It’s not difficult to find “The Words” that will create the next great novel

Life is often stranger than fiction, and that sentiment has never been so effectively displayed as it is in the The Words, a story within a story (within a story) about a struggling writer who finally happens upon that masterpiece he’s been trying to get published. Only problem is, his success is all fiction. Rory Jansen (a somewhat suprisingly dramatic turn by Bradley Cooper, who typically plays less serious roles in movies like The Hangover and Hit and Run) has dedicated his life to being a professional writer, only to receive rejection letter after rejection letter, with only brief glimmers of backhanded hope here and there. But that doesn’t keep him from living a storybook life as he and his lover (Zoë Saldana) get married, honeymoon in Paris and start a young life together in New York City.

Dora and Rory Jansen (Zoë Saldana and Bradley Cooper) ponder the satchel that will change their fate in "The Words" (photo by Jonathan Wenk)

Some time after they return from Paris, Rory finds the gripping story he’s been looking for… tucked away inside a leather satchel his wife purchased for him at a French antique shop. Unable to stop thinking about the story, he finds himself inspired once again, staying up late to transcribe the words from the yellowing paper into his laptop. His wife reads the story, mistakes it for Rory’s own writing, encourages him to submit it to publishers and, before he knows it, he’s a celebrated plagiarist with a best-selling book. And what’s the harm in it all, really? Rory’s secret will never be revealed, and the success of this book will allow him to get his other novels (the ones he’s actually written) published.

Well, that seems to be the case until Rory meets a sickly old man (Jeremy Irons) who has a story of his own to tell about a young boy who falls in love in Paris, finds happiness, suffers tragedy and copes with the tragedy by putting his thoughts on paper, only to lose the leather satchel in which those pages were kept. The irony of the situation, of course, puts Rory in quite a predicament. Rory’s secret is in danger of being exposed and this old man could destroy the life Rory has built (in much the same way the old man’s own young life was destroyed, inspiring the story Rory has claimed as his own).

Rory Jansen (Bradley Cooper) and the old man responsible for his success (Jeremy Irons) are at an impasse in "The Words" (photo by Jonathan Wenk)

As if that wasn’t a big enough moral dilemma, The Words throws the viewer for another loop as the equally successful Clay Hammond (Dennis Quaid) reads excerpts from his latest novel to a packed college auditorium. And Clay’s work of fiction recounts the story of a young writer who finds the perfect novel, publishes it as his own and is confronted by the old man who claims to be the actual author. But is Rory’s story actually Clay’s story? Is the old man a character in one of these stories or the real person responsible for Rory and/or Clay’s success? Is it all a lie or has life truly proven to be much stranger than fiction? These are the struggles at the heart of The Words, and thankfully the viewer is left on his own to decide how the story truly ends.

The Words. Directed by Brian Klugman and Lee Sternthal. Starring Bradley Cooper, Zoë Saldana, Jeremy Irons and Dennis Quaid. Rated PG-13. www.thewordsmovie.com

Samoa Joe looks to put a submission hold on the Bound for Glory Series

Since joining Total Nonstop Action Wrestling seven years ago, Samoa Joe has typically been a man of few words, letting his in-ring dominance speak for itself. After a lackluster showing in last year’s Bound for Glory Series, Joe was able to rebound by shifting his focus to the tag team division earlier this year, where he and Magnus proved to be dominant World Tag Team Champions. After that title run ran its course, Joe began proving himself as a singles competitor once again, most recently with a much more successful showing in this year’s Bound for Glory Series. Depending on the outcome of his Impact Wrestling match tonight against Jeff Hardy, Joe could very well emerge as the points leader in the tournament, which would allow him to choose his opponent in the semifinals this Sunday at No Surrender, a pay-per-view where he has historically had great success. Perhaps more focused than ever, the “Samoan Submission Machine” takes a moment to talk to Wrestling with Pop Culture.

With this year’s Bound for Glory Series you took a different approach on your road to Bound for Glory. How has the way TNA has presented the tournament this year differed from last year?

I think the biggest difference in the tournament this year from last year is that it actually makes sense this year. I have to hand it to the tournament organizers, they’ve put together a hell of a tournament and kept the form and the function of the tournament very basic. Last year we had some ridiculous scenarios put together and kind of pushed different guys in the tournament, which led to me not really appreciating how things were being run and maybe overreacting a bit.

The tournament changes have been indicative of some other changes within TNA. How do you feel about the way the television show has been presented more recently?

I think going live and working live is a better atmosphere for television and delivers a better product. So that’s the biggest thing I’ve noticed that’s made an impact. The better athletes and professional wrestlers of the world thrive in a live environment.

You’ve had a clear resurgence in this year’s tournament over last year’s. What would you say you’ve done differently to get back to the top of the card, and what do you think you need to do to stay there?

If there’s anything I’ve done differently, I’ve made a little more noise than usual. The other thing is, whenever I’m presented with the opportunity to go out there and do the best I can do, I think I do that. So those are the major contributing factors to my turnaround in the Bound for Glory Series.

As mixed martial arts has grown in popularity in recent years, how has that affected the way wrestling is presented? Has it been a challenge to present an in-ring product that competes with MMA, or do you just try to put on the best wrestling show you can?

MMA has definitely changed the way pro wrestlers ply their craft and I’ve always been a big proponent of making those changes and trying to implement them in the realm of professional wrestling. Pro wrestling’s always going to have its strengths, so I think it’s just a really experimental time right now. The better pro wrestlers of the world will be able to adapt to that style in the wrestling world.

You’ve been with the company through its ups and downs. What’s kept you motivated during the times when maybe you’re not happy with the way you’re being used?

The thing that keeps me motivated regardless of what I go through is just maintaining the ability to go out there and perform in front of as many fans as possible. It gives me the opportunity to do what I love, which is pro wrestling. That’s always been my biggest motivating factor.

You’ve just recently returned to singles competition after forming a tag team with Magnus. How do you feel about the way he was able to evolve and improve after you took him under your wing and worked with him?

When it comes to Magnus, he’s a guy that hasn’t reached his potential, but is definitely just realizing what he can be. He’s becoming a very, very good professional wrestler and in the next few years people will be speaking of his work very, very highly. It’s been a very interesting evolution, to say the least.

Given the changes that have been occurring within TNA, as well as the differences between your performance in last year’s Bound for Glory tournament in comparison to this year, what are your thoughts in the way TNA has presented you over the years and how that evolution might play into your relationship with the company moving forward?

When it comes to me and TNA, I’ve never been afraid to try something or give something a shot. I’ve always  kind of rolled with the opportunities I’ve been presented and they know I’ve never been afraid of doing that. At this point, they just have a more hands-off approach and let me go out there and do what I do best and I’m put in a position to showcase why people like to come and watch TNA Wrestling shows.

You’ve been part of every No Surrender pay-per-view since its inception, and you typically do very well at this event. Tonight’s match against Jeff Hardy obviously effects your place on the No Surrender card, but given your history at that event what is your mindset going into tonight’s Impact Wrestling and this Sunday’s pay-per-view?

I’m squarely focused on trying to get as big of an advantage and as close as I can to getting back the TNA World Heavyweight Championship. That’s my plan. If I go out there and beat Jeff Hardy, I’ve sealed it up, I’m number one, I get to pick my opponent and figure out how I’ll go into that championship match. That’s a huge advantage, so that’s what I’m really focused on right now is trying to get myself in the best position possible. I’ll do that any way I can.

Assuming you do defeat Hardy tonight and finish the tournament with the most points in the series, how might you go about choosing your opponent this Sunday?

That’s purely reactionary. I’m going to have to see what condition people are in when it comes time to make that decision. And I wouldn’t tell you anyway because, what’s the fun in that?

For more information, go to www.impactwrestling.com.

TNA X Division Champion Zema Ion readies for his next challenger

To Zema Ion, image seems to be everything. His arrogance, talent and incessant spraying of his wildly-styled hair make it easy for fans to hate Ion each time he steps into a Total Nonstop Action Wrestling ring. But his acrobatic style and willingness to take risks in order to win match make it a little easier for him to boast and gloat. Now that he’s the company’s X Division Champion, many fans watch not only in hopes of seeing him lose his title, but also to see what high-flying maneuver he’s going to pull off this time. Having proven his abilities in the United States, Japan and Mexico prior to joining the TNA roster last summer, the high-fying Filipino has successfully defended his title against fan favorite Kenny King and welcomes his next challenger. With three Impact Wrestling World Tour stops in Georgia this week, followed by the No Surrender pay-per-view on Sunday, Ion will have four more chances to prove his worth as champion. And to hear him talk, holding on to that title for several more months won’t be a problem at all. As he prepares for these matches, Ion talks to Wrestling with Pop Culture about his title, his hair and how Southern wrestling fans are likely to receive him.

Since winning the X Division Championship at Destination X back in July, you’ve successfully defended the title twice against Kenny King. With No Surrender this Sunday, do you know who your next challenger will be?

Word on the street is that my challenger is actually Sonjay Dutt. If he wants to show up in Georgia this weekend, I have no problem giving him a shot. I hear that he’s also my opponent on the pay-per-view this Sunday at No Surrender, so Sonjay Dutt is next in line and hopefully he doesn’t win it back from me.

TNA is running three shows in Georgia this week leading into Sunday’s pay-per-view. Will you be at all three of these shows?

Yes, sir. I will be in Dalton, Ga. tonight at the Dalton Trade Center, Atlanta Friday night at the Tabernacle and Saturday in Gainesville.

Prior to joining TNA, you’ve mostly wrestled in the Northeast, as well as Japan and Mexico. Those styles are very different from what Southern wrestling fans are used to. How do you think your style of wrestling might be received by these Southern audiences this weekend?

If the Southern crowds like some high-flying, lucha libre style wrestling, which I’m sure they probably do, then I think I’ll fit right in. Southern crowds? I already know what I’m getting when I go down there – they’re going to hate me. I  mean, I’m effeminate, I have nice hair, I spray my hair every two minutes, I’m not exactly the most manly type of man in their eyes. I imagine I will not get a warm reception once I arrive, and that’s just fine because I wouldn’t have it any other way.

You still wrestle on the independent circuit as well, and have held a few titles prior to winning the X Division Championship. Do you currently hold any other titles in other promotions?

I currently do not hold any titles on the independent scene, but I’m sure sooner or later I’ll have a chance to regain one. Then I’ll be a champion in not just TNA, but in smaller promotions.

Before you won the X Division title, Austin Aries was on a mission to elevate the status of that title to the more meaningful place it once was. Now that you’re the champion, what are your plans with the title?

Well, I’ve already proven to be the prettiest X Division Champion there ever was and I’m on my way to being the most dangerous as well. I think those are two pretty good accolades to have as the X Division Champion. As far as other goals, Austin Aries currently has the record as the longest reigning X Division Champion of all time. So naturally I want to beat that record and I want to be the longest reigning X Division Champion ever. I’d say I’m well on my way. I think he had it somewhere near one year, so I’ve got at least seven more months to go.

You challenged Aries for the X Division title several times before he opted to go for the TNA World Heavyweight Championship at Destination X. Would you like to eventually parlay your X Division Championship into a World Championship the way he did?

Absolutely! That’s the great thing about being the X Division Champion is at Destination X next year, once again the X Division Champion will automatically receive a World Heavyweight title shot. So if I do make my goals come true and become the longest reigning X Division Champion, that should put me in line for a World title shot next July.

The same night you won your X Division title, Jesse Sorensen made his first on-camera appearance in TNA since suffering a spinal injury in February at Against All Odds. The implication was that you had intentionally injured him, and you didn’t exactly deny those accusations. I think a lot of people were surprised by that entire exchange since it previously seemed like the injury was an accident. What do you anticipate from Sorensen upon his return to the ring?

Well, I was a threat to Jesse Sorensen before he broke his neck and if he wants to actually seriously come back to professional wrestling after breaking his neck, then get back in the ring with me, be my guest. That’s on him, but I’ll be waiting for his return, that’s for sure.

For more information, go to www.impactwrestling.com.

Wrestling with Pop Culture has three pairs of tickets to this week’s Impact Wrestling World Tour stops in Georgia to give away. The first three people to comment below with the name of your favorite X Division Champion of all time and why will win a pair of tickets to the show of your choosing. Just specify if you’d like tickets to the Dalton, Atlanta or Gainesville show and your tickets will be at will call.

Georgia Wrestling Now welcomes Terry Lawler and AR Fox

It might be Labor Day, but that doesn’t mean Georgia Wresting Now isn’t hard at work bringing you the latest news and biggest names in the Georgia wrestling scene. In addition to recapping last weekend’s EMPIRE Wrestling, Dragon*Con Wrestling and other events, Team All You Can Eat’s Matt Hankins and Wrestling with Pop Culture talk to Terry Lawler about the return of the Jail House Rocker this Saturday at National Wrestling Alliance Deep Southern Championship Wrestling‘s Rock on the Ridge event. The high-flying AR Fox also talks about his recent WWA4 match against Mr. Hughes, his upcoming match at Evolve 17, this weekend’s Combat Zone Wrestling World Junior Heavyweight Championship title defense, his recent Dragon Gate USA Open the United Gate Championship victory and more. Other discussion includes recent and upcoming events in Total Nonstop Action Wrestling, Platinum Championship Wrestling, Pro Wrestling Resurrection,  NWA Rampage Pro Wrestling, Fall Brawl II, Peachstate Wrestling Alliance and more.

DGUSA Open the United Gate Champion/CZW World Junior Heavyweight Champion AR Fox

 

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Scores are settled and new rivalries emerge on PWA’s fourth anniversary DVD

Anyone who has been listening to my Georgia Wrestling Now show over the past few months knows that Peachstate Wrestling Alliance has become one of the rowdiest wrestling promotions in the Southeast. And while most any PWA show is going to be an exciting one, certain shows definitely feature a few bigger names, with matches that have a bit more impact and repercussions.

This Saturday, PWA celebrates its 100th show with a card that features wrestling veterans such as Buff Bagwell, Tommy “Wildfire” Rich, Bull Buchanan and “Action” Mike Jackson in what is sure to be an event to remember. But it was less than three months ago that Peachstate celebrated another milestone with a fourth anniversary show in which the very fate of the company was in question as Enoch Tsarion and his Merchants of Death had pushed PWA owner and commissioner Shane Noles to the limit in the prior months. Now available on DVD at PWA shows (incuding this Saturday’s PWA 100), this fourth anniversary show pitted Team PWA (Noles, Jackson, Simon Sermon, Tommy Too Much and the returning Ultimate Dragon against Team MOD (Tsarion, Heritage Champion Cru Jones, Kris Knox and Tag Team Champions J-Rod and C.J. Awesome) in a WarGames cage match in which members of each team entered the cage in increments until all ten participants were in the cage.

With all the build up to this main even match, it was easy to forget some of the undercard matches that took place. But watching this DVD (which has the expected low production value of most indie wrestling releases, but is still impressively watchable with commentary by Robert Slay and ring announcer Tony Calhoun) is a reminder that this was an overall good wrestling show. The first match on the DVD pits rising Southeastern star John Skyler against the aptly named Stupid (with his equally idiotic sidekick Tweety in his corner). PWA regulars have become accustomed to seeing Stupid come to the ring clad in ripped-up jeans and what looks like something that came from the reject pile at the clown costume factory. Skyler, on the other hand, is a great athlete who has been making waves throughout the area, and catching the attention of the bigger wrestling promotions. So you’d think this would be a quick victory for Skyler, but Tweety is always there as a distraction to give Stupid a fighting chance. As a result, it’s a solid opening match that allows both wrestlers to display their strengths in the ring.

PWA’s anniversary card promised a good bit of variety, and the next match provides just that as the MOD’s “Calm Like a Bomb” Pandora takes on her longtime rival Aisha Sunshine. No matter where these two women do battle, it’s always a good match. And having worked with and against each other on so many occasions, this match is no different. Guilty by her association with Tsarion’s faction, Pandora quickly draws the ire of this rambunctious crowd without ever relying on her cohorts for assistance. Pandora and Sunshine bring out the best in one another as they take turns having the offensive advantage. But with the moral support of Tsarion, Pandora is able to get a clean victory to continue this still-ongoing female rivalry.

Next up is Dusty MacWilliams, a throwback cowboy brawler whose crowd interactions are already comical enough. But things soon get even funnier as he finds out his opponent is Peachstate’s favorite midget, Little Fabio. This match is basically like watching a cartoon as Fabio gets the better of his much larger opponent time and time again, which only frustrates MacWilliams all the more. It makes for an entertaining match and the crowd eats it up.

This match leads into another clash of styles as the masked Bad Company takes on the 386-pound Kentuckian “Big Country” Mike Reid. It’s a short match in which Bad Company shows he’s probably a better technical wrestler, but is simply unable to overcome the big hillbilly. And before we get to the main event, we’re subjected to Antonio Garza and the Georgia Junior Heavyweight Champion Stitch Sypher. These are two high fliers – Garza with a more Mexican luchador style and Sypher with a more reckless Jeff Hardy approach – who should work well together. And they do at times, but a majority of this match just looks slightly off the mark with moments such as when Garza takes a dangerous dive from inside the ring onto Sypher, who is on the floor, where the two men take a hard bump onto the concrete. At one point early in the match, commentator Slay has trouble keeping up with all the missed moves and eventually says, “I’m just going to let these two go at it, folks.” But it is an important title bout with a surprise run-in after the match that has caused a chain events that are still being dealt with at subsequent and upcoming PWA events.

Finally, we get to the WarGames main event, a match that will not only determine who gets ownership of PWA, but that also puts all the titles on the line. The MOD comes into the match with the Heritage and Tag Team titles, but if anyone from that team taps out, all the titles will come to Team PWA. Also, if the MOD loses it is banished from PWA for six months. Having already gotten the best of Noles and his allies at previous PWA events, the MOD has forced Noles to resort to extreme measures. Though they’ve had similar battles over the ownership of PWA in the past, the Ultimate Dragon and Noles somehow agree to join forces for the better of the company.

All 10 participants have been through some intense battles in the months leading up to this match, which only adds to the aggression that is seen throughout this main event. PWA hero Jackson does his signature old-school maneuver (the same top-rope-walking wrist lock popularized by the Undertaker) not only from the top rope, but also from the top of the cage, coming perilously close to plummeting to the floor on more than one occasion. When the numbers are against him, Jackson is thrown head-first into the cage by his opponents. The elder Jackson definitely takes a brutal beating before the odds are evened as his teammates gradually get to enter the ring. From there, it’s a vicious and bloody battle with a big conclusion that leaves the audience jubilant. But as Noles should have expected, the Dragon proves to be out for himself yet again. But he’s not the only one making demands after this match as we see the surprising return of Rick Michaels, the former Exotic Ones partner of Simon Sermon, who is upset by how easily he has been replaced during his absence. With a new partner (whose name is not revealed on this DVD), Michaels lays claim to the Exotic Ones name and the two teams will finally do battle this Saturday at PWA 100.

Overall, this anniversary show doe exactly what it set out to do. It features a variety of matches featuring women, a midget, big men, technical wrestlers, high fliers and title exchanges. The animosity that had been brewing between PWA and the MOD for several months finally comes to a busted-open head with an outcome that is inarguably conclusive. And the fans are left with both a sense of closure as well as intrigue from the new shocking developments still being played out.

WWE Studios’ “The Day” proves that humanity has seen better days

WWE has made it clear in recent years that it wants to be recognized not just as a wrestling company, but as a global entertainment entity. One way that the company has successfully crossed over into other areas of pop culture has been through WWE Studios, which releases films that normally feature WWE stars alongside more established actors. But with its latest release, the post-apocalyptic thriller The Day, there are no wrestlers to be found. In fact, there aren’t many people at all as it focuses on five survivors of some sort of future war that has left little in the way of civilized human interaction.

Ashley Bell as Mary in "The Day." Photo by Petr Maur.

Before I get into the many confusing flaws of the movie, I’d like to talk about some of the positive aspects of this bleak look at humanity’s future. First, director Doug Aarniokoski’s washed-out approach really adds to the sense of hopelessness and despair that permeates the entire film. And the acting (especially that of The Last Exorcism‘s Ashley Bell) is impressively distraught considering that most of the stars of the film are relative unknowns. As the name implies, The Day takes place over the course of one 24-hour period after this machete-toting bunch happens upon a house in the countryside that appears to be unoccupied and stocked with food and other essentials. It turns out, however, that this house is a giant trap, and it doesn’t take long for a larger, more barbaric group of survivors to show up with a thirst for blood.

Despite the similarities to Night of the Living Dead and other zombie movies, the attackers in The Day are not reanimated corpses or infected by anything. They’re just other people, so it’s never really made clear why they would be out to trap and kill another group of people. I guess the idea is that humanity will revert to its animalistic nature when confronted with such insurmountable odds. But it’s also not clear what those odds are and why there are so few survivors living under such anarchaic conditions.

Dominic Monaghan as Rick in "The Day."

The film’s biggest star is Dominic Monaghan, who was Raw‘s social media ambassador last Monday (which means he tweeted during the entire broadcast) and is featured prominently in every trailer and poster I have seen for The Day. So it’s a little disappointing that he seems to get less screen time than any one else in the movie. It does, however, give the other actors time to shine and, as I pointed out before, they definitely do a good job of that. Though it is unclear why the thought processes of the individual characters sometimes changes drastically from one scene to the next, that can easily be explained as the type of paranoia and distress that one might suffer while being one of the last people on Earth.

When the warring tribes of survivors enter into their climactic battle, it’s an intensely gory fight that would be a better fit in the old Extreme Championship Wrestling than in today’s PG-rated WWE broadcasts. But since I never figured out why they were fighting, rather than working together to try and reestablish some sort of civility, the broken bones and blood spatters are little more than visceral visuals. While WWE has been focusing more and more on creating engaging wrestling matches and exciting interaction between its competitors as of late, WWE Studios should be taking notes so its next releases offer a little more emotional investment with their action, suspense and drama.

The Day. Directed by Doug Aarniokoski. Starring Shawn Ashmore, Ashley Bell, Michael Eklund, Cory Hardrict, Dominic Monaghan and Shannyn Sossamon. Rated R. www.wwe.com/inside/overtheropes/wwestudios.

Author Matt Bondurant’s family legend is brought to bootlegging life in “Lawless”

Howard (Jason Clarke), Forrest (Tom Hardy) and Jack (Shia LaBeouf) are the immortal Bondurant Boys in "Lawless"

When one uncovers some dark secret from his family’s past, the common inclination is to want to find out more. Even if the people involved were long gone before you were born, there’s still a sense that the actions of these people so many years ago might help define who you are today. Just as the new Southern bootleg film Lawless is derived from Matt Bondurant‘s 2008 novel The Wettest County in the World, Bondurant himself has created a story rooted in historical events involving his grandfather Jack and uncles Forrest and Howard. These Bondurant Brothers were the stuff of legend in Franklin County, Va. for staving off authorities to create a thriving moonshine business during the Prohibition. While Lawless graphically recounts the conniving violence and brutality that naturally came along with such successful criminal activities, it also delves into the nuances of the personal struggles of everyone involved. As his fictional portrayal of his family’s own part in bootlegging business hits theaters today (with Shia LaBeouf playing the author’s grandfather), Matt talks to Wrestling with Pop Culture about the differences between the novel and the film, the research that went into his book and how it feels to have discovered these notorious tales that preceded him.

At what point did you realize that this story needed to be told?

I had a general sense that my grandfather was involved in moonshine when I was younger, but it wasn’t something we discussed within the family. It wasn’t until 15 years ago, when my father started doing some research and uncovered some newspaper articles and showed them to me. We came across this article describing this incident at a place called the Maggodee Creek Bridge in December of 1930, which is the climactic scene in the film. The news version described my grandfather Jack and his two brothers as the Bondurant Boys. Some of the things that were said there made it clear they weren’t just simple moonshiners, they were a known entity that was somewhat notorious. This was a revelation to my father and me, so I wanted to know more about this. I was intrigued about it for the family story aspect, it seemed cool. It wasn’t until I published my first novel in 2005, The Third Translation, that I had the confidence to attack a project like this.

In the early stages I was thinking of it as a non-fiction piece, but it became clear that there wasn’t enough material to work with. There’s no diaries or letters and very little to account for these men’s lives day to day, month to month or year to year. Around 2004, I decided I was going to do a novelization. So I took what information I did have and worked a dramatic narrative to connect it.

Why did you decide to use Jack as your focal point?

He’s kind of the most transformative figure. Maybe it’s because he was my grandfather and is closest to me, and I knew my grandfather as a young boy. From what we do know, Forrest was clearly the acknowledged leader of the group and was a tough character. Jack was the one that seemed like the most obvious transformative figure that I think the reader would more closely align themselves with as somebody who’s trying to enter into this world and these activities with his brothers. He’s also the one who is striving to change himself and his situation. He wants to get out, he has bigger dreams of other things, so I think that’s naturally who the reader would gravitate towards. It may be because he’s the youngest I just felt closer to him in some way.

Jack (Shia LaBeouf) awkwardly woos Bertha (Mia Wasikowska) in "Lawless"

In the book, Sherwood Anderson, who is not in the movie at all, gets a lot of time. And I think in the book the three brothers get closer to equal treatment. Howard gets hardly any time at all in the movie, but in the book there’s a whole thing with Howard and his backstory, his wife and all the things going on in Howard’s life. There’s a bit more with Forrest and Maggie in the book as well, which was unfortunately shortened in the film. I know there are some scenes with Howard that were cut out of the film just for time. So I think that emphasis is more pointed in the film than the book.

Speaking of the differences between the book and the film, Nick Cave wrote the screenplay for the movie. Did he ask you for input at all?

No, he didn’t. At the press conference from Cannes, somebody asked him that directly and his answer was, “Nope.” But I understand it totally because my vision is there in black and white. He needed to take that and come up with his own vision for it, so consulting with me would be like me getting my stuff in there again. If I was in his shoes, I wouldn’t have consulted with the author either because everything that I have to say is in the book. The way that I think anything should be done with the story is in the book, so he could come up with his own take on it and to include me might be kind of strange. I have great respect for him and I think he did a good job with the script. I saw a couple of different iterations of the script about a year before the movie was made and I could tell he had condensed things in a way that made sense, which is a difficult process, and had some sharp scenes in there. The way he adapted some of the scenes in the book, I thought he did a good job. I’ve read one of his novels and he’s a good writer. I was kind of surprised to find out he wrote screenplays, but then it kind of makes sense if you listen to his lyrics.

What was the process of bringing your story to life as a film like for you?

Most of it was happening at a great distance. Agents were doing things in L.A. and New York and they were notifying me of things occasionally. When we sold the rights for the film to Columbia Pictures, that was a pretty big deal and I just happened to be in New York at the time with my agent having dinner with my wife. He actually concluded the deal over the phone while we were having dinner. You don’t really think that someone’s going to make the film because lots of rights get sold all the time and I know lots of writers who have had film rights bought and it just doesn’t get made. Very quickly, though, [director John] Hillcoat, Cave and Shia were attached. My understanding of it is that the three of them were the ones who liked it from the very beginning and were the ones who caused the producers to buy it.

We sold it in 2008, then there was a strange period in 2010 when all these other actors started becoming attached to it. I knew none of it means anything until somebody puts money down and they start building a set. Then in 2011 everything fell into place really quickly, and I think a lot of that had to do with Tom Hardy becoming involved. I think everybody wanted to work with John Hillcoat and they really wanted to work with Nick Cave, they thought the screenplay was good, and Shia, of course, is interesting and is a draw. But it’s a mid-to-low budget indie film and the funding was weird for a while. When they finally went to green light it into production, they said Tom Hardy was on board and all of a sudden everybody else just piled on there. Then Jessica Chastain gets in there and everybody wants to work with her, and Gary Oldman, and everybody was trying to get in.

Forrest (Tom Hardy) is the unkillable leader of the Bondurant Brothers in "Lawless"

Then they started production and they did invite me down to the set, so my dad and I came down for a couple of days. The producers kept me really involved, Hillcoat called me and we had several phone conversations and email exchanges, some of the actors called me and emailed me, and they did, out of their own generosity, keep me involved quite a bit. They didn’t have to, there was no contractual obligation, but they consulted with me on a few points for accuracy. They wanted to stay true to the spirit of the book and maintain the spirit of the characters, and to some small degree they wanted me to be happy with the product. They weren’t setting out to please me, but maybe my opinion mattered just a tiny bit.

Were there any scenes from the book you would have liked to have seen in the movie that were omitted?

The film doesn’t really go into the background of Howard [Jason Clarke] and how he came to be the way he is. That’s not a fault of the film, I’m just saying that that kind of character development is difficult to do. There are a lot of scenes with Howard and his wife exploring his impulsiveness, his drinking problem and he has kind of a rage issue. That comes from his experiences in World War I, which is not in the film at all.

The film opens up with the same scene that the book opens with, which is a pig slaughtering scene, although it’s done slightly different in the book. Forrest actually straddles the pig and cuts its throat, which is what you’d normally do. It’s a really bloody, gory sort of scene and Hillcoat told me they tried to do that with a pig cadaver, but they just couldn’t make it look right so they just had to shoot the pig. But there’s a whole series of stuff about them as boys surviving the Spanish flu epidemic, there’s a whole thing about their grandfather, who was a Civil War veteran who carved these little wooden figures of Civil War soldiers with missing limbs and suffering and stuff, and Forrest liked to play with them as a child. So, yeah, I wish the film could have been 45 hours long and thrown all that in there, too.

Were you pretty confident in Hillcoat’s direction of this movie following his adaptation of The Road?

Absolutely. I’m a huge fan of The Road. It was just out when I found out he was attached to this film. His first film was The Proposition, and Nick Cave wrote that one. After I saw those two films, I was like, “Awesome! This is great.” At first I was envisioning the book in the style of The Road, which is really dark. But they went in a different direction with this film. It’s more like The Proposition. Just to have the person that adapted the Cormac McCarthy book adapt mine is a great honor, and I think he’s highly skilled.

One of the things that I most admire about Hillcoat, and this is reflected in Lawless, is that he’s not afraid to look directly at things. That’s what a lot of novelists try to do because when you’re writing, you want to look at the most horrible thing directly. And I don’t mean horrible as in the grossest, bloodiest thing. It could be, also, the look on somebody’s face when some terrible thing happens. When we see something horrible, we get this instinctual urge to not look at it straight on and stare at it for a few seconds. And if you’re confronting the viewer or the reader with something they have trouble with, it’s challenging us in a way that’s really unique and interesting. And he’s able to do that, especially with this film, in a way that’s sort of packaged within a film that has some conventional gangster genre things going on, so there’s mass market appeal, too. But at the same time, it bears a stamp or quality and I think he has a signature style. I think he’s one of the real up-and-coming directors and I’m excited to see what he does next. I think he’s going to have a good career and I hope this film furthers that and is appreciated in that way, which I think it will.

If you were to write another book that was appropriate for optioning, would you want to be more involved? Do you see yourself getting into screenwriting or being more creatively involved, or do you appreciate that distance?

I do like film a lot, I’m a fan of film. My third novel came out in January. It’s called The Night Swimmer and it’s being shopped around for film rights. Nobody’s bought it yet, and I don’t think it will be bought. It’s about a young couple who moves to the coast of Ireland and it’s more of a love story. People aren’t getting their throats cut and shit. It’s also not based on a true story, which is a big deal for this film. I think my first and third books don’t seem to be too translatable to film, and the fourth book that I’m starting now, I can’t really even think about that yet. I think it’s such a distant art form, and I have great respect for the art form of screenplays. But I don’t really know anything about it. I don’t really know how to do it, I don’t think I’d be very good at it, I think I would have trouble condensing and keeping it short and direct. That’s not my natural inclination, so when I’m writing I’m anticipating that none of these will be made into films. If somebody decides they want to buy the rights, obviously that’s great. But I don’t think I’d want to be involved. I like the position I was in now where they kind of include me, but I’m not responsible for anything. I think I’d rather receive a nice check for it and hopefully sell some more copies of the book that will allow me to write another book. All I hope to gain out of this whole process is the ability to write another book. That’s what selling the film rights means to me is it increases my chances of being able to write my next book by increasing my notoriety so that some publisher wants to publish my next book.

What’s the relationship between Guy Pearce’ s special agent character in the movie and the same character in the book?

Guy Pearce gives Charlies Rakes a shot of eccentricity in "Lawless"

That’s the largest departure from the book is the characterization of Charlie Rakes. Charlie Rakes was a real guy, he was a real deputy, but he was a Franklin County resident. He did really want to kill my grandfather and his brothers for some reason. In the book I try to give a more complex, nuanced depiction of Charlie Rakes as a real person who had come to this point because of plausible scenarios that would cause these men to intersect in 1930 where he really wants to kill them. Hillcoat told me this was going to be a big departure and he ran it by me. But it was to sort of accentuate the outsider quality of Rakes to make him from Chicago, bring in somebody from the outside. It just helped translate him into a villain faster since there’s no backstory of Charlie Rakes in the film. He’s just a lunatic that shows up and is immediately crazy. I knot that Guy Pearce had a fair amount to do with the depiction and the way that he played him. And that’s what films have to do. The medium of film is limited in ways that novels are not, so that was the biggest departure.

The character of Maggie was the second one. In the film she’s from Chicago and in real life she was also a Virginia resident. But she was mysterious, she wore nice clothes and fancy dresses and things. We don’t even know the last name of the real Maggie. After Forrest died, they found out he was secretly married to her, and they lived a strange life. They lived together at the service station and they never had any children.

How did you go about doing most of your research, aside from going off the stories of your relatives?

A couple of the articles about these incidents are kind of helpful because they talk about Jack Bondurant saying things to the deputy and stuff like that. But a big part of the character stuff came from photos. There’s only two or three of my grandfather from this period and in all of them he’s sitting on top of his car wearing these nice clothes with a cigar in his mouth and his hat cocked, really trying to look tough. And I depicted those scenes in the book. Same thing with Bertha, my grandmother. So, Jack was clearly someone who wanted to have some flash and wanted to look like a character or gangster, to some degree. Also, the court transcripts from the Moonshine Conspiracy Trial of 1935 relate some of these incidents, like the shooting at Maggodee Creek and other run-ins between deputies like Charlie Rakes and the brothers. So we had lines where we’d hear things that they said, which are in the book and the film. They had a reputation and he clearly had a thing against them. Forrest supposedly had his throat cut and walked nine miles to the hospital, which is a pretty sketchy story. So I came up with the plausible explanation for that was that Maggie was there, and they play that pretty straight in the film to the way I wrote it. We also know that he … lived through all these things, so he’s kind of like this Rasputin figure because you couldn’t kill him.

My dad says he remembers Forrest as this tough character and nobody wanted to mess with him, but they don’t seem like the type of guys who were running around slapping people around in order to scare them. So why were they scared of them? They were scared of them because you couldn’t seem to kill this guy, Forrest. The film really took this and jacked this up, it’s one of the principal elements, this immortal thing. It’s natural that this is what made them scary … and Forrest understands this to some degree.

How does your father feel about the way his father has been characterized in the book and the film?

He seemed to like the book. He was a little concerned about the violence. He and my mother hadn’t seen a film in 30 years, so they were a little bit shocked. The only thing he feels strange about is having his mother portrayed in the midst of this bloodiness, even though the real Bertha Minnix married a known criminal. My father’s not a particularly talkative individual, so it’s hard to get much of a complex response out of him. I know he’s really proud of what I’ve accomplished, and of the notoriety, to some degree, of his family being known now. He’s 80 years old and I think he’s proud that our family has some sort of pointed history, even it is a little bit negative.

Lawless. Directed by John Hillcoat. Starring Shia LaBeouf, Tom Hardy, Gary Oldman, Mia Wasikowska, Jessica Chastain, Jason Clarke and Guy Pearce. Rated R. www.lawless-film.com.