| The Challenges of The Number 23 With
the cast on board, the filmmakers set about figuring out exactly
how they would bring this story to life on screen. While Fernley
Phillips’ screenplay was unique, it was a complicated
story which still needed some tweaking in order to successfully
translate to the screen. Specifically, Schumacher knew that they
would need to figure out the best way to bring the characters
in the book – Detective Fingerling and the femme fatale,
Fabrizia – to life in the film.
“The way the script was written, the fantasy world was
actually more computer generated – the way Fernley had
first envisioned it, the characters were somewhat gray, amorphous
people with black hollowed-out eyes,” explains Schumacher. “The
first thing I explained to Fernley was that it would be very
hard for anyone to get emotionally involved with those shapes
for a whole movie. And I thought it would be great for the actor
to play the duality. What happened with Jim and Virginia is that
they really did become other people because Fingerling as the
detective and Virginia as the femme fatale in the movie are totally
different human beings from Walter and Agatha, although they
certainly have some of them in them.”
The
key for Schumacher was to succeed in having the characters
in the book sequences be dark reflections of the characters
in the main story – Walter and Agatha.
“It’s a movie about self-revelation and each chapter
of the book is designed to be reflective of the content,” says
Schumacher. “There are haunting questions that each chapter
brings up with, not only Walter, but his son and some of the
people around him. Many things become disturbing. I think everybody
has read books or seen movies or plays where there are parts
that closely mirror their own lives, maybe unspoken things that
seem to disturb someone when they’re experiencing it.”
Schumacher
also knew that the look of the film – particularly
the visualization of the book sequences – would be crucial
to hooking audiences into this dark and surreal world. To create
the look of the film, he put together a talented production team
which included cinematographer Matthew Libatique (The Fountain,
Inside Man), production designer Andrew Laws (The Break-Up, Derailed),
and costume designer Daniel Orlandi (The Da Vinci Code, Cinderella
Man). Together, they created not only the stark look of a modern
day thriller, but the dark and disturbing design of the literary
nether world of The Number 23.
NEXT
23
On The Set
Since obsession with the number 23 forms the backbone of the film, it only
seems logical that some of that obsession would spill over to the production
itself. In fact, members of the cast and crew seemed to be aware of the presence
of 23 in just about everything they were doing
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