Tell No One, it was a fixation
Guillaume Canet could not believe it when director Michael Apted sat down with him at a luncheon in Los Angeles awhile back. Apted's next project at the time was to be an adaptation of Harlan Coben's novel Tell No One, the very book that French actor-writer-director Canet was obsessing over, seeing in his head how he would turn it into a film.
“I saw all the work and the changes I wanted to make in it for a movie,'' the baby-faced Canet said during a recent visit to Los Angeles.
“I was fascinated with all of those characters. I said to my producer, ‘I want to do this film.'
"That's how we heard the film was going to be made in the [United] States by Michael Apted. We just gave up on it. But I was thinking about it all the time.'' And it was still weighing heavily on his mind at that luncheon.
“I looked at Michael Apted and said, ‘It's amazing because I have been talking about you for a while because you are going to do a movie of a book that I loved,''' Canet recalls.
“He said: ‘I have known for a couple of days I'm not going to do it. Do it yourself if you want to do it.' He said it as a joke.''
But it was no laughing matter to Canet, 35. “I stood up and pretended to go to the bathroom. Instead, I called my producer. After that, we got into the negotiation process with Harlan Coben.''
Canet, an utter charmer who resembles a scrubby, Gallic Patrick Dempsey, went so far as to write to Coben describing his passion for the project.
“I explained to him to please trust this young French director,'' Canet said.
And to sweeten the pot, Canet, who also acts (The Beach), sent along his feature directorial debut, Mon Idole, which he describes as a “black, twisted comedy about manipulation and power''.
Coben was impressed and eventually the young director and his producer bought the rights to the novel.
That dogged perseverance has paid off handsomely. The film, which opened in Los Angeles recently, was a huge hit in France in 2006 and won several Cesar awards, including Best Director for Canet — the youngest French filmmaker to earn the honour. Reviews in the US have been stellar.
A pulsating romantic thriller, the film revolves around Alexandre Beck (François Cluzet), a paediatrician who has slowly been attempting to put his life in order after his wife, Margot (Marie-Josee Croze), was murdered by a serial killer eight years earlier.
But when he receives an e-mail supposedly from his dead wife with a link to a recent video clip of her, Beck's life is thrown into a maelstrom once more.
Canet, who co-wrote the screenplay, also appears in a supporting role as a particularly vile young man.
“Nobody wanted to do the part,'' the director said, laughing. “For a long time, I played a lot of these naive, really gentle parts. I thought it was fun to show something else.''
Unlike Apted's planned version of the film as a straight thriller, Canet said, his adaptation focuses on the love story between Alexandre and Margot.
“I was not particularly a fan of thrillers,'' he said. “But to see this love story emerging from the thriller .... We can imagine Alex has been through eight terrible years and, suddenly, something happens like this [the e-mail clue].
"There were strong characters. That is the most important thing for me.''
Canet is still deciding what his next project will be as a writer-director. But he won't be going behind the camera any time soon.
He is slated to begin production in January as an actor opposite his girlfriend, Oscar winner Marion Cotillard (La Vie en Rose), in a film called The Last Flight of the Lancaster.
“It's a film that takes place in the 1930s — it's a beautiful love story,'' Canet said with a shy smile.