Here’s a broad description of the upcoming film Atlas Shrugged, hitting theaters in April:
“The whole theme of the movie is, really, human evil,” says Brian O’Toole, the screenwriter behind Atlas Shrugged Part I, the feature adaptation of Ayn Rand’s influential novel. “And human evil springs from good intentions.”
O’Toole and producer Harmon Kaslow tell Reason.tv what viewers can expect to see in the movie, which covers the first of three sections in Rand’s novel.
“This movie really comes across as a very empowering movie for women,” says Kaslow. “It’s about a woman who takes on a lot of forces working against her.”
The movie is set in a dystopian near-future, and the story follows Dagny Taggart, a railroad executive who faces a crisis when one of her trains is derailed. While Dagny tries to improve the railway by collaborating with Hank Rearden, an entrepreneur who’s developed a new kind of metal, her brother James Taggart conspires with government officials and crony capitalists who are bent on taking Rearden down.
“To me, this was the underdog story,” says O’Toole.
Behind the Scenes:
Adapting the Epic:
And, previously posted on FREE WHITEWATER, the trailer for Atlas Shrugged, Part I: