Elgin James Resumes Movie Career With Deal To Direct Indie Thriller ‘Come Sundown’

EXCLUSIVE: Elgin James has been set to direct Come Sundown, a drama scripted by Justin Marks that will shoot in the fall. Jamie Patricof and Lynette Howell of Electric City Entertainment are producing the thriller about a family taken hostage by desperate fugitives determined to get across the border. It becomes a struggle between a father trying to protect his family while hanging onto his humanity, and a hardened criminal with nothing to lose.

It will be the first project for James after spending almost a year in the Los Angeles Metropolitan Detention Center (he spent eight months behind bars, and another three in a halfway house). If you recall, James grew up on the rough streets around Boston and after getting thumped plenty, helped form the rough street gang FSU that battled skinheads and other ethnic gangs, and robbed drug dealers for money and gave half the proceeds to charity. James came to Hollywood with a film deal to tell his story, but after he made a vow to his girlfriend (now his wife) that he would swear off violence and embrace pacifism, he blew off that deal because he was embarrassed by his past actions and knew they would be glamorized in a Robin Hood-like story. Instead, he wrote the script Little Birds, found an advocate in Blue Valentine producer Patricof, and then got accepted into the Sundance Labs program. He made his directing debut on Little Birds, which made the 2011 Sundance Festival (and subsequently got acquired by Millennium Entertainment). He found an agent at WME, and got his first studio job writing Low Riders for Imagine.

Then, just like that, his violent past reared back to bite him. A Chicago judge ordered James to spend a year in jail for attempted extortion. I met James at Sundance on the day Little Birds premiered, as he awaited the judge’s decision. At the time, it struck me that while so many filmmakers in Park City made gritty films that depicted violence they could only imagine, James had lived plenty of that and went out of his way to de-glamorize the violence in his own film.

I spoke with James today, and he confirms that doing time is at least as bad as you might think. “I’d call it the crappiest writing sabbatical ever,” he joked. It was worse than that. “Because it was an administrative facility and high security, I never stepped outside,” he said. “No fresh air, no sunlight for eight months. I tried to use the time positively, with the idea that since I was losing a year just when things started happening, I could figure out my strengths and weaknesses as a filmmaker. I also set a goal to read 100 books, and I read 101.”

James exposed himself to classics like Gone With the Wind, and the fiction of writers like Pat Conroy. His big challenge was not slipping back into a pattern of settling disputes with violence, and keeping to the vow of pacifism that he feels has turned his life around. “It was one thing to embrace non-violence when you’re living in Silverlake, sipping smoothies with Kate Bosworth and Juno Temple, and meeting with all the intelligent beautiful people who inspired me. It’s another thing when you’re thrown into the darkest, most violent place, the general population of the U.S. Federal prison system. Every day I was challenged, especially at the beginning because some people knew who I was, and they knew about my past. I learned that like being an alcoholic, rage does not just go away because you say you won’t act on it. Every day was like the first day of school, times 1000. Not to sound arrogant, but fear of the unknown goes away quickly, and the bigger issue is handling anger. Here I had spent years fighting against drug dealers, bullies and racists and I was surrounded by them. And I was the only guilty person in prison. Everybody else was fighting their case, while I’d said, yes, I did it. I owned up to it, and was serving my time.”

James won his personal battle with rage, walking away from confrontation and surrounded himself with seasoned cons who had seen enough trouble not to look for more. He would make acquaintances with men who seemed nice enough, only to discover they were there because they’d done ghastly things. And he had to stop himself from getting defensive when former Boston kingpin Whitey Bulger took residence in protective custody. To his fellow inmates, Bulger was a rat. While James was growing up on the rough streets around Boston, Bulger was the man.

It was during that struggle that Patricof sent him Come Sundown. The script had been titled Borderline when Rod Lurie was going to direct it. In prison, James was precluded from writing scripts–he has turned in Low Riders, but if he did any scribbling behind bars, he wasn’t telling me–but he read everything sent to him and found a kinship to the protagonist’s dilemma.

“There is this clash of the lower self against the higher self,” James said. “The kidnapped man is a doctor who is a pacifist, and he has to decide whether to put ideals and principles above protecting his family against the ex-con who personified the lower self. I wouldn’t have thought of doing the project beforehand, it was just a violent action thriller when I first read it. But the idea of exploring where that line should be drawn, when the doctor’s insistence on being a pacifist becomes an excuse for cowardice or self-righteousness at the expense of his family, that intrigued me.”

James recalled seeing footage of himself just before he entered the Sundance Labs, the brashness and rage still in him before the Labs humbled him and changed his life, he said. “Once I had a positive light coming out of myself, I didn’t recognize the old me. I thought, what a fucking asshole I was.” That adherence to pacifism kept him out of trouble in prison. The question of how far it would carry his protagonist got James to commit to the film. James worked with Marks to strip away the violence and cliches that felt exploitative, until he and Marks wound up with a real study of contrasting characters.

“The funny while we worked on it was how Justin related to the ex-con,” James said. “Ironically, I was the ex-con, and I related to the doctor determined to be pacifist. I felt his principles were his weapons, his strength.”

Only time will tell if James can follow those principles and become a positive force in Hollywood. Millennium waited for him to open Little Birds, which bows August 17 in New York and Los Angeles. James, on parole, has to walk the straight and narrow to be able to promote the film and travel to shoot his future films where he wants to. Things other filmmakers take for granted.

Comments (28)

  • Once a con, always a con. I wonder how many talented writers who have never broken the law are being denied opportunities in Hollywood to make room for guys like this?

    Comment by Mr. Yuck — Monday April 16, 2012 @ 5:46pm PDT  Reply to this post
    • He served his time! If he can make a go of it as a film maker, good for him.

      Comment by W — Monday April 16, 2012 @ 6:14pm PDT  Reply to this post
    • So sorry that your prison script was rejected by all of the majors. Word to the wise: prisoners do not say “dy-no-mite!”

      Comment by David — Monday April 16, 2012 @ 6:24pm PDT  Reply to this post
    • Seriously?

      Re-read the story, Mr. Yuck.

      Guy had a deal, turned it down for moral reasons and wrote something else he was fortunate enough to get made.

      Sounds like someone’s got a little “Why not Me…?” going on.

      Comment by Dear Mr. Yuck — Monday April 16, 2012 @ 6:26pm PDT  Reply to this post
    • You’re a fool.

      Comment by mteague — Monday April 16, 2012 @ 7:00pm PDT  Reply to this post
    • Those with the most experience have the most to say. That’s what stories are for. Too many writers are simply pushing product.

      Comment by Anonymous — Monday April 16, 2012 @ 10:48pm PDT  Reply to this post
    • Go take a hike – to put it mildly.
      People with a story to tell are just that…& who ever’s got the best story to tell wins, or should do. Unfortunately that’s not always the case..loads of thrillers & crime stories written by putzs who’ve never even jay-walked but gotten all their ideas from old movies or fantasy crime novels. Reality talks — your “good honest” phonies walk.

      Comment by Denis Harrap — Tuesday April 17, 2012 @ 9:23am PDT  Reply to this post
    • Yes, I’m sure there will be a flood of ex-cons who are gifted writers and filmmakers displacing legions of honest but slightly less talented storytellers in Hollywood any day now.

      Comment by gobacktosleep — Tuesday April 17, 2012 @ 9:33am PDT  Reply to this post
  • Real good guy. Been in a couple rooms with him and he is very soft spoken and humble. Glad to see that garbage is behind him

    Comment by Scotty — Monday April 16, 2012 @ 5:46pm PDT  Reply to this post
  • stop trying to make Elgin-fetch happen! It’s not going to happen!

    Comment by JP — Monday April 16, 2012 @ 6:01pm PDT  Reply to this post
  • Kudos to Justin Marks – a good guy, and a talented writer!

    Comment by A.D. — Monday April 16, 2012 @ 6:08pm PDT  Reply to this post
  • Big difference between and Federal penn and a State penn. Martha Stewart went to a federal penn. So did Leona Helmsly. There are no bars, they don’t wear uniforms.

    Comment by ALEXINWONDERLAND — Monday April 16, 2012 @ 6:30pm PDT  Reply to this post
    • No they didn’t. Martha Stewart and Leona Helmsly went to federal CAMPS. VERY big difference. But this article is less about about prison, and more about someone that sounds like they may have been an asshole in the past, got their shit together, took their lumps and is moving on. Kudos to that.

      Comment by prisonsystem — Monday April 16, 2012 @ 7:18pm PDT  Reply to this post
    • Wrong. Minimum security is what you describe. Violent crimes go to max or super max. You wouldn’t make it there or a min security for that matter.

      Comment by Anonymous — Monday April 16, 2012 @ 7:21pm PDT  Reply to this post
  • Once “taught” writing to the incarcerated, as well as I could. Mostly basic stuff. I could never get a line from the late Phil Ochs’ song out of my head driving home: “There But for Fortune, Go You and I.” Let’s wait and see how the art turns out.

    Comment by mba — Monday April 16, 2012 @ 7:17pm PDT  Reply to this post
  • Lowriders? Paid to write or rewrite that script? Imagine thinks their on the pulse of urban Latino culture? Bleh.

    Comment by Baby Bruck — Monday April 16, 2012 @ 10:47pm PDT  Reply to this post
    • “they’re” … Chale, homes.

      Comment by Baby Bruck — Monday April 16, 2012 @ 10:48pm PDT  Reply to this post
    • Maybe you should wait to hear who else may be involved?

      Comment by guesto — Tuesday April 24, 2012 @ 12:09pm PDT  Reply to this post
  • This guy sounds like a real prick

    Comment by Realist — Tuesday April 17, 2012 @ 12:31am PDT  Reply to this post
  • Elgin’s a great guy – a good soul who has made mistakes and owns up to those mistakes. I wish him the best – always did, always will.

    Comment by bbg — Tuesday April 17, 2012 @ 1:54am PDT  Reply to this post
  • A Desperate Hours remake?

    Comment by Walker — Tuesday April 17, 2012 @ 2:17am PDT  Reply to this post
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