This week, the three American childhood friends who overpowered
a man wielding an assault rifle and a box cutter on a passenger
train to Paris are starring in a Clint Eastwood movie about the
attack, and it's feeling a little surreal.
Spencer Stone, Anthony Sadler and Alek Skarlatos from
Sacramento, California, play themselves in the movie "The 15:17
to Paris," opening in U.S. movie theaters on Friday.
After meeting the three men in their 20s at an awards show,
Eastwood decided to make a film, but rather than casting actors,
the Oscar-winning director called on the friends themselves.
"Three weeks before shooting, he's like 'Do you guys want to do
it yourselves?' and we were like 'What? The movie starts in
three weeks and we never took acting classes,'" Sadler said.
"(Eastwood) was like 'Don't worry about it. We're just going to
go and do it.' So he just kept it simple and said 'Be yourself
and we're just going to capture it'," he added.
The trio were on a train from Amsterdam to Paris on a European
vacation on Aug. 21, 2015 when a suspected Islamist militant
opened fire on passengers.
They helped overpower the man, and Stone plugged the wounds of
another passenger with his fingers after being struck himself by
the attacker. Two other passengers were wounded and the attacker
was arrested when the train stopped.
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Stone is glad the film also honors the other people who sprang into
action. In the film, many of the passengers are the same people who
were on the train in 2015.
"A lot of the times the story is depicted that we were the only ones
who did anything," he said. "For them to be honored for what they
did in such a big way is awesome because it's something we've always
wanted but we just didn't know how we could do that.
"We just wanted to get it right and I think we did," Stone added.
Skarlatos said shooting the movie "helped us close a chapter in our
lives and move on."
But the trio is also hoping it opens other doors.
"Hopefully this launches movie careers for all three of us," said
Sadler. "We're all trying to pursue acting. We've kind of caught the
acting bug and he (Eastwood) gave us the confidence to do it."
(Reporting by Rollo Ross; Editing by Jill Serjeant and Sandra Maler)
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