Why âWonder Womanâ director Patty Jenkins returned to TV for the L.A. noir âI Am the Nightâ
âSome stories you canât tell,â one reporter grimly warns another over drinks in an early scene of the TNT series âI Am the Night,â debuting Jan. 28. âSome stories will eat you alive.â
Itâs the kind of hard-boiled dialogue that helped establish a tradition of L.A. noir that includes Raymond Chandler and James Ellroy. As envisioned by Patty Jenkins, best known as director of âWonder Woman,â this miniseries continues that legacy with a compelling new angle on the grisly unsolved 1947 killing of a woman who became known as the Black Dahlia.
For the record:
12:10 p.m. Jan. 11, 2019An earlier version of this story said that Patty Jenkins directed all six episodes of âI Am The Night.â She directed the first two. Additionally, Elizabeth Smart was killed in 1947, not 1949.
âThis [story] really rocked me,â says Jenkins, who directed the first two episodes of âI Am the Nightâ before starting work on the blockbuster superhero sequel-in-waiting, âWonder Woman 1984.â âI actually fully and really believe this is the truth of what happened.â
Adapted by Jenkinsâ husband, Sam Sheridan, the series tells the story of Fauna Hodel, whose 2008 memoir âOne Day Sheâll Darkenâ mixes elements of race, identity and one of the most famous homicides of the 20th century in a way that consumed Jenkins in such a way she was initially a bit wary as well.
âI met [Hodel] years ago, and she sat down and told me her story, and it so blew me away,â Jenkins says, speaking by phone just before the new year. âI was a little freaked out by it because it was so dark and kind of scary, and I had a very young child at the time and was like, âOooh, do you want to take this on?ââ
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Hodel grew up Patricia Ann Greenway and was raised by a black family in Sparks, Nev. Believing her biological father was African American, Hodel experienced the racism and segregation integral to the black experience in America, especially in the early 1960s, when much of âI Am the Nightâ takes place. Not long after high school, Hodel learned her actual birth name and fled an abusive home to Los Angeles to connect with her biological grandfather, George Hodel.
A prominent L.A. physician, Dr. Hodel came under scrutiny in 1949 amid accusations that he molested his daughter, Tamar Hodel â Faunaâs mother. He was acquitted, but the LAPD considered him a suspect in the killing of the aspiring young actress Elizabeth Short. The brutal and disturbing circumstances of Shortâs death captured tabloid headlines and led her to be dubbed the Black Dahlia in one of the most famous true crime mysteries of the 20th century.
The stakes are so high on âWonder Womanâ and the money is so high, but the stakes are high in a different way when youâre telling someoneâs true life story.
— Patty Jenkins
Jenkins describes herself as âmesmerizedâ by Hodelâs story, but she envisioned it as something larger in scope than another Black Dahlia-tilted feature film. As time went on, the likelihood of working with Hodel on her story appeared to grow slim, especially as Jenkinsâ schedule grew crowded with the next âWonder Womanâ installment.
âFauna was calling me and trying to get my advice about doing the project with someone else and saying to me, âBut I still wish it was you,ââ Jenkins remembers, âand I was saying, âFauna, Iâm just too busy. I donât want you to have to wait for me.â But I was telling the story to [âWonder Womanâ costar] Chris Pine, and he just freaked out: âYou have to do that story. That storyâs incredible.ââ
Pine soon came on board to portray Jay Singletary, a troubled, PTSD-haunted newspaper reporter whose career was derailed by pursuing Hodel in the Dahlia case, and Jenkins and Sheridan soon found themselves creating âI Am the Nightâ in the tight window between âWonder Womanâ movies, with India Eisley cast as Fauna.
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But just before filming began, Hodel was diagnosed with cancer and, in 2017, died, a development Jenkins still calls âshocking.â (Daughters Rasha and Yvette were frequently on set, however, and Jenkins says they were âintegrally involvedâ in the miniseries.)
Though Jenkinsâ career began with the 2003 feature âMonster,â this miniseries marks a return to familiar ground on a few levels. Before âWonder Woman,â she directed episodes of âArrested Development,â âEntourageâ and, in another dip toward the world of homicide, the first season of Veena Sudâs âThe Killing.â
âI like to work, and I like to experiment with other things,â she says. âI donât want to have to be waiting for my next feature to get to work and try different things and tell different kinds of stories.â
Though she doesnât consider herself a dark person, Jenkins recognizes a tendency toward stories that approach the worst in human behavior. âI think itâs because I am very captivated by truth and Iâm comfortable dealing with whatever I find there,â she says. âIâm not super into escapist/alternate realities of what mankind is. Even in âWonder Woman,â Iâm very interested in embracing the darkness and the light of mankind.â
That approach lends itself nicely to the gray shadows of âI Am the Night,â which with its story of dogged investigators, powerful people and the secrets hidden in hillside mansions taps a cinematic bloodline for the city that runs from âThe Big Sleepâ to âChinatown.â It was a lineage that Jenkins was eager to join.
âTo add to the voice of L.A. noir was super cool because thatâs something thatâs been shot many times and has all of these specific things that are associated with it,â she says. âSo instead of being the â40s, youâre in the â60s and trying to completely embrace that time period and what it felt like. But then to fold it into a style that fits with noir in a new way was really awesome.â
Going back to TV would seem to mark a change of pace from âWonder Woman,â which earned more than $800 million and set a high bar for the sequel due in 2020. But in terms of her creative process, Jenkins doesnât draw much of a distinction between one medium versus another.
âI am so ambitious with my work being worthwhile that it never feels a whole lot different for me, frankly,â she says. âThe stakes are so high on âWonder Womanâ and the money is so high, but the stakes are high in a different way when youâre telling someoneâs true life story and itâs a miniseries like this. [Stakes are] never not high that youâre not wasting peopleâs time and not making something beautiful.â
While the ongoing, seemingly endless ascent of Peak TV led to Jenkins being able to tell Fauna Hodelâs story with a broader palette than a movie allows, she doesnât see that as a threat to the long-term prospects of feature film. She does, though, see television as a form that offers greater flexibility.
âItâs a quick-run, more fluid medium to try and mess around with other interesting stories,â she says. âBut people still want to go to the movie theaters, and theyâre gonna want to go to the movie theaters forever as far as I believe.
âI feel weâre in a wonderful time where the great tradition of storytelling has found new outlets, some of which are really thriving in television,â Jenkins adds. âLike the more complicated story that doesnât fit into two hours like this one. I feel like where indie features used to have a real life, thatâs now moved to television.â
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