Adventure set in Utah heading to big screen
Environmental novel 'Monkey Wrench Gang' to be filmed
But the movie won't be filmed in Utah.
Edward Abbey's legendary novel, "The Monkey Wrench Gang," is mere months away from production. The novel is about a group of Utah environmentalists who are fed up with the overdevelopment of the region's canyonlands and who want to destroy the Glen Canyon Dam to drain Lake Powell.
"The characters are very hysterical, they're very funny, very eccentric and just a blast to read," the film's director, Catherine Hardwicke, said. "So it's not preachy. It's a wild rumpus, an anarchist's romp, about people that care passionately about the land."
Hardwicke is a juror at this year's Sundance Film Festival. Her directing credits include "Thirteen," "Lords of Dogtown" and this year's "The Nativity Story."
The novel, published in 1975, is an edgy, comedic story about a four-man gang that attacks trains and bulldozers. It inspired the environmental Earth First! movement, and the term "monkeywrench" now means to ruin something usually in order to protect the environment.
Sanders, who was a good friend of Abbey and can recount stories of traveling with the author, owns publishing rights to the 1985 R. Crumb-illustrated version of the book. Sanders has helped Hardwicke research the film and even started a line of "girly" "Monkey Wrench" T-shirts at her prompting.
But after seeing so many filmmakers get so far along without a movie materializing, he says, he won't believe it until he sees it.
"It's Hollywood, and anything can happen. I'm really rooting for them, I'm really hoping. But I've heard this so many times," he said. "In part, I think there's been resistance over the years that, I mean with Sept. 11 and Columbine, that it promotes terrorism. But if you read the novel, it's comedic. And the four people that form the Monkey Wrench Gang care deeply about the landscape and the wilderness they live in, and they are outraged at what's happened to the land. Anybody who has those kind of philosophies today, I would call them patriots and not terrorists."
Hardwicke remains confident that she's going to make a movie. Offers are out to actors now, low-ball figures to big-name stars. She expects to hear back in a matter of days. Redford has even talked to her about playing a minor character because he loves the book and Abbey, who was his friend.
Recent comments
I can't wait for this movie to come out! Leave it to Redford...
Pat in NH | April 5, 2008 at 1:15 p.m.
I hope they complete the movie because I am very excited to see it...
Dennis B. | March 20, 2008 at 7:09 a.m.
What is the latest on "The Monkey Wrench Gang" movie? Any...
Kevin Hancock | Jan. 2, 2008 at 2:16 p.m.



