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Changeling is an upcoming American period thriller set for release in 2008.
The film is set in late 1920s Los Angeles & is based upon the true story of
a woman who believes that the son returned to her after a kidnapping is not
her own. It was directed by Clint Eastwood & written by J. Michael
Straczynski. The film was produced by Imagine Entertainment & Malpaso
Productions for Universal Pictures. Ron Howard was originally slated to
direct, but scheduling difficulties & Universal's desire to fast track the
project led to his replacement by Eastwood.
Angelina Jolie appears in the lead role with support from Jeffrey Donovan,
John Malkovich, Jason Butler Harner, Amy Ryan, Michael Kelly, Geoff
Pierson, & Colm Feore. Principal photography began on October 15, 2007 &
was completed in November 2007. Filming took place on location in & around
Los Angeles. Changeling is scheduled for general release in North America
on October 31, 2008 after a limited release beginning on October 24, 2008.
It premiered in competition at the 61st Cannes Film Festival on May 20,
2008, where it received largely positive reviews. It had its North American
premiere on October 4, 2008 as the centerpiece of the 46th New York Film
Festival.Premise
The film is set in late 1920s Los Angeles & is based upon a real-life
incident related to the Wineville Chicken Murders, an infamous kidnapping &
murder case that spanned 1928–1930 & received nationwide attention in the
United States. When single mother Christine Collins (Jolie) returns home
from her job as a telephone operator, she finds that her nine-year-old son,
Walter, is missing. An exhaustive search for the boy proves unproductive,
but five months later a child claiming to be Walter is returned to her by
police. Despite knowing that the boy is not Walter, overcome by conflicting
emotions in the crowd of police & reporters, Collins is persuaded to take
the boy home. When Collins urges the authorities to continue looking for
her son, she is vilified as an unfit mother & branded delusional. With the
help of Reverend Gustav Briegleb (Malkovich), Collins confronts the city
authorities & corruption in the Los Angeles Police Department to find out
the truth.
Production
Several years prior to the film's production, television screenwriter &
former journalist J. Michael Straczynski was contacted by a former source
at Los Angeles City Hall. The source told him that officials were planning
to burn numerous archive documents, & that among them was "something
[Straczynski] should see". This proved to be a transcript of a City Council
welfare hearing in Christine Collins' case. Straczynski became fascinated
with the story. After twenty years working in television, writing &
producing shows such as Babylon 5 & Jeremiah, Straczynski felt he needed a
break from the medium, & he spent a year researching the case through
archived criminal, county courthouse & city hall records, before obtaining
enough information on the case to be able to "figure out how to tell it".
He wrote the first draft of the script within twelve days. Straczynski's
agent passed the script to Ron Howard, who optioned it immediately.
In June 2006, Universal Studios & Howard's Imagine Entertainment bought
the script with the intention for Howard to direct. The film was on a
shortlist of projects for Howard after coming off the commercial success of
The Da Vinci Code. Straczynski indicated that the film was talked about as
a "prestige" project for the studio, & said a number of female stars were
interested in the project before Jolie "jumped to the front of the line".
In March 2007, the production was fast tracked by Universal. When Howard
instead opted to direct Frost/Nixon, following that with Angels & Demons,
it became clear that he could not direct Changeling until 2009. After
Howard stepped down, it began to look as if the film would not be made,
despite the script's being admired in the industry (a situation Straczynski
said he had "gotten very Zen" about). Howard & Imagine partner Brian Grazer
instead began looking for other directors to helm the project. Straczynski
said that five A-list directors were interested, before Clint Eastwood
agreed to direct immediately after reading the script.
The film marked a repeat visit to territory visited by Eastwood in earlier
films: the Great Depression. Explaining his attraction to the project,
Eastwood said his memories of growing up during that time meant that
whenever a history concerning the Depression era landed in his hands, he
"redoubled his attention" upon it.
Casting
Angelina Jolie was suggested to Eastwood for the lead by producers Ron
Howard & Brian Grazer. Eastwood cast her as he felt her face was one that
fit "both contemporarily & in a period".
Angelina Jolie was suggested to Eastwood for the lead by producers Ron
Howard & Brian Grazer. Eastwood cast her as he felt her face was one that
fit "both contemporarily & in a period".
Angelina Jolie plays Christine Collins. Jolie was suggested to Eastwood
for the role by Howard & Grazer. As he felt her face fit the period
setting, Eastwood agreed. Jolie was initially reluctant to join the
production, as the film's subject was one that made her uncomfortable due
to her having children herself. The screenplay's portrayal of Collins as
having the ability to bounce back from adversity & the strength to fight
against the odds swayed Jolie, & she joined the production in March 2007.
Jolie noted that performing the role was very emotional, & she had to learn
to roller skate while wearing high heels for scenes at the telephone
exchange, a documented practice of the period. Gattlin Griffith plays
Walter Collins, with Devon Conti as his doppelganger, Arthur Hutchens—a
12-year-old who wants to escape his previous life.
Jeffrey Donovan plays J.J. Jones. Jones is the Los Angeles Police
Department captain leading the juvenile investigation unit, & Collins'
antagonist. Upon returning the boy claiming to be Collins' son to her, he
bullies Collins into accepting the boy. Lines from the real Jones' public
statements were used in a scene where Jones has Collins committed to a
mental institute. Donovan expressed his fascination & disbelief at the
amount of power Jones wielded in the city, & that he was able to have
Collins committed based solely upon his word.
John Malkovich plays Gustav Briegleb. Malkovich joined the production in
October 2007. Briegleb is a Presbyterian reverend, & pastor of the St.
Paul’s & Westlake Presbyterian churches in Los Angeles. The character is
a community activist who uses his radio show to deliver sermons that
challenge the public not to turn a blind eye to the corruption of police &
city government officials. When Collins is committed to a mental institute,
Briegleb uses his knowledge of the city's political structure to publicize
Walter's disappearance on his radio show & rally the public behind Collins'
cause. Malkovich said that the character helps Collins to find the strength
of her own voice in her battle for the truth. Eastwood deliberately cast
Malkovich against type as he felt the casting would bring "a different
shading" to the character.
Jason Butler Harner plays Gordon Northcott. Northcott is a mechanic
accused of murder. Harner described his character as "a horrible, horrible,
wonderful person". He said Northcott plays a cat-and-mouse game with
Collins, & that he believes he shares a connection with her due to their
both being in the headlines: "In his eyes, they’re kindred spirits".
Harner landed the role after a single taped audition. Casting director
Ellen Chenoweth explained that Eastwood chose Harner over more well-known
actors who desired the part due seeing "more depth & variety" in the
performer, & because he was able to project "a slight craziness" without
evoking Charles Manson. During casting, Eastwood was also surprised by the
resemblance between Northcott & Harner, saying they looked "very much"
alike when Harner was made-up.
Amy Ryan plays Carol Dexter. Dexter is a prostitute wrongfully imprisoned
by police in the same mental institute as Collins. She befriends Collins &
teaches her how to survive the treatment to which Dexter has already been
subjected. Ryan said that while her character doesn't come to blows with
Jolie's, there were "some good fight scenes" between them. Like Jolie &
Harner, Ryan didn't audition for her role in person; instead she sent in a
tape to Eastwood.
Michael Kelly plays Lester Ybarra. Ybarra is a police detective & the only
officer on the case who believes Collins. He is a composite of several
people from the historical record.
Geoff Pierson plays Sammy Hahn. Hahn is a defense attorney, known for
taking high-profile cases. He takes up Collins' case & in doing so plants
the seeds of the eventual overturning of imprisonments under "Code 12" (a
catch-all term that covered anyone who "dissented, protested, caused
trouble o. objected" to police methods).
Colm Feore plays James E. Davis. Davis is the Los Angeles chief of police,
who is keen for Collins to disappear due to the bad publicity her campaign
brings upon the department & the despotic political infrastructure led by
Mayor George E. Cryer (Reed Birney). The life & backstory of Davis was
changed from that of his historical counterpart.
Denis O'Hare plays Jonathan Steel. Another composite character, Steel is a
doctor who rules the mental institute & has a brutal approach to
psychiatric care.
Filming
The Park Plaza Hotel in Los Angeles doubled as the 1920s Los Angeles City
Council chambers.
The Park Plaza Hotel in Los Angeles doubled as the 1920s Los Angeles City
Council chambers.
Changeling was made by Imagine Entertainment & Malpaso Productions for
Universal Studios. It was produced by Imagine's Brian Grazer & Ron Howard,
with Malpaso's Robert Lorenz & Eastwood. The film was edited by Gary D.
Roach & Joel Cox, & the score is by Eastwood. Tim Moore & Jim Whitaker were
executive producers. Production design was supervised by James Murakami &
the visual effects were supervised by Michael Owens. Cinematography is by
Tom Stern. In what was described as a "technical innovation", Eastwood &
Stern used hand-held wireless video screens to watch the live feed of a
particular shot.
Principal photography began on October 15, 2007, & took 35 days. Location
scouting prior to filming revealed that many of the older buildings in Los
Angeles had been torn down, including the entire neighborhood where the
real Collins lived. Instead, suburban areas in the nearby cities of San
Dimas, San Bernardino & Pasadena doubled for 1920s Los Angeles. The visual
effects team supplemented these exterior shots with skylines & detailed
backdrops. A neighborhood in the Old Town district of San Dimas stood in
for the block of homes that housed the real Collins, as well as surrounding
areas, & was used for both interior & exterior shots. Murakami said that
the area was chosen because very little had changed since the 1920s. A
subdued color palette was used in decorating the location to evoke feelings
of comfort. For some exterior shots, the production renovated run-down
properties in neighborhoods of Los Angeles that still had surviving 1920s
architecture, & some scenes were filmed on the Universal Studios backlot,
on the New York street & at an alley next to the entrance to the King Kong
attraction. New York street was later destroyed by a fire. The Warner Bros.
backlot in Burbank, California was also used, as was the Park Plaza Hotel
in Los Angeles, which was converted into a replica of the 1920s Los Angeles
City Council chambers.
Eastwood had clear childhood memories of living in Los Angeles in the
1930s & attempted to recreate several details in the film: the town hall,
at the time one of the tallest buildings in the city; the city center,
which was one of the busiest in the world; & the "perfectly functioning"
Pacific Electric Railway, the distinctive red streetcars of which feature
closely in two scenes. The production used a fully functioning replica
streetcar for these shots, with visual effects employed for streetcars in
the background. Los Angeles City Hall, on which construction was completed
in 1928, was retouched by the effects team to remove the weathering & newer
surrounding architecture. A small farm on the outskirts of Lancaster was
used as the location for the Wineville chicken ranch. The entire farm was
recreated, with the production team using archive news photographs & visits
to the original farm where the killings took place to get a feel for the
topography & layout.
"One day we were shooting a scene where [Collins & Briegleb] talk about
her case... We started shooting at 9:30 a.m. & it was seven o. eight pages,
which is usually an 18-hour day. Around 2:30, [Eastwood] goes, 'That's
lunch & that's a wrap.'... I've made close to 100 films now & that's
certainly a phrase I've never heard in my entire life."
—John Malkovich discusses Eastwood's famously economical directorial
style, which extended to Changeling's set.
Eastwood is known for his "economical" film shoots, & his regular camera
operator (Steve Campanelli) indicated that the rapid pace at which Eastwood
shoots his films—and intimate & near-wordless direction—was also a
feature of Changeling's shoot. Eastwood limited the number of rehearsals &
takes to garner more "authentic" performances from the cast. Jolie said,
"You've got to get your stuff together & get ready because he doesn't
linger... He expects people to come prepared & get on with their work."
Campanelli sometimes had to tell Jolie what Eastwood wanted in a scene, as
Eastwood talked too softly. In order to lend verisimilitude to certain
scenes, Eastwood sometimes asked Jolie to play a scene quietly, as if just
for him. At the same time he would ask his cameraman to start filming
discreetly, without Jolie's seeing it. Some of these takes made it into the
completed film. Malkovich noted Eastwood's direction as "redefining
economical", saying that Eastwood was quiet & didn't use the usual phrases
"action" & "cut" during filming. "Some [directors]—like Clint Eastwood o.
Woody Allen—don’t really like to be tortured by a million questions.
They hire you, & they figure you know what to do, & you should do it... And
that’s fine by me." Ryan also noted the calmness of the set, observing
that her experiences working with director Sidney Lumet on 100 Centre
Street & Before the Devil Knows You're Dead were useful due to his sharing
Eastwood's preference for filming a small number of takes. Ryan cited the
filming of a fight scene during which Eastwood showed her "how to throw a
movie punch" as her favorite moment of the production.
Clothing matching the 1920s style had to be found for up to 1000 people, a
task made difficult for costume designer Deborah Hopper by the fabrics used
in the period, which were not hard-wearing. Sharp wool suits were found for
the police officers. The style for women of all classes was to dress to
create a demure silhouette, using dropped waist dresses, cloche hats that
complemented the bob cut hairstyles of the day, fur-trimmed coats & knitted
gloves. Archive media of Collins was used to replicate her look for Jolie.
She indicated that the costumes Collins wore formed an integral part of her
approach to the character, saying that the style made her "feel a little
softer & just so delicate, hidden behind it all".
Writing
"The story is just so bizarre that you need something to remind you that
I'm not making this stuff up. So it seemed important to me to put in those
clippings because you reach the part of the story where you go, 'Come on
he's got to have gone off the rails with this.' Turn the page & there is
indeed an article confirming it, which is why, in terms of writing the
script, I hued [sic] very close to the facts. The story is already
extraordinary enough."
—Screenwriter J. Michael Straczynski placed newspaper clippings into
physical copies of the script in order to remind people it was a true
story.
Straczynski stuck closely to the facts of the case while writing the
script, saying there were only two moments at which he had to "figure out
what happened", due to the lack of information in the public records. He
cited as an example a scene set in a psychiatric hospital, for which there
was only limited after-the-fact testimony. Straczynski had to extrapolate
events based upon standard practice in such institutions at the time. The
shooting script was not changed from Straczynski's first draft. Straczynski
said "Clint's funny—if he likes it, he'll do it, that's the end of the
discussion. When I met with him to ask, 'Do you want any changes, do you
want any things cut, added to, subtracted from, whatever,' he said, 'No.
The draft is fine. Let's shoot the draft.'"
Straczynski said his attraction to the project was the tenacity Collins
showed in her fight to uncover the truth, & the legacy the case left
throughout California's legal system: "My intention was very simple: to
honor what Christine Collins did." To ensure the veracity of the story,
Straczynski incorporated quotes from the historical record & direct
testimony directly into the script. He also included photocopies of news
clippings every 15–20 pages in the script in order to remind those
reading it that the story was a true one.
The title is derived from West European folklore, & refers to a creature,
a "changeling", left by fairies in place of a human child.
Release
Changeling is scheduled for general release in North America on October
31, 2008. The studio will attempt to build positive word-of-mouth for the
film by releasing it in select locations from October 24, 2008. Its
premiere was held on May 20, 2008 in competition at the 61st Cannes Film
Festival. The film was Eastwood's fifth to enter competition at the
festival. Its appearance at Cannes was not part of the original release
plan. Universal said it had been looking forward to the festival without
the worry associated with screening a film there, until Eastwood made
arrangements himself for Changeling's appearance. The film was still in
post-production one week before the start of the festival.
Changeling also appeared at the 34th Deauville American Film Festival,
held September 5–14, 2008, & had its North American premiere on October
4, 2008 as the centerpiece of the 46th New York Film Festival, screening at
the Ziegfeld Theatre.
Changeling is the first film made by Eastwood for a studio other than
Warner Bros. since Absolute Power in 1997, & is his first directed for
Universal since The Eiger Sanction in 1975. Eastwood's successful track
record at the Academy Awards generated speculation that Changeling will
find success at the 81st Academy Awards ceremony in 2009, which will honor
outstanding achievements in film for 2008.
Reception
The film's screening at the 2008 Cannes Film Festival was met by largely
positive reviews, prompting speculation it could be awarded the Palme
d'Or.[44] This eventually went to French film Entre les murs ("The
Class").[45] Damon Wise of Empire called the film "flawless",[46] & Todd
McCarthy of Variety said Changeling was "Emotionally powerful &
stylistically sure-handed". He said it was "more complex & far-reaching"
than Mystic River, Eastwood's previous entry at the festival in 2003.
McCarthy praised Jolie's performance in the lead role as "top-notch",
saying her performance "hits home" more directly than in A Mighty Heart
(2007) due to the absence of affectation. He also said the film offered "a
wealth of sterling supporting turns", praising Michael Kelly's performance
in particular. McCarthy expressed admiration for Straczynski's
"outstanding" script, which he said had "deceptive simplicity & ambition to
it", & he praised Eastwood's direction, which he said honored the script by
"underplaying the melodrama & not signaling the story's eventual dimensions
at the outset". He said, "The characters & sociopolitical elements are
introduced with almost breathtaking deliberation, as dramatic force &
artistic substance steadily mount" & that "In the end, Changeling joins the
likes of Chinatown & L.A. Confidential as a sorrowful critique of the
city's political culture."[47]
Kirk Honeycutt of The Hollywood Reporter said the story "adds a forgotten
chapter to the L.A. noir of Chinatown & L.A. Confidential". Honeycutt wrote
that due to the film's close adherence to the true-life facts of the case,
the drama sagged momentarily at one point, but that "Straczynski & Eastwood
are good at cutting to the chase. Seldom does a 141-minute movie feel this
short". Honeycutt praised Jolie's performance, saying she "completely shuns
her movie star image" & "[appears] vulnerable & steadfast in the same
moment... She reminds us that there is nothing so fierce as a mother
protecting her cub". He said the supporting characters (with the exception
of Amy Ryan's) "tend toward righteousness o. badness without too many
shades in between". Honeycutt had praise for Eastwood's "melodic" score
that "evokes not only a period but also the mood of a city... undergoing
galvanic changes" & that "[the] small-town feel to the street & sets,
seeming oh-so-quaint to modern eyes, captures a society resistant to seeing
what is really going on".
Oliver Séguret of Libération said the cast was the best part of the
film. He had praise for the "magnetic" performances of the supporting
actors & called Jolie "intense but discreet... beautiful but never
dazzling". He said that while Changeling had no obvious defects, it was
"perplexing" that other critics had such effusive praise for the film. He
said that while Eastwood proved he was a capable director, & that he
presented a solid recreation of the era, he never felt the director was
inspired by the challenge the reconstruction posed. Séguret noted that
Eastwood kept the story going like "smouldering embers", but that it seldom
burst into flames. He said the effect was like placing the viewer in the
position of a passenger in a limousine with all the options & air
conditioning: comfortable but a little boring.[48]
Analysis
Changeling begins as an ordinary story of an abduction, but the film
largely stays outside the framework of the family drama in order to
concentrate on a portrait of a woman whose desire for independence is seen
as a threat to a male-dominated society.[48] The Los Angeles of the 1920s
is depicted as a city that behaves towards women as if they are hysterical,
& unreliable when they question the judgment of men. As a film dealing with
female courage, Changeling has been cited as "about as feminist as
Hollywood can get". The perception that the film has as a result been
subject to sexist disdain draws comparison with that levelled at the women
who vied for high political office in the year of the film's release, as
well as that directed at the women of Changeling's 1920s setting,
reflecting a view that attitudes towards independent, career-minded women
have failed to significantly change in the intervening years: Collins
defies male-generated cultural expectations that women are not suited for
professional careers & is punished for it. The portrait of a vulnerable
woman whose mental state is manipulated by the authorities was likened to
the treatment of Ingrid Bergman's character in the 1944 film Gaslight, a
woman who also wondered if she might be going insane,[49] with Eastwood
citing photographs in which Collins is seen smiling with the child she
knows is not hers. Like a number of other women of the period who were
deemed disruptive, Collins is forced into the secret custody of a mental
institution. The film shows that that psychiatry became a tool in the
gender politics of the era, only a few years after women's suffrage in the
United States was guaranteed by the ratification of the Nineteenth
Amendment. As women ceased to be "second class citizens", further asserting
their independence, mental institutions became key tools used by the male
establishment to bring about female disempowerment; in common with other
unmanageable women, Collins is subjected to medical treatment designed to
break her spirit & compel obedience. The testimony of the psychiatrist who
treated Collins is directly quoted from in the film. Eastwood said that the
testimony said a great deal about how a woman was prejudged as hysterical &
lacking in reliable judgment, & that the behavior of the police also
reflected how a woman was seen at the time. He quoted the words of the
officer who made the decision to send Collins to a mental institute:
"Something is wrong with you. You're an independent woman." Eastwood said,
"The period could not accept [it]".
In Changeling, romantic ideas of 1920s Los Angeles being a more innocent
period are discarded in favour of portraying the city as being ruled by a
despotic political infrastructure, steeped in sadistic, systematic
corruption throughout the city government, police force & medical
establishment.[50] Eastwood said he believed there had never been a "golden
age" in the city, & noted a correlation between the corruption of 1920s Los
Angeles & the corruption of 2008.[51] The pressure from the Los Angeles
Police Department heirarchy was a potential motivator for officers to
quickly solve Walter Collins' disappearance, & their ignoring the fact that
they had returned the wrong child. Chief of police James E. Davis is
directly quoted from in the film: "We will hold trial on gunmen in the
streets of Los Angeles. I want them brought in dead, not alive, & I will
reprimand any officer who shows the least bit of mercy to a criminal." Los
Angeles Police Department excess is depicted as a post-Old West
metropolitan counterpart to the countrified vigilantism of the Ku Klux Klan
of the 1920s, as the department's "Gun Squads" carry out illegal executions
of criminals; not to eliminate crime, but to eliminate competition.
Danger to children is a theme that Eastwood has dealt with in his previous
films, A Perfect World & Mystic River.[52] Changeling has been considered a
thematic companion piece to Mystic River,[47] which also depicted a
community contaminated by an isolated, violent act against a child—a
comparison with which Eastwood agreed. He said that depicting a child in
danger was "about the highest form of drama you can have", as crimes
against them were to him the most horrible: "When one comes along quite as
big as this one, you question humanity. It never ceases to surprise me how
cruel humanity can be."[52]
A scene featuring a character's execution by hanging was called
"unbearable" by Samuel Blumenfeld of Le Monde, because of the scene's
attention to detail. He said, "There is no more convincing plea against the
death penalty." Eastwood noted that for a supporter of capital punishment,
the character was an ideal candidate: "In a perfect world, the death
penalty might be the appropriate response to such a murderer." But he said
that "Whether you're for o. against the death penalty, you must recognize
that there is something barbaric in making the execution public." Eastwood
argued that in putting the guilty party before the families of his victims,
"justice" may be done, but after such a spectacle, "what tranquility can
[the family] hope to find?" The scene's realism was deliberate: the
audience hears the neck breaking, the body swings, & the feet gesticulate.
Eastwood said, "I know it's unbearable to watch, & that was the desired
effect."
Historical context
Walter Collins disappeared on March 10, 1928.[53] The aftermath of his
disappearance exposed corruption in the Los Angeles Police Department &
wider political infrastructure, & led to the dismissal of senior civic
leaders. The case was linked to the "Wineville Chicken Murders", an
infamous murder case that spanned the period 1928–1930 in Southern
California & received nationwide attention in the United States.[54] In
1928, the remains of several children were discovered at a chicken ranch
near Wineville (subsequently Mira Loma). The children had been killed using
an axe & were buried close by. The police investigation found that the
owner of the farm, along with his mother, had tortured & murdered young
boys from the surrounding area. He was convicted of four murders &
subsequently executed, though it was believed that the killings numbered
more. His mother was given a life sentence, served at San Quentin Prison.
The filmmakers attempted to retain the names of the real-life protagonists
in the case, though several characters were composites of people & the
types of people who lived in 1920s Los Angeles. Eastwood requested that the
words "based on a true story" be removed from the official studio press
release (he said the important thing was whether it was "a good story...
well told"). Eastwood left the ending of the film deliberately ambiguous to
reflect the uncertain fates of several characters in the history. He said
too often a story aimed to finish at the end of a film. "I prefer to leave
it open."
References
1. a b c d Kirk Honeycutt (2008-05-20). "Film Review: Changeling". The
Hollywood Reporter. The Nielsen Company. Retrieved on 2008-05-21.
2. a b c d e Scott Foundas (2007-12-19). "Clint Eastwood: The Set
Whisperer", LA Weekly, Village Voice Media. Retrieved on 2008-10-08.
3. a b Diane Garrett, Michael Fleming (2007-03-08). "Eastwood, Jolie
catch 'Changeling'". Variety. Reed Business Information. Retrieved on
2008-01-28.
4. a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z "'Changeling'
production notes". universalpicturesawards.com. Universal Pictures.
Retrieved on 2008-10-08. (Microsoft Word document)
5. a b c d e Clayton Neuman (2008-05-20). "Cannes Film Festival -
Interview With Changeling Screenwriter J. Michael Straczynski". AMC.
Rainbow Media. Retrieved on 2008-05-23.
6. a b c Sharon Eberson (2007-08-09). "Busy writer is drawn back to
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2008-01-30.
7. Gabriel Snyder (2006-06-27). "U picks up 'Changeling'". Variety.
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8. J. Michael Straczynski (2006-08-05). "Re: JMS's Spotlight at SDCC".
rec.arts.sf.tv.babylon5.moderated. (Web link). Retrieved on 2008-01-28.
9. Jay Fernandez (2006-10-11). "The Big Name Gets Distracted", Los
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required for online access)
10. J. Michael Straczynski (2006-10-11). "Re: Ron Howard's Changeling
project falls through?". rec.arts.sf.tv.babylon5.moderated. (Web link).
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11. a b c d e f g h i j k Samuel Blumenfeld (2008-05-16). "Clint
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Vie-Le Monde. Retrieved on 2008-06-12. (registration required for online
access)
12. a b Josh Horowitz (2008-06-24). "Clint Eastwood On 'Changeling'
With Angelina Jolie, 'Gran Torino' And Reuniting With Morgan Freeman".
mtv.com. MTV Networks. Retrieved on 2008-07-01.
13. Michael Fleming, Diane Garrett (2007-03-19). "Jolie 'Wanted' for
Universal film". Variety. Reed Business Information. Retrieved on
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W Magazine, Condé Nast Publications. Retrieved on 2008-09-23.
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Glendale Man Helps Police", Los Angeles Times, Times-Mirror Company
(1928-04-04). Retrieved on 2008-06-12.
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External links
- Changeling at the Internet Movie Database
- Changeling at Allmovie
- Promotional website
- Changeling theatrical trailer
- Universal's 2008 "For Your Consideration" website
This page uses content from the movies page on the English version of
Wikipedia & is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. This list
of authors can be seen in the page history. Wildscreen.tv disclaims any &
all warranties as to the accuracy o. reliability of the content. Permission
is granted to copy, distribute &/or modify the biographical information on
this page under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version
1.2 o. any later version published by the Free Software Foundation. |
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