By Farah Cheded
The director and actor certainly make a surprising pair.
As per Deadline, Joe Wright is set to make yet another post-Pan career pivot with the movie adaptation of “Stoner,” a recently re-discovered and critically acclaimed 1965 novel by “writer’s writer” John Williams. The screenplay will be written by Andrew Bovell (A Most Wanted Man), while in more characteristic move, Casey Affleck will augment his list of understated turns as William Stoner, the book’s self-effacing hero.
A fair warning: despite its suggestive title and the fact that it was penned during the age of hippies, the movie’s source material is not about a pot-smoker, so don’t expect a stoner bro comedy from the Atonement director (would you ever go into a Casey Affleck movie anticipating light entertainment, though?). Instead, it is, ostensibly, a concise tale of one man’s life and the many disappointments that fill it, from his failed marriage and aloof father-daughter relationship to a foiled love affair and a promising academic career spoilt by professional rivalry.
Born at the tail end of the 19th century, William Stoner is the quiet, unassuming only child of a struggling Missouri farming family. When he comes of age, someone suggests he might study agriculture at college to breathe new life into the family farm, and so he is duly loaded up with expectation and shipped off to learn the riveting science of soil.
But before his parents’ dreary dream can come true, a bolt from the blue hits William, dramatically changing the course of his life. Forced to take a survey class on English literature, the otherwise poorly read young man discovers a dormant passion for the subject, and swiftly (and without word to his parents) changes his major. This is, the book suggests, the first thing William has ever truly done for himself.
A middling academic career and domestic disappointment follow. Not for lack of bravery, William stays at university throughout both World Wars and the Great Depression, remaining unscathed from their horrors and therefore depriving readers of the dramatic spectacles and tragic literary power of war and poverty.
The New Yorker called it “the greatest American novel you’ve never heard of.” But if nothing especially of note happens, where does it draw its prestige from? Not from dramatic flair or counterculture credentials. It’s the sort of quietly brilliant book that was bound to get lost amongst the more obviously revolutionary output of its time, but thanks to its persistent, stirring power, it has recently been unearthed from relative obscurity to be exalted as a literary treasure.
Like its protagonist, “Stoner” is humble and unassuming, a quietly brilliant, affecting book that conveys the story of William’s life (by all accounts, full of failure) with a true-to-life realism that doesn’t insist on pity for its oft-frustrated protagonist. Instead, William is something of a hero, albeit a passive one. In under 300 pages, we witness him trudge along and receive life’s many blows without so much as a complaint. This is why the novel is so highly acclaimed: its protagonist is the type of everyman conspicuously absent in so much art — one who suffers and endures without ever being soothed by the sense that he’s not alone. He is alone, as so many are, making this novel oddly comforting in its full, compassionate acknowledgement of a life that would otherwise be confined to the footnotes.
While Joe Wright is no stranger to producing cinematic magic from legendary literary sources, this project isn’t exactly a natural fit at first glance. There is a muted-ness about the book that doesn’t automatically connect with his oeuvre. Wright’s films Pride & Prejudice, Atonement, and Anna Karenina all boast celebrated novels as their basis and have earned critical respect and audience esteem in their own regard, too. But these works offer obvious drama and allure, ample theatrics out of which Wright could fashion stunning visual tableaus. “Stoner,” however, is completely devoid of romantic Dunkirk moments and opportunities for highly choreographed meet-cutes (see this or this).
The article Joe Wright Tackles the Great American Novel With Casey Affleck appeared first on Film School Rejects.
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