Vadim
Perelman
Vadim Perelman
had the sort of feature film debut most filmmakers dream about but rarely
are able to realize. An acclaimed director of commercials, he optioned
the novel House of Sand and Fog by Andre Dubus III, adapted
it for the screen with Shawn Lawrence Otto and co-produced the
film with Michael London.
The tale of a young
woman evicted from her house and her subsequent encounter with its new
owners - immigrants from Iran - received critical kudos and respectable
commercial returns. He clearly established himself as a talent worth
watching and chief among his promoters was Steven Spielberg. Perelman
was put to work adapting the Stephen King novel Talisman
for DreamWorks and some feared he would descend into the industry's
commercial abyss.
That was five years
and several projects ago. Now he's resurfaced with The Life Before
Her Eyes, a story one might ascribe to an episode of The Twilight
Zone that like the bygone anthology has serious things to say about
life, family and social issues told within a phantasmagoric frame.
"It's ironic
but I optioned the book it's based upon at virtually the same time as
Sand and Fog," the filmmaker says with an implied chuckle. "They
share certain things - a similarity in sensibility and a parallel plot
thread that allows you to go back and forth between the two storylines.
That's something I find very appealing."
The two strains
both involve the character Diana. As a high school student portrayed
by Evan Rachel Wood she's experiencing the usual teenage angst
when she's thrust into a Columbine-style massacre by a fellow student
and finds herself and her best friend facing him down the barrel of
an assault weapon.
The other thread
begins 15 years later with Diana (Uma Thurman) married with a
young daughter and living in the same small Connecticut town. The dilemmas
of her adult life collide with the echoes of the past when her school
sends an invitation for a memorial remembering the tragic incident.
"The author,
Laura Kasischke, is a poet who's also written several novels,"
he notes. "What struck me about the book was its really vivid imagery.
The movie is kind of amazingly faithful. Obviously the rhythms are different.
That's just going to happen when you're working in a different medium.
Movies allow for a more relentless way of telling a story."
The biggest change
is that the key to the story's mystery occurs at the outset of the novel.
Perelman couldn't see a way of telling the story unless he held the
reveal until the conclusion. In opting for a mystery construct clues
had to be introduced to what would ultimately transpire.
But the filmmaker
says the puzzle aspects of the material while necessary were not his
primary focus. He was considerably more focused on dealing with what
he references as "the ultimate story of survivor guilt." In
his view it's a lamentation; how an unforeseen and extraordinary act
informs a life and (without being too direct) conspires to create regrets
for things not done."
"It's an affirmation
of life," Perelman insists. "There are always going to be
disappointments, even tragedies but somehow we push on. That's the kind
of story that I relate to."
The filmmaker isn't
blind to the fact that those stories are more difficult to get made.
He considers himself lucky to have another career that's allowed him
not to have to make a feature to pay the bills.
"I was really
moved by the documentary My Architect and this crazy life that
Louis Kahn had. He was someone that by the standards of his discipline
was involved with very few buildings. But what he devoted himself to
was extraordinary. For me it all crystallized when I.M. Pei basically
said he hoped to one day to be able to do something as good as Khan."
Perelman believes
his next film will be an adaptation of Atlas Shrugged, Ayn
Rand's epic philosophical novel that centers on a female railroad
executive confronting a world that's lost its balance. He's also been
in discussions with a Russian producer (Perelman was born in the Ukraine
and his family moved to Canada when he was a teenager) about a film
on Babi Yar (located close to his boyhood home), the largest
single massacre of the Holocaust during the Second World War.
April 19, 2008
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by Leonard Klady