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August 17, 2007
Ed Norton Helped Write Movie Screenplay?
At the San Diego Comic Convention, there was a Marvel movie panel
that included a discussion on the Hulk movie. Ed Norton was there
and he mentioned that he wrote the screenplay. Needless to say,
that lead to some confusion as Zak Penn has been stated as the screenplay
writer. The LA Times got the background on the comment:
"A few weeks ago, a minor controversy sprung out of Marvel's
"Incredible Hulk" panel at Comic-Con that had a lot of
fans both scratching their heads and pointing their fingers. And
no, it wasn't griping about Liv Tyler being cast as Betty Ross or
fears that the Hulk was going to CGI-fly again. As with most mini-scandals,
it turns out to have been both more and less than it first appeared
to be.
When it was revealed that Edward Norton, who had been cast as the
scientist-gone-green Bruce Banner, had also written the script,
it surprised and confused a lot of folks who thought that Zak Penn
had written the screenplay. Penn, who has worked on half a dozen
Marvel movies, including the last two "X-Men" installments,
"Elektra" and, as one of his first Marvel assignments
a dozen years ago, what eventually became the first, Ang Lee-directed
"Hulk," had actually spent a year writing the screenplay
before Norton became involved.
At first blush, it looked like just another case of a screenwriter
getting disrespected while a movie star with a reputation for aggressive
involvement in scripts had bullied his way into writing this one.
"Both panels were excellent for Marvel Studios," says
Marvel Studios president of production Kevin Feige, who was also
there presenting "Iron Man." "I think the only bit
of bungling on my part was not clarifying Zak's role up there in
front of 7,000 people, which I then tried to clarify in some round
tables I did 20 minutes later after the 'Iron Man' panel."
Of course, nothing prevented Norton from speaking up about Penn,
and it didn't help that the actor, by many accounts a very smart
guy (and a closet comic book geek), had long since acquired a reputation
for stepping on writers' toes when it came to script revisions.
Widely credited with doing substantial uncredited work on "Frida"
for then-girlfriend Salma Hayek (who was the film's producer and
star), Norton had also shown up on the set of "Red Dragon,"
for example, with new script pages not only for his character but
for Dr. Hannibal Lecter as well. Other people on the film describe
director Brett Ratner fighting with Norton over the issue, and Anthony
Hopkins reportedly expressed his comfort with speaking the original
lines written by Ted Tally, an Oscar winner for his adaptation of
"Silence of the Lambs." (Norton's publicist maintains
that Ratner asked him to write new pages.)
In the case of "Hulk," after another writer's treatment
was declined in early 2006, Marvel hired Penn, who wrote three drafts
over a year. By spring 2007, Penn was about to go off to promote
his movie "The Grand," but the studio and the director,
Louis Leterrier ("The Transporter"), still felt that the
screenplay needed work.
When Norton came in to meet about starring as Banner in April,
the film had already been greenlighted and there were just three
months before shooting was scheduled to begin, just after Independence
Day. But Norton had well-established (if underground) writing experience
and strong ideas about how to separate the film from any confusion
over its connection to the 2003 Ang Lee version by casting it in
a more distinct, starting-over vein like "Batman Begins"
or "Casino Royale."
So Norton's initial deal included payment not just for his acting
services but for his writing talents too, with his draft contractually
stipulated to be turned around in less than a month. As it turned
out, Norton delayed work on another screenplay job to do "Hulk,"
and he continues to tweak the script as principal photography hits
its halfway point outside Toronto.
Meanwhile, Penn is writing a big-budget version of "The Avengers"
and yet another potential "X-Men" spinoff."
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