Under the studio
Sony Pictures Entertainment,
Apt Pupil was directed by
Bryan Singer based on a screenplay by Brandon Boyce that adapted the 1982 novella
Apt Pupil by
Stephen King. The production was "a Sony Pictures Entertainment release from TriStar Pictures of a Phoenix Pictures presentation of a Bad Hat Harry production".
Direction under Bryan Singer Bryan Singer first read
Apt Pupil when he was 19 years old, and when he became a director, he wanted to adapt the novella into a film. In 1995, Singer asked his friend and screenwriter Brandon Boyce to write a
spec script adapting the novella. Boyce recalled the writing process, "I thought it was a great stageplay, actually ... two people, pretty much in a house talking. My script was completely on spec, so, if it didn't work out, at least I'd have a writing sample." When the original option to the novella expired in 1995, Stephen King sued to get the rights back. Singer and Boyce then provided to King a first draft of their script and a copy of Singer's film
The Usual Suspects (1995), which had yet to be publicly released. Impressed with Singer, Singer said of King's ultimate response to the film, despite some changes made to the source material, "Stephen loved it. He seemed to think I captured the mood of the piece." Singer described
Apt Pupils premise as a "study in cruelty". He prepared for the film by reading books like the 1996 history book ''
Hitler's Willing Executioners'', which confirmed his beliefs that Nazi war criminals felt "guiltless and matter-of-fact about what they did". He referred to how young Todd Bowden's interactions with Nazi war criminal Kurt Dussander start to affect him, "I liked the idea of the infectious nature of evil ... The notion that anybody has the capacity within them to be cruel if motivated properly is, I think, a scary concept." The director also perceived the film as not about the Holocaust, believing that the Nazi war criminal could have been replaced by one of
Pol Pot's executioners or a mass murderer from Russia. "It wasn't about fascism or National Socialism. It was about cruelty and the ability to do awful deeds, to live with them and be empowered by them," Singer said. He was also attracted to the film as "[an] idea that the collective awfulness of this terrible thing that happened decades ago in Europe had somehow crept up across the ocean and through time, like a golem, into this beautiful Southern California suburban neighborhood". Singer turned down directing opportunities with films like
The Truman Show and ''
The Devil's Own after the success of The Usual Suspects
. He instead pursued Apt Pupil
, "It was a very dark subject matter, and it was something that came from passion." He acknowledged in retrospect that Apt Pupil'' "wasn't really supposed to be a big success". Singer was financially supported by producer
Scott Rudin and the production company Spelling Films.
Ian McKellen was cast as Dussander, and
Brad Renfro was cast as Bowden. With $1 million paid toward pre-production, filming was scheduled to begin in June 1996. Due to financial disagreements between Singer and Rudin, the start date was pushed back and subsequently canceled.
Editing and composition John Ottman served as both film editor and music composer for
Apt Pupil. When he edited the film, he found it a challenge to create the proper musical score. Ottman recalled, "Normally, an editor will score scenes with temporary music from CDs, and so forth, and nothing I could find worked for this film." The composer sought a mix between the scores of the science fiction film
2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) and the military-based comedy
1941 (1979) to create an "otherworldly pastiche". Ottman said of his approach: When you throw a cat in the oven, it's easy to have someone in the orchestra slam a hammer down on an anvil, scaring the hell out of everyone. The hard part is manipulating the story and accenting the characters. In the beginning, when Todd is laying down the rules, there's a certain repetitive thematic idea you hear. You hear the same music when Dussander is turning the tables on Todd, which makes you remember the first scene ... You hope people are subliminally making the connection that the tables are turning back and forth. Another scene in which Ottman meshed his editing and composing duties was when Dussander wakes up in the hospital with the television show
The Jeffersons playing in the background. Ottman explained his intent for the scene, "I used
The Jeffersons as this innocuous thing—going between him and the television—so that when he does open his eyes, it scares the hell out of you ... I added this deafening Bartok pizz, which is when all the violins pluck their strings really loud and they create this gnarly, unsettling sound." Ottman recorded the film's score with the
Seattle Symphony. ==Critical analysis==