I don't understand why, when writing a biopic, one would choose to ignore facts in favor of making stuff up.
I understand the need to streamline things and omit unnecessary details—you're making a feature film, not a documentary—but when you start inventing people who never existed and events that never happened because the actual person's life apparently wasn't interesting enough, you probably need to rethink your subject matter. All you're doing is annoying people who know what really happened.
I understand the need to streamline things and omit unnecessary details—you're making a feature film, not a documentary—but when you start inventing people who never existed and events that never happened because the actual person's life apparently wasn't interesting enough, you probably need to rethink your subject matter. All you're doing is annoying people who know what really happened.
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I don't know either of those productions, but it does sound like a classic case of someone arbitrarily deciding that what the script needs is to 'personalise the conflict' (e.g. in the remake, Zorro can't just be motivated by observing manifest injustice, he has to have had his wife and child personally abducted/molested by the designated villain!) I can easily see a scriptwriters' conference deciding that Lucky Luciano would make a more relatable protagonist if we invent a few personal slights for him to avenge, as opposed to having him act against 'the system'... (remember Fatty Arbuckle saying that the average mental age of motion-picture-goers was only that of a twelve-year-old?)
'Disrespecting' gangsters is a proverbially bad idea... :-D
(As for Harriet Tubman, you're talking to someone who barely knows the difference between Harriet Tubman and Henrietta Lacks -- it depends on the target audience.)
My guess would be that most people don't know anything about Al Capone beyond a vague idea that he was a Chicago gangster who shot up a lot of people as a result of Prohibition in America (and maybe that he famously ended up getting arrested for tax evasion instead), or much about Errol Flynn beyond a general impression of someone who swung around on ropes and fought with swords, and slept with lots of women -- and maybe had a moustache ;-p
By 'urban legend' I meant that people don't know who they are, but have heard the name... much like the Phantom of the Opera, or Frankenstein's Monster.
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You're probably right.
The thing about Lucky Luciano was that he was a lot more open-minded and forward-thinking than many people of his time. He encouraged his fellow Italians to work with each other, rather than against each other, and with non-Italians. His two closest and most trusted associates were Jewish in a time when friendship and cooperation between people of different ethnicities were virtually unheard of. Essentially, he was a visionary. I respect and admire that. Take that away, and you're stripping him of perhaps the one virtue he possessed.
The difference between Harriet Tubman and Henrietta Lacks is that even elementary schoolers can probably tell you who Harriet Tubman was and what she did, whereas I doubt most adults nowadays have heard of Henrietta Lacks. :P
Even people who don't know anything about the Prohibition era have heard of Al Capone. Anyone who recognizes the name Errol Flynn probably knows at least a little bit about film history.
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In your country, possibly -- neither of them are on the curriculum over here :-D
(I happen to know about Henrietta Lacks, or at least about her cell culture, because I read the blurb of a book called "The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks"; when you mentioned Harriet Tubman I genuinely thought at first that was who you were talking about!)
Without looking her up, I have a vague idea that Harriet Tubman was something to do with the American 'Underground Railroad', and therefore either black or a Quaker (but probably not both). And I'm pretty well educated, and know a bit of American history.
I suspect that about as many people in England are aware of her existence as Americans are of Hannah More or Octavia Hill...
I only know that I was aware of his existence long before I started watching 'old films'; Errol Flynn as Robin Hood is, or was, one of those memes that have become part of popular culture, like the Disney classics, for people who haven't necessarily even seen the films in question and certainly wouldn't dream of watching anything else from the period. But maybe modern generations have had the 'Boys' Own adventure' ethos censored out of their existence :-(