Salinger | |
---|---|
Theatrical release poster
|
|
Directed by | Shane Salerno |
Produced by | Shane Salerno Buddy Squires Deborah Randall Craig Fanning |
Written by | Shane Salerno |
Cinematography | Anthony Savini Buddy Squires |
Edited by | Jeffrey Doe |
Distributed by | The Weinstein Company |
Release date
|
|
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Box office | $650,675 |
Salinger is a 2013 documentary film about the reclusive writer J. D. Salinger directed and produced by Shane Salerno. The film tells the story of Salinger's life through interviews with friends, historians, and journalists. The film premiered at the 40th annual Telluride Film Festival and had a second premiere on the opening night of the Toronto International Film Festival.
Salinger was one of the top-ten highest-grossing documentaries of 2013, with the highest per screen average of all the films that were released on its opening weekend. Two million viewers watched its broadcast on American Masters on PBS.
According to Salerno, the project initially started as a feature film, with Daniel Day-Lewis as his choice to play Salinger.
Buddy Squires, Emmy-winning and Oscar-nominated cinematographer, was hired to shoot the film.
On January 29, 2010, the website Deadline.com first reported on the documentary, which had been kept secret for five years. Michael Fleming, the first journalist to view the film, called it "arrestingly powerful and exhaustively researched". Additionally, Fleming announced that Salerno had co-written a 700-page biography on Salinger with New York Times bestselling author David Shields. On February 4, 2010, Entertainment Weekly detailed the elaborate security surrounding the film.
When American Masters executive producer Susan Lacy read about the project, she began a three-year pursuit to acquire the television rights to the documentary. On January 27, 2013, Lacy and PBS American Masters concluded a deal for the domestic television rights to Salinger for a low-seven-figure sum. Lacy said: "Shane's film is an extraordinary piece of work; the more recognition Salinger received, the more reclusive and enigmatic he became, refusing all interviews and trying to block all coverage. With the embargo finally lifted, it is my intellectual and emotional thrill to bring the inimitable J. D. Salinger into the American Masters library. I cannot envision a more appropriate subject for our 200th broadcast in January."