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Entertainment

127 Hours sought honest account amid drama

Among the biggest challenges facing the team behind Danny Boyle's heart-pounding 127 Hours was how to recount faithfully the tale of Aron Ralston, the outdoorsman driven to amputate his hand after being trapped in a remote Utah canyon for nearly a week.

James Franco praises survivor for courage

Outdoorsman Aron Ralston, left, poses with actor James Franco at the 127 Hours press conference Sunday during the Toronto International Film Festival. ((Joe Scarnici/Getty Images))
Among the biggest challenges facing the team behind Danny Boyle's kinetic, heart-pounding 127 Hours was how to recount faithfully the tale of Aron Ralston, the outdoorsman driven to amputate his hand after being trapped in a remote Utah canyon for nearly a week.

Aside from what star, James Franco, described as an intense, difficult shoot, the filmmakers wrestled with telling Ralston's real-life tale.

"It's his story," said Simon Beaufoy, who co-wrote the script with director Boyle, said Sunday in a press conference at theToronto International Film Festival. "Somehow you have to balance the actuality of what happened with the demands of drama, which are often very different, and yet somehow present an authentic experience.

"It's being able to be honest about the depths, the different layers of a person's personality the flaws of that person's personality while he's still with us. We could only do it because Aron was so incredibly open about himself."

Ralston, whose horrific yet triumphant ordeal in 2003propelled him to re-evaluate his life and renew his relationships with his friends and family, revealed that he initially turned Boyle down in 2006 because he preferred a more factual retelling, versus a drama.

Music and sound effectsare key storytelling tools in a typical Danny Boyle film. 127 Hours ranges from the rock 'n' roll, multi-screened opening set toChopin's Nocturne No. 2 in E-flat major, weaving through a dreamy memory sequence, to stark silences save for James Franco's tense breaths and boulder-chiselling.

For his latest film, Boylereunites with his Slumdog collaborator A.R. Rahman, whom he hailed as "absolutely genius."

"It's quite rare to work with someone who musically is that extraordinary, really," the passionate music fan said of the Indian film composer, producer and recording artist.

"It doesn't matter what we all do visually, One thing I've learned in my career is that 70 per cent of a movie is sound," Boyle said. "If you run any of these films without sound, after three or four minutes, forget it. Or if the sound quality is poor, forget it.

"That's one piece of advice I always give to young filmmakers: if you're starting off, save some money for the sound budget at the end and keep it, because it's extraordinary how much it means to people."

After some thought and seeing what Boyle did with his 2008 indie blockbuster Slumdog Millionaire, he changed his mind.

"It was giving [my story] to them and understanding and trusting, too, that there is more than one way of getting to this goal of conveying utterly the experience of what I went through in a genuine fashion sometimes with the hard truth and sometimes with fictional adaptations," said Ralston, who also admittedcrying through much of 127 Hours the first time he watched it.

Franco, on whom most of the 90-minute film is intimately focused, lauded Ralston's bravery in sharing with him thecamcorder videos he filmed while trapped and anticipating death. Thepersonal messages had only been shown to family and close friends, Franco said, as Ralston nodded in agreement.

"That was gold for an actor because I got to see him in that situation, in the moment when he was in the middle of it, not knowing he was going to get out," said Franco, who portrays Ralston as an outgoing and charismatic, but somewhat foolhardy, adventurer ultimately saved by his courage and will to survive.

"I was watching a guy accepting his own death, but not wallowing in self-pity. He held this respect for everyone he addressed. It was very, very powerful and it was one of the things that guided me through."

Francoisearning acclaim forhis intense, dramatic turn in 127 Hours, following hisroles in Judd Apatow comedies such as Pineapple Express,the Spider-Man franchise and Apatow's cult high school TV series Freaks and Geeks.

Danny Boyle gestures during the TIFF press conference for his film 127 Hours. ((Jessica Wong/CBC))
The actor and budding filmmaker, who balanced 127 Hours with studies at New York University and Columbia University, praised his experience working with Oscar-winner Boyle, who tells Ralston's story ina fast-paced, colour-saturated, music-infusedmanner.

"[Boyle] really does love the search and the experimentation and finding new approaches to moviemaking," Franco said. "It was really exciting. I felt like we were really discovering things together."

Boyle had urged his actors to be "constantly moving," recalled co-star Amber Tamblyn, but there was a reason for infusing the shoot with a feverish pace.

"I believed it would affect the texture of the film, the feeling of the film. Because obviously the film is incredibly inert in one sense, and I thought it'd be absolutely catastrophic if it remained inert," Boyle said.

"We forced everybody to keep working pushing, pushing in the hope that it would bleed into the film. That sense of restlessness would bleed into the film and make it bearable to watch."

127 Hours has its TIFF debut Sunday evening. It will also screen again Monday and next Saturday, ahead of a wider theatrical debut this fall. TIFF continues through Sept. 19.

Corrections

  • An earlier version of this story said Aron Ralston amputated his left hand after being trapped in a Utah canyon. In fact, Ralston amputated his right hand.
    Sep 13, 2010 9:05 AM ET