'Charlie
Says' tells Manson story from view of women he sent to
kill
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[September 04, 2018]
By Sarah Mills
VENICE, Italy (Reuters) -
Charles Manson did not wield the knives in the 1969
murder spree that ended the Californian hippy dream, so
what drove the people who did so on his orders? That is
the question posed in "Charlie Says" which premiered in
Venice on Sunday.
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"Doctor Who" star Matt Smith plays Manson, a wild-eyed petty
criminal who sets up a hippy commune where his followers worship
him like a messiah, clinging to every word of his incoherent
prophecies of Armageddon.
Directed by Canadian Mary Harron, who made the 2000 Christian
Bale movie "American Psycho", "Charlie Says" is set three years
after the murders of, among others, Roman Polanski's actress
wife Sharon Tate and her unborn child.
Serving life in jail are three women, still in thrall to Manson
and clinging to his promise that they will all live out the
coming race war in a hole in the desert from which they will
emerge to populate a glorious new world.
Trying to reverse the brainwashing is a prison teacher who is
astonished that the bright-eyed young women seem untroubled by
their crimes and the fact they will die in jail.
"That's a perspective that no one has seen and no one has really
focused entirely on: their story or their journey about how they
ended up there and why they did the things they did," Harron
told Reuters in an interview.
"To me that's the great mystery. You know Charles Manson was
insane, but they were not, so how did he get them to do these
things?"
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Smith, who portrays Manson with a guitar slung around his neck as he
picks out third-rate songs he believes will propel him to global
stardom, said: "This isn't a film about Charles Manson.
"There's nothing new to find out (about him), but I like the idea
that this was a film about what made these girls go to commit these
crimes."
Screenwriter Guinevere Turner, who co-wrote the "American Psycho"
script with Harron, said she wanted to show how it might not be as
difficult as most people would think to fall into the thrall of a
charismatic huckster, if he was offering the promise of true love
and salvation.
"(I tried) to sort of implicate the audience in 'what would you do?'
... It was all very fun and happy, and orgies and drugs at the
beginning, and that was great. And then and it turned – and at what
part of the journey would you walk away?"
"Charlie Says" is competing in the Orizzonti segment of the Venice
Film Festival that runs until Sept. 8.
(Writing by Robin Pomeroy; editing by David Evans)
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