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NEW YORK DAWN™ > Blog > Entertainment > ‘We do not make these films anymore’: How ‘Roofman’ defied Hollywood widespread sense
‘We do not make these films anymore’: How ‘Roofman’ defied Hollywood widespread sense
Entertainment

‘We do not make these films anymore’: How ‘Roofman’ defied Hollywood widespread sense

Last updated: October 13, 2025 12:48 pm
Editorial Board Published October 13, 2025
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“We’ve been doing this for a while now,” laughs Channing Tatum, “and every once in a while a new thing comes out I haven’t heard.”

Tatum’s responding to the most recent revelation of the press tour for his new movie “Roofman”: Director Derek Cianfrance’s declare that he was the quickest checker in Walmart historical past. (“They gave you a raise if you got 18 rings a minute,” says Cianfrance. “I averaged 350.”)

The purpose, for Cianfrance, is that the characters on the coronary heart of “Roofman” — good-hearted thief and unauthorized Toys “R” Us tenant Jeffrey Manchester (Tatum) and dealing mom Leigh (Kirsten Dunst) — are his type of individuals.

And “Roofman,” which in its themes of non-public accountability, neighborhood and acceptance holds a lot in widespread with the work of Frank Capra, is his type of movie. The director behind the 1946 Christmas basic “It’s a Wonderful Life” loomed over Cianfrance’s movie from the beginning. “As we were selling this movie, trying to get it financed, I was pitching it to everyone as a Capra movie and what I kept hearing is, ‘We don’t make those movies anymore.’”

Cianfrance at all times knew he wished “Roofman” to be a Christmas film, which regularly options characters rediscovering themselves in a small city and magical happenings like, as he says, “a fish shows up with wings.” Or, on this case, that Manchester — on the lam after escaping jail — finally ends up falling in love with Leigh and being embraced by her household and neighborhood.

Tatum as Jeffrey Manchester in “Roofman.”

(Davi Russo / Paramount Photos)

“I love the populist filmmaker who’s making movies about regular people,” says Cianfrance. “You never feel like Capra’s ever judging people, or being snobby about the people he’s making movies about. He’s making movies about the people who go to the movies.” And whereas the movie’s true-life story is actually stranger than fiction, Cianfrance prevented turning “Roofman” into Hollywood escapism. As a substitute, he says, he wished for example his respect for working individuals’s goals and aspirations: “The thing that transformed it for me was when Leigh told me that Jeff was the greatest adventure of her life, and that she didn’t regret a thing.”

With that in thoughts, he urged the solid to reside their characters’ suburban North Carolina lives. He inspired actor Peter Dinklage, who performs the Toys “R” Us retailer supervisor, to really handle the shop. Dunst’s Leigh, a brand new rent, was given an precise job interview by Dinklage himself. “He would not give me an inch in that interview,” says Dunst. “I respect him so much as an actor, I think I was also just intimidated by him as well.”

Cianfrance calls the set “an aquarium for actors” — a spot the place, to drag one other Christmas reference he drops, everybody was Rudolph the Crimson-Nosed Reindeer on the island of misfit toys. Actors like Emory Cohen and Juno Temple expanded their characters past the web page. Cohen, who performs bullied worker Otis, conjured up his character’s love for peanut M&M’s, whereas Temple, who performs the girlfriend of considered one of Manchester’s associates, noticed her character as a hairdresser.

Even a scene the place the Toys “R” Us is embellished for Thanksgiving gave Cianfrance and manufacturing designer Inbal Weinberg the chance to debate the place to have Dunst place an inflatable turkey. “I was like, we’re gonna let the actors decide. Kirsten came to set. She got the turkey. And she started to decide where it went, and she put it where my production designer wanted it,” Cianfrance says. “And Peter Dinklage came out and was like, ‘No, the turkey goes here.’”

"Roofman" director Derek Cianfrance.

“As we were selling this movie, trying to get it financed, I was pitching it to everyone as a Capra movie and what I kept hearing is, ‘We don’t make those movies anymore,’’’ says “Roofman” director Derek Cianfrance.

(The Tyler Twins / For The Occasions)

Dunst had been desirous to work with the director since auditioning (unsuccessfully, the pair joke) for his 2016 characteristic “The Light Between Oceans.” “I would have done this movie without reading any script,” she says. “How he makes a set — he wants to capture all the nuance and the things that make us humans interesting.”

Tatum concurs. He knew instantly the position would problem him as a performer. The actor had heard tales of how Cianfrance labored with performers to get genuine responses, like giving Ryan Gosling and Michelle Williams — taking part in a married couple in 2010 drama “Blue Valentine” — contrasting data in scenes to intensify rigidity.

Dunst recollects the same second on “Roofman,” the place Jeff scares Leigh by driving a automotive too quick along with her and her daughters inside. “Derek held my arms and he was like, ‘Push against me as hard as you can,’” she says. “I did that and he held tight and then we went into the scene immediately after. It brought up emotions of being trapped and a feeling like everything was out of your control … but that really helped me a lot.”

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“I only told [Cianfrance] no one time,” says Tatum, “and that’s when he wanted me to sing.” Which may shock viewers contemplating Tatum has an prolonged nude sequence the place Jeff tries to flee from Dinklage’s Mitch — the primary time Dinklage and Tatum met, because it occurs.

“[Derek] always jokes, ‘You read the script,’” says Tatum. “I’m like, ‘Yeah, I know I read the script. I just assumed you had a plan … a blocking plan.” The scene itself, which involved Tatum running through the toy store and leaping onto a small roof, took 15 takes to accomplish over almost eight hours. Tatum, Dunst and Cianfrance laugh about how the director broached the subject of keeping Tatum’s nudity tasteful. “He’s like, ‘You want me to blur it?’” says Tatum. “I’m like, ‘Don’t blur it. That’s even weirder.’”

As Dunst, Tatum and Cianfrance focus on the manufacturing, the dialog appears to be as a lot in regards to the reminiscences they made on set because the making of a movie — which underscores Cianfrance’s method to directing.

“I’ve always tried to make sure [the actors] have environments … so that they can have these accidents and surprises. Moments can happen one time that you can’t replicate, and they become the moment that you watch forever. They become immortalized because of that.”

It’s sufficient to make Frank Capra smile.

A digital cover for The Envelope featuring Channing Tatum and Kristen Dunst of 'Roofman'

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