film and Hanks together it is their shared
fascination with and respect for World
War II. As chance would have it the pair
were separately sent Robert Rodatâs
Saving Private Ryan screenplay on the
same day. At this stage it was a more
straightforward adventure movie with
jingoistic clichés action set-pieces and
wisecracks. Spielberg committed to
the concept but not the script and
called Hanks who was then editing
That Thing You Do!.
âSteven said âWeâre going to throw
all that out and itâs just going to be
completely authenticââ recalls Hanks.
ââWeâre going to show what it was really
like to be on Omaha Beach. Itâs going
to be the bloodiest place youâve ever
seen.â I said âThank you. Am I still
in the movie?ââ
The result earned Spielberg a Best
Director Oscar reinvented combat on
film spawned two HBO mini-series
(Band Of Brothers The Pacific) and
became a touchstone for what D-Day
means to an entire generation. Its
âmaking ofâ is a story of constant
reinvention a towering testament to
Spielbergâs ability to think on the fly and
never settle. He enlisted Frank Darabont
to expand the D-Day opening from six
pages to 28. Screenwriter Scott Frank
faxed Spielberg new material from LA on
a daily basis â âRemember the fax
machine?â says Hanks â adding among
other things the âEarn thisâ notion that
Miller utters with his dying breath.
âThere was a lot of improvisation
in terms of the story structureâ says
Spielberg. âI totally made up the
whole thing about Upham the young
translator not being able to make it up
the stairs to save Mellish. Itâs always fun
and a little risky to change character and
make up dialogue. But to materially alter
the structure of the movie thatâs the
âYea t atâs e an
the oral ce tre f
everything. o ls!âTom Hanks
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