
Annons
Annons
Louis Mellis: A passing thought. A whim becomes an idea. A "what if?" Is there a film in it? A story worth telling? If such a notion stands up to scrutiny after being examined from various angles and it is decided that it could make a film – I like to think that the film it will become is already out there floating in the ether, waiting to be written. And it's the screenwriter's task to find it and hone it and get it down on paper as a set of clearly discernible plans.Sexy Beast was the middle film of a trilogy planned by myself and my then writing partner David Scinto, sandwiched between Gangster No. 1 (which we originally wrote as a stageplay) and 44 Inch Chest. We wrote the screenplay for Gangster No. 1 and had Jonathan Glazer on board to direct, but the situation became untenable and all three of us walked. Rare I guess on a first film, which I've still not seen. So we had to come up with something quick or that would have been that. David and I locked ourselves away for three weeks and wrote Sexy Beast. The initial idea was, how possible is it for someone to "split the programme," to escape from the past and create an idyll in Spain? What are the human logistics?So you began writing for the stage? How did that lead to the screenplay? Did someone encourage you to make it into a film?
We were approached to make the stageplay Gangster No. 1 into a film and wrote several drafts, which for legal reasons could not be used.
Annons
Simplest thing to say re the three of us walking away from Gangster No. 1 is "artistic differences." Because it was our first film we were expected to put up with all manner of ridiculousness re casting, tone, themes, etc. These stuck in our throats, and so we left them to it (and walked into the London snow).I can’t imagine how much pressure you must have felt to write it in three weeks. Would you describe what those three weeks were like and how you felt at the end of the time period?
I remember the three-week period during which Sexy Beast was born as intense, manic, fun. We had no idea what the film would be – it started with a guy basking in the Spanish heat, and from there we improvised most of the rest. Fortuitously it flowed, and as is always the best way, it "wrote itself." Incidentally both films wrapped on the same day, so we were in effect in competition with our own work.Often writers get credit when in reality they've merely been the conduit. The classic question "How did you get the idea?" is impossible. An idea comes from nowhere. The "work" bit is getting it down.Did you set out to write characters that were gangsters? Or did what you want to write about end up requiring gangsters?
I think the attraction of working in the gangster genre is that the characters and situations can easily become more Shakespearean than in, say, a rom-com.
Annons
I have no particular favorites amongst Shakespeare's plays – maybe there's a bit of Iago in Don Logan?Do you know any gangsters?
Can't say I fraternise with gangsters (or would want to). Interestingly, amongst the criminal fraternity of thieves, pickpockets, con men, etc., gangsters have always been looked down on as the lowest of the low: unskilled, no-class, gaining only through violence, and lacking expertise.Whose idea was it to have Don pee on the rug in the bathroom? This crystallises something about his character for me. And maybe part of the reason this interests me is that I don't think a woman would ever do that.
Don Logan in SB peeing on the rug came out in an improvisation between myself and David Scinto (as did most of that film). It's petty, mean-spirited, childlike, cat-like (spraying). Territorial. Would a woman do the same? Don't see why not if she were Don-like in demeanor.What was it like to write with a partner? What would you say to other writers who were wondering if this is the way to go? (I have noticed that with screenplays people often partner, but this would never happen with a short story or novella, and so this fascinates me – how it works.)
Yes, it's strange how two people can concoct a screenplay but that hardly ever happens with a novel. Must be because film is a collaborative venture. By necessity, working with a partner already involves compromise. We had a hard and fast rule: If we both didn't agree on something, it was out. No discussion or case-pleading. It was gone, and we'd find another solution.Do you believe in God?
Sometimes… but mainly I believe in good!Any advice for aspiring screenwriters?
Regarding creating film scripts, the thing I adhere to is something Chekov (I think) said (and I paraphrase): A guy walks into a casino, places 20 grand on black, loses, goes home and shoots himself. This is what we generally see.But a guy walks into a casino, places 20 grand on black, wins, goes home and shoots himself… That's drama!