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Highland hopes for Hollywood hit: filmmakers seeking locations for blockbuster set in Scotland

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Published Date: 02 November 2008
WE'VE had Braveheart, Rob Roy and Highlander in a series of blockbuster films that put Scotland on the celluloid map.
Now the country is set to star again, in a series of big-budget Hollywood adventures that could attract actors of the calibre of James McAvoy and Keira Knightley.

Outlander, the story of an 18th-century Highland warrior hero, is based on a best-selling American novel that mixes action, romance and time travel.

It has been turned into a screenplay by Randall Wallace, an American with an impeccable pedigree for Scottish-Hollywood blockbusters after initiating and writing Braveheart.

The American production company, Essential Pictures, has thrown its weight behind the project. It aims to shoot next spring and hopes the film will be the first in a "franchise" as enduring as James Bond and Indiana Jones.

The budget is likely to be around £25m and it is almost certain the film will shoot on location in Scotland, following the dollar's recent rise against the pound.

James McAvoy, who is now well established as Scotland's top young film actor, after The Last King Of Scotland, Atonement and the action movie Wanted, is an obvious contender for a starring role.

Knightley could be in line for the role of his sweetheart. Her mother is the Scottish writer Sharman Macdonald, and she is already involved in a film of King Lear that is likely to shoot in Scotland.

Last night, a Hollywood insider told Scotland on Sunday: "Randall has written an adaptation of Outlander. Essential, who commissioned the adaptation and controls the film rights for the book, is going out to directors."

Trish Shorthouse, film commissioner for the Scottish Highlands and Islands, said Outlander would give rural Scotland an economic boost.

"Anything of that size would be of great significance to the rural economy in the north of Scotland, especially during a time when petrol prices are crunching in on locations," she said. "We are starting to see a little bit of that happening, with cutbacks in location budgets."

The Outlander series of books is written by Mexican-American writer Diana Gabaldon and they are much more popular in the US than the UK.

They begin in the 1940s, when Claire Randall, an English nurse, goes on holiday to Inverness, visits standing stones, blacks out, regains consciousness and thinks she is in the middle of a battle re-enactment – only slowly realising she has travelled back in time to the mid-18th century.

Randall finds herself caught up in Scottish history, just a few years before the 1745 Jacobite Rising, with tensions running high. She meets, and gradually becomes romantically involved with, a young Highlander called Jamie Fraser, despite the fact that she already has a husband in the 20th century.

The first novel appeared in 1991 and was called Cross Stitch in the UK. Subsequent instalments shift the focus to the Jacobite Rising itself, Culloden and finally the American Revolution. There have been six books so far, with more to come

"They have got a terrific following in America," said Alastair Cunningham, who organises tours of Outlander locations, including Castle Leod in Easter Ross (the model for the MacKenzie stronghold of Castle Leoch in the novels), the Clava Cairns, near Inverness, Loch Ness and Culloden.

"They really put the spotlight on the romance of Scotland. A large number of our clients come over because of the romance of the place, the castles and the clans."


The full article contains 587 words and appears in Scotland On Sunday newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 01 November 2008 7:33 PM
  • Source: Scotland On Sunday
  • Location: Scotland
 
1

W Smith,

Middle East 02/11/2008 04:10:28
Aye.

Scotland was put on the map by a movie shot in Ireland (Braveheart).

As far as "the romance of the place" goes this just cringy shortbread tin / Brigadoon claptrap.
2

donald,

glasgow 02/11/2008 08:16:12
Aye, self hatred, self loathing and self racism is not a pretty sight, hence the need for a North British Labour Party and a Scottish office in London.
3

Steve Ev,

Malta 02/11/2008 08:24:00
A good Blockbuster on the 45 is long overdue and should be filmed in SCOTLAND ! Although the adventures of a certain Bonnie Prince Charles should be told as a true story and not Hollywood fiction. Great for tourism and shortbread tin sales!!
4

Dr. James Wilkie,

Vienna 02/11/2008 09:36:54
I hope that Randall Wallace has learned a bit more about Scottish history since he wrote the script for Braveheart. The real history that he missed could have been even more cinematic. There were a lot of lost opportunities in Braveheart, and I hope he takes some expert advice this time. Rob Roy, which had a high degree of historical accuracy, showed what could be done without detracting from cinematic appeal. I agree about the need for a major production on the '45. I have a DVD of Chasing the Deer, which is historically very accurate, but lacks the Hollywood flair. A production that managed to combine both qualities would be a world-beater.

5

RaT1745,

Scunthorpe 03/11/2008 23:35:25
What's the betting shirt sleeves and sword and targe in the middle of winter. But that's what the Americans expect after all why let fact get in the way of the story. Having been involved with the filming for the Culloden filming (both times), it gets very cold, and we were only in the borders!

I have read some of the books and there is potential for a good film, IF a decent historical advisor is used with 18th century re-enactors making the bulk of the forces.
6

RaT,

04/11/2008 12:12:11
Here we go again more fantasy rubbish. Although a docu-drama would not be very Hollywood has no one worked out that the '45 is one of the best stories ever that really happend. lots of action, politics, and the opertunity for some really good acting roles.
I've been asked to read a lot of novels about the '45 and have only ever found one that was even close.
How many other writers have used the passing back in time idea? Mills and Boone crossed with fantasy history.
Please let this at least be based on some facts.
7

Marg,

US 04/11/2008 18:52:48
James McAvoy as Jamie Fraser? I don't think so...Jamie was a tall hulking Scot with blazing red hair. Surely there's someone else out there who can fill the bill.
8

Maire,

Canada 06/11/2008 00:20:09
I just hope the dialogue is better in the movie adaptation than it was in the book. Randall Wallace made such a mess of Braveheart and since he will be writing to please American women, I am doubtful that history or the real Scotland will be at all important. And I hope Mr. Wallace isn't relying on the novel to get the history or the language right, because Diana Gabaldon certainly didn't get it right. Hopefully the movie will be better than the book.
9

Maggie P,

Edinburgh 06/11/2008 22:16:17
Early in this novel it was obvious that the author was American so the screen adaptation doesn't need another American to perpetuate the mistakes. A Scottish writer could fix the mistakes, make Claire more likeable (don't understand why Jamie loved her) and soften some of the heavy-handed plot devices used to move the story forward. I stopped reading these books after the third novel when the history and the integrity of the writing falls apart. I can't imagine more than one movie because the other books get too bogged down in wooden dialogue and ridiculous story lines. The whole time travel concept is compelling and if the writing could be tidied up, it would be a wonderful movie.
10

jhjhjhjhjhj,

Upstate NY (boonies) 20/06/2009 07:51:54
Jaime Gerard Butler
Claire Alex Kingston
Briana Laura Prepon
Roger Colin Firth

 

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