The problem with biopics is when they try to include too much. Movies need a narrative structure and movies that try to do from birth to death don’t have the correct structure. They are best when they concentrate on one time or event in their lives and skim what comes before.
Squanto. He had such an interesting life being kidnapped by what may as well have been aliens and taken to their world. Then coming back to his and finding his people have been wiped out and teaming with the aliens to get revenge. So cinematic.
Robert Smalls. Escapes slavery by taking over a confederate warship and piloting her to union hands. Convinces Lincoln to allow blacks to serve in the union military. Rescues his ship will under fire and is promoted to captain. Goes to the Republican convention where he learns to read and write and is instrumental in integrating public transportation in Philadelphia. Later become a congressman.
Whitaker Chambers- Becomes a spy for the USSR, then quits, and tries to warn FDR about other spies. Becomes an editor for Time magazine. Agrees to testify against the other spies but no one believes him because he is dumpy, from a poor background, and the person he is accusing is so powerful. He is accused of being crazy and having a homosexual crush on the person he is accusing. He then produced evidence that he has been hiding in a pumpkin patch that proves his allegations and the spy is arrested and put in prison.
You open with “pre-teen version of star shown having what we’ll recognize as a formative experience. Also, the parents messed up.”
Then there’s probably a “got his first” (guitar/piano/Theremin) scene.
A “decreasingly sucking at it” montage.
First taste of success/failure!
Long nights dedicated to the craft. Sitting in a dark room under a desklight. Wife appears at doorway in nightgown. “C’mon honey, come to bed.” “Not till this is finished! Don’t you understand?!?” “I never understood this!”
The making it big concert they almost didn’t make it to, which is somehow one song.
Clair Patterson, the Caltech geochemist who, while trying to determine the age of the Earth through ratios of lead isotopes, discovered the massive airborne contamination of the environment due to the use of the anti-knock tetraethyllead in gasoline, and championed its removal (as well as elimination of other common sources of household and consumer lead contamination, such as lead solder in food cans) despite decades of obstructionism, obfuscation, and outright threats by the Ethyl Corporation and its benefactors in addressing the environmental harms of lead contamination. Oh, and he also did make the most accurate and precise estimate of the age of the Earth prior to return of Lunar samples from the Apollo missions and modern radiometric dating methods.
[In response to my suggestion of a movie about Lee Harvey Oswald]
I thought that it could be the antidote to the movie JFK, which was heavily fictionalized. After watching a movie about Oswald’s life (the dysfunction as a kid, the problems in the military, the journeys back and forth from the Soviet Union, the attempt to kill General Walker), I’d like to think an audience would walk out going, “yep, shooting the President sounds about right for that wackjob.”
There’s about 200 pages in Reclaiming History (written by Vincent Bugliosi) that serves as biography which could make the basis for a good screenplay.
Plus just because the studio makes a superhero movie doesn’t mean they can’t also make movies about “real humans who are more deserving”. Quite the opposite actually. The superhero movies are the tentpoles that support the studios and allow the smaller pictures to be made.
Governor of two states (Tennessee and Texas**), U.S. Representative and Senator, President of his own country, responsible for the defeat of General Santa Ana, resulting in Texas Independence. Refused to join the Confederacy.
Lived among the Cherokees for years and was the ancestor of Will Rogers. Arrested for fighting another Congressman and defended himself in court. Wounded twice in battle but went right back in.
Yes! Great story - the only man to get a medal from both Hitler and King George VI. The Wiki article mentions the 2009 Spanish documentary, which is pretty good but not great.
Definitely. Some good CGI could do wonders both with the Wrights’ various aircraft, and the giant fleets of Nelson’s time.
Ooo, great idea!
Also agreed. Priscilla Johnson McMillan’s Marina and Lee would be a great resource. Oswald was a bully, a mooch, an egomaniac and a whiner; his only redeeming characteristic that I recall is that he opposed segregation in his native New Orleans and always made it a point to sit in the “Colored” section of city buses.
Yes! Quite a guy. His speech in response to Texas secession would be an Oscar-worthy moment for whoever plays him:
“Fellow citizens, in the name of your rights and liberties, which I believe have been trampled upon, I refuse to take this oath. In the name of the nationality of Texas, which has been betrayed by the Convention, I refuse to take this oath. In the name of the Constitution of Texas, I refuse to take this oath. In the name of my own conscience and manhood, which this Convention would degrade by dragging me before it, to pander to the malice of my enemies, I refuse to take this oath. I deny the power of this Convention to speak for Texas…I protest…against all the acts and doings of this convention and I declare them null and void… Let me tell you what is coming. After the sacrifice of countless millions of treasure and hundreds of thousands of lives, you may win Southern independence if God be not against you, but I doubt it. I tell you that, while I believe with you in the doctrine of states’ rights, the North is determined to preserve this Union. They are not a fiery, impulsive people as you are, for they live in colder climates. But when they begin to move in a given direction, they move with the steady momentum and perseverance of a mighty avalanche; and what I fear is, they will overwhelm the South.”
**Alexander von Humboldt **founded physical and human geography…by doing badass fieldwork from 1799 to 1803, everywhere in Latin America. Among other feats, he climbed nearly to the top of Chimborazo, an Andean peak higher than 20,000 feet in altitude – mainly to measure the relationships among elevation, temperature, and vegetation.
The book Beyond Bravery is the fascinating first-hand account of Witold Pilecki, the Polish officer who snuck *into *Auschwitz – and stayed there for years – to document the atrocities and help save lives from the inside, obviously at huge risk to himself. And he survived! … only to die at the hands of Soviets, early in the Cold War. Quite a story.