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November 2001 Cover
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Madison
Movie Mania
Premier
generates pride
among Madison residents
By Don Ward, Editor
(Nov.
01)
INDIANAPOLIS - That popping sound you might have heard the night
of Oct. 18 was caused by the buttons flying off the chest of Madison,
Ind., as those watching the long-awaited showing of the movie Madison
swelled with pride and emotion. Playing to a hometown
crowd for the first time, the Heartland Film Festival premier of
the not-yet-released film gave this sellout crowd of 1,750 a night
to remember as they watched with excitement and often emotion
their home town come to life on the silver screen.
Not since the 1959 movie Some
Came Running had the Ohio River bridge connecting Madison,
Ind., to Milton, Ky., served as the scenic backdrop to the opening
of a feature film.
Only this time, the sweeping aerial shot of the river valley gave
way to a dramatized account of the true story of the late Jim McCormicks
victory in the 1971 Gold Cup unlimited hydroplane race aboard the
community owned Miss Madison. Seymour native and pop star John Mellencamp
reads the opening and closing narration in the film. Mellencamp
is writing an original song for the final cut.
From the moment the first frame lit up the big screen, applause
filled the Hilbert Circle Theatre in downtown Indianapolis. As expected,
the crowd only got wilder as the film progressed, making stars out
of many local landmarks, legends out of several residents who played
extras, and heroes out of brothers Bill and Scott Bindley, the films
director and writer, respectively.
Since its filming on location in summer 1999, Bill Bindley has tried
to secure a distribution deal in Hollywood for a nationwide studio
release. After a couple of false starts, the film now appears scheduled
for release in spring 2002 by the newly formed Premiere Market and
Distribution Group, headed by Mitch Goldman, a former executive
at New Line Cinema. Goldman plans to release the film in April in
2,000 theatres, bolstered by $15 million in advertising and promotion.
Bindley must still negotiate a $2 million deal for a final score
for the film.
Making the film cost $15 million, according to executive producer
Carl Amari, 38, a Chicago businessman who financed one-third of
it himself.
Bindley says he plans some of kind
of spring premier in Madison, either at the Ohio Theatre on Main
Street or on a giant screen to be set up at the riverbank on Vaughn
Drive.
I just want to thank the people of Madison for their patience,
and I hope that very soon everyone will have a chance to see the
movie, said Bindley, 39, an Indianapolis native who studied
filmmaking at Northwestern University. He called the premier a
special and emotional night for me because of so many family
and friends in attendance.
The movies premier served as the official opening of the weeklong
Heartland Film Festival, which was marking its 10th year. Festival
officials put on a real show. With the Oh Boy Oberto-Miss Madison
unlimited hydroplane parked outside the theatre in downtown Indianapolis,
the actors arrived Hollywood style and posed for photos on a red
carpet leading from the theatre door to the Circle Center street.
Inside, the anxious crowd awaited their arrival and introductions.
For many who had made the two-hour trip from Madison to Indianapolis,
it was like watching a home movie at a family reunion.
Familiar faces that sprinkled many scenes drew shouts and cheers.
There was frequent laughter and applause. But for those perhaps
most touched by the films true story Bonnie McCormick
and her 40-year-old son, Mike, there were tears flowing almost throughout.
It was hard to hold back the tears, especially when youve
lived with this story your entire life, Mike McCormick said
afterward. I could see my dad up there, and it brought back
a lot of memories.
It was wonderful, and it meant everything to me, Bonnie
said. Im so proud, and its a great legacy to Jim.
Mike McCormick is played as a youth in the
film by then-9-year-old actor Jake Lloyd (Star Wars
The Phantom Menace). Lloyd is now 12 and living in Indianapolis.
Jim Caviezel (The Thin Red Line) plays McCormicks
father, Jim. Filling the films other main roles are veteran
actor Bruce Dern (The Cowboys), Paul Dooley (Breaking
Away), Mary McCormack (Private Parts), Chelcie
Ross (Rudy), Vincent Ventresca and Frank Knapp. Caviezel,
Lloyd, Ross and Knapp attended the Heartland premier, along with
many camera and film crew members.
But on this night, the bigger stars were the city itself and those
locals who made their way into a scene, either as extras or actors.
Three local residents had brief speaking roles.
Ovo Cafe owner Greg Thomas, who had studied acting in New York,
earned an entire, albeit brief, scene with McCormack. Tony Steinhardt,
the Miss Madison crew chief in 1971, is played by actor Brent Briscoe.
But aside from providing technical support and allowing filmmakers
access to his personal collection of hydroplane photos and memorabilia,
Steinhardt himself delivers a line on screen.
He said the film brought him to tears. Weve always said
that the Miss Madison was our floating chamber of commerce, and
how much better can it get than having a whole movie about it?
Despite the fictionalized story line in the movie when Steinhardts
character desserts the team and later comes back, Steinhardt assured,
I never walked out on that team. We were all together; we
were inseparable.
Fourteen-year-old Kyle McClanahan of Madison also has a brief line
and is seen at least twice. Betsey Vonderheide, who in real life
works as special projects coordinator for Madison Mayor Al Huntington,
plays Gertie, who without speaking provides a humorous stamp
on things in a brief shot.
Dozens of other locals grace the screen as extras. Bindleys
own father, Bill Bindley, has a line in the scene that was filmed
at the Brown Gym. Bindleys own 9-year-old son, Will, is an
extra.
In this business, you never know if your scene will even make
it to the screen, said the elder Bill Bindley. One time
I spent a whole day on shooting a scene for my son in another movie
and it wound up on the cutting room floor. So I know how exciting
it is for the other extras to watch for themselves in this movie
tonight.
Whether they saw themselves on screen or not, Madison residents
absorbed it all with pride. There were a lot of people in
the theatre from Indianapolis and Madison, and it made me feel proud
to be one from Madison, said extra Kelly Campbell, 25. I
was also excited that Jim Caviezel remembered me.
It was a lot of fun to see Jake again, said McClanahan.
I just hope the movie comes out soon because I want everyone
to see it.
There were so many familiar faces back here tonight it made
it even more exciting, said Thomas, who plays a construction
worker in a scene with actress McCormack. I think the movie
portrays Madison perfectly with beautiful shots of the river and
Main Street.
Scott Tebbe, Madison Regatta festival chairman, played an extra
on the Miss Madison boat crew in the movie and said the film should
do wonders for the sport as well as the city of Madison. It
was great to see all the hard work over a decade long come together
on the screen. It portrays Madison and the people in a great light
and it should increase the awareness of unlimited hydroplane racing
nationwide.
Except for parts of the movie shot in Miami, Seattle and San Diego,
Madison area landmarks, such as Shipleys Tavern, Hinkles
Sandwich Shop, Rogers Corner, Vaughn Drive, the Brown Gym,
Crystal Beach, the Indiana-Kentucky Electric Corp. power plant and
Madisons Main Street, provide much of the local setting. Scenes
were also filmed on the Belle of Louisville, at Hanover College,
Clifty Falls State Park and Marengo Caves.
In addition to the real actors, local landmarks and townspeople,
however, the stars of this movie included the vintage hydroplanes,
many of which had to be reconstructed and retooled and transported
to Madison from around the country. Many of the boats were driven
in the movie by their owners, who had to follow strict instructions
on formations to recreate race scenes called for in the script.
On many days, the boats broke down or failed to start. And
its not easy to find parts for World War II era Allison aircraft
engines, Bindley said.
Given the obstacles he faced in casting the movie and reviving 50-year-old
boats, plus only a three week preproduction schedule, Bindley now
admits, What we did was insane. While addressing the
crowd in the moments prior to the premier, Bindley said, What
we have been through in making this film has been incredible. It
was a real community effort. We closed down Main Street, we closed
down the Ohio River and we closed down Shipleys Tavern on
more than one occasion.
Bindley joked that the recent victory by the Miss Madison at the
2001 Madison Regatta spoiled the movies tag line, which states
that the Miss Madison is still racing on the circuit but hasnt
won a race since 1973. The closing narration by Mellencamp
also says the real Jim McCormick retired from racing in 1975 and
died in 1996. Bindley told the crowd he regretted that McCormick
did not live to see the finished movie, which has been in the making
since Scott Bindley began writing the script as a college project
in 1989.
Nevertheless, Bindley said he fulfilled his promise to the late
McCormick to get the film made. Bindley pays tribute to McCormick
during the films credits by showing the original ABC-TV black-and-white
footage that was shot that day in July 1971 at the Madison Regatta
when McCormick emerges from the Miss Madison and is interviewed
on the dock by broadcaster Keith Jackson.
The young, handsome Jim McCormick is then whisked up the riverbank
and showered with congratulatory hugs and cheers from his crew and
the crowd. He is wearing Rayban-type sunglasses. He makes his way
up through the crowd, high-fiving shirtless men and signing autographs
for young and old alike. A young Mike McCormick is seen at his side
peering up at the camera and at his father with adoring eyes and
a wide smile.
Bonnie McCormick said that while visiting the movie set of Madison
in 1999, she gave those very sunglasses to Caviezel to keep as a
momento. When I saw him at the premier, I asked him what he
did with Jims sunglasses. He said they are in a very special
place.
Copyright 1999-2008, Kentuckiana Publishing, Inc.
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