Thursday, June 21, 2018

Welcome To Marwen, the most original movie concept I've seen since Colossal, Steve Carell as an artist specializing in WW2 drawings, then photography of WW2 dioramas. It's like they looked at my blog and made a movie!



This holiday season, Academy Award winner Robert Zemeckis—the groundbreaking filmmaker behind Forrest Gump, Flight and Cast Away—directs Steve Carell in the most original movie of the year. Welcome to Marwen tells the miraculous true story of one broken man’s fight as he discovers how artistic imagination can restore the human spirit.

On April 8, 2000, 38 year old Mark Hogancamp was attacked by five men and left for dead, beaten into a brain-damaging coma, outside of a bar in Kingston, NY. After nine days in a coma, he awoke to find he had no memory of his previous adult life. He had to relearn how to eat, walk and write.

When Hogancamp woke up in the hospital he had no idea who he was or where he was, a devastating attack wiped away all memories, and no one expected recovery.

 He was beat up so badly that he couldn’t walk, talk or speak. His therapies were cut off by Medicaid, of course, and Hogancamp had to make his own treatment, and in the process he makes some most unusual friends.

 Putting together pieces from his old and new life, Hogancamp meticulously created a wondrous 1/6th scale World War II-era town in his backyard where he could heal and be heroic. As he builds an astonishing art installation—a testament to the most powerful women he knows—through his fantasy world, he draws strength to triumph in the real one.

In a bold, wondrous and timely film from this revolutionary pioneer of contemporary cinema, Welcome to Marwen shows that when your only weapon is your imagination…you’ll find courage in the most unexpected place.

The epic drama is produced by Oscar®-winning producer Steve Starkey (Forrest Gump, Flight), Jack Rapke (Cast Away, Flight), and Cherylanne Martin (The Pacific, Flight) of Zemeckis’ Universal-based ImageMovers banner produce alongside the director.


Mark Hogancamp's artwork is on display at One Mile Gallery (or take a quick look at the first feature in https://www.esopus.org/issues/view/5)

One Mile Gallery
475 Abeel Street
Kingston, New York, 12401
onemilegallery@gmail.com

Since the New York Film Fest documentary debut, Mr. Malmberg has set up a web site and invites viewers to support Mr. Hogancamp by donating to J and J Hobbies, Mr. Hogancamp’s favorite store, a Kingston hobby shop. Some send money, which Mr. Hogancamp uses to buy new figures and supplies.

Mr. Hogancamp lives from disability check to disability check. To save money, he eats one meal a day. He buys groceries every Tuesday, when a neighbor gives him a lift to the Cumberland Farms store five miles away.

He was a boatswains mate in the Navy, in the 80s, served on the Savanna, and did about 6 to 9 years (approx, it's difficult to get that accurate) and honorably discharged out.


The prospect of a Hollywood film of his life is “scary,” Mr. Hogancamp said, and he still feels overwhelmed at the attention from the art world. But over all, he is pleased with this unexpected chapter. After the documentary, fan messages and gratitude from people suffering from P.T.S.D. filled its Facebook page. https://www.facebook.com/Marwencol  “I didn’t know that my fight to get my mind back would benefit other brain-injured people,” Mr. Hogancamp said. “Now they know they can create their own world that only they understand.”



In November 2010, the deli where he used to shop went out of business. It was just two miles away, and he could walk there by himself, keeping steady by focusing his eyes on the lines at the side on the road, and staying calm by dragging behind him an Army jeep the size of a handbag filled with Deja and the other girls, all armed to the teeth to keep him safe. The trip was also helpful in that it wore down the factory seams on the jeep’s rubber tires (Mr. Hogancamp is a stickler for detail).

https://www.welcometomarwen.com/

https://www.nytimes.com/2015/05/15/arts/design/mark-hogancamp-the-artist-as-imagined-war-hero.html
https://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/07/garden/07marwencol.html?_r=0

A book of his photography

can be previewed and bought at https://www.amazon.com/Welcome-Marwencol-Mark-Hogancamp/dp/1616894156 and the preview is wow... a lot of incredible photos, and several chapters to read. More than usually found on Amazon.

6 comments:

  1. I didn't know about the movie, but I heard his story on Snap Judgement. Looking forward to the movie now!
    http://snapjudgment.org/marwencol

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks! That added quite a bit to my post... very nice of you!

      Delete
  2. Anonymous9:08 AM

    Thanks for the heads up on this, looks like a great movie on a very serious subject.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Certainly! Like I mentioned, it's a movie on topics I favor extensively, WW2, photography, art, and movies. Plus it's got Steve Carell, who I enjoy a lot in movies, and is about a squid, which I was one too... and after Carell's last movie, Last Flag Flying, this is a cool follow up movie about another navy vet.
      It's got a zig in it, the guy was beat up for being a cross dresser. That's not something everyone can deal with compassionately when it comes to someone with serious life troubles, as Mr. Hogancamp ws homeless, alcoholic, and seriously had crashed and burned out. But damn, he was one amazing artist drawing incredibly good work from that one glimpse we have in the preview.
      Well, I hope people aren't shocked when the movie shows that, after it's never mentioned in the preview.
      Hell, I avoided focusing on that too, as a lot of people can't be cool with other people, and well, that's who tried to kill this poor bugger. People who can't live and let live.

      Delete
    2. well said, Jesse. I've known about Hogancamp's story for some time and look forward to seeing the film. I hope his life is improved by the increased awareness.

      Delete
    3. thank you! I hope so too. Horrible circumstances, and total loss of memory. I can't imagine what a persons mind and personality would be like after having lost all memories.

      Delete