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Charlie St. Cloud

by Ben Sherwood
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Product Details

  • Publisher: Bantam
  • Publishing date: 22/06/2010
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-13: 9780553584028
  • ISBN: 0553584022

Synopsis

Questions for Ben Sherwood About Charlie St. Cloud

Q: Did you always imagine your book becoming a movie?
A: In a word...no. I quit a great job at NBC News in New York to write this book. It was a risky career move. I wish I could say the road was easy, but it wasn’t. There were major creative challenges and serious professional setbacks. Indeed, the route from blank page to the finished book might well be described as a near-death publishing experience. Perhaps that’s why I never really imagined this book becoming a movie. Indeed, the very idea of a film adaptation seemed farfetched. As one of my close friends always said: "I’ll believe Charlie St. Cloud is a movie when I’m sitting in the theater and eating popcorn."

Q: How involved were you with the movie and did you write the screenplay?
A: The producers and studio were generous to include me at many stages of the process but I wasn’t involved with the movie or screenplay. I was fortunate to visit the production twice, once on location in a cemetery and another time on a soundstage in Vancouver. Each time, I relished how filmmakers turned some of the book’s tiniest details into movie reality. For instance, Major League Baseball sent three small Red Sox mitts for Sam to use when he played catch with Charlie. I watched an assistant prop master carry a brand-new red mitt around all day, rubbing it constantly to give it a well-worn appearance.

On another occasion, the director showed me the closing shot of the film. Today, words still fail to describe the exhilarating experience of seeing Charlie and Tess literally sailing into the sunset. Seven years earlier, in the quiet of my little writing room, I had imagined these two young people on a boat aimed at the open ocean. Suddenly, they were on the screen, leaning into each other with wind tousling their hair and sails, steering a Gryphon Solo, one of the world’s fastest fifty-foot sailboats, filmed by a camera mounted on a helicopter hovering above.

Q: How does it feel to see your book turned into a movie?
A: Quite simply, I’m filled with gratitude. To create the movie version of Charlie St. Cloud, it took 28 actors, 34 stunt people, and some 250 crew. When I visited the set in Vancouver, I tried my best to thank every single one, including the wrangler responsible for a noisy flock of geese, the messy bane of Charlie’s existence.

When I called my wife in Los Angeles, she asked, "How does it feel?" I thought for a moment. Then I answered: "I want to hug every person I meet."

Q: Did you imagine Zac Efron as Charlie St. Cloud?
A: In candor, I never imagined Zac Efron in the role of Charlie. Wrecked by loss and grief, Charlie was a character who had wasted many years of his precious life. I always imagined Charlie as much older and much sadder. Thank goodness I’m not a movie producer.

I salute the studio and producers for realizing that Efron was a perfect choice. Young, dynamic, and charismatic, he embodies the promise of Charlie St. Cloud without the burden and loss. With Efron’s vibrant presence and performance, a sometimes weighty story feels more hopeful and uplifting. As I told Efron when we met in the cemetery in Vancouver, I’m delighted and very thankful that he took the part and filled it with vitality.

Q: How do you feel about the movie being made in Vancouver, Canada instead of Marblehead, Massachussetts, where the novel takes place?
A: I love Marblehead and the people of the town. While researching the book, I traveled to Marblehead several times to walk among the tombstones in Waterside Cemetery, eat breakfast with fishermen at the Driftwood before dawn, drink beers with 'Headers at Maddie's, and compete in my first and only sailboat race.

Vancouver is a country away from the wonderful town where I situated the story. But a movie adaptation isn't supposed to be a literal translation of a book. It's an interpretation. While I sincerely hoped that the film would be made in Massachusetts--and while the filmmakers tried their best too--I understood the financial decision to pick Canada, where production costs are significantly lower.

Given this choice, the filmmakers did a great job transplanting Charlie and Sam's story to the Pacific Northwest, which looks absolutely spectacular on film.

Q: Your writing seems to focus on questions of life and death. Why?
A: Maybe it's my age or life experience but I've spent a lot of time thinking about how we overcome grief and loss and make the most of our time on earth. These are subjects that have come to occupy my recent work. Over the last few years, I wrote a nonfiction book called The Survivors Club, exploring the secrets and science of the world’s most effective survivors and thrivers. Interviewing survivors around the world, I discovered even more proof that love is a powerful and universal survival tool. In my own life, falling in love with my future wife, Karen, helped unlock the stranglehold of my father’s sudden and untimely death 17 years ago. (That’s why I dedicated the book to both of them.) In Charlie's case, discovering Tess helped him break free of the cemetery and the suffocating grip of grief.

Q: You have two young sons. What do you hope they take away from this book some day?
A: When I was leaving the movie set in Vancouver to fly home to Los Angeles, one of the producers generously asked if I wanted a souvenir from the production. I asked for one of Sam’s red mitts from Major League Baseball. Our two young boys can play catch with it. Then some day when they outgrow it, the glove can sit in my office, a reminder of the power of brotherly love and what happens when you take risks, seize life, and set your imagination free.




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  • Mediocre at best (May contain spoilers)
    From Amazon

    I had high hopes for this book, I really did. After seeing the trailer for the movie, I immediately ran to the bookstore to purchase this. What a disappointment! The story had the potential to make a great work of fiction. Instead, it was overly sentimental, tacky, and quite frankly, vain. Love at first sight, sex with a woman you've known for a 24 hours, thoughts of suicide: these are ingredients for a half decent Lifetime movie, not literature. It's an easy read well suited for a summer afternoon, but you may loose a few brain cells along the way.

  • Charlie St. Cloud
    From Amazon

    Wonderful book! Easy to read. There were a couple of twists and turns that really kept my interests perked.

  • Embracing and Riviting
    From Amazon

    I may be slightly biased due to the recent death of my own brother; however, I do feel that this book is extremely riveting. Just ask my co-workers, but I couldn't put the book down from start to finish, nothing else was on my mind.

  • Spiritual but not religious
    From Amazon

    Good book overall. quick read. I loved the brotherly love story. That really got to me towards the end. I would have extended the ending to tie up Tess and Charlie's future instead of the narration.

  • Book was great!!!... A little nervous for the movie though
    From Amazon

    I got this book because I saw previews for the movie and thought it looked good. I always like reading the books before the movies come out, because let's face it... the books are usually always better! Besides the creepy huge face of Zac Efron on the cover that was embarrassing to carry around while I was reading it, the story was great. From the description and movie previews, you can sense it will be sad, but honestly it wasn't tearjerker sad. I'll admit the beginning was a little slow for me, but towards the middle, something happened that I wasn't expecting at all, and the book was hard to put down. After reading the book I can also already tell they are changing a lot of things around in the movie... just from the previews. The plot line isn't quite the same, so I'm hoping the movie won't disappoint too badly. Even if it does... the book was still a good read!!!

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