"Reading the script was like, what? This is so
weird. Like, surely Mom has a hand at, like, why this is
happening right now," said Micheál Richardson.
The film, out on demand on various broadcast platforms on
Friday, centers around a father and his estranged son who
attempt to renovate a Tuscan home inherited from his late wife.
Natasha Richardson, the star of movies like "The Parent Trap,"
died at age 45 after suffering a severe brain injury in a skiing
accident in Canada in 2009.
Writer and director James D'Arcy wrote the script before
Richardson died, and when he sent it to Neeson, it was with a
lot of trepidation.
"I thought we could get a pretty insulting note back saying,
'how dare you send him a script like that?' And actually, it was
completely the opposite. He really responded to it personally,"
D'Arcy said.
Neeson suggested his real-life son be cast in the film, but
wanted to make sure Richardson was protected.
"He's a pretty young man and he had a terrible trauma 10 years
ago. And I did not want him to be retraumatized in the making of
the film," Neeson said.
The movie is filled with romance, comedy and a message of hope -
which Neeson hopes helps people during the stresses of the
coronavirus pandemic.
"It's important to say that we have each other. We have to help
each other," he said.
(Reporting by Alicia Powell, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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