Tom Fulton of CJRT-FM's On the Arts |
In his movie, The Terry Fox Story (1983), where amputee actor Eric Fryer played Fox and Robert Duvall portrayed his trainer, Bill Vigars, Thomas certainly set out to capture what made Fox such a distinctly heroic figure, rather than building a momument to him. While the film, in retrospect, would have likely done better on television (as it resembled a TV movie in many ways and was released in the U.S. on Home Box Office), it was given a theatrical run in Canada and people simply didn't run to see it. Nevertheless, The Terry Fox Story went on to win six awards at the 1984 Genie Awards (the Canadian equivalent of the Academy Awards) including Best Picture.
We did the interview shortly before the awards ceremony.where Thomas was still searching for clues in understanding why his picture didn't strike the same popular chord that Fox himself had a few years earlier.
kc: Considering the heroic stature of Terry Fox in Canada now, are you surprised that more people hadn't turned out in the theatres to see The Terry Fox Story?
rt: The problem was that it opened in about 100 theatres and only three or four hundred thousand Canadians went to see it. This isn't bad, or even a sign that people rejected the film, but the distributor was expecting over a million Canadians to see it. Now the reason this didn't happen was that the film came out too soon after the event.
kc: How so?
rt: To a certain extent, I knew we were in trouble with the film when we were promoting it. I kept having members of the press coming up to me after screenings and saying things like they were glad they saw it, but it was a film they really didn't want to see right now. I said to the producer that there was a built in resistance to the film, which wasn't what we expected. Even friends of mine who'd seen everything I'd ever done came up to me and said that they weren't going to see my movie. When I asked them why not, they told me that they'd already seen it, they had lived through it, right up to the time when Terry Fox died. So what happened in this country was that people became very personally involved with Terry Fox in ways that they don't with even their own family members. To them, that experience was special and they were afraid my film might ruin that relationship for them.
Robert Duvall, Chris Makepeace, Eric Fryer & Michael Zelnicker |
rt: Of course. In the United States, you didn't have that personal connection with Terry Fox. For them, it was a whole new story. As a matter of fact, when we were auditioning actors for the film in Los Angeles, I kept asking people if they'd heard of Terry Fox. They said they had, but only in a vague sense. The person they knew more about, however, was this guy who was apparently dragging a cross across Canada. I've never heard of him! But it seems there was some guy who set out from Vancouver about the same time as Terry Fox hauling this cross. That apparently got more attention in the U.S. than Terry Fox. (ed. An Internet search I conducted for this man's identity came up empty. He doesn't seem to be remembered anymore.)
Terry Fox |
rt: Definitely not. First of all, in the newspapers you only got a small slice of Terry's life, a small picture of really only what the press wanted to give you. You also only got what Terry and Bill Vigars and the people around him wanted you to see. In the movie, you see all sorts of things that Bill Vigars later didn't mind you seeing.
The Terry Fox statue in Ottawa |
rt: What attracted me to Terry Fox was discovering just how human he really was. In the end, every hero is human. We tend to strip away their humanity and isolate them. One of the reasons we do that is that we want to say, "Oh yeah, but he's extraordinary. I could never do that." We want to relax into a comfort zone where we can look up to him as someone extraordinary, but Terry Fox was also human. I wanted to present him with all the angers, frustrations, and weaknesses and vulnerabilities that we all have. That was his true heroism. It was how he surmounted his own failings. The road became, in many ways, secondary to that. Maybe it's my fundamental Baptist background, but I really tend to see that he was working out his salvation in that sense. And towards the end, he finally achieves some peace.
kc: What do you think was the greatest thing Terry Fox gained from his journey?
rt: When he breaks down and cries towards the end – and I'm talking here about the real Terry Fox, as opposed to the one in my film – he was crying more at the failure of his own body than out of anger and frustration with anyone else. He had gone beyond the blaming. He starts as a blamer, you know, "Who is to blame for doing this to me?" I mean, the only answer you could come up with is God. That he found hard to deal with. Now I don't want to get too much into religion, but his story takes you into the Book of Job. The story of Terry Fox is a Job-like story – and like Job he confronts God. He argues with him for three thousand and three hundred miles across this country. And in the end, death prevails. But he has still achieved something. He has become something much greater by that point.
– Kevin Courrier is a writer/broadcaster, film critic, teacher and author (Artificial Paradise: The Dark Side of The Beatles' Utopian Dream). His forthcoming book is Reflections in the Hall of Mirrors: American Movies and the Politics of Idealism. In January 2012, at the Miles Nidal Centre JCC in Toronto, Courrier will be doing a lecture series (film clips included) based on Reflections. Check their schedule in December. With John Corcelli, Courrier is currently working on another radio documentary for CBC Radio's Inside the Music called The Other Me: The Avant-Garde Music of Paul McCartney.
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