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News
Director Terry George on Reservation Road, American Gangster and More
The Irish-born director talks film criticism, the Troubles, and balancing drama and thriller elements.
by Alex Vo | October 18, 2007
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Though there's never been an Irish New Wave per se, Terry George's early work shares the two themes characterized in most Irish films steadily released over the past three decades: the struggle of the working class and the everlasting tension between Ireland and Britain. After being imprisoned for six years for involvement with Irish republican organizations, George began his career co-writing the screenplays to In the Name of the Father, The Boxer with Jim Sheridan, and writing/directing 1996's Some Mother's Son. George broadened his scope with Hotel Rwanda, which earned George an Oscar nomination for co-writing the screenplay and a nomination for Don Cheadle's lead performance.

Rotten Tomatoes spoke to Terry George in San Francisco at the beginning of his press tour promoting his latest film, Reservation Road. An adaptation of the John Burnham Schwartz novel, Reservation Road stars Joaquin Phoenix as a father who loses his son in a hit-and-run accident and Mark Ruffalo as the guilt-ridden killer, and opens this Friday in limited release.

Rotten Tomatoes: Given your history and background, it's surprising you haven't directed more movies about Ireland.

Terry George: Well, I've done three. I wrote In the Name of the Father and The Boxer, and I directed Some Mother's Son. And they covered, certainly, the central section of the Troubles. The timeframe of In the Name of the Father was 1974; The Boxer would've been 1988. So we covered a 14 year range at the heart of the Troubles.

RT: So for now you're satisfied with the subject?

TG: There's a project Jim [Sheridan] and I have talked about. We want to do what would essentially be three movies, almost like Lord of the Rings. [We'd] cover the whole Troubles with real characters [who] move though it. That'd be divided up between me and Jim and another Irish director so we'd be making them at the same time. Maybe Neil Jordan, or Thaddeus O'Sullivan, or John Carney, who just did Once. Or maybe Paul Greengrass.

RT: How did you and Sheridan first meet and start collaborating?

TG: He was the artistic director of a theater called the Irish Arts Center in New York. And I had wrote a play in Northern Ireland about a prison escape. I took it to him and he put it on. It ran pretty well, ran for six months. Then he went off to do My Left Foot and I stayed behind and became this sort of temporary artistic director. [Then] I encountered Gerry Conlon, the subject character of In the Name of the Father, and started working [on the screenplay]. So I sort of stumbled into [filmmaking].

RT: Were you always interested in it?

TG: My interest was primarily journalism. I was working as a freelance journalist doing some work on research and work on a big Mafia book. The playwriting was just a way of expressing sentiments I felt about Northern Ireland, having left it in 1981, 1982. So, no, I never really planned a career or anything.

RT: For a while, you were attached to direct American Gangster with Don Cheadle and Benicio Del Toro. What happened with that project?

TG: I had a perception of a cast, so I rewrote it.

RT: This was after Washington and Antoine Fuqua had left the project.

TG: Right. I always viewed it as a team. Me and [Cheadle] were a package deal. Then the studio wasn't in favor of Benicio anymore. So I proposed that we do me and Don and Joaquin. And the cost of the movie didn't match up with the perception of what we [could] draw [at the box office]. And then Denzel became interested again and I couldn't in all good conscience abandon Don.

I think what [Universal] ended up with is the product they were after in the first place. Big stylish movie. I tried to approach it but if you have a $120 million dollar budget, it's different from a $65 million dollar budget. So that was basically it.

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Comments (1-5 of 5 posts) | Reply
arendr
arendr writes:
on Oct 18 2007 03:57 PM

This thread needs some comments.

AL GORE!!!!

That should get it started.


(Reply to this)
killermonkey8822
killermonkey8822 writes:
on Oct 18 2007 04:11 PM

American Gangster could actually be a really good movie.... i couldn't get into blade runner for some reason, but i really do like ridley scott's other work... gladiator is still one of my favorite reasons, and is beautifully directed, either way i don't like a couple of his movies but i still think that he is a really good director, and that this movie could turn out to be pretty good.

(Reply to this)
killermonkey8822
killermonkey8822 writes:
on Oct 18 2007 04:11 PM

***movies.

(Reply to this)
3dtodd
3dtodd writes:
on Oct 22 2007 01:38 PM

I'm glad Terry George gave way to Ridley Scott, Denzel Washington and Russell Crowe for "American Gangster". It will be a better movie for it. Don Cheadle and Joaquin? Hey, they're excellent actors. But, for "AG" you couldn't ask for a better pairing then Washington and Crowe, I'm sorry.

(Reply to this)
jjccjjccjj
jjccjjccjj writes:
on Dec 19 2007 10:58 AM

jennifer connelly # 1 for ever !!!
great actreess , extremely beautiful, wow , simply the best !!!


(Reply to this)
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