Even M. Night Shyamalan ā known for making darker movies like āThe Sixth Senseā and āSignsā ā goes looking for the light sometimes.
āI just finished three really dark movies, 'Old,' āKnock at the Cabinā and āTrap,' which are really edgy movies where the characters are super, super dark and complicated, and I wanted to do something different,ā said the director.
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He found an interesting opportunity to collaborate on a new supernatural romance novel called āRemainā with Nicholas Sparks. Yes, that Nicholas Sparks ā king of romantic dramas like āThe Notebookā and āA Walk to Remember.ā
Co-authored books are a hot trend right now in the publishing world. Reese Witherspoon and Harlan Coben have a new novel out. James Patterson has teamed up with Bill Clinton and Dolly Parton on books. This collab, however, is different in that Shyamalan had written the screenplay and Sparks agreed to write a novel based on that story. A āRemainā film ā starring Jake Gyllenhaal and Phoebe Dynevor ā already wrapped production and will be released next year.
āI donāt think anybody has ever done what we just did, which was take the same story and simultaneously go do our separate things,ā said Sparks. āIt isnāt in linear fashion. Itās two people doing two different art forms from the same story. I trusted him 100% to make the best film version of that story possible and he trusted me.ā
The two crossed paths years ago when Shyamalan was asked if he would want to adapt Sparks' novel āThe Notebookā into a feature film. The job ended up going to Nick Cassavetes, but Shyamalan said Sparks' work āalways represented something magical to me.ā It meant something to him that he would be entrusted with a story so beloved.
In an interview with The Associated Press, Sparks and Shyamalan talk about teaming up, scary movies and chicken salad. Answers have been edited for clarity and brevity.
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AP: At first thought, you two working together seems like an unlikely duo. but the supernatural and romance genres have a lot in common.
SPARKS: We're not the first to dabble in this. The biggest movie of 1990 was āGhost.ā Shakespeare used to put ghosts into his plays.
SHYAMALAN: I think love is a supernatural conceit. Itās a mythology we all buy into, but it is still a mythology, a supernatural mythology that thereās a āone.ā The ādestined oneā that you meet in the coffee shop and that you know it was meant to be, and then all the things that happened because you met.
AP: Night, you say you approached Gyllenhaal at the beginning of the year about this role. When you did that, did you tell him it would also be a novel written by Sparks?
SHYAMALAN: I must have. But it was such an unusual moment because I had finished writing the screenplay, pressed save, rushed to get in the car to go to New York for my daughterās birthday. In the car the phone rings, and it's Jake. And Iām like, āWhatās up, man?ā We hadnāt talked in five years, something more. And heās like, āIād love to be in one of your movies.ā And I went, āThat is so weird. Where are you?ā And heās like, āIām in New York.ā I said, āWell, Iām going to New York. Want to have tea?ā I had a gut feeling that the universe was doing something. So, I called my assistant. I said, āPrint the script.ā So, weāre just having tea and catching up. And heās telling me how in love he is and how heās just so happy and in love. And I said, āYou know what? Here.ā He was in shock. He called me two days later and said, āIām in. I love it.ā It was a weird kind of beautiful thing.
AP: Does the book follow the screenplay to the letter or vice versa?
SPARKS: Like any adaptation, no. The first thing I said when I read his script was, āHey, this is great. Of course, itās gonna be nothing like my novel. Itās entirely different.ā Night said basically the same thing.
SHYAMALAN: I think for audiences, itāll be really interesting. They can point out the differences and ask, āWhy did Nicholas do that with the character and the backstory? Why did Night do this?ā Our dialogue isnāt the same.
AP: Night, we're in spooky season with Halloween coming up. Are there any films ā besides your own ā that you recommend watching?
SHYAMALAN: āThe Exorcist,ā of course, itās always there. There's āThe Innocents.ā āThe Hauntingā 1963 film by Robert Wise. And the Japanese movie āCure.ā
AP: Nicholas, have you made Night your famous chicken salad with Splenda?
SPARKS: No, I haven't. I did an interview with the New York Times where I offered the reporter some of my homemade chicken salad and it had Splenda. And whatever reason this blew up on social media. People thought it must be the most disgusting chicken salad ever. So, I said, āNo, itās delicious.ā We started making it on my book tour last year, handing it out to people. And in fact, Splenda put the recipe on its boxes. You can get them. I was invited to the Indianapolis 500 to see the Splenda car.
SHYAMALAN: To get to the core of your question. No, he has not made it. Nor has he mentioned it. Didnāt even offer it.
