Sam Worthington in the True Story of “Kidnapping Freddy Heineken”
Acclaimed actor Sam Worthington, who rose to
worldwide attention with his lead role in James Cameron’s groundbreaking
“Avatar” and further cemented his role as one of Hollywood’s most-sought lead
stars, lends his star power in the gritty thriller “Kidnapping Freddy Heineken”
along with Sir Anthony Hopkins in the titular role.
“Kidnapping
Freddy Heineken” was filmed in Brussels, Antwerp, Amsterdam and New Orleans
where the European leg of the production presented the producers with unusual
challenges in replicating the time and place of the most notorious crime that
happened in 1983 when brewery tycoon Freddy Heineken was abducted along with
his chauffeur.
Written
by William Brookfield and directed by Daniel Alfredson from the bestselling
book (of true accounts) by crime scribe and Emmy Award-winning Peter R. De
Vries, the movie pans back at the time when four friends planned, abducted and
released Heineken after being paid a ransom that was considered to be the
largest amount paid at such time.
Brookfield
finds during the writing process that the kidnappers fall on the gray area in
between, since all of them are normal thriving citizens at that time. “They had legitimate construction business,
but they weren’t smart and they didn’t put reserves aside, and there was
recession. They decided, “Let’s do a
crime, but let’s do a really big crime.
They weren’t serious mafia gangsters,” explains Brookfield.
The
presence of a conscience allowed for Brookfield to entertain the idea of
writing the screenplay around the experience of the kidnappers. “They never wanted to hurt anybody. That’s the interesting part about it. If they had been ruthless, they would have
gotten away with it, and would have gotten the money, and would have never been
caught. They were more like kids. They weren’t what they were pretending to be,
and the police smelled it. They were
never physically very hard with them.
They nearly cracked up because of the tension.”
After
casting Hopkins, the rest of the ensemble fell in line. “I think when the younger actors, like Sam
Worthington, Jim Sturgess, Ryan Kwanten and Mark Van Eeuwen heard that Anthony
Hopkins would be playing Heineken and that they would play opposite him in the
holding cell scenes, how could they not want to do that?” producer Cairo
says. “It had huge appeal to the younger
actors, and it was very thrilling to see the great relationships that they all
developed on set. Anthony Hopkins was so
fabulous with the younger guys, and also had great respect for them and great
encouragement for them.”
Producing
partner Michael Simpsons was in awe of the true crime story by De Vries, “I was so
fascinated listening to everything I heard.
What I quickly understood in talking with Peter is that the kidnappers
were very full-blooded, real people.
Very complex characters. They
were childhood friends, which I found fascinating.”
“Kidnapping Freddy Heineken” is now in theaters nationwide from Axinite Digicinema.
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