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Atom Egoyan To Bring His Version Of West Memphis Three To Big Screen

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  • Atom Egoyan To Bring His Version Of West Memphis Three To Big Screen

    ATOM EGOYAN TO BRING HIS VERSION OF WEST MEMPHIS THREE TO BIG SCREEN

    Tert.am
    23.08.11

    The Oscar-nominated Canadian- Armenian film-maker Atom Egoyan has
    revealed he is bringing his own dramatic version of West Memphis
    Three to the big screen, a move that has made the makers of the new
    documentary to change the ending of their film, The Guardian reported.

    Teenagers Damien Echols, Jessie Misskelley Jr and Jason Baldwin were
    convicted in 1993 of the murder of three eight-year-old cub scouts in
    the Arkansas town. Local police and many residents believe the boys
    were killed as part of a satanic ritual, but follow-up investigations
    have thrown doubt on the original enquiry.

    Paradise Lost 3: Purgatory is the film-making team of Joe Berlinger
    and Bruce Sinofsky's latest attempt to prove that the West Memphis
    Three have been wrongly convicted, following previous films in 1996
    and 2000. The Arkansas supreme-court ruling which freed the men did
    not go quite that far: it required the trio to file an Alford plea,
    which allows them to assert their innocence while accepting that
    prosecutors have enough evidence to convict them. Like its two
    predecessors, Purgatory will be shown on the HBO cable channel in
    the US once it has completed a round of film-festival screenings.

    "We've made the decision to let the film play as is in Toronto,"
    Berlinger told Deadline. "We worked on it for a long time and it
    didn't seem right to rush a new ending. We'll tack on one more scene
    that changes the ending from a question mark to a joyous triumphant
    moment, but we'll aim for the New York film festival or for HBO."

    The duo criticised the judge's decision not to overturn the original
    verdict, following which Echols was sentenced to death and Misskelley
    and Baldwin were ordered to spend the rest of their lives in prison.

    Instead, Echols, Misskelley and Baldwin were sentenced to time already
    served and allowed to go free.

    "That the state of Arkansas did not have the courage to exonerate them
    and admit they made a mistake was shameful," Berlinger said. "These
    guys still have murder convictions hanging over their heads, and that
    will be there for the rest of their lives. And at the Arkansas press
    conference, they maintained these guys were guilty, and washed their
    hands of accountability.

    "The real killers are still out there. It was a cover-your-ass deal to
    make sure there would be no lawsuit for a wrongful conviction. Damien
    was on death row for 17 years, hasn't seen sunlight in the last seven
    or eight years and was by all reports terribly treated. To not be
    able to seek compensation is just wrong."

    As well as the documentary, Egoyan is working on a drama about the
    West Memphis Three, based on the book Devil's Knot by journalist Mara
    Leveritt. The director told the Hollywood Reporter he was delighted
    the men were finally free. "[It's] very exciting news, obviously;
    quite shocking and sadly predictable," he said.

    Egoyan revealed he hoped to uncover the "human drama" behind the
    convictions. "It's a contemporary Salem witch-hunt," he said.

    "The screenplay beautifully examines the ebb and flow of grief,
    disbelief and anger that flowed through the community in the wake
    of this catastrophe. It's an amazing story of a community and
    the conflicting emotional needs of seeking and finding justice,
    but also the complexities of jumping to conclusions. In this case,
    it was very clear to me that there was a miscarriage of justice. I
    think the documentaries have done a really amazing job of showing
    that. But there's a human drama behind it all as well. I think this
    script has been able to capture that."

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