Entertaining
Ideas
Filmmakers in our
backyard
By Neil Cohen
The
It's the question everyone asks writer/director
Tommy Stovall and his partner, producer Marc Sterling, and I didn't even have
to — "Is Hate Crime autobiographical?" Definitely not, Stovall
volunteers, although people could be forgiven for asking. Hate Crime's
protagonists are Robbie and Trey, a young, handsome gay couple from Dallas who
are leading a perfectly normal life until a dangerous homophobe moves next
door.
The Sedona residents are riding high on the acclaim
their first film has received at the Palm Springs Film Festival, where it sold
out without the benefit of pre-festival buzz. They're looking forward to seeing
how it goes over as the Friday night feature at the 11th Annual Sedona Film
Festival, beginning March 4. I spoke with them about Hate
Crime,
and its controversial take on revenge and religious intolerance.
Echo: How did the script for Hate Crime
come about?
Stovall: I started thinking about it six or seven years ago, and I'd
always wanted to get into making independent films. So I had this idea in my
head, I kind of started with the title. A lot of people ask me if it's based on
a true story, and it isn't, thank goodness. I thought it would be an
interesting subject to explore, but I didn't want it just to be a message movie
or to make some political statement; I wanted it to be entertaining as well.
Echo: It does straddle a lot of genres (drama, mystery, suspense-thriller) Did the script evolve while you were
writing it?
Stovall: I didn't start writing it until about a year and a half ago,
and the first draft was pretty straightforward and predictable. So I tried to
make it a little more interesting and surprising. I'm glad to hear that people
are surprised at the end, because that certainly was the hope.
Echo: The film has a lot of political weight, especially now with the
drive to outlaw gay marriage. How does that affect you as a couple, knowing
you've made this powerful film about religious intolerance?
Sterling: Neither one of us is really political.
Stovall: My political views are expressed in the film. I hope it's not
straightforward what my political views are — I just lay them out and let
people draw their own conclusions. But for us, the gay marriage issue doesn't
really affect us either way. Our lives are going to be the same whether it
happens or not. It would be nice, of course, and I think everyone should have
the right (to marry). I think it will happen. It's just a question of when.
Echo: How long did it take you to adopt your son?
Stovall credits living in Sedona with giving him the motivation to write the
script, although filming away from home for two months did have its drawbacks.
Luckily, the two were well-acquainted with their
Casting was an eye-opening experience.
Getting product placement in the film also came about
differently. Most film producers go through a central company to handle putting
brand names on screen, but when the movie has gay subject matter, the companies
don't want the job.
Hate Crime is a
relationship film (Robbie and Trey have commitment issues), a revenge drama,
and a mystery-suspense picture, but it also resonates deeply when it delves
into the self-loathing and repression many hate crime perpetrators feel. The
scene that gets the most comments, Stovall reports, is one where a loving
sermon at the gay church is countered by Bruce Davison's fiery sin diatribe.
"They call it the 'Dueling Sermons' scene,"
he said, laughing. "I grew up in a small town in
Some parts of Hate Crime,
such as the actual beating, are hard for people to watch, but Stovall knew he
had to show it. What surprised
Stovall is already planning his next script, a lighter
comedy-drama set in Sedona. One hopes the legislature will recognize what a
valuable resource filmmaking is to the state, and people like Stovall and