. Even
Jonathan Jackson (who plays the son) although he turned 18 while we
were shooting, he spent 5 years or something as Luke and Laura's son
on General Hospital, so he was a veteran.
7- Another script
that you worked on is also coming to
light very soon: Valentine. Have you seen the movie yet? What can genre fans
expect from this flick?
Donna:
Valentine is a horror/slasher film in the Halloween vein. We
saw a final cut (but not a final mix) last week and it is scary.
It delivers completely for genre fans. What's different
about the film is that the characters are in their 20s, not teens,
so the setting is a little more like Sex in the City.
Wayne:
What appealed to us about writing the project was the notion of do
you really know who you're having dinner with? Could they be a
killer. It's the same premise we explored in skeletons in the
closet, that film having a father and son at dinner; this film
having two people on a date at the dinner table. Valentine's Day is
a cool day to explore the premise because everyone was to be with
someone on that day, no one wants to be alone.
8-
Have you ever been surprised by the casting of a specific actor in a
part that you wrote? Where the actor was the opposite type of what
you had in mind when you wrote the part?
Wayne:
Well
in my film, I hadn't thought of Linda Hamilton until her manager
brought her up to; I hadn't thought of her because I didn't think
I'd be able to get her for such a low budget film, but the material
appealed to her. She was, however, exactly what I had in mind
when we wrote the screenplay.
9- You worked on another script called
"Dare", which Joel Schumacher is going to direct.
Are you happy with his involvement? What is the script about?
Joel has been great
to work with. He is very creative, kind, knows what he wants
but gives you plenty of room. He works extremely hard (we
would have story meetings with him between set-ups of a film he was
directing; he's always working.) It's about a young, up and coming
lawyer who isn't very happy with her own life. She's having an
affair with somebody, she's lonely, she at a point of crisis. Her
best friends from college come to see her and they, as opposed to
going into the white collar world, went off to see the world -
they're adventurers. One if her first love, too, so they come
into her life and she starts thinking about the road not taken and
should she have done that or should she have not; she should go off
with them now. But then it turns out that they have more nefarious
reasons for coming back into her life. It's a thriller with a
lot of twists and turns.
10- Where do you guys get your inspiration?
"Skeletons In The Closet" for example, how did that come about?
Wayne:
SITC came from the idea of taking an Ordinary People type of
drama, a father-son
relationship, and taking it to its more extreme
and disturbing end.
11-
What's next for The Powers'?
Donna:
We're
working on a remake of The Italian Job for Paramount. It's an action heist film. PG-13. A lot of fun.
12- Any advice for the budding screenwriter
out there?
Wayne:
Don't write a spec script with the idea that you'll sell it
for a million dollars. Write it with the hope that people will
read it and appreciate the craft of it so much that they're hire you
to write one of their projects. That way, your script will
have more of a personal feel, more original. And once you've
written it, rewrite it many times, getting advice from others (some
of which you take, some of which you don't) but just keep rewriting
until you're so sick of it you want to murder the script. Then
you're done. A big mistake is to write a draft, be tired of
fussing with it and jump right into another script. We spent 8
months writing our first script out of college. It wasn't
commercial but it got us work.
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Thanks
a lot guys and come back any time. I don't think I'm the only horror
fan looking forward to VALENTINE. And if any of you are looking for
some more juice about this flick, check out the official site below:
http://valentinemovie.warnerbros.com/
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