Medicine Hat News

Producers plan movie about Thai cave rescue

- JAKE COYLE

NEW YORK The boys are out of the cave. Now Hollywood wants in.

The producers behind Christian films like “God’s Not Dead” are already in Thailand with plans to develop a movie about the 18-day saga of the soccer team trapped in a flooded cave. Though the drama of headline-grabbing rescues often doesn’t carry over the big screen, Pure Flix Entertainm­ent co-founder Michael Scott believes the story about the 12 boys and their 25-year-old coach is ripe for movie adaptation.

“We realized that this would make an incredibly inspiring movie,” Scott said Wednesday, speaking by phone from Thailand. “Like a lot of people, we know there’s not a lot of positive news in the world today.”

Scott said he feels a personal connection with the story. His wife is Thai and he said he was spending the summer in Bangkok when the soccer team went missing. Scott and fellow producer Adam Smith recently travelled to the area around the cave in the northern Thailand, and they have begun talking to some of the participan­ts about their “life rights.”

But they also stressed that they aren’t yet pursuing most of the families of the boys, who on Wednesday remained recuperati­ng in hospital.

“For us it’s not a huge race,” said Smith. “It’s about making sure we get the authentici­ty right.”

Many hurdles await. Most films that enter developmen­t never get produced, and the producers are just beginning to seek a screenwrit­er. Other film production­s companies will surely show interest, and they could leapfrog ahead with a larger production.

And while the Arizona-based Pure Flix has found some success with low-budget Christian films (“The Case for Christ”) and conservati­ve documentar­ies (“Hillary’s America: The Secret History of the Democratic Party”), it’s far from a Hollywood heavyweigh­t. Others in TV and film are already looking to capitalize. Discovery has scheduled one-hour documentar­y special to debut Friday.

But Pure Flix hopes they can beat any fictionfil­m rush.

“I don’t think this is a religious film,” said Scott. “I think this is an inspiratio­nal film.”

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