Somewhere in Time: Movies about Writing

My mom loves this movie, especially the soundtrack. Richard Matheson wrote the book this is based upon where the main character is also named Richard. This Richard is a playwright portrayed by Christopher Reeve who falls in love withe a 1912 photograph of actress Elise McKenna (Jane Seymour) while staying in a historic seaside hotel. Through this obsession, Richard manages to time travel and meet Elise, causing her to fall for him as well. Matheson based the idea on his youthful obsession with a photograph of Maude Adams, who he researched and based Elise upon (although I’m fairly certain that the real Maude Adams was gay).

The movie opens with Richard as a college student who is presented with a pocket watch from a mysterious elderly lady who pleads with him to “come back to her” at his first successful play. Years later, while going through a writing block on his latest work, Richard goes to a hotel as a way to jump start his brain and sees the photograph, discovering that Elise was who gave him the watch almost a decade earlier. He gets personal information from Elise’s biographer Ms. Roberts (Teresa Wright), discovering that after a final performance in 1912, Elise completely shut herself off from the rest of the world.

Richard manages to hypnotize himself back in time to meet Elise and her obsessive (this story has a lot of obsessive men) manager William Fawcett Robinson (Christopher Plummer). The somewhat psychic Robinson believes that Elise has a destiny on the stage and objects to the budding romance between the pair. Jane Seymour does a fantastic job as a comedic actress of the time and Plummer is creep in his high back chair sitting in the wings. I do like a scene where Richard watches the 1912 cast being criticized by their playwright, showing that nothing ever changes.

SPOILER ALERT: The couple are very happy for a time, making plans to marry and run away from Robinson. The manager tries to separate them and make Elise think Richard doesn’t love her. However, she is steadfast and leaves Robinson to find Richard. Just as their lives look to be content full of future plans, Richard comes across a 1970s coin in his pocket which breaks the hypnotism and sends him back to his own time.

Long story short - Richard never finishes his play. He throw away a successful career to SPOILER ALERT (again) slowly dies of a broken heart. Don’t get me wrong, this is a great movies but . . . In my opinion, I get that they are supposed to be a great love story, but he sort of ruined both of their lives. She spent the rest of her life pining for him and he died young pining for her. I supposed they meet again in the What Dreams May Come afterlife.

Irish Wish: Movies about Writing

So it turns out this Netflix produced Hallmark movie rip-off starting Lindsay Lohan is about an editor who wants to get her own novel written/published . . . and makes a wish that she is marrying her last collaborator, Irish author Paul Kennedy. Waste of a wish, lady.

Maddie has worked alongside Paul (Alexander Vlahos) for a year polishing his latest bestseller and pining for him. However, he hits it off with her best friend, Emma (Elizabeth Tan). Next thing Maddie and her other best friend, Heather, (Ayesha Curry) know, they are in Ireland for the pairs wedding. Despite meeting a handsome English photographer named James (Ed Speleeers - you know, the kid from Eragon) upon arrival, Maddie still makes a wish that she was marrying Paul instead of Emma. A fairy (who is supposed to be Saint Brigid which is very confusing to me) dressed in late 60s mod fashion grants the wish. Now Maddie is marrying Paul and James is their wedding photographer. Oh and Jane Seymour plays her mom who spends most of the film on Maddie’s phone screen or in her own B-plotline. I expected more Jane Seymour.

Before I talk about the writing elements, I want to talk about the “Irish” elements. First of all, Paul lives in a giant estate with a English accent mom. Colonizers! You know his family stole land from the Irish long ago and clearly don’t care. Second, most people in the movie have no Irish accent or a really poor accent (sound like me when I’m trying to impersonate an Irish lady I stayed with on a college trip and who did not seem to care for me). There’s a scene in a bookstore where the clerk barely tries to use an accent, the puts a God’s eye in withe books purchased. Why? Third, the stock photo scene of the Irish countryside don’t match the sets where the actors are. Fourth, what the crap is a “wishing chair”? There are so many other ways they could have worked Maddie’s wish into the movie that come from actual Irish folklore. Even the movie Leap Year came from an actual old Irish tradition. Fifth, Maddie’s favorite author is James Joyce. No one’s favorite author is James Joyce. I think they just looked up the most famous classic Irish author and said, “That will work.” And lastly, Saint Brigid?! Sorry, I can’t get over that part.

Anyway, back to the parts about writing. Heather points out that Maddie had to edit so much of Paul’s book it was practically like she wrote it. I feel like if Paul was truly into his own writing, he wouldn’t have allowed her to change that much. Her character had been working as a freelance writer before that and I appreciate how the movie points out how difficult it is to live off freelance writing which is why she became an editor for the publishing company that handled Paul’s books. Also, Paul’s book is apparently in present tense which I can only handle in certain books. No wonder she had to over-edit it. Present tense is really hard to keep up throughout an entire novel. Paul writes both of their wedding vows, pointing out that HE is the writer, even though he knows she writes as well. Of course, they have to work the love story into her career. Paul states that he knows she needs time to work on her own novel, but first he wants her help on his next novel, despite him promising to hype her up to the publisher they both work for. Naturally, James points out that she should take time for her own writing and all that. James also notices the book she edited is better than any of Paul’s other books.

Spoiler Alert . . . After realizing that Emma and Paul are better for each other and that Maddie likes James, she reverses the wish. Oh, and she tells Paul to only work with her again if it was as a co-writer.