The Philippine Star

A romantic movie that will make you cry

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“You only get one life. It’s actually your duty to live it as fully as possible,” says Will Traynor (Sam Claflin) in New Line Cinema’s new romantic drama Me Before You.

His advice is directed at his effervesce­nt yet seemingly settling caregiver Louisa “Lou” Clark (Emilia Clarke), 26, who claims to be happy in the quaint English town in which they both grew up. But Will, only 31, knows whereof he speaks… perhaps better than most.

“At its most basic, this is a story about the power of love and how it transforms you,” says director Thea Sharrock. “These are two characters who, but for their very different and difficult circumstan­ces, should never have met…but here they are. And that’s where the fairytale begins.”

Lou and Will’s uniquely romantic tale was crafted for the screen by Jojo Moyes, based on her own best-selling novel. “It’s a simple and complicate­d story all at once,” Sharrock continues. “Both in the script and in her book, Jojo managed to find a way to make the most emotionall­y difficult situations incredibly accessible through the unfolding of these two characters’ getting to know each other along this transforma­tive journey they take.”

“It’s a bit of a dream for me, the idea that this story is going beyond the book to the screen,” Moyes offers. “Having watched what it’s become through the actors’ performanc­es and Thea’s wonderful direction, I can say that people who see the movie will get the same story and characters, but also get something quite different out of it. Audiences bring their own experience­s, hopes and fears, and I think they will truly be taken out of themselves and into Lou and Will’s world.”

Sharrock adds, “Jojo has carried these characters, Lou in particular, with her for a long time, so it was especially important to me that we get it right.”

At one time, Will’s world was all-encompassi­ng; he lived a “no limits” lifestyle. Now, two years on, we find him utterly confined. Betrayed by his own body due to a spinal cord injury, he resides — even he would not say he lives by any definition of the word — at his parents’ countrysid­e home. Lou, on the other hand, has rarely stepped outside this little town, and even stepping into the grand Traynor estate — the “castle,” as it’s called by the locals — is foreign to her. Yet they meet, whether by chance or by fate.

“What resonated with me in Jojo’s novel was the original voice of the characters and the emotional truths,” says producer Karen Rosenfelt. “I loved how she handled the most complicate­d and personal issues and how life-affirming the story was. I was absorbed — I read the book in one sitting and immediatel­y visualized the film, and that rarely happens.”

Like Rosenfelt, producer Alison Owen’s interest in the property was longstandi­ng. “I read the book when it came out and I loved it. Jojo creates such fantastic characters and has so much insight into people’s lives and minds, and she writes with incredible empathy,” she says.

(Me Before You, a presentati­on of New Line Cinema and Metro-GoldwynMay­er Pictures (MGM), opens June 15 in cinemas nationwide. It will be distribute­d by Warner Bros. Pictures, a Warner Bros. Entertainm­ent company.)

 ??  ?? Emilia Clarke and Sam Claflin play lovers Lou Clark and Will Traynor in Me Before You
Emilia Clarke and Sam Claflin play lovers Lou Clark and Will Traynor in Me Before You

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