Director Darren Aronofsky talked to THR about the battle he had with Paramount Pictures over reactions to the test screenings held for his March Biblical epic "Noah" and how, everything got ironed out quite nicely for both parties.
An adaptation of the Biblical story of Noah's Ark, Russell Crowe stars as the man who must build an Ark to save all of creation from a coming flood.
The studio was said to be initially worried about how audiences would
respond to this biblical film and insisted on holding test
screenings while post-production work was still in progress. Aronofsky
strongly objected to it, saying:
"I was upset -- of course. No one's ever done that to me.
There was a rough patch. I imagine if I made comedies and horror films,
it would be helpful. In dramas, it's very, very hard to do. I've never
been open to it."
The studio suits also wooed a number of Christian viewers with the
hopes that they would be the biggest fans of the movie. Instead viewers
reacted badly to the film's adherence to the Bible and to the
dark portrayal of Noah including one scene that sees him get drunk
and contemplates genocide.
It got to the point that at least a half-dozen different cuts of the
movie were tested
Ultimately though, the studio has gone with the Aronofsky's own 132 minute version. Ironically it's the only version that hasn't been
test screened.
Aronofsky says:
"My guys and I were pretty sure that because of the
nature of the film and how we work, there wasn't another version.
That's what I told them … the scenes were so interconnected -- if you
started unwinding scenes, I just knew there would be holes. I showed it
to filmmaker friends, and they said the DNA was set in this film. I'm a great closer. I've never reshot a frame, and I think that's
very odd on big-budget movies. We're meticulous. We come from
independent film, with limited resources. They tried what they wanted to
try, and eventually they came back. My version of the film hasn't been
tested ... It's what we wrote and what was greenlighted."
Aronofsky defended his version in a lengthy quote to answer those
who may take issue with the film for not being 100% faithful to the
original story:
"It's probably is more accurate to say this movie is
inspired by the story of Noah... [it contains] the key themes of the
Noah story in Genesis -- of faith and hope and God's promise to mankind.
Our anticipation is that the vast majority of the Christian community
will embrace it. I had no problem completely honoring and respecting everything in the
Bible and accepting it as truth. Of course, my production designer
[Mark Friedberg] had a million ideas of what it could look like, but I
said, 'No, the measurements are right there.' We wanted to smash expectations of who Noah is. The first thing I
told Russell is, 'I will never shoot you on a houseboat with two
giraffes behind you.' ... You're going to see Russell Crowe as a
superhero, a guy who has this incredibly difficult challenge put in
front of him and has to overcome it. For people who are very literal-minded, it would be great to
communicate that the themes of the film are very much in line with the
themes of the Bible - ideas about hope, second chances and family. If
they allow that, they're going to have an incredible experience with the
movie. If they don't allow it, it's theirs to lose."
Saoirse Ronan, Douglas Booth, Logan Lerman, Ray Winstone, Anthony Hopkins Jennifer Connelly, Kevin Durand Icelandic actors Jóhannes Haukur Jóhannesson Arnar Dan Mark Margolis Nick Nolte and Emma Watson also star.
Aronofsky & Ari Handel, wrote the original script for "Noah," but they eventually handed re-writing duties to John Logan (The Last Samurai, Gladiator).
Aronofsky, Mary Parent and Scott Franklin are producing the pic.
The film has a March 28th U.S. release
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