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'Motorcycle Diaries' Writer Options 'Apples'

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  • 'Motorcycle Diaries' Writer Options 'Apples'

    'MOTORCYCLE DIARIES' WRITER OPTIONS 'APPLES'
    By Josh Getlin

    Los Angeles Times, CA
    Jan 10 2008

    Getting Micheline Marcom's "Three Apples Fell From Heaven" to the
    big screen is a labor of love.

    The Book "Three Apples Fell From Heaven" by Micheline Marcom

    The Buyer Jose Rivera

    The deal Jose Rivera, Oscar-nominated screenwriter ("The Motorcycle
    Diaries"), options Micheline Marcom's "Three Apples Fell From Heaven,"
    a powerful novel about the Armenian genocide.

    The players Marcom is represented on literary rights by Sandra
    Dijkstra at the Sandra Dijkstra Literary Agency and on film rights
    by Liza Wachter at the Rabineau, Wachter, Sanford & Harris Literary
    Agency. Rivera is represented by United Talent Agency and Rick Berg
    of Code Entertainment. The novel was published by Riverhead Books.

    The back story Sometimes in Hollywood it's not who you know but how
    well you know them. Although Rivera and Marcom were represented by
    well-connected industry players, their recent book-to-film deal was
    driven more by a personal relationship. Soon after Marcom's novel
    was published, she met actress and producer Sona Tatoyan at a Los
    Angeles reading.

    Tatoyan, like Marcom, is of Armenian descent, and she became
    passionate about the highly praised book. She gave a copy of it to
    her then-boyfriend (and now husband), Rivera, who had a similar
    reaction. As their friendships deepened, the screenwriter became
    convinced that the book was not just a potentially great film, he
    saw it as the Armenian community's equivalent to "Schindler's List."

    But adapting the novel would not be easy. Marcom's dream-like text
    shifts back and forth in time, with a profusion of characters. One
    of the most unforgettable segments is the interior monologue of an
    Armenian infant who is left with other children under a grove of trees
    during his family's death march from its ancestral village. "A lot
    of authors are accused of writing novels that feel like screenplays,"
    Rivera said. "But you can't say that about Micheline.

    She wrote a literary gem. And it's a challenge for a filmmaker."

    Rivera was deeply committed to the project, so much so that he wrote
    a screenplay based on an oral agreement with Marcom; the two signed
    an option deal only when his agents began hunting for a director.

    Both see the process more as a labor of love than a legal
    arrangement. "It felt, and still feels, like Jose's screenplay has
    been a collaboration between the two of us," Marcom said. "But there
    are two different creative worlds here, and I'm not involved in the
    film one all that much. In the end, he'll have to follow his own muse."
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