Nights in Rodanthe Movie Trailer. “Talking with a stranger gives you permission to reveal yourself in a way that you rarely can with people you know,” Wolfe states. Being the focus of a stranger’s attention can prompt us to take a fresh look at ourselves and see, for the first time in years, strength we had forgotten or maybe longing and regret we had come to accept.
“What Paul stirs for Adrienne, and vice versa, is the audacity of `Who do you think you are?’ That’s a good question,” says Lane. “`Wait a minute while I think about that…who do I think I am?!’ That’s what people bring each other at the beginning of a relationship; the opportunity to say and do something intentional instead of just coloring by the numbers. It may be uncomfortable but it’s liberating.”
“In this way, Paul and Adrienne act as catalysts for each other’s self-realization,” offers screenwriter Ann Peacock. “Paul enables Adrienne to do what is right for her rather than what she had been conditioned to doing, and Adrienne enables Paul to drop his guard and open himself to the possibility of love and forgiveness.”
“It’s all a learning experience,” Gere suggests. “We’re all infants, trying to figure out who and what we are and what it all means. What’s beautiful about `Nights in Rodanthe’ is that it shows how two people in crisis can get past their defenses, reach out to each other and make enormous impact on each other in a relatively short period.” And that impact can often extend beyond the two of them.
Says Di Novi, “What they find with each other, the kind of connection they have, is one of those once-in-a-lifetime things, such a deep love that, as Adrienne says in the film, it makes you want to share it with the rest of the world.”
Richard Gere and Diane Lane Together Again
“Nights in Rodanthe” marks the third screen pairing of Richard Gere and Diane Lane. The two first met playing reckless lovers 24 years ago in Francis Ford Coppola’s “The Cotton Club,” and more recently portrayed a couple whose faltering marriage still radiates heat in the memorable 2002 drama “Unfaithful.”
Remarking on their palpable onscreen chemistry, Gere and Lane slip into an easy banter that proves the point even as they laugh about it. Lane cites the example of actors with sizzling real-life chemistry whose romantic scenes can fall inexplicably flat on film, before joking, “Richard and I have the opposite situation. We feel absolutely nothing standing next to each other…” at which point Gere jumps in to corroborate, “I mean nothing. Less than nothing. Yet, when you see it on screen it’s all there. It’s a miracle.” In truth, he goes on to say, “Our friendship has evolved over the years into a great sense of trust. I love working with her.”
Gere also believes that the differences between who they were in their “Cotton Club” days, both as actors and as individuals, and who they have since become, is appropriate to the kind of relationship that develops between Paul and Adrienne. “What was important to me in taking on this role, and Diane too, I believe, was that it wasn’t a story about kids who are goo-goo-eyed about each other from the moment they meet. It’s not that kind of movie. There are scenes in which they barely look at each other, but there is a powerful and deepening understanding at work and you can feel it evolve in front of you.”
Adds Lane, “What you potentially bring to a relationship at this stage is often so much more than what you had to offer at eighteen. You have more insight, more personality and more appreciation of things-and of each other.”
As all of these elements come together in the growing rapport between Paul and Adrienne, two people caught by a storm in the Outer Banks, “It never feels as though we are watching two actors. Rather, it’s as if we’re just watching two human beings experiencing life,” notes Wolfe.
Just as there is always a chance to fall in love and to find your purpose, there is always a chance to learn, to do things better and to make things right with the people in our lives. Beyond Paul and Adrienne are other key players in this drama, who support or challenge them in ways that help bring them to this juncture.
It is Torrelson’s tragedy that precipitates Paul’s journey to the Outer Banks and, subsequently, the opportunity for some serious soul-searching. It is Jack, Adrienne’s conflicted husband, who creates the crisis that sets her adrift. And it is Jean whose decision to entrust the inn to Adrienne this fateful weekend provides the perfect setting for storms to break and love to take hold.
Paul’s situation with Torrelson occurs almost simultaneously with the dissolution of his marriage and the deepening estrangement with his son, but, of the three, it’s the one problem that appears to have the simplest solution. Wolfe explains, “Paul is focused on his career crisis. A patient has died and her husband has filed a wrongful death suit. As is frequently the case with very focused, driven and accomplished people like Paul, he is not necessarily skilled at processing failure, loss or disappointment. He’s good at fixing things. He likes to leap over the complications and get to the result. So he has come to Rodanthe to fix this.”
Scott Glenn, who plays the grieving widower, says, “What Paul fails to understand is that Torrelson isn’t interested in money. It’s not about the lawsuit; he wants an apology. He wants to make sure that this person he loved, who died, was not just another number, that she was important and precious. The point, for him, is to get this doctor’s attention and hear him acknowledge that he screwed up and he’s sorry.”
“Scott is brilliant,” says Di Novi. “The scene in which Torrelson confronts Paul is just indescribably beautiful. This is a man deeply in pain, who has such a hard time expressing it. It’s clear that this is the first time Paul has been forced to connect with another human being in this way.”
While Paul struggles to make sense of this encounter and wonders how to approach his next challenge-mending the rift with his son-Adrienne is trying to decide how she feels about Jack, whose heartfelt pleas, even in this remote outpost, are as close as the telephone.
Christopher Meloni, who stars as Jack, sees his part as “the catalyst. Jack lights the fuse of what becomes Adrienne’s journey. He pushes her into this dilemma where she has to reconcile and examine everything to figure out what’s right or wrong for her and where she goes next.”
The role is more complex than would first appear. Di Novi points out, “No one sets out to be the bad guy. No one plans to do the wrong thing. There was a reason that Adrienne fell in love with Jack and we must understand there was a reason they were married for so long. It was essential that the actor who played Jack was able to bring out all these colors so he is not a black-and-white character.”
“He must be a worthy contender, so that you see Adrienne being genuinely and believably tugged back in his direction,” adds Wolfe.
Ultimately, says Meloni, “Jack is sincere in wanting to be part of the family again, but I don’t feel he’s coming back for the right reasons. Even through his sincerity you get the sense that there’s something not quite right about him, and, hopefully, audiences will pick up some of the misgivings Adrienne feels toward him, without necessarily even knowing why.”
One person who would likely agree is Adrienne’s loyal friend and confidant Jean, played by Viola Davis. Jean provides encouragement, humor and honest opinions … without waiting to be asked. Clearly, the two women go back a long way together, as Jean’s home, the inn, is full of crafts they made as girls, plus photos and mementos that share space with Jean’s travel souvenirs and the eclectic mix of art she has either made or collected through the years.
Says Di Novi, “Jean represents a completely liberated woman. She knows who she is and doesn’t care what people think. She gives full expression to her art and talent and lives life to the fullest, and in some ways that’s what Adrienne aspires to.”
Certainly Adrienne has those same elements in her nature, but, Davis observes, “While Jean pursued the dreams they likely both had as younger women, Adrienne is the one who suppressed some of that to raise children and lead a more stable, conservative life, forsaking certain freedoms and putting everyone else’s needs first. They’re a good match because they balance each other’s choices while sharing a similar point of view.”
Similarly, Jean’s freewheeling style is much different from the life Davis lives, which added to the challenge and fun of the role, and was part of the reason Wolfe cast her. “This is definitely not who I am,” she says. “Jean is much more flamboyant and free and would do things I would never do. I’m more grounded and introverted.”
Stormy Weather
Production began in May 2007 in the small town of Rodanthe and its environs on the Outer Banks, an approximately 200-mile string of barrier islands that parallel the North Carolina coast and seasonally bear the brunt of the ocean’s fury. Known as the Graveyard of the Atlantic, this hurricane-prone region rates one of the highest densities of shipwrecks in the world.
“Nick’s books are always set in North Carolina and Rodanthe is an isolated and very specific part of the Outer Banks,” says Di Novi, confirming that the challenges of filming there were well worth the effort. “There is something undeniably magical about the place that we knew could not be duplicated anywhere else. It’s a setting rarely seen on film, a truly unique place in America that few people have experienced.”
Scouting locations for the film, Wolfe was particularly struck by the way the Outer Banks suits the story’s romantic drama. “It’s a landscape that’s breathtakingly beautiful, but also vulnerable and exposed, a relatively thin strand of earth surrounded by water on both sides. You can really feel the power of the ocean and the sky. It became clear to me how the forces of nature and the elements played a part in making this love happen between these two people.”
Screenwriter John Romano notes how Nicholas Sparks honors the storyteller’s tradition of harnessing these powerful external forces to his characters’ emotional states and the drama of their lives. “The hurricane rages outside, throwing them together, but there’s also a storm brewing within the house, between the two of them, that echoes it. There’s a seamless flow between the turbulence without and the turbulence within. It was George’s intention to see this realized on screen; in the way he imagined it-in the dialogue, in the way he shot it and in what the actors bring to it with their tremendous capacity for subtext.”
While it may be true that nature and circumstance conspire dramatically to bring Paul and Adrienne together, it is equally true that these forces seemed determined to scatter the crew and their materials all over the coastline.
With a laugh, Wolfe vividly recalls, “There were times we began filming and the ocean said, `No, you won’t be doing that scene today because I’m coming up to take away a piece of your set.’ And it would. There was nothing we could do but adjust our schedule. It was a fascinating process, especially for me, as a person who’s lived in New York City for a thousand years, to go out there and find myself actively negotiating a relationship with nature just to get my work done.”
Despite careful planning to avoid storm season, production was slammed on its second day by a Nor’easter, with 55 mph winds and rain. It was the earliest storm to hit the area in the past 30 years, bringing with it the highest tides seen in more than a decade. “The tide washed most of the sand out from under the house,” says Oscar®-winning production designer Patrizia von Brandenstein (“Amadeus”), referring to the story’s primary exterior set-an existing local structure that became the movie’s inn-which not only lost up to four feet of sand from its foundation but also two flights of 18-foot steps, along with props and equipment that had been stored there. “It was still standing, but at a very precarious angle. With the loose sand washed away, we saw big bags of sand that had been placed under the house to stabilize it during a prior storm, plus newly exposed roots and stumps of Cyprus trees, probably centuries old, that appeared at the water’s edge, left over from a time when this area was a coastal forest.”
Under von Brandenstein’s guidance, the crew brought in several additional construction units from nearby Wilmington and worked over the next four days to rebuild. “The two sets of stairs that washed down the beach were found a couple of weeks later and dragged back,” she says. “In the spirit of recycling, we found a use for it in our other sets, and that was appropriate, in a way, to the story. I like the idea of salvage, of taking something that appears ruined and remaking it. You see it in the way that Adrienne carves driftwood into treasure boxes, and then in the way that she and Paul salvage and remake their lives.”
Interiors were filmed in a comfortable two-family dwelling in Topsail Island, about 40 miles outside Wilmington, converted into a larger space to accommodate the inn’s lounge, dining room and kitchen by the removal of a few walls.
For Wolfe, the inn itself became “an integral character in the story, a place with history and a soul, laden with the years and peoples’ lives, and a kind of home to spiritual forces.” Mindful of the region’s unique multicultural history and imagining a rich backstory for Jean and her ancestral home, he sought to work some of those elements into the inn’s décor with the myriad, spiritually-themed artwork of generations sharing space with Jean’s own creations and the collected treasures of her interests and explorations.
Another remnant of Rodanthe’s spiritual heritage became one of the inn’s most striking exterior details, its deep blue shutters-known locally, Wolfe discovered, as “haint blue” and likely dating back to a time when survivors of slave ship wrecks settled in the area, adding the influence of their cultures and religions to the indigenous population.
According to custom, people would paint the shutters of their homes blue to keep away the “haints”-or haunts. Though tales of supernatural visitation are long gone, the custom, and the color, remains. “It’s generally a grey-blue, but ours was a sharper shade, owing to the fact that Jean likes things bright and vibrant,” says von Brandenstein.
The shutters also play a role in setting the tone for the impending storm. Their insistent banging against the widows signals trouble and helps create a sense of rising unease and volatility as it gathers momentum.
The inn and its difficult topography, the ocean and the weather together, Wolfe observes, “are representative of life. Even the fact that the house is positioned with the ocean on one side and the inter-coastal waterway on the other is emblematic of what life is, and what love is-both fragile and heroic. Most importantly, it’s enduring, even when it seems that nothing could endure.
“I think there exists inside all of us a need to see emotional truth and emotional possibilities when we watch a story unfold on screen,” he continues. “We all understand how fragile life is, how fragile love is, and how precious the time we have with each other. In some ways happiness is like an air bubble; you grasp it too tightly and it’s gone. It’s wonderful to see two people still learning about who they are and re-awakening to the idea that great love is possible.”
“I hope audiences will feel as though they have lived through something with these characters,” says Di Novi. “I would love to think they might be inspired and uplifted and maybe walk out of the theater with a slightly different perspective. They might want to find that special person if they haven’t yet, or hold them a little tighter if they have.”
Nights in Rodanthe (2008)
Directed by: George C. Wolfe
Starring: Richard Gere, Diane Lane, Scott Glenn, James Franco, Christopher Meloni, Viola Davis, Mae Whitman, Pablo Schreiber, Mae Whitman, Carolyn McCormick, Pablo Schreiber, Jessica Lucas
Screenplay by: Ann Peacock, John Romano
Production Design by: Patrizia Von Brandenstein
Cinematography by: Alfonso Beato
Film Editing by: Brian A. Kates
Costume Design by: Victoria Farrell
Set Decoration by: James Edward Ferrell Jr.
Art Direction by: William G. Davis
Music by: Jeanine Tesori
MPAA Rating: PG-13 for some sensuality.
Studio: Warner Bros. Pictures
Release Date: October 3, 2008
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