For director Shawn Levy and star Ryan Reynolds, working on the new Netflix film The Adam Project gave them a chance to take a page from, and pay tribute to, beloved blockbusters of the past like Back to the Future and E.T. But it also allowed the duo, who both produced the action-adventure, the opportunity to work on something “deeply personal,” as Reynolds puts it.
Ahead of the film’s March 11 debut, Levy and Reynolds talked about why The Adam Project hit close to home, their unique collaborative creative process and the power of nostalgia.
Shawn and Ryan, The Adam Project is your second creative collaboration off the heels of Free Guy. How did this reunion come about?
Shawn Levy: From our very first meeting on Free Guy, it was clear that Ryan and I had a great creative chemistry, not just as director and actor, but as fellow producers. We both like to take material and look for ways to make it better with the same tenacity and he cares about his projects the same way I do. So, it really became a brotherhood.
Ryan Reynolds: As soon as we finished Free Guy, our immediate question was, “What can we do next?” David Ellison, the head of Skydance, had reached out one day and just said “I’m coming over.” And he just showed up at my door in New York and handed me this script and we talked about it for a long time. There was an idea in there that I kind of hooked into before even reading the script, which is something that evolved greatly as we continued to shoot the movie. The Adam Project just ticked every box for us. It was enough of a departure from Free Guy in tone and feeling, but still the kind of broad, audience-pleasing project we both love.
What was it about this story that attracted you?
Levy: What hooked me in was the idea of: What if you could make your peace with your own history? What if you could, as an adult, go back and make peace with your younger self, and make your peace with the parents we failed to understand when we were growing up? What if you could go back and reconnect with your parents with the benefit of a lifetime of wisdom and perspective? Because more often than not, when we think back to our parents, there are stories we tell ourselves. Either they were perfect or they were the villain in my backstory. But generally, neither is true.
Reynolds: The movie ended up being very personal for me. My father passed away years ago and for a long time, I told myself these stories about him that helped me make sense of my own deficiencies or shortcomings. But when I came to terms with the fact that those were just stories, I realized that the reason I was really mad at my father wasn’t because he was a bad guy or because had screwed up as a dad — it was because he died. I was actually mad at my father because he died. And I thought it was really interesting that my character, Adam, gets to go back and see his dad, not only when he’s alive, but when they’re at the same age. They get to look at each other as peers for a moment, not father-son.
What was the process of revising the script like, given how personal the story was to each of you?
Levy: Screenwriter Jonathan Tropper and I met at Ryan’s house in New York where the three of us spent many, many hours talking about our own relationships with our fathers and suggesting ideas where we might dig deeper or have more fun. We definitely honed in early on this universal theme of the way men wrestle with anger towards their fathers, but aren’t able to step into a happy, grown-up existence until they forgive their dads for being human.
Reynolds: It was an idea that I loved — the stories that we tell ourselves to make sense of our world around us — and we all found that we were a pretty good writing unit together. It was such a wonderful time and I actually wish I could get those days back! To me, they felt sort of like the meta version of playing catch in the yard with dad. As hair-pulling and frustrating as it is to shape a story, it was truly magic that time we had together.
Levy: Ryan poured so much of himself into this story, too. There’s a beautiful scene in the film between Ryan’s character and his mom, played by Jennifer Garner, that’s really just an outpouring of Ryan’s own feelings about his mom that completely knocks you out. But at the same time, a lot of the ideas we discussed were also just pure fun, escapist ideas. Like, what if when soldiers from another time period die, they explode into something that looks like the equivalent of digital Skittles? Wouldn’t that be cool?
What were some of your inspirations for The Adam Project?
Levy: It’s definitely a throwback to a deeply nostalgic breed of Amblin film that, for me, epitomizes what I want movies to be: adventure-filled and wish fulfillment-fueled, but also funny and warm. The truth is, I feel like our storytelling and film industry has evolved to a point where there are escapist popcorn movies or there are movies about big ideas that are resonant and important. But the movies we loved from the past somehow were able to be both. Back to the Future is one. E.T. is another.
Reynolds: Nostalgia is the greatest drug on Earth and this movie very much steps in the existing footprint of those films in that there’s a complete absence of narrative cynicism, an abundance of wonder mixed with comedy and levity, and just absolute gut punches of emotion. They also had this wonderful element of action and adventure. So the opportunity to actually make a movie like that — it was a hard thing to pull off, but it was worth it for both of us because it’s so personal. I have not personally done a lot of movies that really reflected my own life the way The Adam Project does.
The Adam Project premiered March 11 on Netflix.
Source: Netflix