A Hollywood Movie to Remember
WASHINGTON BUREAU
Terry Mattingly's religion -
February 20, 2002
No one
was surprised when "A Walk to Remember" opened on Jan. 25th and drew
flocks of teen-aged girls to the suburban super-cinemas that circle America's
biggest cities.
This
was, after all, a multi-hanky "chick flick" staring pop diva Mandy
Moore. After a week, it was the No. 3 movie and had pulled in $12.2 million,
which raised some Hollywood eyebrows because it only cost about $10 million to
make.
Then the
plot thickened. In weeks two and three, ticket sales hit $23.3 and then $30.3
million [as of 3/24/02 domestic BO take as just over $40 million]. "A Walk
to Remember" was doing OK in major cities, but soaring in smaller cities
and towns across the heartland. Was the quiet little romance about a chaste
preacher's daughter and a brooding troublemaker reaching a new demographic?
"We
don't want to go out to theater lobbies and ask people, 'Are you a born-again
Christian? Are you going to recommend this movie to people at your church?' But
it seems clear this movie is attracting people who normally don't dash out to
movie theaters," said veteran producer Denise Di Novi. "We must be
getting good word-of-mouth support from people who are saying, 'This is not a
typical Hollywood teen movie. You can trust this one.' "
"A
Walk to Remember" began with a novel by Nicholas Sparks, an active
Catholic. The movie tells the story of Jamie Sullivan, the devout but spunky
daughter of a small-town Baptist pastor, and Landon Carter, a handsome jerk in
need of redemption. Jamie carries a Bible, helps poor children, dresses
modestly, obeys her widower father and does not compromise when taken on a
stargazing date that involves one blanket.
Landon
tells her father: "Jamie has faith in me. She makes me want to be
different -- better."
The
screenplay is not as overtly religious as the book. Nevertheless, reluctant
Warner Bros. executives pressed Di Novi for hard evidence that an audience
existed for such a clean, pro-faith story. The studio eventually sponsored
promotional materials for Christian viewers, including 10,000 youth-pastor
packets containing a Bible study about issues in the movie.
Now, Di
Novi is predicting the film will hit $50 million in theaters, with a bright
future in video,. This has obvious implications for other films, if there are
quality scripts available with a similar blend of morality and storytelling.
"It
was hard getting this movie made. I don't mind saying there was spiritual
warfare involved," said Di Novi, who is best known for making films such
as "Heathers," "Edward Scissorhands" and "Message in a
Bottle," based on another Sparks novel.
"This
isn't a blockbuster. But it is a bona fide hit movie. People should sit up and
pay attention. I think we have shown that there is an audience for a teen movie
that isn't just about sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll. You don't have to be
prurient."
Christian
critics have not been silent or unanimous in their praise. Some powerful voices
have insisted that "A Walk to Remember" is too vague. The film does
not include one very dangerous word -- "Jesus" -- and the rebel never
articulates his faith. Di Novi said the movie was screened in advance for
secular and religious audiences and she had no intention of running either crowd
out of theaters.
The
bottom line is that this is not a "Christian movie" that preaches at
viewers. Instead, she said her goal was to produce something more daring -- a
Hollywood movie that revolves around a Christian character that is
compassionate and attractive, as opposed to being a phony, angry, hypocritical,
judgmental zealot.
At the
same time, the movie makes a subtle comment about modern churches and the young
people in their pews. It shows the rebellious Landon sitting in church and,
later, a confrontation with the preacher makes it clear the kid was paying some
attention week after week.
"Lots
of kids go to church, but you never see that reflected in TV and at the
movies," said Di Novi. "And there are all kinds of kids at church --
good kids and mixed-up kids. The book says Landon had already been baptized.
Sometimes the faith gets through to kids like that and sometimes it
doesn't."
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Terry
Mattingly (www.tmatt.net) teaches at Palm Beach Atlantic College and is senior
fellow for journalism at the Council for Christian Colleges & Universities.
He writes this weekly column for the Scripps Howard News Service.