Window shuts on A View from the Bridge
The curtain falls on Anthony LaPaglia’s long-cherished dream of filming Arthur Miller’s play.

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Anthony LaPaglia’s 14-year quest to produce and star in a movie based on Arthur Miller’s celebrated play A View from the Bridge is over.
The Miller estate has turned down a pitch by LaPaglia and his Australian co-producer Stephen Van Mil to renew the film rights, which expired on Tuesday.
Impian Films founder Van Mil had New York-based Bella Donna Films ready to supervise production of the film, which would have been shot in Gotham, with Ray Lawrence directing from a screenplay by Andrew Bovell, and LaPaglia set to play an unhappily-married Brooklyn longshoreman who falls in love with his niece.
This week Van Mil was in discussions with Maarten Kooij of ICM Talent, agent for the Miller Trust, which ended yesterday when the agent emailed: “Further to your call earlier today, we've now discussed your View from the Bridge proposal with our clients at the Miller Trust and I'm afraid the response is a polite but firm no.”
A disappointed Van Mil suspects the Miller Trust, which is headed by Miller’s daughter, actress-director Rebecca Miller, may be doing a deal on the film rights with another party.
He said the subject of a fee to extend the option was never raised by ICM. “I just asked for another year: they wouldn’t even grant me another day,” he told SBS Film.
“I understand the Miller Trust’s frustration but we had significant international interest, an excellent screenplay and Ray Lawrence was committed. It was a whole new ball game.”
LaPaglia first secured the rights after starring in the Broadway revival of the play in 1997-98 and was hopeful that Van Mil could engineer a deal. Two weeks ago he told SBS, “I've had 14 years to get the film up. And despite being very close so many times, I was not able to successfully drag it over the line. The feeling is, and I agree, that it's time for someone else to take the reins and give this material the respect it deserves.”
LaPaglia has no shortage of work, having recently voiced the character of Boss Skua in George Miller’s Happy Feet 2 and co-starred in writer-director P.J. Hogan’s comedy Mental, which Universal will release in Australia. In that he plays a philandering politician who commits his wife to a mental hospital after she has a nervous breakdown, finds himself alone with five teenage daughters he barely knows and impulsively hires a hitchhiker (Toni Collette) as a nanny.
Among his current and upcoming projects, he’ll be seen in Long Time Gone, based on April Stevens' novel about a mysterious woman (Christina Ricci) who enters the life of a dysfunctional family and turns it upside down; and Save Your Legs, an Australian/Bollywood co-production about a cricket tragic who takes his local D-grade team on a tour of India.
Early next year he’s set to star in The Grandmothers, the saga of two fiftysomething women, each of whom is having an affair with the other's son, based on a Doris Lessing novel and directed by Anne Fontaine; and in Quentin Tarantino’s spaghetti Western Django Unchained, with an all-star cast headed by Leonardo DiCaprio, Jamie Foxx, Christoph Waltz, Samuel L. Jackson and Kurt Russell.
Comments (6)
read between the lines
LaPaglia may well play the role, but he knows it's not going to happen with this producer. LaPaglia himself says: "The feeling is, and I agree, that it's time for someone else to take the reins." He's saying Van Mil's time is up and he'd prefer a new producer get it together.
16 Oct 2011 17:49 AEST
From: NYC, NY
Very Disappointing
I will disagree most whole heartedly with Tesla. It can take a long time for a film project to get off the ground and let's face it, it was never going to be a huge profit making film (but one that would need to be made for posterity's sake). Unless the dollar signs are there, major studios aren't interested. I had the privilege to see Mr. Lapaglia's performance on Broadway and he was spellbinding, I'm sure he could have carried this through to his film. I also saw the recent revival with Liev Schreiber and it didn't quite have the same effect. They should have given Mr. Lapaglia some more time, as it appeared to be all ready to go anyway.
16 Oct 2011 13:17 AEST
From: Toorak
Come on
They had 14 years to make this happen. You can hardly blame the estate for not taking back the rights after so long.
16 Oct 2011 9:07 AEST
From: NZ
This SUCKS!
I can only echo what Phishy and Tiff have written. This is just the biggest load of crap. LaPaglia was the man for this and while it has taken him and his co-producer a long time to get it organised, they were practically there; to have it pulled out from under them at the last minute just shows the Miller Trust/Rebecca Miller to be a bunch of heartless academics more interested in money than Arthur Miller's wishes. Boo and shame on you Miller Trust -any film that is going to be made will not be getting my ticket money or support. Oh, and Rebecca Miller is married to Daniel Day Lewis. If he turns up in a film version, then we know it was also nepotism...
14 Oct 2011 22:47 AEST
From: Georgia
AVFTB without Lapaglia isnt a good View
I am very saddened to hear this news. Mr. Lapaglia would have really done this project justice, but some people dont recognize the talent this man truly possess. So after 14 years of seeing the man, give this project everything he has, they decide to trll him NO after being the closes he has ever been to get this movie rolling. Great job Miller estate, you lost me as a fan of this film.
13 Oct 2011 23:54 AEST
From: NY, NY
Demolish that Bridge
The Miller Estate can kiss my @$$. There is NO WAY I will ever see any version of "A View From the Bridge" that does NOT star Anthony LaPaglia as Eddie. Arthur Miller personally gave LaPaglia the rights to the play and Rebecca Miller is spitting on her father's grave by taking those rights away. Exactly what I expected from a greedy Hollywood brat. I hope she chokes on the rights and is haunted by her father's ghost nightly.
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17 Oct 2011 9:28 AEST
Tesla
From: Toorak