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Posts Tagged ‘Cliffhanger’

“As a script reader, I noticed that every variation of Die Hard had sold. Not all of them got made, but they all sold.”
Michael France (On what led him to write Cliffhanger on spec)

One of the fun things about doing a small niche blog like this is making all kinds of odd connections, which I believe is what creativity is all about. (See the post Where Do Ideas Come From?)

For instance, as I mentioned yesterday I flew out of the Tampa airport and learned that the first commercial flight ever was between St. Pete and Tampa. That led me to learn that screenwriter Michael France (Cliffhanger, Hulk) was not only born in St. Pete Beach, but lives there today. Not only that, but he owns an old movie theater there which is currently playing the Jason Reitman/George Clooney film Up in the Air that I spent several days blogging about recently. In one of those posts I mentioned that Walter Kirn, who wrote the novel Up in the Air, was once married to and has two kids with the daughter of Thomas McGuane. Well, it turns out that I found an interview with Michael France where he said his favorite book is The Buchwacked Piano by Thomas McGuane.

One big interconnected world.

In an interview with Stax at ING, France was asked, “What do you feel has been your most important professional accomplishment to date?

“I took this question a couple of different ways. My first response to this is, managing my writing career so that I’m able to live where I want – which is waaaaay out of L.A. – and spend my off hours with my wife and kids on the beach. That’s not an easy balance to pull off, and it allows me to live the way I want to, so…that’s important to me personally. But I think you probably mean artistically, so I’ll take my head out of the beach for a minute. When I was writing Hulk, I wanted to make Bruce Banner an extremely complex, emotionally sealed off character, and to make his relationship with Betty romantic but still tragic. Those dynamics are difficult to make credible even when you’re not bringing in large science fiction ideas – but I tried to make that work in balance with the large scale action scenes that you have to have with Hulk.”
Michael France

To be fair, France did do time in New York & L.A., but a screenwriter “waaaaay out of L.A.”—huh, what an interesting concept. (Of course, to pull that off, it doesn’t hurt to have a few blockbuster films to your name and Marvel’s Stan Lee in your address book.)

Though I’ve never met France, I bet in that funky, creative way our paths have crossed somewhere. We’re the same age so it may have been that Jimmy Buffett concert I went to at the University of Florida campus (where France went to school) in the early 80s (Coconut Telegraph tour if I remember correctly), maybe somewhere in L.A., but most likely it would have been St. Pete Beach where I’ve spent much time visiting over the last 30 years. In fact, I shot part of a commercial there last summer.

One thing is sure, the next time I’m down that way, I’m going to catch a movie at France’s Beach Theater after my regular fried grouper stop at The Hurricane.

Scott W. Smith

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When you think of fly-over country, Tampa Bay is probably not the first thing that comes to your mind. But as far as commercial flights are concerned, that’s the original fly-over territory. It wasn’t until I flew out of the Tampa Airport yesterday that I learned that the first commercial flight back in 1914 was from St. Petersburg to Tampa.

So I thought I’d find a screenwriter from St. Pete and came up with Michael France who was born there in 1962. France graduated from the University of Florida before breaking into the movie business in 1991 when his spec script Cliffhanger was sold. In 1993 it became a hit film starring Sylvester Stallone. He was credited for the story on the James Bond film Goldeneye, as well as co-screenwriter of Hulk and Fantastic Four.

According to IMDB, “Movies made from Michael France’s screenplays have earned well over one billion dollars in worldwide theatrical admissions, and at least another billion dollars in home video revenues.”

France lives in the Pass-a-Grille section on the southern tip of St. Pete Beach and in 2007 he purchased the local Film Paradiso Beach Theatre . (How many screenwriters and filmmakers dream of buying an old theater? France is the only one I know who ever followed that dream to the finish line.) And because I’m a big fan of the film, I should point out the Up in the Air is playing this week at the Beach Theater. On Saturday nights’ they play The Rocky Horror Picture Show and Laurel & Hardy pictures on Saturday mornings. Something for everybody. (Heck, this past Sunday they even held a tribute for the librarian at the St. Pete Library and who passed away in December.)  A community movie theater at its best.

This is the same theater that France’s parents and grandparents took him to movies as a child. Don’t you love happy endings?

Scott W. Smith

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