Nottingham Post

Having young sons is one of the reasons we wanted to make this movie...

STAR JUSTIN TIMBERLAKE AND DIRECTOR FISHER STEVENS TELL DANIELLE DE WOLFE ABOUT THEIR NEW FILM, PALMER, A TALE OF REDEMPTION AND ACCEPTANCE

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WHEN it comes to cinematic releases, tales of redemption make for enthrallin­g viewing. Directed by Academy Award-winning film-maker Fisher Stevens – best known for his on-screen roles in Damages and Succession – Palmer tells the tale of one man’s fall from grace and the journey that arises as he attempts to rebuild his life.

After 12 years in prison, former high school football star Eddie Palmer (Justin Timberlake) returns home to Louisiana and moves in with his grandmothe­r Vivian, where he attempts to put his life back together.

The story, however, takes a turn when Vivian’s neighbour Shelly, played by Juno Temple, abandons her young son Sam in favour of drugs, leaving Palmer temporaril­y charged with the child’s care.

The ex-con finds his outlook challenged by the seven-yearold (played by Ryder Allen), who suffers at the hands of bullies for playing with dolls and not conforming to gender stereotype­s.

Grammy award-winning singer-songwriter Justin, 39, is no stranger to the big screen.

He starred as entreprene­ur Sean Parker in David Fincher’s The Social Network and the comedy Friends With Benefits, and lent his voice to the 2016 animated film Trolls.

Born and raised in Tennessee, the combinatio­n of his southern upbringing, acting expertise and first-hand experience of fatherhood all played to his benefit during casting.

“As the father of a four-yearold boy, I got very emotional,” recalls Justin, 39, of the subject matter.

“Fisher and I spoke quite a bit about having young sons. That’s one of the reasons we both wanted to make this movie at this time.

“It just felt like a very special story, one that needed to be told, about the idea of redemption and acceptance and how love can break down some pretty sturdy barriers.”

A tale of transforma­tion that comes as a result of both love and shared experience, Palmer’s story is both heartwarmi­ng and eye-opening for audiences.

“He returns home to find everything is different,” says Justin of his character. “Once he accepts Sam for who he is, which isn’t easy for him, it becomes a story about two guys who don’t really fit in.

“My character sees that he can make a difference in this child’s life, and by doing that, he begins to heal his own.”

Palmer attempts to get his life back on track in spite of ongoing judgment from the local small-town community and living in the constant shadow of his former glory days as a star football player.

“I wanted to do something that was small, intimate, personal and emotional and something that I could make for a lower budget that I could call the shots and get my people around me,” says Fisher, 57, of the project.

“There was something about the authentici­ty of the script and I felt like I could bring the authentici­ty of making a documentar­y to this story.”

“Justin said he grew up with people that were star athletes that ended up just falling from grace,” continues Fisher.

“That whole notion of second chances was so attractive to us to shed light on and he loved that element of it.

“(Justin and I) both have young sons and I don’t think that we could have made this film before we had children,” asserts Fisher.

“I read the script right after Trump was elected and I thought ‘I don’t know America. I don’t know my country. I need to get out of my bubble’ – and this is a great way to do that.

“This boy is in the heart of red state Trump’s America and I thought ‘this is an amazing juxtaposit­ion’.

“I related to it – my nephew, Max, at seven, was very much like Sam, playing with dolls, wearing dresses, only having girlfriend­s.

“He was one of the greatest kids I’ve ever met and I thought, wow, thank God my sister and her husband were so supportive.”

Fisher admits that getting Palmer off the ground was anything but straightfo­rward.

“It wasn’t easy getting this made but it was worth it,” he says. “We had a false start about a year earlier. We didn’t sign anybody but we had a couple of people in mind and it fell apart.

“It wasn’t until I was making a documentar­y with Leonardo Dicaprio and his manager read the script and suggested Justin and I was like, ‘perfect!’.

“He’s from the south, he knows this world. And anyway, then it took a little while; he was on tour and I had to kind of talk to him between cities and work on the script with him a little bit.

“Once Justin got on board it was all systems go.”

The central themes of mentorship and metamorpho­sis are as much a part of the film’s fabric as its depiction of judgment and scrutiny in 21st century America.

It’s a project that tackles traditiona­lly held preconcept­ions surroundin­g gender identity head on – a subject that its director remains proud to have broached.

“Look, America almost went seriously backwards – whether you want to talk about race relations, whether you want to talk about any civil rights, gay rights. We were this far away from – I don’t even want to talk about it,” sighs Fisher.

“It’s incredible that we’re still so judgmental as people, as humans.

“A beautiful thing in the script that I always loved, is that his (Sam’s) mother – who’s addicted to crystal meth, who’s a terrible mother, who disappears for weeks on end – the one thing she gave Sam was an incredible sense of self-esteem.

“She made him feel like it’s OK to be who you are. She gave that boy that strength. So, yeah, it is a movie about healing, it’s a movie about unity, it’s a movie about compassion.”

■ Palmer is available on Apple TV+ now.

 ??  ?? Justin Timberlake says his new film is a special story that needed to be told
Justin Timberlake says his new film is a special story that needed to be told
 ??  ?? Ryder Allen as Sam and Juno Temple as mum Shelly in Palmer
Ryder Allen as Sam and Juno Temple as mum Shelly in Palmer
 ??  ?? Director Fisher Stevens with an award for his documentar­y Before the Flood (2016)
Director Fisher Stevens with an award for his documentar­y Before the Flood (2016)
 ??  ?? Justin as Eddie Palmer and Ryder as Sam
Justin as Eddie Palmer and Ryder as Sam

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