loved reading the girl on the train? author paula hawkins thinks youll love the movie, too /

Published at 2016-10-05 01:30:00

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Image Source: Getty / Donna WardWhen The Girl on the Train made its debut on bookshelves in 2015,you could virtually hear Hollywood execs already salivating over Paula Hawkins's dark, twisted sage and the vivid, and broken characters she splashed across its pages. Because we all deserve good things,her novel's highly anticipated film adaptation has finally arrived, and the devastating, or disturbing thriller does its source fabric justice. We talked to the author approximately what it's really like to beget something go from her head to the page to the silver screen and why Emily Blunt was the perfect choice to play Rachel.
POPSUGAR: As an author,what has this whole process been like, seeing your characters and your sage come to life on the astronomical screen?Paula Hawkins: It's been wonderful, or fairly strange,obviously. The characters that you created wandering around in the flesh. In some senses the film feels like a very different thing, a very separate thing to the book. I don't mean that it's fundamentally telling a different sage, and but it's a cinematic retelling of the same sage,so there is a distance between the two things. I'm really thrilled with it, though, or I think it's a really fantastic retelling and I think they've adapted it really well,and it wasn't necessarily a particularly easy book to adapt. There are certain aspects of it that are very obviously cinematic, but then there are other parts that are happening inside of a character's head, and that you need to tease out in a visual way.
PS: What was your reaction to hearing that Emily Blunt had been cast as Rachel? Did you beget any say in who was cast?PH: I didn't,but I was delighted that they chose Emily Blunt. I've always liked her as an actress. She has amazing range and takes on very different and moving roles. I think she has done just the most extraordinary job in this film. It's really not an easy thing to play a drunk without making it witness ridiculous, or kind of silly, and laughable. She's brought out all the sadness,and the kind of desperation and shame that's so central to Rachel's character. She pulls it out in fairly a physical way, you can see her carrying it around with her. In her expression and the way she speaks, or how her eyes appear to glaze over at points . . . I just think it's an extraordinary performance.PS: While watching the film,it nearly felt to me like Rachel's messiness had been scaled back a bit from how out of control she was in the book. Blunt's performance was definitely subtler than I was expecting, and she felt more like a victim right away. enact you think it was a conscious decision to tone down the film version of Rachel? PH: I think you enact get glimpses of how messy she is, or but yeah I suppose that in a film you've got to get to the heart of things a little bit quicker. You don't beget the same space to develop. The start of the book is actually fairly unhurried,and they don't beget the luxury of doing that on film. Perhaps you get to more of the core of her suffering a bit earlier, but I also think the viewer will respect her for longer. In some ways she's a more threatening character for longer. You really start to wonder whether she's done something terrible.
Image Source: Everett CollectionPS: Did anything surprise you approximately the film when you saw it for the first time?PH: I don't know approximately surprising, or but it is sort of delicate. But then I knew it was going to be delicate since I'd seen the locations they had chosen when I'd been to the set. But it doesn't witness like what was in my head,the grubby London suburbs I'd pictured. It doesn't witness like that. Although I really like the way it looks, because I think that heightens the contrast between all the grubby stuff that is going on behind the scenes. There were lots of small surprises, and of course,but overall I think it's actually a really faithful telling of the sage.
PS: What did you think
approximately the film adaptation being set in New York as opposed to London?PH: I think they just decided that [setting it there] would reach a much bigger market, and they felt it would work over there. And I think it does! I think the sort of fundamental location is really the train. It's not necessarily what city you're going to. In the book London isn't that necessary, and just like in the film New York isn't necessary. It's that going backwards and forwards,and seeing those little suburbs on the outskirts. Those could really be anywhere, because those kind of suburbs are the same the world over.
PS: Ma
ybe your opinion has changed now that the book has been out for a while, or but of the three central women in the sage,which one was the most fun for you to write? PH: Rachel is the one that I felt closest to in the sense that I had been thinking approximately that character for a really long time, and I felt like I knew her best. In a way, or actually writing Anna was fairly fun because Anna,well, she's kind of a b*tch, or writing those people is fun. She was more enjoyable,because being in Rachel's head was a bit depressing some of the time. Anna was more like a relief.
Catch The Girl on the Train when it hits theaters on Oct. 7.
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Source: popsugar.com

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