| 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.
“Everybody was coming up all the time and asking ‘Did
you hear what added up to 23 today?’” says Jim Carrey. “There
was always something, everybody got into it. That’s what
I hope for people when they leave the theater, that they kind
of start looking around and find those things. I’m really
drawn to movies that are about more than just the plot itself.
Movies that somehow capture a social phenomenon like Jaws captured
our fear of the ocean, our fear of the unknown in sharks. I think
this movie captures a real phenomenon that’s going on out
there. The 23 enigma is everywhere, and this movie puts its finger
on that.”
Carrey
and the rest of the team became well versed in the 23 mythology. “In life, 23 seems to be attached to a lot of
different things – good and bad,” notes Carrey. “You’ve
got Michael Jordan and LeBron James, who both wear number 23.
David Beckham just changed his number to 23. Then you’ve
got O.J. Simpson, the infamous athlete who wore 32 – 23
reversed. You’ve also got Nicole Simpson and Ronald Goldman,
whose names combined have 23 letters. It just goes on and on.
It’s everywhere.”
But not everybody was quick to get caught up in the symbolism
of the number on set. Schumacher found himself debunking superstitions
as quickly as people were discovering them.
“I try not to get caught up in it anymore, because when
we were making the film, the cast and crew became so obsessed
with the number,” says the director. “People’s
children, the internet, it becomes this every day thing. Somebody
would look at the slate and we’re doing the 23rd take of
the 23rd scene, and it happens to be February 23rd. Then everybody
goes, ‘No way…’ and nothing happens. You do
take 23 or not, and then you go on. But the cameras didn’t
explode, we didn’t win a million dollars in the lottery.
Nothing happened except that it was the 23rd take on the 23rd
day – oooohhh.”
Schumacher
continues, “I do have my own superstitions,
and there were some things that happened on the movie with 23’s.
But maybe if we were making a movie called ‘Twenty-Eight,’ that
would have happened also. I don’t know.”
Even
Virginia Madsen, who was initially a skeptic, began to notice
strange coincidences. “My mother bought a new place,
and the address has the number 23 on it. Then a parking space
that was assigned to me was number 23. And when Jim and I filmed
a scene in a car on a flatbed, every time we went to the beginning
of the shot we found ourselves on 32nd St. Jim is so satisfied
when it happens, but I try my best not to pay attention. I’ve
decided it’s just too haunting.”
Whatever
people’s feelings were about the 23 phenomenon,
Jim Carrey points out that all the conjecture made for an interesting
shoot. “What’s really fun about this whole concept
of the 23 is that it taps into this need people have to believe
in magical things,” he says.
Magic or not, the 23 enigma is sure to capture the attention
of audiences. But at the end of the day, The Number 23 is about
much more than just numerology.
“I don’t know about any enigmas. I wanted to tell
a story and I thought this is a damn good story to tell,” says
Schumacher. “If people want to see this movie just as a
thriller, that’s fine with me. But I think there are many
other elements to it. It’s essentially a film about responsibility
because I believe in that very strongly. I think we have to take
responsibility for everything we have done, and I think when
we avoid that it can be like a disease, like a physical disease
of the soul.”
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Synopsis
Spiraling into a dark obsession with the number 23, Walter Sparrow (Jim Carrey)
twists his once idyllic life into an inferno of psychological torture that
could possibly lead to his death as well as the deaths of his loved ones.
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