Early development Director
Ali Selim first read
Will Weaver's short story "A Gravestone Made of Wheat" in 1989 in the Sunday magazine of the
Star Tribune, a
Minneapolis newspaper. After purchasing the film rights, he spent much of the 1990s working on a script in his spare time as he worked as a director of
television commercials. Two early supporters of the project were actors
Alan Cumming, who played Frandsen, and
Gil Bellows, who signed on as a co-producer. Selim met Cumming while screening a short film in Los Angeles; he knew Bellows from directing him in a steak-sauce commercial. Bellows helped Selim get the script into workshops in Los Angeles, where the reaction was positive; however, no Hollywood studios were interested in making the film. In 2004, Selim raised about $1 million to produce the film himself, mostly from private investors in Minnesota, and pre-production began in July, with shooting planned for that fall.
Casting Dan Futterman, whom Selim also had directed in commercials, was originally cast as Olaf but had to drop out when his film
Capote went into production. Futterman suggested
Tim Guinee as his replacement. Selim said on the film's DVD commentary that
Ned Beatty, who has a summer home in his wife's hometown in northern Minnesota, said he took a role in the film to impress his in-laws—although he later confessed that he also liked the script.
Filming Sweet Land was filmed in 24 days in October 2004 in and around
Montevideo, a city in
Chippewa County, Minnesota. Reaser does not speak German and had to learn her lines phonetically despite only four sessions with a dialogue coach. The film uses some computer-generated graphics: The northern lights in the scene where Inge walks through the fields to Olaf's house to take a bath (the scene was actually filmed in the daytime), and, later in the film, the geese flying over Olaf's house. ==Distribution==