12 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, September 10, 1999 Writer turns director for 'Stir~ The Washington Post In "Stir of Echoes," Kevin Bacon is a regular guy from a Chicago sub- urb, who submits to a hypnosis ses- sion, only to learn he's part of an estimated 8 percent of the popula- tion whose subconsciousness is eas- ily triggered by hypnotic sugges- tion. Writer-director David Koepp spoke of his personal satisfaction in directing this movie, his second directorial effort after 1996's "The Trigger Effect." Research was fun, too. Koepp found the idea of hypnosis so fasci- nating, he says, he decided to under- go a session himself. "It was kind of intense," Koepp said. "It's like a heightened state of concentration. Unless you're part of the eight percent, you don't black out. "It's not like you don't remember. You're always there and you're always in control, unless you're one of those whose subconsciousness leaps right out. I'm from the Midwest. My subconscious is waaaay down in the basement. Packed away." This experience was not a cine- matic experience, he confessed. So he had to "fudge the scene for entertainment pleasure" by literally conveying Bacon's state of mind. "I want you to pretend you're in a theater," said Illeana Douglas (who plays the hypnotist) in the movie to Kevin Bacon. As Bacon imagines, Koepp shows us a movie screen with audi- ence heads in the foreground. Instead of showing the actor pre- tending to be in a trance, said Koepp, we see what Bacon sees. And we feel as if we're being hyp- notized too. Koepp is better known in Hollywood as a scriptwriter whose credits include "Apartment Zero," "Bad Influence," both "Jurassic Film's success does not boost directors' Newsday Still, the film The year starts with your movie winning the Special Jury that a document Prize at the Sundance Film Festival. By midsummer, the film, Which is acknov borne by intense word-of-mouth support, begins slipping into Ropes" directing theaters. "It's funny" M Critics, even those with hearts of stone, become enthusias- not far from the1 tic acolytes of your movie's cause. And - big drum roll here "If we'd made - the box-office take is a pleasant surprise. a par with thev So the phones should be ringing off the hook, right? Big would be inunda stars should be making desperate "can-we-talk" phone calls at "The only thi odd hours, right? in, "is that, ever Well, no, say Nanette Burstein and Brett Morgen, producer- ings with people directors of "On the Ropes," the acclaimed boxing documen- the way things a tary. you to develop a The film's absorbing 90-minute narrative tracks a year in ideas yourself." the lives of those who work and train at Brooklyn's Bed-Stuy If the abovet Boxing Center, situated in one of the city's most forbidding experience of m neighborhoods. mitted both thes The focus is on four magnetic people: Harry Keitt, an ex- the documentar convict and recovering drug addict who built the center and first drawn to f dedicates himself to helping neighborhood kids avoid his mis- everyone else kn takes; Noel Santiago, one of Keitt's teen-age pupils, whose (Burstein mad ingratiating bravado shields a potentially crippling streak of John Ford and B self-doubt; George Walton, Keitt's prized prodigy, whose Yet it's their p move to the professional ranks leaves his mentor abandoned defines their aes and depressed. stories," Burstein And, most poignantly, there's Tyrene Manson, a bright-eyed, to find a real-li ebullient young woman whose clear shot at a Golden Gloves story. We havee championship is threatened when she's implicated in a drug from them ..." bust. Morgen, as e Manson's subsequent travails moved New York magazine ner's thoughts. film critic Peter Rainer to write, "It's one thing to read about know from drai the injustice of the criminal-justice system ... But hearing tion film." Tyrene's harrowing defense of herself, of her life in an atmos- Burstein takes phere of such stark indifference is almost unbearable." social document Rainer's reaction reflects the near-unanimous acclaim tem. But that wa received by "On the Ropes." Audiences have likewise been ing place with tf roused by the film despite its departure from the customary had their own dr ascending (or descending) arc of boxing films. "Sort of what f You know how it usually is in those ring epics: Either "'In Cold Blood Sylvester Stallone wins or Robert Ryan loses in the end. In tion novel) was a "On the Ropes," the conflict within the ring is subordinated to Several docur the process and caprice of life itself; the stone being rolled pair, including t uphill and rolling back down; dreams born, dying and looking about a Texas hig for more fertile ground in which to take root. real-life private i careers is a documentary. And there's only so m* tary can do to boost a filmmaker's profile. wledged - and accepted - by the "On the tandem. lorgen, 30, said at a Park Avenue coffee house pair's Manhattan distributor's office. a fiction film that got the kind of reaction on way our film has been received, I think we ted with offers." ig this film has done;' Burstein, 29, chimed since Sundance, we're able to go into meet- who can green-light our projects. But th always are with documentaries. No one p documentary. You have to come up with the reads like sour grapes, it's misleading. The aking "On the Ropes" has, if anything, com- e New York University film school alums to y genre, even though both claim they were ilmmaking by the same Hollywood product nows and loves. e fictional shorts in her apprenticeship, while ernardo Bertolucci are Morgen's heroes.) predeliction for traditional movie genres t thetic for non-fiction film. "We wanted to tell n said. "And the challenge for both of us was fe situation and fashion it into a compelling our favorite documentaries and learned a lot ach of them often do, completes his part- "But really we tried to take everything we rmatic filmmakers and apply it to non-fic- the ball. "I know people see our movie as a and an indictment of the criminal-justice s* sn't our intention. We just found this interest- hese very interesting people with stories that ama to bring out." people call the new journalism," Morgen said. ' (Truman Capote's 1966 true-crime nonfic- as much an influence on us as any movie." mentary projects are on the horizon for the two potential TV series, "American High," gh school, and "The Searchers," which tracks nvestigators. Coutesy of Artisan~ Entertainment David Koepp directs on the set of "Stir of Echoes." Park" movies, "Snake Eyes" Impossible." "Carlito's Way ," and "Mission: As the director on "Stir of Echoes," he enjoyed a luxury rarely experienced by writers in Hollywood: control. "Screenwriting is half an art form," explained Koepp, a bearded 36-year-old with an easy, witty manner. "You write it, then someone else always directs it. And no matter whether the movie ends up worse or better than what you wrote, it's always different" from the scriptwriter's original vision. Even when you're included in dis- cussions about the movie, Ko continued, "you lose the argumen with the big stars, the producersa the directors. "After a certain point, you see director's eyes glaze over. "No matter what you say, h going to do it (his way) anywaya you can type what he wants or can have someone else type it... "The only way to be comple happy," said Koepp, semi-facetio ly, "is to give up your soul." But this time, Koepp not o typed, he won the arguments -- in consultation with Bacon, a was a producer. With his soul intact, he confess "I was very happy on this movie IPP ntS" and the ie's and he Clayson jomns Gumbel's new show The Washington Post tely Jane Clayson doesn't want to talk about whether she us- drinks caffeinated beverages and she dislikes telling reporters her shoe size, but she can't wait to meet the "ordi- nly nary people" who think that hanging around a streetside TV uh, studio is a great place to be at 7 in the morning, and wants who to learn everything about their lives. Clayson, 32, a Los Angeles-based correspondent for ABC sed, News, on Wednesday was officially named Bryant ." Gumbel's new sidekick. She and Gumbel will host CBS's morning news program, "The Early Show," which debuts Nov. I from a storefront studio that the network is building at the southeast corner of Central Park. Meeting Gumbel, she told reporters Wednesday, was "like seeing an old friend - we just clicked." Eighteen years Gumbel's junior, Clayson says she watched him while she was in high school. "Everybody watched Bryant and Jane. That's how you started your day - he's an institution," she said. And if she's half as successful as Gumbel's other Jane - Pauley that is, with whom he hosted NBC's "Today" show from 1982 to 1990 -"I will be pleased and very grateful," Clayson said. Reporters were eager to learn something about Clayson, about whom little has been said by CBS except that she's been with ABC News since 1996 and earlier worked in local news in the Salt Lake City market. Clayson clammed up on personal questions. Which isn't good, because the morning news audience likes to feel close and personal with its stars -- or it doesn't watch. CBS brass have been scouting for a female co-anchor since May. Friedman says they looked at 300 tapes and spoke with 100 candidates before making their only offer to Clayson. Though Clayson's background is in hard news, she said she's looking forward to meeting "ordinary people:" "I love to hear about their lives and interests and what motivates them," she said. And the meet-and-greet aspect of the show is very imp e tant, Friedman said. After people glad-hand with GumW and Clayson, they'll go home and watch, and so will their relatives. "It's almost like retail television," he said. "You win fans one at a time." Running Out of Clean Clothes? Coin Laundry and Dry Cleaning Service1 FREE 120 Washers D~ryers Laundry Bags Attendant Always 668-7928 O" "u) IN COLONIAL LANES PLAZA 1964 5. 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