Way
back in 2001 Marlon Brando was appearing in The Score, his last film
before he died. The film was being produced by Bernie Williams, and it just so happened that, at the same time, I was working with Bernie on a
sequel to his 1985 movie, Bounty, with Mel Gibson and Anthony
Hopkins.
I should explain – In
1990 I heard of a proposal to cull a herd of wild bison in Canada
because they supposedly carried brucellosis and TB, and it was being
spread to cattle destined for the United States meat market. I wrote
a short piece about it, which was bought by the BBC World Service and
went out at the time of the Gulf War. I remember thinking no one is
going to be interested in this – they’re all listening to news
about Kuwait going up in flames. Nevertheless, it bump-started my
writing career, and from that point on I worked on documentaries in
the UK. I would research a subject that interested me, write up a one
page outline and submit it to an independent TV producer. I was
fortunate enough to have an actor friend Stewart Bevan (who had been
in Dr Who in the early 70s) and he introduced me to Norrie Maclaren
at Tartan Television. Norrie had been Stanley Kubrick’s assistant
on the film Barry Lyndon and I learned a lot from him about writing
for TV and film. For the next few years we developed many projects
together.
Move forward a few years
and I meet a man called Stephen Walters. Stephen was a maritime
consultant and colleague of film-maker David Lean, and had worked on
Bernie Williams’ movie Bounty. Stephen suggested I talk to Bernie
about an idea we had to follow the story of the Bounty mutineers
after they arrived on the island of Pitcairn. He gave me Bernie’s
phone number in LA, and I called him. On the strength of that one
phone call I found myself working with one of the all-time great
producers. The Bounty was his passion. He had always intended on
making a second movie, but the money ran out and Hollywood’s
appetite for ‘ship films’ had shifted.
Over the next couple of
years I wrote with Bernie. We emailed manuscripts back and forth. I
didn’t earn anything. I considered it a privilege to learn from a
master in this way. He took me seriously as a writer. He encouraged
me, and I learned about characters, plots, and the way Hollywood
views its writers.
Bernie also told me all
about the film he was making with Edward Norton, Robert De Niro and
Marlon Brando. It was called The Score. Frank Oz was directing. Frank
also having some kind of emotional problems and the script was
unfinished. Eventually, Ed Norton stepped up and completed the
writing and Bernie took over direction, though he was never credited
for it. Half way through shooting Bernie gave my Bounty sequel to
Marlon Brando and asked him to read it. Brando of course had played
Fletcher Christian in the 1962 film of Mutiny on the Bounty. Fitting
then, that he should pronounce on the newest offering.
He loved it. He told
Bernie, he should make it. It was a winner. Bernie talked to Anthony
Hopkins, and he agreed to a cameo. The proposal went to studios in
Hollywood. I expected to get very rich – well okay, not very rich.
It was explained to me that as I was not a Writers Guild of America
member, I would at best only be credited with the first draft script.
Subsequent drafts would be written by a guild member. In any case,
it never happened. Hollywood still didn’t want a ‘ship film’.
Even after Master and Commander came out, it still didn’t want to
reprise Mutiny on the Bounty. My sequel entered ‘development hell’,
which is where it has been ever since.
In many ways, it doesn’t
matter. Marlon read my script. Loved it. Recommended it be made. What
greater accolade can a writer have? I suppose yes, winning a major
writing prize would trump it, but for me? No. Marlon Brando read what
I wrote. I can’t ask for more for more than that.