Orlando Sentinel

Legendary director Clint Eastwood

- By Josh Rottenberg

casts the real heroes of a 2015 terrorist attack for his latest film “The 15:17 to Paris.”

Grasping for a way to describe the indescriba­ble, stunned survivors of terror attacks have often reached for the imagery of cinema: “It was like a movie.” But that phrase has never taken on quite the same meaning as it has for Spencer Stone, Alek Skarlatos and Anthony Sadler.

On Aug. 21, 2015, the three young American friends were on a backpackin­g trip through Europe when they thwarted a terror attack on a high-speed Thalys train from Amsterdam to Paris, tackling and subduing Moroccan-born Ayoub El Khazzani, who was armed with an AK-47 assault rifle, a 9mm pistol and other weapons.

Their bravery made headlines around the world and earned France’s Legion of Honour, various military awards and a visit to the White House.

Now, in the latest improbable twist, the three are playing themselves in a Clint Eastwood-directed film about the event, “The 15:17 to Paris.”

On a recent afternoon, Stone, Skarlatos and Sadler — who are all 25 — sat in a hotel lobby in Burbank after a taping of “The Ellen DeGeneres Show,” trying to wrap their heads around this surreal turn of events. Childhood friends who grew up together in Sacramento, the three have never been in so much as a school play. Yet here they are starring in a major studio film directed by a genuine Hollywood legend.

“We were raised on Clint Eastwood’s movies — I still remember at Spencer’s house he had ‘Hang ‘Em High,’ ‘The Good, the Bad and the Ugly,’ ” said Skarlatos, who was an Oregon Army National Guard specialist at the time of the attack, on holiday after a stint in Afghanista­n. He shook his head. “To get to do all this with guys that you’ve been friends with for so long — our whole lives have been like a movie. It’s ridiculous.”

Eastwood first met Stone, Skarlatos and Sadler when he presented them with the Hero Award at the 2016 Spike Guy’s Choice Awards. Agreeing to direct “The 15:17 to Paris” — which retraces the events leading up to the attack all the way back to the three men’s childhoods — he had spent weeks auditionin­g actors to play them. But in his mind, he kept circling back to the real-life guys.

“I thought they were very charismati­c, and all three of them seemed like they were extremely smart,” Eastwood said. “I thought, ‘If I can get them approachin­g this thing without too much thought and too much worry and anxiety, they could do it.’”

Casting people as themselves in movies is not unpreceden­ted, of course. Decorated World War II soldier Audie Murphy played himself in the 1955 film “To Hell and Back.” Jackie Robinson and Muhammad Ali starred in their own biopics, as did Howard Stern. Many more real-life figures have popped up in small cameos in film versions of their stories.

Still, when Eastwood first asked Stone, Skarlatos and Sadler if they’d be up for playing themselves, they weren’t sure how to respond. Though they had coauthored the 2016 book on which the film was based with Jeffrey E. Stern, the idea of actually appearing in the movie had never occurred to them. The start of production was just three weeks away, and none of them had ever even set foot on a movie set.

They said yes, then almost immediatel­y began to second-guess themselves.

“I really didn’t want to ruin the movie,” Sadler said. “I’m like, ‘Actors can do this and it would probably be more successful.’ But Spencer was like, ‘Are you really going to look 20 years down the line and say you could have been in a Clint Eastwood movie but you’re not?’ And that convinced me right there. There’s no way you could deny that.”

With what little time they had before shooting, the three wanted to prepare in any way they could. “When the reality set in, we were like, ‘We’re really thankful for the opportunit­y, Mr. Eastwood, but we also think we’re going to need some acting classes,’ ” said Stone, who was an Air Force medic at the time of the attack. “And he was like, ‘No, you don’t want to do that, because then it will make it look like you’re acting. I just want you to go out there and be natural and do it how it happened.’ ”

Eastwood admits that the prospect of casting nonactors didn’t thrill the executives at Warner Bros.

“I don’t think they were excited at the beginning,” he said with a dry laugh.

But in a testament to the tremendous amount of clout Eastwood has at the studio — where his production company is based and where he has directed such films as “Mystic River,” “Million Dollar Baby,” “American Sniper” and “Sully” — they agreed to go along with the idea.

There were some bumpy moments at first. In his first big scene, set in a Jamba Juice, Stone “felt like I was crashing and burning.” In another scene, Sadler, unaware of the need for continuity, kept picking up different things with his hands in different takes.

But things soon slipped into gear, and the studio was reassured that the experiment could work. “I think — or at least I hope — that they were pleasantly surprised,” Eastwood said.

 ?? LIONEL BONAVENTUR­E/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? U.S. Army Specialist Alek Skarlatos, right, U.S. Air Force Staff Sgt. Spencer Stone, left, and Anthony Sadler, center, helped stop a terrorist attack on a train in 2015 in France.
LIONEL BONAVENTUR­E/AFP/GETTY IMAGES U.S. Army Specialist Alek Skarlatos, right, U.S. Air Force Staff Sgt. Spencer Stone, left, and Anthony Sadler, center, helped stop a terrorist attack on a train in 2015 in France.

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