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The Beanie Bubble film follows the rise and collapse of the Beanie Baby phenomenon in the 1990s and its inventor, Ty Warner (Zach Galifianakis), a charming but troubled entrepreneur who appears to be the architect of both his own incredible success and tragedy.
After reading Zac Bissonnette’s 2015 book, The Great Beanie Baby Bubble: Mass Delusion and the Dark Side of Cute, husband-and-wife directing duo Damian Kulash – also known as OK Go’s frontman – and Kristin Gore – daughter of Al Gore – were immediately taken with the idea of adapting the Beanie Babies creation story, and the human drama surrounding it.
Author Bissonnette investigated Beanie Babies and their creator through numerous interviews with former Ty Inc. employees and original superfans, who drove secondary market demand for the limited release toys online with their voracious obsession: the booming popularity of eBay and Beanie Babies went hand in hand.
Galifianakis confesses that in his surprising but intriguing role as the media-shy and ‘controlling’ Warner, he eschewed emulating the real guy in favour of capturing ‘the spirit of a person’ instead.
And both he and co-star Elizabeth Banks, who portrays the composite character Robbie (loosely based on Warner’s business partner Patricia Roche), agree that the most compelling aspect of the picture is the interpersonal dynamics at work.
‘We didn’t set out to tell the real story of a real Ty. We found in the insanity that the Beanie Baby craze was, there were all these much darker and more interesting themes to us,’ Kulash explained.
‘We loved that there was this surreal, absurdist real-life event that had all these much more universal themes in it. So, we were able to find in that this sort of fable about the female relationship to the American Dream.’
Gore described Zac Bissonnette’s book as ‘very much our launchpad and guiding light for the film’, as it featured all the ‘raw material.’
‘We don’t know the real Ty, we didn’t do a ton of research. What we did was read a book that had a lot of very, very juicy nuggets of what America is about, and we tried to tell a story about the humans and not about the Beanie Babies,’ added Kulash.
Discussing standout sections from the book that the couple knew had to be in their film – adapted by former Saturday Night Live scribe Gore – the directors pointed to a real-life truck crash on an Atlanta, Georgia highway in 1999, which saw drivers on the I-285 during rush hour risk life and limb to scoop up Teenie Beanie Baby goods (a lucrative deal with McDonald’s) when a lorry spilled its wares on the road.
‘The truck crash that opens the movie is a good example of that because that actually happened! When we learned about that, we thought it was the perfect metaphor for the whole journey that we want to show with what happened to America in this insanity and it was a great way to have this joyful, colourful backdrop and then these kinds of insane things coming in,’ Gore revealed.
‘I would also say also, Ty’s treatment of his mega-fans, that the people who sort of drove this in the first place were these collectors who he wound up actively attacking because they were trying to participate in the whole process,’ chimed in Kulash.
The 47-year-old musician and director conceded that he himself had ‘the collecting bug’ and went mad for baseball cards when he was younger.
‘I would fall for pretty much anything.’
Meanwhile, Gore “just had imaginary friends” and so did not fall under the grip of any such trends as a child.
The key Beanie Babies in the Beanie Bubble were also a logistical challenge for the directors to figure out, not least because they had to make them entirely from scratch because they were only authorised to use Ty tags but not the actual toys themselves.
‘Making the Beanie Babies – sorry, making our ‘plush toys’ – was an enormous project because we needed 10,000 of them to explode across a highway and we were in the middle of a pandemic and a supply chain crisis, and – it turns out – Chinese New Year – so it was really hard to get a lot of stuffed animals made,’ recalled Kulash.
When it came to any favourites being requested for recreations for the movie by former fans on the film, he said: ‘Mostly the design was the incredible work of our production design team and we just got to approve them. They would bring us designs and say, “Does this feel like the right type of snake?” And we would be like, “Feels like it should be a little more rainbow coloured?”
‘But I don’t remember anyone ever being like, “Oh I need Peanut the royal blue elephant”.’
The Beanie Bubble is available to watch in select cinemas and on Apple TV Plus now.
Source My Celebrity Life.