Side Effects Writer Scott Z. Burns Talks The Hitchcock Influence And Pain Of Letting Things Go

By: Eric Eisenberg

Scott_Z_Burns_35645As the Master of Suspense Alfred Hitchcock had many tools in his filmmaking belt, but perhaps one of his greatest was his ability to craft empathetic lead characters who are as caught up in the mystery as the audience. In Rear Window Jimmy Stewart isn’t sure if he’s witnessed a murder or just stir crazy. In North By Northwest Cary Grant is a victim of mistaken identity and forced to go on the run from evil agents. And it’s no conincidence that similar themes appear in Scott Z. Burns’ new film Side Effects.

Last week I had the pleasure of talking with the phone with the screenwriter, and beyond chat about the Hitchcockian influence in the film, he discussed the film’s long development process, why he passed the reins to Steven Soderbergh as a director, and even a bit about his Dawn of the Planet of the Apes script. Check it out!

I know that you’ve been working on this script for a long time, and I’m always curious how greatly the final cut of a film differs from the first draft.

With a thriller I think you have to sort of stay pretty close to the script. There were things that we sort of adjusted. There were a couple of twists that developed in the last year or two that weren’t there seven years ago. So things are always evolving as you go. You add a character, you give someone a child, and then you decide they shouldn’t have a child, then you give them back the child… [laughs] So there’s always a lot of tinkering that goes on, but the basic bones of the thriller were pretty much intact from five years ago.

To kind of talk about those “basic bones,” the structure of this film is really interesting because the tone style and even arguably the genre are different in the first half compared to the second What was the greatest challenge in structuring the script that way?

Well, I think it was sort of dictated by the characters. We start out experiencing the movie through Emily’s eyes, and by the end you’re experiencing it more through Dr. Banks’ eyes. And that sort of cross-fate between those two characters is the reason for that shift in tone. And that was something that Steven [Soderbergh] and I talked about from the first time he read it because he actually asked me the same question that you just did [laughs]. And said, “Was that what you were trying to do?” And I said, “That’s exactly what I was trying to do!” – to have us experience the movie from her point of view and then slowly once he meets her, we now have to kind of go on the same ride that he does.

Was that a driving concept behind this project, an idea that you liked and wanted to implement?

I don’t know that it was a conscious choice, I just didn’t know how to tell this kind of a story any other way – to have the audience meet a character and get to know her and then have the other sort of lead of the movie get to know her, and then see where the two of them go together. It was less of a choice of, “I’m going to try this because I think it’s really cool,” and more of, “I don’t know what I’m doing,” [laughs] which might be the best way to do this.

On the story side of things, I did feel that the film has a very strong Hitchcockian feel, largely perpetrated by the “man stuck in a mystery” element. Were you aiming at making that kind of thriller? What were your inspirations?

Well, I’m very flattered! Hitchcock was a major influence on this movie. The paranoia of Jimmy Stewart in Rear Window is something that really roused the creation of Dr. Jonathan Banks – about someone who is wondering “is what they think is happening really happening?” So that character in particular. But it was my hope in doing this to sort of create a modern noir. Because I feel like we as an industry have moved away from those movies a little bit and I really love them. And I think the world today in which we live is just as ripe for these kinds of things as we were then.

I couldn’t agree more! It came out of that post-war, dark time in America during the 1940s and 1950s, and we see a lot of those elements in society today.

That’s interesting. I’m sure you’re right. The world against which Double Indemnity is set is a world – and I don’t know this, but I’m talking about it a little bit and you might know more about this than I do [laughs]. It’s worth researching. But I think if you look at the newspapers around then I’m sure there were people figuring out ways to scam insurance companies. And usually those things do happen when there’s economic depression and people get desperate. And we all know that desperation breeds creativity [laughs].

Source: Cinema Blend

 

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