‘Corsage’ Star Vicky Krieps to Play Murdered Film and TV Producer Sophie Toscan du Plantier in Jim Sheridan Docu-Drama ‘Re-creation’ (EXCLUSIVE)
Vicky Krieps, best performance prize winner in Cannes Un Certain Regard for Corsage, will star as Sophie Toscan du Plantier in six time-Oscar nominee Jim Sheridan and David Merrimans Re-creation, which is being presented in the Venice Gap-Financing Market.
The docu-drama, which centers on the brutal murder in 1996 in Ireland of French film and TV producer Toscan du Plantier, has been co-written and will be co-directed by Sheridan, best known for My Left Foot and In the Name of the Father, and Merriman. The unsolved crime was previously the subject of Sheridans documentary series Murder at the Cottage.
Krieps garnered widespread acclaim with her breakthrough performance in Paul Thomas Andersons Phantom Thread in 2017. As well as the Cannes prize, her performance in last years Corsage also won her the European Film Award for best European actress.
Jim Sheridan walks the red carpet for The Secret Scripture during the Rome Film Festival. Courtesy of Ernesto Ruscio/Getty Images Sheridan said of the Luxembourgish actress: Since our first meeting in Berlin, it was clear to me that Vicky was just the perfect choice for this role. She always looks like she has her feet on the ground but with an ethereal quality that allows her spirit to break any obstacles.
Merriman added: Sophie will have her place in this film beyond the tabloid headlines that have become her legacy. We feel lucky to have Vicky with us and believe she will bring the truth to this character that she deserves.
The film is being produced by Tina OReilly of Hells Kitchen in Ireland and Fabrizio Maltese of Luxembourgs Joli Rideau Media. Sheridan is the executive producer.
The documentary parts of Re-creation will be shot in Ireland, France and U.S., whereas the drama will be shot on a sound stage in Luxembourg. The production, supported by Screen Ireland, Film Fund Luxembourg and Eurimages, aims for a theatrical release in late 2024.
Merriman is an Irish artist and filmmaker. He directed The State of Being Human in 2014 and the Sheridan-produced Rock Against Homelessness in 2020. He has made music videos and worked with such artists as Glen Hansard, Aslan, Tolo Makay, Gilbert OSullivan and The Pillow Queens.
Sheridan, who is attending the Venice Gap Financing Market, part of the Venice Film Festivals industry activities, said: Re-creation is a hybrid film between fiction and reality. I began my career on a theater stage, writing and making plays, before moving into film. Fiction has been my form of expression throughout my creative career.
In Re-creation these elements come together to interrogate the reality behind one of the cases that polarized public opinion in Ireland and France and not only from the late 90s on, the brutal murder of Sophie Toscan du Plantier.
We want to use fiction, which is the expressive form I know best, to challenge the whole narrative around this case, built on negligence and convenient truths.
Sophie Toscan du Plantier was the subject of Netflixs Sophie: A Murder in West Cork. Courtesy of Netflix/Everett Collection Merriman added: As in a game of mirrors, an infinite gallery, we will pull back from reality to show not only how certain details deemed irrelevant fit into the picture, but also show the entire creative process of how the film is fabricated, which becomes an integral part of the film itself, giving a completely new perspective.
Toscan du Plantiers life was layered and intriguing. She was a successful TV and film producer, as well as being one half of a film power couple. Together with her husband, the influential film producer Daniel Toscan du Plantier, they were the darlings of the Cannes and Paris film scene in the 1990s. Re-creation is set against the backdrop of the murder, which happened in West Cork, Ireland, on Dec. 20, 1996, while she was on a solo trip to her holiday home in Schull. Little is known about the reasons for this solitary visit. It was there that her life came to a bloody, brutal end.
Twenty-eight years later the murder remains one of the most compelling unsolved crimes in Irelands history. A new cold case review is underway.