In the summer of 1993, an army of filmmakers arrived in the Lowcountry of South Carolina and began work on the groundbreaking film Forrest Gump. Led by visionary director Robert Zemeckis and the extraordinary Tom Hanks, the team didn't know at the time that the film would make cinematic history. They were challenged by the complicated details of the production on a movie that depicted a turbulent time in American history in places that ranged from backroads of South Carolina and the bayous of Louisiana to the jungles of Vietnam and the Washington, D.C., Mall. In these pages, Steve Starkey, one of the producers of the film, takes you behind the scenes and shares his memories of the unlikely journey to make the Oscar-winning film.
Beginning when his filmmaking partner, Robert Zemeckis, dropped the script on his desk and continuing to the film's release to critical and popular success, Starkey reveals the magic of the filmmaking process: discovering the locations for the film, including the Gump house; figuring out how to shoot Gump's transcontinental runs; and, especially, creating the extraordinary visual effects that, among other things, allowed Forrest to interact with several presidents of the United States.
He also relates the difficulties of working with Paramount Pictures, a reluctant partner on the film, and how the filmmaking team was eventually able to overcome all obstacles and make the film of their dreams. Illustrated by a large number of film stills taken during the making of the film, Stupid Is as Stupid Does brings to life an iconic, beloved movie.
When I think back on the making of Forrest Gump, my mind swirls in disbelief at what I and the film company went through to get that movie done. In order to get the cross-country run on film, we worked 27 days in a row. The show was relentless, but we got through it and maybe got a little bruised in the process, but, at the end of the day, we made the film we set out to make.
-Tom Hanks
Many of the amusing stories that Starkey tells in his trip down memory lane I had completely forgotten about. All I tend to remember about the shooting of the film was how hard it was. When I think back on the shots he describes, I remember my fears of having bumps in a camera move or if the shot was in focus. Steve's book is a look behind the curtain-an enjoyable firsthand account of the making of Forrest Gump.
-Robert Zemeckis