
UPDATE: Rarely have I gotten so many emails on a story that has struck a nerve among former students of Penn State. Some claiming to have clout in Hollywood say they will try to squash this project, and others are critical of me and defensive of the beloved Paterno, claiming he got a raw deal. I can’t imagine these apologists have kids. The idea that nobody acted seriously on information given by grad assistant and later assistant coach Mike McQueary that could have stopped a predator convicted on dozens of counts of molesting vulnerable children is unconscionable. Paterno defenders say that McQueary was vague in describing what he saw, but I fall on the side of those who feel that Paterno was so powerful at Penn State that he could have stopped this in its tracks had he chosen to follow up, or even if he had dialed three numbers: 911. McQueary certainly wasn’t vague in his testimony at Sandusky’s trial, saying he was sure he had stumbled upon Sandusky engaging in a sexual act with an underage boy. When I think of great college coaches, I wonder: what would someone like Bobby Knight have done if given the same information?
The administration at Penn State chose to protect its cherished powerhouse and lucrative football program, and went against the contract that any institution of higher learning has, which is to protect the young and vulnerable. The idea that this just somehow happened, and nobody but Sandusky was to blame, is something I will never embrace. Had that been the case, I doubt the university would have fired Paterno and later torn down his statue, or that the NCAA would have leveled devastating sanctions against the football program at the expense of current players who had absolutely nothing to do with any of this and who didn’t deserve punishment that was delivered to send a clear message about prioritizing what is important. Regretfully, that is Paterno’s enduring legacy now. But keep the emails coming!
EARLIER EXCLUSIVE, FRIDAY 5:30 PM: ICM Partners next week will be taking a package for a movie about former Penn State head football coach Joe Paterno, with Al Pacino attached to play the man called JoePa by most students at Happy Valley. The package will be built around Joe Posnanski’s biography Paterno, which is now atop The New York Times Bestseller List in its second week. Pacino’s manager, Rick Nicita, will produce.

The narrative arc of the movie that will be shopped is obvious. A man becomes the winningest coach in college football history and builds a powerhouse football program that turns him into a campus deity. When his former defensive coordinator Jerry Sandusky is revealed to be a pedophile and it comes out Paterno was told and helped hide the scandal, the coach was summarily fired. He died shortly after of cancer — and many feel of a broken heart — and the school had little choice but to raze a fabled statue of Paterno just as the NCAA dropped the hammer with sanctions against the school that included removal of Paterno’s wins going back to the cover-up. Sandusky was found guilty on 45 counts of sexual abuse against young boys and is expected to spend the rest of his life in prison.
Posnanski, an award-winning sportswriter who has written for Sports Illustrated and The Kansas City Star, had spent a year working on the book when the scandal broke. The book–and the movie–isn’t just about Paterno’s demise but rather his life before Penn State, his family and the iron grip he held over Penn State football and politics until his downfall. This can either be a feature film or a cable movie, because Shakespeare himself would have had trouble coming up with anything this shocking, and because the issues here still boggle the mind.
How could a coach whose mission was to mold college athletes into men and who was revered by his players stand idly by after learning one of his former coaches was a perv who used his charity for underprivileged kids, The Second Mile, to lure young fatherless victims for sexual trysts? An investigation indicated that Paterno used his influence to a degree that police weren’t even called after a graduate assistant (who later became an assistant coach) witnessed Sandusky engaged in what he believed to be a sexual encounter with a minor in the Penn State football facility showers but told the coach instead of calling the authorities. While Paterno told his superiors, he might not have wanted to sully his beloved football program with bad press, his inaction enabled Sandusky to operate unfettered for a decade, ruining young lives in the process.
A deal needs to be made, a script written and a director secured before this actually happens, but Pacino is a great choice. He played a memorable head football coach in the Oliver Stone-directed Any Given Sunday, and he also played Jack Kevorkian in the HBO film You Don’t Know Jack. I don’t often write about projects before they’re set up, but I doubt this one will stay on the market for long. John Burnham, Jeff Berg and Adam Schweitzer rep Pacino at ICM Partners, while the agency’s book czar Sloan Harris reps Posnanski.


If they look to portray events in this saga accurately, the story will be far more compelling than the ESPN lynch mob version.
I would love to see John Malkovich, Billy Bob Thornton, or Christopher Walken play Sandusky
The Freeh report does not prove a coverup, but everyone loves the idea Joe was covering up. Read the report and treat Joe like you would have wanted to be treated if you were falsly accussed. There really is no proof solid. Proof may come, but he is innocent until proven guilty. Why is due process for Joe is so hard to come by? What is this hatred for him?!? An investigator said procedure was followed and he hates when people try to interfere. He would have told Joe did everything correctly.
the freeh report or not. you don’t think he had an inkling of what was going on? the president and athletic director are going on trial for perjury. oh i’m sorry there’s no way joe pa had any idea what was going on, he was busy grooming mcqueary into his successor. “i learned this one from pontius pilate…” (pardon that reference not a religious dude. i do know right and wrong though and that no man is a deity).
Deb
Your saying Joe Paterno was totally clueless that a monster was running around on campus, are you like Joe, no courage to stop a monster?
Exactly! This could be a great movie, but you know Hollywood won’t care about the truth….just sensationalism and BUCKS!
Maybe they should just do this one like Adaptation did The Orchid Thief. That way they don’t have to go into the disgusting details that no one wants to relive and they can even get Nicholas Cage to play Posnanski and his “twin” brother Donald. God knows he needs the cash.
Apparently Joe Paterno does.
I was born and raised in Altoona,Pa and left in early 90,so sorry to hear what has been going on at Penn State—I THINK THAT AL PACHINO WOULD BE GREAT TO PLAY THE PART OF PATERNO.
Looks like all the Penn State cultists came out to deadline.
Alan Rickman should play Sandusky
it is unfathomable that a book has already been published and a movie is being planned when there has been nothing substantial done to authenticate the freeh report as anything more than a bunch of unfounded garbage. heresay and innuendo are being used to undo a 60 year career of a man dedicated to serving and improving the lives of not only athletes but also students in general at p.s.u. before we decide who will play paterno lets find out for sure how his legacy should be portrayed. the perpetrator has been jailed, the school has been ostracized with bad press and a major fine, which will be spent on improving education and providing help for victims of child abuse. let’s get our facts right. let’s get on with life and allow this matter to die a rightful death. no one should profit from what happened here.
Get off his jock
I don’t know why the Penn State people are so against this. The source material for this movie was as favorable for JoePa as possible. It was essentially a puff piece on JoePa and portrayed him as a coach that was in the dark and “should have done more”. Penn Staters should be happy it’s based on the book PATERNO rather than the facts that actually were discovered (i.e. in the grand jury testimony & the Freeh Report).
Cable would probably be a better place for this one. Wherever it ends up, it needs to be a scathing indictment of how football money has corrupted the whole collegiate system to the point where things like this could be allowed to happen and to continue for years. If not a cover up then some kind of psychotic denial along the lines of “If I just cover my eyes and ears and say ‘nyah nyah nyah nyah’ over and over again, it will cease to be real.” Be interesting to see how it turns out.
What is all this “curse” stuff?
Mike, keep doing what you’re doing. People love DEADLINE for adding a bit of spice to reporting, but suddenly shudder when something’s “too political” or now, “too sensitive” for certain people such as Penn State alums.
If people in the industry want to tell [a version of] the story, they will tell the story, however controversial it may be. The fact that Pacino is aligning himself with this project so early shows that he himself sees the potential here for great drama as well, despite (or indeed perhaps even because of) the controversy surrounding the real-life happenings.
“Cursed”? It didn’t stop Hollywood from “finishing” or “continuing” Bruce Lee’s story. Or September 11th. Or Michael Jackson’s (and look what he was accused of late in life). Or Elia Kazan’s. Or… You get my drift. It’s interesting that throughout an industry which has historically had absolutely no problem with exploiting images and controversial media happenings, suddenly Penn State alums (some of whom have no doubt worked on other projects I’ve mentioned) take offense to this.
An HBO film would be perfect placement for this.
“And to play Jerry Sandusky: Jay Leno.”
HA!! Yes!
Joe Paterno was a great man who deserves to be remembered for all the great contributions he made to Penn State. Personally, I don’t believe the Freeh Report regarding JoePA; the report is based only on Mr. Freeh’s opinion, not facts. JoePa would not participate in such a cover up.
Spoken by a true delusional person. Also, no one will remember Paterno for any of the good he did or the records (now vacated anyways) that he obtained. This will be the biggest standout when it comes to people talking about him. He is a shamed coachh.
Unless Sandusky confesses, this travesty is incomplete. Unless he repents, there’s no where to go with this story.
And I find it hard to believe that anyone would be interested in seeing this movie on a Friday night.
It’s just too soon.
He was convicted. In the eyes of the law, he is guilty. A confession is not necessary. Do you honestly think just because he’s never said he actually did it (read the facts on pedophiles…rarely do they confess because they don’t actually think they are doing anything wrong), that he didn’t actually commit the crimes? A confession is honestly somewhat irrelevant at this point, as again, he was convicted. A jury of his peers concluded after reviewing all the evidence that he did indeed molest and rape children.
It’s amazing to me how the ignorant and hateful resort to insults when they can’t back up their feelings with any facts.
How can anyone in Hollywood use not having kids as a club to insult someone who has not slavishly followed “the company line?” Kids have no meaning, other than as accessories for PR to fool the masses, to Hollywood.When you decry the slaughter of the unborn THEN and only then, can you be considered serious.
Your lack of understanding of the PSU politics does not help.
Joe Paterno did get a raw deal. The (left wing, jealous, hate-filled) Faculty, finally got their chance to destroy Paterno. As with all liberals the truth did not matter.
Oh! the Freeh investigation convinced you? Maybe you should reread it, then read about Freeh’s failures as an investigator. Then make up your mind. Conclusions are NOT facts.
Use your brain, Mike. Feelings are why we have Obama and his 4 years of failure..
The movie had better be factual. I’m sick of hearing opinions with no proven facts to back them up. I’m sick of people judging the situation without knowing the truth. People who’ve never lived here don’t really know what happened here. Nobody here doubted what Sandusky did. It was the garbage that followed that most people take issue with. Please, go ahead and use the Freeh report. Maybe someone will finally look at it critically without sensationalizing it.
What Penn Staters have clout in Hollywood. Name them?
Joe Paterno is innocent. He reported what he knew to both his superiors and the police. The police dropped the ball. Louis Freeh was complicit in the mass murders of many children at Waco Texas in 1993 and cannot be trusted.
Perhaps people who don’t like it can just not go see it. Perhaps the controversy will continue the conversation and need more clarity and light to the events and the overall subject. As a male student who was taken advantage of by a male teacher in high school…. I fully support the Hollywood treatment. Let’s get the people in the middle of the country on to the conversation. And let’s make it less about football. And more about how this happened and raise some awareness so it doesn’t again…
Paterno didn’t cover anything up? A young coach says he saw a grown ass man with a boy in a shower. However “vague” or “unclear” that is a reason to call the police. Not sit on it as to not disturb people’s evenings. Not make margin notes about Second Mile kids being a “liablity” years later. Not leave it in the hands of “university officials.” Protocol be damned when it comes to child rape. And where did this kid end up? Did JoePa try to find him in order to help? Did he confront his old friend Sandusky and tip him off that people were suspect of him? You sheep sound like a bunch of apologists who defend the Pope’s pedophile sect because you can’t reconcile being Catholic with the fact that some priests raped little girls and boys and got away with it and still are raping many overseas. Mark, I am not sure what abortion has to do with this. Adopt a child or feed some starving kids before you cast dispersions. Judge not, lest ye be judged? Right? Mr. Fleming, stay the course.
so if the book sells, isn’t there a market for the story?
Two things:
1. No one has read the script. So all this speculation is retarded. None of us know how the producers and screenwriter will handle the material. They may do a brilliant job, it may be a hack job. We just don’t know. It may seem odd that Pacino is attached even before there is a writer or director, but I’m sure he did it so he could make sure that people he trusted were put in those roles.
2. I don’t care about any of this sophistic bureaucratic haggling about Joe Paterno’s responsibility. He is a legendary coach, a great game winner, but the plain fact is that he knew about a child rape and he didn’t call the police. It’s child rape, folks. CHILD RAPE. Get that through your thick heads. It’s exactly like what happened in the Catholic Church with people “checking in with their superiors” and nothing happening. Anyone who knew anything and didn’t immediately, as Nikki said, dial “911″ is culpable. ENOUGH SAID. And this idea that some sports writer hagiographer will get the facts more correct than the former head of the FBI is just beyond hilarious. The Freeh report is despised by Penn State blowhards because it’s telling a carefully investigated and horrifying truth. Penn State alumni should thank their lucky stars that the entire football program wasn’t summarily dispensed with….and let’s face it, there’s a strong argument that it should’ve been, especially if you love college football.
Spot. On. Children were raped, their lives were ruined, and all the Happy Valleyites can worry about is the old man’s legacy. Put your moral outrage where it belongs why don’t you?