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Dax Phelan Set to Direct Tale of Outcasts, Misfits, Holy Fools, a True American Original – and Wine

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Adaptation of Todd Kliman’s Critically Acclaimed “The Wild Vine” Makes Cannes World Debut

“A fascinating story, complex and with a haunting finish.” – The Washington Post

CANNES (May 13, 2019)– Award-winning writer/producer/director Dax Phelan(“The Other Side of the Wind”, “Jasmine”) has secured the screen rights to two-time James Beard Award-winning author Todd Kliman’s first book, “The Wild Vine.” Eric M. Klein(“Chimera Strain”) will produce with Phelan, who also will write and direct. Stratton Leopold(“Mission: Impossible III”), James Su(“She’s Lost Control”), and Bill McMahon(“Jasmine”) will executive produce.

Lon Haber is presenting the film in Cannes.

The uniquely American true story is about a multi-millionaire, transgender winemaker on an obsessive quest to redeem the legacy of a brilliant antebellum doctor and restore a little-known American grape — which rocked the fine-wine world of the 19th century — to its former glory.

“From the moment I finished reading Todd’s book, it struck me as the most unique — and most uniquely American — underdog story I’d never heard of,” Phelan said.“That rare quality, combined with its outsider central character, made it impossible to resist.”

Said Kliman, “I’m so incredibly excited for this project, and to know that the book is in such capable hands. Dax really understands that this story of a humble grape is really a story of our time — a story of immigration, of transgenderism, of cultural authenticity, and above all of what it means to be an American.”

“It’s kind of astonishing to me,” Leopold added, “because at the same time this is a story that’s set in the past, its universal themes are so incredibly relevant to the present. I see a picture with a large market that also speaks loudly and clearly to the moment we’re in. I couldn’t be more excited.”

The project is expected to lens in Middleburg, Virginia and Hermann, Missouri, if the latter’s tax credit program, currently in legislation, is reinstated.

Kliman is an author, essayist, cultural critic, and food writer. He has won two James Beard Foundation Awards, including a 2016 MFK Fisher Distinguished Writing Award for his autobiography in seven meals, “Pork Life.” His writing has appeared in numerous publications, including “The New Yorker,” “Harper’s,” “The Oxford American,” “The Daily Beast,” and “Lucky Peach.” He recently completed a new book, “Happiness Is Otherwise,” and is at work on two others: a novel set during the last decade of American slavery, and a work of narrative nonfiction about the converso Jews. 

Phelan recently served as co-producer on Orson Welles’s final film, “The Other Side of the Wind,” which had its world premiere at the 75th Venice Film Festival. The Netflix original film won the prestigious and rarely given William K. Everson Film History Award from the National Board of Review and the Film Heritage Award from the National Society of Film Critics.  

Phelan recently adapted Neil White’s “New York Times” bestseller, “In the Sanctuary of Outcasts,” for Leopold and his award-winning feature directorial debut, “Jasmine,” which Leopold and Klein produced, was released by Lionsgate last summer.  

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1 COMMENT

  1. That is fantastic!!! It was a great book and I am a huge Norton fan. I lived in Virginia. now in KY (we grow Norton too), did the Norton wine trail in Missouri. But the best thing was we go to VA yearly to get great wines as we also love Petit Verdot . Anyway 3 years ago I took a bottle of Rising Son’s Norton Estate wine and some bourbon chocolates and left them for Jennie, she called me said the wine was really good and she had to meet me. so the next year we met her, got a tour of the old mill where she was going to grind the originial wheat they grew there in VA, and she showed us her cheese making plant under the tasting room, and took us to her house and we got to feed her chickens and tour the 40 acres of Norton. Norton is a true American grape and the book is awesome. I live in a suburb of Cincinnati and Vine St in Over the Rhine ( founded by the Germans) has been gentrified and has fantastic restaurants and a new winery where winemaker wants to use local grapes but they could not buy enough Norton so they bought it from VA- someplace named Chrysalis. Cannot wait to see movie

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