Jeremy Leven was born in 1941 in South Bend, Indiana, USA. He is a writer and producer, known for The Notebook (2004), Real Steel (2011) and My Sister's Keeper (2009).
[on working with Johnny Depp and Marlon Brando on Don Juan DeMarco (1994)] Johnny wanted to work wit...Show more »
[on working with Johnny Depp and Marlon Brando on Don Juan DeMarco (1994)] Johnny wanted to work with Marlon a whole lot. Obviously, I did not have Marlon Brando in mind when I wrote the film. I felt like I was watching probably the greatest actor now working passing the torch on to the greatest actor in his 30s. They're both instinctive actors. Although they'll discuss on an intellectual level with some emotional grounding, when they finally get down to it I don't think they have a clue what they're doing in front of a camera. It's totally instinctive. It's just brilliant. And they're constantly surprising. Show less «
[on Girl on a Bicycle (2013)] Paris has become a repository of beautiful-girl genes, so everywhere o...Show more »
[on Girl on a Bicycle (2013)] Paris has become a repository of beautiful-girl genes, so everywhere one goes, they pass by like a May breeze. I just saw the pretty girls riding by in Paris and came up with the idea. The theme is, as Derek says in the film, that "there will always be a girl on a bicycle", meaning that there will always be someone or something that makes us wonder what could have been and can have a very distracting presence. Show less «
[on Don Juan DeMarco (1994)] I had a decision to make about what to do about Marlon's weight, regard...Show more »
[on Don Juan DeMarco (1994)] I had a decision to make about what to do about Marlon's weight, regarding the fact that he is heavy. Actually, it was Marlon's idea, when we starting shooting the first scene, suddenly he walks up to Richard C. Sarafian and taps him on the tummy and says, "Putting on a little weight." That came out of nowhere. I never wrote that line. That was Marlon's line. But I figured, "Well, that was his way of dealing." Show less «
[on adapting Nicholas Sparks' novel for The Notebook (2004)] The biggest challenge is to make it rea...Show more »
[on adapting Nicholas Sparks' novel for The Notebook (2004)] The biggest challenge is to make it real, not to make it saccharine. There's a sleight of hand while you're pulling the audience's strings not to let them know, so they don't feel like you're pulling their strings. It's a very difficult thing to do and it's a very delicate line between it, to make sure that it's real. You still get them to cry at the end, but they're crying over something that's real. It's not hard to get an audience to cry, but to get them to cry because it resonates with them - that's hard. Show less «
My first novel, Creator, is about faith. The second one is about the devil coming for psychotherapy ...Show more »
My first novel, Creator, is about faith. The second one is about the devil coming for psychotherapy because he feels he is unloved and misunderstood. That's all about faith. At the end, the devil has destroyed the life of the psychiatrist - absolutely destroyed it. He's lost everything: his children, his home, his job, his wife, everything. And he's off to do it again, and the devil says, "I don't get this. Hope. Hope. Hope. He's off doing it again. Where does this ever come from?" So all my novels, a lot of my screenplays, they all deal with love and faith and religion a lot. I always have a cryptic that my kids know about. I have "704" because "7" is "G", "0" is "O" and "4" is "D". So there's always a phone number with 704 or an address with 704 or something in every book that I write. Every screenplay that I write, there's always 704 in it somewhere. Show less «
[on The Notebook (2004)] The problem with the book is that it's melodramatic and sweet, and you have...Show more »
[on The Notebook (2004)] The problem with the book is that it's melodramatic and sweet, and you have to find a way to appeal to an audience that is apprehensive about yet another sweet movie. So you have to give it an edge, make it real and make the choices the characters face real. I thought that Nick Cassavetes did some very good things - I don't mind being rewritten if it's better, I can learn from it. I'm very happy with the film. Show less «