推 kidmen:那要找誰演 06/08 02:30
F. Gary Gray will direct "Marvin," a biopic of Marvin Gaye, the iconic singer
who was shot to death by his father in 1984. C. Gaby Mitchell ("Blood
Diamond") is aboard to write the script.
David Foster will produce with Duncan McGillivray, and next week they will
shop to studios and financiers a package that includes the complete music
rights to Gaye's catalog, including the hits that made him Motown's biggest
solo male star.
Those tunes include "Ain't No Mountain High Enough," "Heard It Through the
Grapevine," "What's Goin' On" and "Let's Get It On." Plan is to have the star
of the film lip synch to Gaye's recordings.
Gray ("The Italian Job") has long wanted to tell Gaye's story, but the
inability to secure music rights has made it a high mountain to climb. A
rival pic, "Sexual Healing," produced by James Gandolfini, who has a role,
and starring Jesse L. Martin, will focus on the singer's declining years,
because the filmmakers have rights to use songs only from his post-Motown
career. That film, reportedly skedded to start last month in Europe, has not
begun production.
Gray said his movie will cover Gaye's entire life, from his emergence at
Motown through his defiance of Berry Gordy to record "What's Goin' On" and on
up to his death.
"This is my passion project, the one that I wake up every day thinking
about," Gray told Daily Variety. "I'm going to tell a truthful story, and
there is no shortage of drama and extreme conflict in a relationship with his
father that at its core is Shakespearean and tragic."This isn't the average
biopic of a rock star wrestling with drugs and women, but a man whose musical
awakening became a call to action that questioned critical issues like a
costly foreign war, recession, environment, inequality -- issues that are
relevant now."
The music rights were secured by McGillivray, the former Bank of America exec
who once arranged credit lines for studios and producers in the 1980s.
"My mantra was, no music, no movie, but to me, the core story is a man who
spent his whole life trying to justify and prove himself to a father who beat
him down physically and later mentally," said McGillivray. "His father was a
cross-dressing, alcoholic Baptist minister who was let off the hook for
shooting his son."
Vet producer Foster was brought in to guide the picture, which will be a
co-production of David Foster Prods. and McGillivray's Film by Humans. DFP's
Ryan Heppe is co-producing.
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http://www.variety.com/article/VR1117986983.html?categoryid=16&cs=1
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