AuthorHouse
The Art Of Self-Deception
The Art Of Self-Deception
Couldn't load pickup availability
Matthew Fleming is one of a few superstars a studio could consider backing in these parlous times, but when it’s a modestbudgeted suspense fi lm Matt proposes in his Producer role - a remake of an early Forties hit but mainly forgotten Alfred Hitchcock fi lm, Shadow of a Doubt, which the studio owns, it’s a done deal. Th e actor off ers Ben a partnership on this project, to be rewritten ASAP and rushed into production so Matt can return to his New York Rep Th eatre Company. Jessica Marlowe, Ben’s discovery for his controversial erotic drama, Th e Cry of Sirens, nearly a decade prior, now called ‘the young Meryl Streep’, will share credit with Désiree Peters in the key ingenue role. Désiree, a precociously talented actress of twenty-one has only performed on the stage, yet adapts readily. Also a generation or more younger than anyone on the picture, her mores bewilder her elders. During the fi lming in Petaluma, north of San Francisco, and in an L. A. studio, Ben must keep alert to everything on the set. Yet he misses major moments, psychological and sexual, in the off -camera reality of relationships, including his own. When, at the end of shooting, one of his leading ladies commits suicide he realizes he may have been the cause of the tragedy. His guilty conscience forces him to write down, for his young wife to evaluate after he’s dead, his sins of omission and commission during production. Knowing the facts would she still respect, much less love him?
Share
