‘Dallas Buyers Club’ writer Craig Borten on his personal inspiration
Writer Craig Borten talks about how he came to write Ron Woodroof’s story
“Dallas Buyers Club” co-writer Craig Borten first met Ron Woodroof, the real-life Texas electrician-turned-AIDS-activist, in 1992, a few months before Woodroof succumbed to the disease. But Borten had seen Woodroof’s never-say-die attitude before: It was the same one his cancer-stricken father had displayed a decade earlier.
At a recent installment of the Envelope Screening Series, Borten talked about how his father’s fight to survive inspired the film.
“Every scene in the movie speaks to a man wanting to live,” Borten said, “and I think part of having that inside of you — not wanting to die, and wanting to do everything you can to stay alive — is kind of what can extend your life.”
‘Dallas Buyers Club’: Watch cast, crew discuss the film
Borten continued, “I think part of that extended Ron’s life, and I think for my father it was very similar. He wanted to seek out alternative medications; the doctors were very cold. There was only protocol for certain chemotherapies, and we looked abroad. He never really faced death until he had to — on a physical level, but not on an emotional level. I think Ron Woodroof’s character was very similar to that, and when I read about Ron Woodroof, that’s what spoke to my heart.”
For more from the cast and crew of “Dallas Buyers Club,” watch the clip above.
ALSO:
Oscar nominations 2014: Laying odds on the six major races
SAG Awards 2014: ‘Hustle’ cast wins, tightens race to Oscars
Oscars 2014: Nominations — and snubs — attest to the strong field
More to Read
Only good movies
Get the Indie Focus newsletter, Mark Olsen's weekly guide to the world of cinema.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.