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The Curious Case of Ben—No, Max Tivoli

 

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Say you wrote a book. You agonized for years over every word, each character. Say your book did quite well, received glowing reviews from big-shot critics, became a bestseller—and then, four years later, say you start getting phone calls from friends complaining about a film in the works starring two of Hollywood's biggest stars that has a story just like your book—a film that goes on to be nominated for 13 Oscars. And say, throughout it all, your book is hardly mentioned. How might you feel? Andrew Sean Greer, the author of "The Confessions of Max Tivoli," a turn-of-the-century tale about a man who ages in reverse, feels a bit like a lonely ex-boyfriend. His 2004 novel and a certain Brad Pitt movie are similar enough that some of his fans are positively hysterical. But not Greer. He explains to NEWSWEEK's Jesse Ellison. Excerpts:

The movie is based on a short story by F. Scott Fitzgerald. Was your book as well?
I hadn't heard of the Fitzgerald story until my book was published. I thought I'd invented the idea. Such hubris! The vanity of a solitary writer! Now whenever I do a reading, people say, "You know, there's a 'Star Trek' episode about people aging backwards." "Mork and Mindy" had a character age backwards!

Have you seen the movie?
I finally saw it in January because I couldn't take it anymore. I was so anxious about it. But it was a great relief. I didn't see any of my book on the screen. I called my editor and said, "Everything's fine."

Really? Despite the similarities?
What's similar are the solutions to the problem of telling a story about a man aging backwards. Either he ages backwards in his mind or he doesn't. There are only two ways to go. There aren't 1,000. So to me ["Button" screenwriter] Eric Roth found the same solution I did and went a totally different way, which was fascinating to watch.

How often are you asked about the film?
All the time. It's like, five years after you've moved out of someplace, there's a kid who looks like you and you have to say, "I'm not the father. I know he looks like me, but I'm gay."

It seems peculiar that your book is never mentioned in reviews of the film. The book got a lot of attention when it came out.
I think no one mentions it because film people aren't book people.

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Member Comments

  • Posted By: wildechild66 @ 02/14/2009 1:25:20 AM

    Dude, don't ruin the movie for people who haven't seen it. That's very bad form.

  • Posted By: a_little_bit @ 02/12/2009 4:26:21 PM

    Im sorry the movie nor storie line just didn't tickle my fancy. Sorry Brad!!!

  • Posted By: jbz7879 @ 02/09/2009 5:31:45 PM

    an appalling egregious modification of dorian grey
    while dorian grey is a moral fable which brings a man eternal youth for selling his soul ,some one in hollywoods thought a reversal of fortune would be contemporary genius ,
    here the man goes from geriatric to peadiatric ,continuously pestered as an old man by friends as to if he has conquered a female or not as if having sex with a woman is the only achievement a man can desire -in that case the chinese are the most sucessful race as they create more progeny with females then any orher racial prototypes,
    after leaving home at 70 he embarks on a sea voyage and ends up in world war 2 -the ultimate blessing to hollywood where a fish trawler sinks a submarine in mid ocean and a metaphorical humming bird appears ,
    next is middle age where he eats caviar and has fornication with a rather silly woman on regular basis in a rat infested hotel with gold plated goblets ,
    she leaves him a note to go swim the english channel and he becomes brad pitt who finds a ballet dancer in the form of an overacting method nightmare cate blanchett and in the rest of the movie they strip each other ,liaise on a matress ,create an almost aborted baby girl before he gets scared and runs away on a motorbike for a world tour to india ,
    when he comes back he looks like he is wearing more loreal then miss blanchett and then he goes to the freudian foetal state getting demented in between as he becomes infantile .
    it is hilarious and more concerned with hurricane katrina as it is set in new orleans than its characters who all are overacted or non acted with a skillful function of diligent dysfunction ,
    it is a spoof of oscar wildes dorian grey and its inspiration is an absolute mockery of the human life and existence with no logic or message .
    the only philosophical treatise discuseed is in a barber shop at the beginning where he is told we are our memory as if we do not know that exists .
    there are underwater tropical swimming sequences and southern funerals with black american church stereotypes by dozens and finally katrina comes along and you wish it had struck earlier .
    at least this bizarre ordeal would have terminated

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