James Gandolfini is currently having a very busy spring. He’s got roles in no less than three very high profile films: Stephen Daldry‘s “Extremely Loud And Incredibly Close,” Andrew Dominik‘s “Cogan’s Trade” and David Chase‘s “Twylight Zones” and moreover, he’s got a couple in the can with HBO‘s “Cinema Verite” premiering next month and the teenage assassin pic “Violet & Daisy” due later this year. And “The Sopranos” star shows no signs of slowing down, as he attaches himself to another promising project.
Deadline reports that Gandolfini is attached to star in an adaptation of “Eating with the Enemy: How I Waged Peace With North Korea from my BBQ Shack in Hackensack” by Bobby Egan and Kurt Pitzer. The incredibly strange true story centers on Egan, the owner of a rib joint in Hackensack, New Jersey who becomes an unlikely diplomat between the United States and North Korea after he simply goes over to the consulate at the UN building and offers his hand in friendship. He winds up traveling to North Korea four times and even brokers talks between the two nations regarding nuclear arms. Eventually, his connections at the UN are called back home and Egan goes back to slinging BBQ.
HBO Films will be behind the project but it might be a while off yet as no writer is on board right now. But it sounds like some great material, and a good fit for Gandolfini. Check out the Amazon synopsis below. Pretty bonkers stuff.
There was only one chair in the room. Fluorescent tubes on the ceiling hummed with blue light. The woman smiled and explained in a soothing voice that there were some “procedures” they had to go through.
“We’re just going to put you under for a few minutes,” she said. One of the officials told me to turn around..
“Do I have a choice?” I lowered my pants, exposing most of my left butt cheek. The woman came up from behind me, and I felt a sharp prick as she pushed in the needle and rammed the solution into my muscle. When she finished, I sat down.
“Which agency do you work for? CIA?” asked the other male official.
“I operate independently,” I said. I started to feel good. Very good. I had the urge to laugh, even though nobody had said anything funny. “I’m a lone wolf. And I make burgers for a living. I’m a burger-making lone wolf.”
I must have blacked out for some of it. When I opened my eyes again, the two men were there, but the woman was gone. I wiped my nose, and my hand came away bloody. I suddenly felt so sick and dizzy I thought I’d had a stroke. “What the fuck?
In Pyongyang in 1994, Robert Egan was given Sodium Pentathol, or “truth serum,” by North Korean agents trying to determine his real identity. What was he doing in the world’s most isolated nation—while the U.S. government recoiled at its human-rights record and its quest for dangerous nukes? Why had he befriended one of North Korea’s top envoys to the United Nations? What was Egan after? Fast-paced and often astounding, Eating with the Enemy is the tale of a restless restaurant owner from a mobbed-up New Jersey town who for thirteen years inserted himself into the high-stakes diplomatic battles between the United States and North Korea.
Egan dropped out of high school in working-class Fairfield, New Jersey, in the midseventies and might have followed his father’s path as a roofing contractor. But Bobby had bigger plans for himself, and after a few years wasted on drugs and petty crime, his life took an astonishing turn when his interest in the search for Vietnam-era POWs led to an introduction in the early nineties to North Korean officials desperate to improve relations with the United States. So Egan turned his restaurant, Cubby’s, into his own version of Camp David. Between ball games, fishing trips, and heaping plates of pork ribs, he advised deputy ambassador to the United Nations, Han Song Ryol, and other North Koreans during tumultuous years that saw the death of Kim Il-sung and the rise of Kim Jong-il, false starts toward peace during the Clinton administration, the Bush “Axis of Evil” era, and North Korea’s successful test of a nuclear weapon in 2006. All the while, Egan informed for the FBI, vexed the White House with his meddling, chaperoned the communist nation’s athletes on hilarious adventures, and nearly rescued a captured U.S. Navy vessel—all in the interest of promoting peace.
Egan parses U.S. foreign policy with a mobster’s street smarts, and he challenges the idea that the United States should not have relations with its adversaries. The intense yet unlikely friendship between him and Ambassador Han provides hope for better relations between enemy nations and shows just how far one lone citizen can go when he tries to right the world’s wrongs.