‘Raiders’ star makes directing debut, appears on panel today at RIIFF
Will speak about adapting material for screenplays
PROVIDENCE — Award-winning actor, theatrical director and writer Karen Allen (“Raiders of the Lost Ark,” “Animal House,” “Starman,” “The Glass Menagerie,” “The Perfect Storm,” “Year By the Sea”), has directed her first film, based on the Carson McCullers’ short story “A Tree. A Rock. A Cloud.” The film was screened at the Rhode Island International Film Festival Thursday night at the Moses Brown School Woodman Family Performance Center as part of the “New Perspectives: Shorts Package.”
Today, Allen will also be a featured speaker on the Screenplay Adaptation Panel, which will take place at the ScriptBiz Workshop at 2 p.m.
This year marks the 100th birthday of renowned author Carson McCullers. Written when she was just 19, “A Tree. A Rock. A Cloud” is set at a roadside café in the early morning in spring of 1947. A young boy and an older man meet by chance. The man relates a luminous tale of personal heartbreak and loss, and of his hard-won understanding of the nature of love.
For Allen, the story made a lasting impression many years ago.
“I came across this story when I was in my early 20’s. As a young actor I was drawn to Carson McCullers as a playwright and novelist at first, and then began to read everything she’d written that I could get my hands on. ‘A Tree. A Rock. A Cloud.’ always loomed large for me among her many short stories; it is a quiet, subtle, mysterious story. It sneaks up on you and has stayed indelibly etched in my imagination all these years,” she said.
Allen’s film stars veteran actors Jeff DeMunn (“The Shawshank Redemption,” “The Green Mile,” TV’s “The Walking Dead”) as The Man and James McMenamin ( TV’s “Orange is the New Black”) as Leo, the owner of the diner.
Making his film debut is Jackson Smith in the role of the Young Boy.
To bring the story to life on film, Allen surrounded herself with many established film professionals. Academy Award nominee Kristi Zea was the production designer (“The Departed,” “Silence of the Lambs,” “Philadelphia,” “Goodfellas,” “Broadcast News”). Cinematographer Richard Sands has designed lighting and/or shot over 35 films and 47 television movies with directors such as Steven Spielberg and Francis Ford Coppola. He is also the lighting designer for photographer Gregory Crewdson. Producers on the project are Allen’s East Coast manager, Brian Long, and independent film and visual effects produce, Diane Pearlman. Shooting took place in the bucolic Berkshires hills of western Massachusetts over sixdays. With its natural beauty and perfect interior location, Allen was able to shoot quite near her home and use many of the talented professionals who live and work in the area.
The film is currently being submitted to festivals internationally. It has been shown at celebrations of Carson McCullers’ extraordinary life and writing under the auspices of the Carson McCullers Center at Columbus State University in Columbus, Georgia, and in the newly acquired McCullers Center in Nyack, N.Y. Screenings have also been held held in New York City and Rome, Italy with educational and literary institutions. Allen hopes to highlight McCullers’ influence on generations of writers, most particularly women in the 20th and 21st centuries.
As she sees it, “The story is flooded with the raw, tangible beauty of the natural world, set in contrast to the complex, intangible yearning for love in the characters’ interior worlds. I stayed very close and true to the story Carson McCullers wrote, as I wanted to illuminate in the film the characters she has so beautifully drawn in the pages of this story. I’m thrilled to be bringing this incredibly sensitive and original story to audiences all over the world.”
Further information about the film can be found at www. atreearocka- cloudthefilm.com.
For more information about the Rhode Island International Film Festival: http://www.filmfestival.org/