Tagline: Visionary. Lover. Dreamer. Fighter. Legend. Icon. “Amelia.”
An extraordinary life of adventure, celebrity and continuing mystery comes to light in “Amelia,” a vast, thrilling account of legendary aviation pioneer Amelia Earhart (two time Academy Award winner Hilary Swank).
Amelia movie storyline. Hilary Swank plays Amelia Earhart, a noted American aviation pioneer, author and women’s rights advocate who disappeared over the central Pacific Ocean near Howland Island during an attempt to make a circumnavigational flight of the globe in 1937.
After becoming the first woman to fly across the Atlantic, Amelia Earhart (Hilary Swank) was thrust into a new role as America’s sweetheart – the legendary “goddess of light,” known for her bold, larger-than-life charisma. Yet, even with her global fame solidified, her belief in flirting with danger and standing up as her own, outspoken woman never changed.
She was an inspiration to people everywhere, from First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt (Cherry Jones) to the men closest to her heart: her husband, promoter and publishing magnate George P. Putnam (Golden Globe winner Richard Gere), and her long time friend and lover, pilot Gene Vidal (Ewan McGregor). In the summer of 1937, Amelia set off on her most daunting mission yet: a solo flight around the world that she and George both anxiously foresaw as destined, whatever the outcome, to become one of the most talked-about journeys in history.
From award-winning director Mira Nair and starring Academy Award winner Hilary Swank in the title role, comes the true story of the woman who won the hearts of the nation with her daring dreams of flight. Celebrated as the first aviatrix to fly solo across the Atlantic Ocean, Amelia Earhart led a bold and uncompromising life as a woman ahead of her time, an adventurer who refused to see limits, and a symbol of American spirit. AMELIA chronicles her skyrocketing rise to fame; the record-shattering flights that forged her image as “Lady Lindy”; a love life complicated by her devotion to flight and freedom; and a legacy of courage, social advocacy, and independence.
Amelia’s World: The Design
When it came to the look of AMELIA, Mira Nair was most inspired by the things in life that inspired Earhart herself – vibrant style, the spirit of adventure, and most of all, the call of nature’s wide open spaces. “Amelia was wedded to nature, to the elements, to the skies, to the ocean. These were the elements she loved and these were the elements that swallowed her — so I wanted to use landscape to capture the part of the world she was drawn to the most,” says Nair. “Shooting in South Africa, Nova Scotia and Newfoundland allowed us to really do that.”
Nair collaborated closely in creating the film’s look with cinematographer Stuart Dryburgh, who garnered an Academy Award nomination for the stunning, rustic imagery of Jane Campion’s THE PIANO. “Stuart is a boy’s boy who loves action, loves nature, loves planes and photographs them all beautifully,” says Nair. “He is so well suited to this story.”
Dryburgh drew inspiration from the extensive documentation that has been amassed of Amelia’s life and times – screening newsreels and pouring through period photography. Yet one of the first decisions he and Nair made was to keep the film’s visual atmosphere fresh and modern. “Amelia was, after all, a thoroughly modern woman,” says Dryburgh. “The idea was not to go for a period look, but to let the people, landscapes and aircraft really speak for themselves.” Shot in widescreen anamorphic to emphasize the vastness of Amelia’s story, Dryburgh’s other primary goal was to capture the raw thrills of solo aviation. “We wanted the audience to be able to share in her yearning for adventure,” he explains, “and her intense love of flight which overpowers all of her earthly loves.”
To achieve this, Dryburgh put together a crack aerial unit led by 2nd Unit Director Marc Wolff, a veteran helicopter pilot in his own right and a leading expert in aerial photography. “Marc covered every airplane we had that could actually fly, including vintage acrobatic bi-planes, a beautifully restored Ford Trimotor and of course Amelia’s beloved Electra,” says Dryburgh. “These are scenes that really convey the joy that Amelia felt in flying and the motivation for her whole lifestyle.”
For those planes the production could not find in a flight-worthy state – in particular the Fokker seaplane named “Friendship,” in which Amelia first crossed the Atlantic, and the Lockheed Vega in which she set many of her records – the production built replicas. In turn, these replicas were then flown “virtually” via computer animation, overseen by the film’s visual effects team at Mr. X in Toronto. Says Dryburgh: “With so much exhilaratingly real flying in the movie, our visual effects powered flights had a lot to live up to — but I think our VFX team at Mr X succeeded magnificently.”
The global landscapes that Dryburgh shot, from both above and on the ground, were largely brought to life in just one, enormously diverse country: South Africa, where Nair lived for three years, and which provided the production not only with vintage art deco airports and unending skies but also the means to forge eight different countries through which Amelia traveled, without ever crossing a border.
Nair was thrilled to have this chance to shoot in South Africa. “It was very moving for me to shoot there,” she confesses. “It was a chance to pay homage to a continent I love and it gave us the extraordinary breadth we needed to show Amelia’s travels around the world.”
The task of turning one county into several fell to production designer Stephanie Carroll, with whom Nair has repeatedly worked with since THE PEREZ FAMILY. “Stephanie rock and rolls between India and America with me with great ease and great love. She has an eye like no other, a sensibility like no other — deeply informed by art and always seeing with fresh eyes,” says the director. “In South Africa, she just bloomed, giving us a true diversity of international looks and merging natural elements with high design, much like Amelia did in life.”
Carroll faced a daunting task ahead. “There was a lot of research that had to be done in very little time,” she explains. “Mira and I both believe in creating sets and props with as much accuracy as possible – and then drawing from that the answers to what might have really happened or what things really looked like when no one was there to document them. Making the film was very much like Amelia’s life – she was always moving from location to location and so were we – it was go, go, go all the time in quick and exciting movements.”
Each set that Carroll created is layered with details she gleaned out of reading about Amelia’s itinerant life, details chosen to further reveal the inner territory of the ever-exploring character. “Every element you see on screen should, I believe, reflect the emotions of the script and somehow, subliminally the audience should feel it’s about Amelia or about flight,” she explains. “Mira really appreciates beauty and design, so it’s very creatively rewarding to work with her.”
In South Africa, Carroll’s work was about transformation. For example, one of her biggest challenges was turning a grassy airfield in the Transkei into the Lae airstrip in New Guinea, where Amelia was last seen before disappearing. “Finding the right airfield was much harder than you might think because flying the Electra has certain demands, so we had to find just the right balance between historical accuracy, what the plane needed and what we could afford,” she points out. “We ended up using an old military airport and turning it into a far more tropical locale.”
Equally key was overseeing the design of numerous historical planes. “We were basically fabricating planes that don’t exist any longer,” says Carroll. “But we knew that many aviation enthusiasts would be seeing the film so we felt a real responsibility to be authentic.”
To help recreate the Fokker F7 seaplane and Lockheed Vega, the filmmakers recruited visual consultant Paul Austerberry, who oversaw the fabrication and construction of all the vintage planes. “Paul did a fabulous job and the film could not have happened without him,” says Carroll. Austerberry tracked down the original Dutch drawings of the F7 from the Fokker factory in Holland to match up the airframe structure and fuselage – and drew from photographic evidence to forge the plane’s 29 foot-long pontoons used for water landings. He also was able to use the wrecked fuselage of a Lockheed Vega to rebuild the plane’s structure replete with its original gauges. In addition, Austerberry created an interior mock-up of Amelia’s Electra that was used for some scenes in addition to the “Hazy Lily.”
The whole process, Austerberry says, was like a history course in how modern aviation first got off the ground. “Amelia’s life spanned the birth and development of human flight,” he notes. “Her first plane had a wooden fuselage and her last plane was a gleaming Art Deco wonder. In her few short years, there were incredible changes and we had the chance to reflect all of that on screen.”
More changes are reflected in the costume work of Kasia Walicka Maimone, who says “the period and character of Amelia were a dream come true for a costume designer.” Walicka Maimone, who previously collaborated with Nair on HYSTERICAL BLINDNESS, began with the thousands of archival photographs of Earhart, literally lining her walls with them for months as she began her artistic process. “I surrounded myself with these pictures and really studied and from that emerged a feeling of knowing this incredible woman intimately,” she says.
In contrast to period films that sometimes suffer from a scarcity of information, AMELIA deluged Walicka Maimone with real-life input. After all, the more Amelia was photographed, the more she began to forge her own image that evoked strength, capability and adventurousness, along with a dash of feminine glamour. “We had pictures of Amelia in every kind of outfit, from her flight stuff to her press conference outfits to her glamorous evening outfits and there was such a massive range,” observes the designer. “So Mira and I really had to sift through and find the essential looks that would define our character. It was a constant collaboration between me, Mira and Hilary Swank.”
Walicka Maimone especially enjoyed researching the history of flight uniforms – and discovering that, in the 1930s, there was no standard outfit for women pilots, which turned Amelia into a fashion pioneer as well. “A lot of Amelia’s flight outfits she designed herself,” she notes. “She brought in so many interesting twists: the French cuffed shirts, the perfectly tailored slacks and a custom-made, short leather jacket modeled after military jackets of the time. With that jacket, she started her own fashion trend.”
By 1934, Amelia had started Amelia Earhart Fashion Designs, with a line of clothing at Macy’s. Her look was instantly recognizable — streamlined, ready-for-action with a powerful, unfussy elegance – and that was the essence at which Walicka Maimone aimed.
The designer’s team ultimately created many of the film’s outfits from scratch because vintage items were too fragile to withstand the intense production. In doing so, Walicka Maimone kept one eye on the authentic past and another on women’s fashion of the present.
“We wanted to create a modern, relevant take on the period fashion of the 20s and 30s, which means you sometimes have to avoid the more extreme details,” she explains. “For example, we tried some real 30s hats that were just so outrageous and loud they were distracting. So the fun was figuring out how to create a bridge between the reality of what Amelia wore and the beauty of Mira’s film design.”
Nair says that Walicka Maimone walked that razor’s edge with impressive balance. “Kasia is an extraordinary artist, uncompromising and always deeply educated in the period she’s working in. The costumes for AMELIA are not only authentic, they are also something a modern girl can really relate to and want to wear, which is everything I wanted,” she comments. “I didn’t want this movie to feel like a museum, but to be completely alive.”
Further enhancing the costume work is the work of Hilary Swank’s makeup artist, Vivian Baker, and hair designer, Anne Morgan. Sums up Swank: “Without the collaboration of these two artists — Vivian who gave me Amelia’s beautiful freckles and Anne Morgan who did my short hair — there would have been no character.”
Character. That’s what lies at the heart of all of AMELIA’s elements, says Mira Nair, whether emerging via the design, the performances or the score by Gabriel Yared. She concludes: “AMELIA is about a life-loving, passionate, strong, unpredictable woman who had enormous loves in her life, both on the ground and in the air. As a visualist, I loved the possibilities that making AMELIA gave me, to form a real tapestry of the world, and to do action in a way that I hadn’t been asked to do it before. Most of all, I enjoyed in making this movie being able to show the core of what Amelia believed: that really we can do anything.”
“I hope that people are as inspired by Amelia as I was. If you have a dream, don’t be afraid to pursue it. Believe in yourself. But don’t forget to have fun along the way,” says Hilary Swank.
Continue Reading and View the Theatrical Trailer
Amelia (2009)
Directed by: Mira Nair
Starring by: Hilary Swank, Richard Gere, Ewan McGregor, Christopher Eccleston, Mia Wasikowska, Aaron Abrams, Dylan Roberts, Cherry Jones, Ryann Shane, Elizabeth Shepherd, Richard Donat
Screenplay by: Ronald Bass
Production Design by: Stephanie Carroll
Cinematography by: Stuart Dryburgh
Film Editing by: Allyson C. Johnson, Lee Percy
Costume Design by: Kasia Walicka-Maimone
Set Decoration by: Darlene Lewis, Gordon Sim
Art Direction by: Nigel Churcher
Music by: Gabriel Yared
MPAA Rating: PG for some sensuality, language, thematic elements and smoking.
Distributed by: 20th Century Fox
Release Date: October 23, 2009
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