Mordecai Richler wrote a screenplay based on his book
Joshua Then and Now.
Ted Kotcheff, who directed a
film based on Richler's
The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz, was selected to direct. Kotcheff was paid US$500,000 for the film. Producers
Robert Lantos and Stephen Roth decided to create both a film and miniseries to maximize the project's investment from
Telefilm Canada.
20th Century Fox paid $2 million for the film's distribution rights and
CBC Television gave additional investments. The film received $3 million in funding from Telefilm. $7.4 million was raised from Telefilm, CBC, and Fox, and an additional $1.8 million was raised by deferments and private investors. Kotcheff was paid US$1 million, half in cash and the other in deferments, and Richler was paid US$350,000.
James Woods was paid US$250,000 and
Alan Arkin was paid US$150,000. The film was shot from 7 August to 4 November 1984, at a cost of $10,940,000, after an initial budget of $9.2 million. Shooting was done Canada and the United Kingdom in
Brockville, Montreal, and London. Douglas Leiterman was the completion guarantor for the project and knew that the film was going to run over budget, but believed it would only be up to $800,000. Leiterman took control of the film away from the producers before editing. The runtime is 118 minutes, but a longer version with additional characters that runs at 126 minutes was shown at the
1985 Cannes Film Festival. The film's ending was edited between its Cannes showing and North American release. ==Release==