Los Angeles Times

Leads set for ‘Mind’ reading

Tessa Thompson and Adam Scott will star on March 4 in Film Independen­t event.

- By Jen Yamato

A live-read of 2004’s “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind” will star Adam Scott, Tessa Thompson. E2

The heart wants what it wants, and so director Brett Haley leaped at the chance to bring the Oscar-winning 2004 film “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind” to Film Independen­t’s starstudde­d, live-read series for a March 4 event that will star Tessa Thompson and Adam Scott.

“For our generation, this is our romance,” said Haley, the “Hearts Beat Loud” director and self-described hopeless romantic who counts “Eternal Sunshine,” written by Charlie Kaufman and directed by Michel Gondry, among his favorite films. “This film was so brutal, and yet so beautiful … and the premise is genius.”

Nominated for two Academy Awards, “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind” followed the tangled tale of Joel and Clementine, two strangers who discover that they were in a past romantic relationsh­ip that both had erased from their memories.

Kaufman took the Oscar for original screenplay alongside story writers Gondry and Pierre Bismuth. Kate Winslet starred opposite Jim Carrey in the sci-fi romantic drama and was nominated for lead actress.

Performing with Thompson and Scott in the liveread will be Kiersey Clemons, who starred in Haley’s 2018 indie “Hearts Beat Loud,” “Star Wars” alum Kelly Marie Tran and Bridget Regan of “Jane the Virgin,” with additional cast members to be announced.

Chatting excitedly from New York, Haley teased a musical element he’s hoping to work into the performanc­e, as well as the revelation that this “Eternal Sunshine” will be a rendition most fans of the film haven’t seen: It will include the character of Naomi, Joel’s previous ex, portrayed by Ellen Pompeo but cut from the film.

Haley even managed to get on the phone with Kaufman and plans to share insights from their chat with the live-read audience.

Inaugurate­d in 2011 by filmmaker Jason Reitman, Film Independen­t’s popular one-night-only, live-read series matches guest directors with actors to bring beloved screenplay­s to life. With no rehearsal, the storytelli­ng unfolds onstage in the moment.

Dozens of classics from across generation­s and genres have been mounted, including “The Princess Bride,” “The Big Lebowski,” “Shampoo,” “Network” and “The Maltese Falcon.” Last October, James Ponsoldt guest directed Cameron Crowe’s “Singles.”

Part of the magic of a liveread event is the opportunit­y to revisit films with fresh eyes and ears. (1979’s “Breaking Away” will be staged Tuesday at the Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts by “The Climb” directors Michael Covino and Kyle Marvin.) Haley says it’s also a way to show how inclusive casting choices can bring new dimensions to great stories.

“We get to do it through a different lens, with a different cast, and bring people in,” said Haley, who will gender-flip at least one of the roles for his live-read. “Let’s mix it up. Let’s make it a little more 2020.”

Haley’s Friday Netflix romantic drama “All the Bright Places” shares a heart-aching DNA with “Eternal Sunshine” in many ways, he says. Adapted from the YA bestseller of the same name, it stars Elle Fanning and Justice Smith in the story of alienated teens who find each other while wrestling with their own demons.

“[‘Eternal Sunshine’] was the first movie to really get the complexity of love and the complexity of how difficult it is and not in a clichéd way,” said Haley. [‘All The Bright Places’] “has that doomed, tragic romance element that gets to the heart and to the soul of what it means to love and what love really means. It’s not just this fluffy, sweet thing. It’s so much more than that. It’s so complex and layered and difficult. Love is difficult.”

For his next film “Sorta Like a Rockstar,” Haley cast “Moana” actress Auli’i Cravalho in her first leading live-action film role. Casting talent in roles they don’t usually get asked to play, whether for a film or a liveread, “comes down to privilege,” said Haley, who applied that principle to casting his “Eternal Sunshine” ensemble.

“I thought, ‘Let’s get some great people that maybe wouldn’t be offered this normally,’ ” he said. “Why not? It takes extra thought and effort, but I always think it’s worth it.”

Every department matters in the making of a film, he notes. “But the two things that matter the most are the script and the performanc­es, and that’s what you get in a live-read,” said Haley.

“Randall Park directing an all Asian American ‘When Harry Met Sally … ’? Yes, please. A queer, all-women ‘Casablanca’? Who wouldn’t want to experience those screenplay­s, as written, through a different lens?” he said. “I think that’s what this opportunit­y opens up beyond just getting to hear something that we all love.”

The live read of “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind” is at 8 p.m. March 4 at the DGA Theater. Tickets go on sale Monday.

 ?? David Lee Focus Features ?? WINSLET, here with Carrey, earned a lead actress Oscar nod. The film won a statue for original script.
David Lee Focus Features WINSLET, here with Carrey, earned a lead actress Oscar nod. The film won a statue for original script.
 ?? Chael Nagle For The Times Jay L. Clendenin L.A. Times ?? TESSA THOMPSON and Adam Scott will be featured in the reading based on the 2004 film that starred Jim Carrey and Kate Winslet.
Chael Nagle For The Times Jay L. Clendenin L.A. Times TESSA THOMPSON and Adam Scott will be featured in the reading based on the 2004 film that starred Jim Carrey and Kate Winslet.
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