Use BBC.com or the new BBC App to listen to BBC podcasts, Radio 4 and the World Service outside the UK.

Find out how to listen to other BBC stations

Episode details

Radio 4,29 Apr 2011,30 mins

The rise of film and TV drama based on real events

Front Row

Available for over a year

When director Danny Boyle read mountaineer Aran Ralston's account of how he cut off his own arm after being stranded in a canyon for five days, he knew he wanted to turn it into a film, which became the Oscar-nominated 127 Hours. Kirsty Lang talks to Boyle about the process of adapting a true story for the big screen. She also discusses the rise of films and TV dramas based on real events with screenwriter Aaron Sorkin who won the Oscar for his script for The Social Network; Public Enemies screenwriter Ronan Bennett; and actress Hilary Swank who played real characters in Boys Don't Cry and the recent Conviction. Screenwriter Peter Morgan, who wrote The Deal, The Last King of Scotland and Frost/Nixon, discusses how he approached the subject of Diana's death which ultimately became The Queen, starring Helen Mirren. And director Peter Weir explains why he turned his hand to an apparently true story when adapting the bestseller The Long Walk, turning it into his recent film The Way Back, starring Colin Farrell. Producer Jerome Weatherald.

Programme Website
More episodes