EXCLUSIVE: Universal Pictures has acquired screen rights to Laura Hillenbrand’s bestselling new book Unbroken: A World War II Story of Survival, Resilience, and Redemption. The studio is in talks with Francis Lawrence to direct, and wants Crazy Heart helmer Scott Cooper to write the script. Lawrence, best known for helming I Am Legend, just completed Water for Elephants for Fox 2000, with Reese Witherspoon, Robert Pattinson and Christoph Waltz starring.
The studio that rode Hillenbrand’s book Seabiscuit into the winner’s circle as a film now hopes she’ll work the same magic on the story of the unbreakable spirit of Louis Zamperini, a former Olympic track prodigy who endured unimaginable hardship as a WWII POW. The deal, worth 7-figures if the movie gets made, gives an important second wind to a project that Universal has been trying to make for more than 50 years. Matthew Baer and Erwin Stoff will produce. Filmmaker (and Zamperini’s son-in-law) Mick Garris is exec producer.
Hillenbrand’s Random House book, currently number 2 on The New York Times bestseller list, fleshes out Zamperini’s survival story in remarkable detail. As a youth, Zamperini transformed from a Depression Era troublemaker into the “Torrance tornado,” a world class runner who became the youngest American to compete on the U.S. team. He ran in the 1936 Berlin Olympic Games and though he didn’t medal, Zamperini ran a final lap so fast that Adolf Hitler asked to meet him. Expected to mature into gold medal form–and a threat to break the 4-minute mile–by the 1940 games set for Tokyo, Zamperini ‘s dreams were dashed by WWII. By the time he crossed the Pacific en route to Japan, Zamperini was an Air Force bombardier. After emerging unscathed after several dangerous bombing runs, Zamperini crashed in the Pacific while on a rescue mission. Most of their crew-mates dead, Zamperini and two others floated in a raft for 47 days. After surviving hunger, thirst and incessant shark attacks in a raft that drifted 2000 miles, Zamperini was caught by the Japanese Navy and then the hardship really began. First dispatched to a hellhole called Execution Island (named because Japanese guards routinely beheaded prisoners), Zamperini’s Olympic feats got him transferred to another POW camp where he could have lived in relative comfort. But when he refused to read anti-American propaganda statements over the radio, Zamperini was sent to serve hard time. Starved, subjected to medical experiments, slave labor, and brutal beatings by guards, Zamperini was specifically targeted by a sadistic overseer named Mutsuhiro Watanabe. Called “The Bird” by the POWs, Watanabe made it his mission to break Zamperini’s spirit with brutal beatings and mental and physical torture. Zamperini would not break, but the guard kept trying right up until the war ended and the war criminal slipped away and eluded manhunts. The Bird lived on in Zamperini’s nightmares, though. After once waking to discover he was choking his terrified wife, Zamperini was convinced his freedom depended on returning to Japan to kill his tormenter. On the verge of divorce, alcoholism and a total breakdown, Zamperini discovered another way. Dragged by his wife to a tent where Billy Graham preached, Zamperini embraced his message and decided to forgive all of his captors. The nightmares ceased. Zamperini even traveled to Japan and met most of the guards to forgive them in person. When The Bird finally resurfaced, Zamperini returned to Japan and prepared to meet and forgive him, too. Watanabe refused, but Zamperini outlived The Bird, who died in 2003.
Universal bought Zamperini’s life rights way back in 1957 along with his memoir, Devil at My Heels. Tony Curtis wanted to play him, expecting a script to be ready after he returned from shooting Spartacus for director Stanley Kubrick. The project stalled, though, and remained dormant until 1998. After CBS broadcast a moving segment during its broadcast of the Nagano Olympics where Zamperini carried the Olympic torch, Nicolas Cage wanted to play Zamperini. His Brillstein-Grey managers got the project going with Antoine Fuqua, and a Robert Schenkkan script rewritten by Neil Tolkin. Titled Iron Man and later Zamperini, the drama once again languished.
Hillenbrand has done far more than bring a great title to the table. I read her book over the holiday. Exhaustively researched and written over seven years, it’s as engrossing as Seabiscuit. Her book and research will become the cornerstone for the film.
Baer, the producer who has been pushing the project since he was a film exec at Brillstein-Grey in 1998, said he was hopeful that the acclaim for the book–and the elements attracted by it–will finally get Zamperini’s story told. The new momentum comes at a time , he said, when there is a bumper crop of age appropriate twenty-something actors who could play Zamperini as he went through his wartime ordeal.
“Lou’s journey is so incredible, I’ve always felt it would attract the right people at the right time,” Baer told me. “Fortunately, Laura’s book is the most persuasive creative argument a producer could ever have. The nicest part is that Lou, at 93, is still alive to see all this attention paid to him and his remarkable life.”
CAA brokered the book deal for Janklow & Nesbit, and CAA reps Lawrence, Zamperini and Garris. ICM reps Cooper.





Author Laura Hillenbrand has done her best to keep at a minimum “Unbroken’s” Louis Zamperini hand shake with Adolph Hitler at the 1936 Olympics. When I asked her why, when his teammate Jesse Owens was snubbed, he decided to shake Hitlers hand, she replied, “Chris, it is a myth that Hitler snubbed Owens specifically.” Not true at all. Here’s what Zamperini had to say:
“Hitler came and shook my hand after the race,” Zamperini recalls. “I was one of three Americans who shook his hand. But what happened was that one of his advisors told him that once he starts shaking hands, he’ll have to shake all of them. We all knew he wasn’t going to shake Jesse’s hand.”
It seem Louis Zamperini was fascinated by the Nazi’s, here is another incident:
True to form and before departing for home, the troublemaker turned champion runner stole a Nazi flag off the Reich’s Chancellery. Caught by the Gestapo, Zamperini convincingly talked his way out of the predicament and proudly brought the flag home.
And after all these years, over half a century, this is what the man thinks of Hitler:
Zamperini shook the Nazi leader’s hand and thought the man odd. “Like a dangerous comedian,” he said.
“Veterans Journal,” Winter, 2006, Franklin County Veterans Service Commission, Columbus, Ohio.
Really? A comedian? That’s a first in describing Hitler. Both Laura Hillenbrand and Louis Zamperini need to come clean about the Nazi question in the paperback version of “Unbroken” because now it is broken.
The lead role is perfect for James Franco (127 Hours). Please don’t miscast this movie!!
And yet you know who he is, don’t you?
I hope this is a successful note that, by the same miracle Louie survived, this message gets to your desk, Mr. Baer.
PLEASE do not allow the director to shake the camera!
We are the audience sitting in stable seats. Until approximately ten years ago, the directors knew and respected this. It is a poor habit to try to bring the audience up on stage by shaking the camera as if they are looking through a “third eye.”
The audience is the audience, and their job is not to be part of the stage arena.
I personally do not go to movies because of this poor style. I do not watch them on the little screen either, when I have to chase the actors, plot and acting back and forth with no time to catch the stage-center before the average 1.2 second time limit-for-scenes sweeps away the the whole moment. Please force the director to leave the camera alone.
I have missed alot of recent great plots and acting due to this poor style that I would have missed anyway because I have to chase-like-Ol’ Yeller the movie.
I wish you luck and success in telling Louis Zamperini’s story. I read Mrs Hillenbrand’s book, and wish you the best in telling an accurate account.
No Nicholas Cage. His style of acting is unique, but his channeled, quiet rage is too phoney for a human being. I like him, but not in uniform.
Thank You,
This Story is one of many from an era long past, the Men and the Woman of this time were rare and special and gave it all to unsure that we as a Nation could have the many luxuries that we all enjoy today. It is a breath of fresh air to see the wonderful story come to life in a very well writen book. For those who don’t know and those who never cared these are the people that help defend a nation against the greatest threat the world has every known. Please Universal complete this film before all our Vets are gone show Louis that for all he has done we have not forgot and we will remember long after he has gone home to God, the generations of today need to know what there grand fathers and Great grand fathers had to endure no film could ever make that happen better than this story can.
Someone please send this script to Andrew Garfield from THE SOCIAL NETWORK.
Louie Zamperini’s story as told by Hilenbrand in Unbroken, was absolutely incredible. Louie is one of the most remarkable people to have walked the planet in my opinion. What a life!
As others have expressed, I too was excited for a movie that depicts his amazing life story. However thinking it through, I’m not so sure Hollywood is capable of doing his life justice with a 2 hour film. It simply can’t be accomplished. A ten part miniseries similar to Band of Brothers or The Pacific would probably get it done with the respect Louie’s story deserves. Additionally Hollywood is far to politically correct to show the atrocities committed by the Japanese upon American POW’s, civilians and American servicemen. I just don’t see the truth being told as it should.
Maybe a movie is a bad idea. Do is life justice by doing an exceptional piece of work or don’t do it at all.
Chris Pine has the attitude, the experience and the right mix for the lead role, coming off of “Star Trek”, a come-from-behind story for an actor young enough to pull out a performance that needs strength and grit.
My concern is the director & producer. “I Am Legend” wasn’t exactly great. Would like to see Spielberg involved in this one.
I am so proud of Laura Hillenbrand for writing this book. With her very frustrating health problems, it is heroic of her herself to be writing about heroes. “Unbroken” is a wonderful story and such a tribute to the human race—-all whiners need to shut up!
Congratulations to Laura and I hope the money and recognition that she receives will brighten her life.
It is a MUST that whomever plays Louie is an American actor. We do not need any foreigner playing the role of an American hero!!!
Just finished “Unbroken” and loved it. Did I miss in the story what happened to Louis’ wife. And who would play her in the movie?
As I was reading the book, Christian Bale was the actor who popped into my mind. But I like the suggestions of Chris Pine and James Franco, as well! I hope that Hollywood doesn’t water down this amazing, riveting story.
Elijah Wood, Justin Timberlake, Shieah Leboef
This book was riveting! Hope Universal thinks long and hard about who ultimately plays the two leads. As for Zamperini: Jake Gyllenhaal immediately came to mind when I first read about a movie being made. Also think James Franco, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, or Ryan Gosling could pull it off. Especially Gosling. He can be so compelling to watch. You always feel there’s more just beneath the surface, which would be perfect for this role. Elijah Wood? That’s interesting maybe choice. Sinese would have been fabulous, but he’s matured past the proper age now. (Never thought he’s gotten his proper due.) Cage is way too old and too inconsistent as an actor. Shia LaBeouf is physically unsuitable — too beefy — and, frankly, he’s never impressed me as being that great an actor. He was awful in the Indiana Jones movie, and the Transformer movies don’t exactly showcase any talent he may have. Finally, I agree: Gary Cooper was bland!
Dorothy Aufiero, producer of The Fighter should produce this movie. We need someone of her character, experience and integrity to do this. She can do anything, including casting.
Watch The Fighter, and see if you don’t agree.
M Micciche
Naples, FL
In 50+ years – the best book I’ve ever read. You CAN NOT put it down. I’m with the “unknown actor” group. I don’t want to see anyone with “baggage” ruin this great story.
Someone who is not too loaded with history from other, maybe even similar, roles. Therefore Franco wouldn’t work. The perfect actor for the role is Trevor Wright. Not too worn out, not too well known – but with an IMPRESSIVE talent and the right physically constitution. He’s a surfer and into extreme sports. And he’s got this unforgettable face, like made out of rock but filled with expression. A huge, not really fully discovered talent.
I can’t help but think how much this movie would mean to Mr.Zamperini. YES it needs proper casting, but get on with it.He is 94 and deserves to see it made in his lifetime.
Giovani Ribizzi ? Would love to see him as Zamperini
Adrian Brody.
Can’t wait to see Unbroken in a movie. Read the book and hope soon to watch the movie. Planning on rereading book
When I opened this page, Ryan Gosling’s face appeared. I thought, how perfect! just finished reading this inspiring book and I look forward to the movie.
Okay so I imagine James Franco to be Louis. He is a bit old, but Franco still looks young so I think it would work.
Also, I think Sebastian Stan should play Phil. He was in Captain America recently and he we would be the perfect Phil, even looks like him.
It is the best book I have read. I didn’t think anyone would make a movie because some parts aren’t “political correct”. But Hildebrand did such a great job researching the history. It is just like Seabiscuit. Everything is researched. She is a fantastic author.