Bestselling Phenomenal Young Adult Novel “The DUFF" Comes to the Big Screen
Executive
Producer Lane Shefter Bishop first learned of the novel “The Duff” when she saw
the partially written book in the office of Joanna Stampfel-Volpe, a book agent
in New York. Bishop instantly loved the
title and the idea, and read the book that night. The next day, she called Stampfel-Volpe and
asked for the chance to secure a movie deal.
Bishop immediately sent the project to producers McG and Mary Viola of
Wonderland Sound and Vision and said, “You have to read this now!”
“We got about 100 pages of the
book in manuscript form” says Viola. “Lane emphasized that the book was very
special.” Like Bishop, Viola read the pages overnight.
“I called Lane the next day and
said ‘This is amazing. The voice is so original. We have to get this book,’” she says. McG agreed.
“I just thought it was something that was ‘zeitgeisty’, of-the-moment –
so relatable and just true to life,” he says.
The producers were soon
surprised to find that the original voice belonged to author Kody Keplinger,
who wrote the book titled “The Duff” when she was just 17 years-old.
“We had no idea she was a
teenager until Lane was working out the details of the deal and Kody said she
would need to discuss it with her mother, “says Viola.
Bishop says, “I thought, ‘This
cannot be a 17-year-old. She has the
high school voices down, but this is someone who knows how to write because the
emotion woven throughout is dead on.’ There’s a lot going on (in the book) and
a lot of complexity underneath it all.”
As much as the producers loved
the book and the characters at the heart of the story, they needed to put it in
a film structure and adjust certain aspects to make it work visually for an
audience. They enlisted screenwriter
Josh A. Cagan (Bandslam).
“Sometimes while condensing a
book, you have to lose certain things and change others but we stuck with the
elements that were the most important and integral to telling the story,” says
Viola.
“The changes were a challenge,”
Cagan says. “I needed to come up with a
device that would drive the narrative as we took the story from book to screen.
I was struck by the idea of the Kubler-Ross model of the five stages of death –
denial, anger, bargaining, depression and acceptance – albeit a seemingly odd
device for a comedy.”
“Any time you are adapting a
book into a film, things are going to change. If you adapt a book as it is onto
the screen, it is probably going to be a pretty long and boring movie,”
explains Keplinger. “What has always mattered to me is the message of the book
- the theme that at some point in life, everyone feels like the DUFF. As things
proceeded and as I watched the casting, I could see how passionate everyone
involved was about the project. I knew they cared as much about the spirit of
the story as I did. I’m just so excited to see the movie and message come to
life.”
Even before the term DUFF
(Designated Ugly Fat Friend) entered the high school vernacular, there have
always been unspoken differences in social circles. It seems that everyone has
friends who are more attractive, smarter, or more talented at some point in
their lives, as well as friends who are not as attractive, smart or talented. The reality is that everyone is a DUFF and
everyone has a DUFF, and nowhere is that more pronounced than in high school.
“I clearly remember my senior
year of high school when I walked into the cafeteria one morning and a girl at
my table was talking about how she hated when guys referred to her friend as
the DUFF,” says Keplinger. “I didn’t
know what it meant so I had to ask and she told me that it meant the designated
ugly fat friend. I had three reactions.
I first thought, ‘That’s hilarious,’ and then I thought ‘Oh no wait, that’s
actually really mean,’ and then I thought ‘That’s me.’”
“Later I was telling my friends
this and I realized that they all thought they were the DUFF. And so I started
saying that I would, as a joke, write this book called The DUFF but instead of
the girl taking her ponytail out and her glasses off and becoming a supermodel,
she would stay the DUFF throughout.”
“The most common thing I’ve
gotten is people who read THE DUFF and email me and say ‘I’m the DUFF of my
group of friends and this book really meant something to me,’” says
Keplinger. ”It doesn’t matter what you
look like. It’s not about being fat or
thin, or short or tall. It could be that
you don’t feel like you’re the smartest in the group or the most talented in
the group. It’s about feeling insecure
and inadequate, and everyone has been there.”
Although the cast and filmmakers
all feel strongly about the message of the film, everyone agrees that the movie
is first and foremost a very funny comedy.
“One of the things about comedy
is it lets you touch on very important or controversial subjects in a way that
you wouldn’t be able to in other aspects because you’re not trying to be super
dramatic which is going to feel heavy-handed and boring,” says director Ari Sandel. “If you can make jokes about the subject, it
actually makes it lighter.”
“The Duff” opens April 15 in
theatres nationwide from Pioneer Films.
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