'Hillbilly Elegy' director Ron Howard did not expect JD Vance to be so divisive, reveals last text to VP
The director of "Hillbilly Elegy," the movie about Vice PresidentJD Vances fraught upbringing, time as a Yale Law student and Appalachian hometown roots, said that he didnt anticipate Vances rhetoric to be as "divisive" as it has become.During aconversation with Vulture published Wednesdaytitled, "'Youre Only As Good As Your Last Film' Ron Howard has worked with everyone from Bette Davis to J.D. Vance. He has stories about all of them," directorRon Howard was appeared perplexed by Vance's public persona.Howard also revealed the last time he texted Vance and the content of the message.Bilge Ebiri, a film critic for "Vulture," asked Vance, "You obviously spent a lot of time with J.D. Vance back then; you did press together. Are you able to reconcile the person you knew and the character in the movie with the person you see now?"VANCE COMPARES HARVARD TO NORTH KOREA AS HE TAKES AIM AT SCHOOLS IDEOLOGICAL DIVERSITY"It remains a bit of a surprise to me," Howard said. "I would not have seen it coming, and I wouldn't have expected his rhetoric to be as divisive as it sometimes is. By the way, I'm not following him or listening to every word."The veteran film director revealed that he had one recent interaction, via text, with Vance."I did one text, after the election, which was just sort of Godspeed. Try to serve us well," Howard said."Hillbilly Elegy," released in 2020, is an adaptation of Vances 2016 memoir of the same name.Howard stated that he was unsure about his films legacy."I know it's a mixed bag and probably quite culturally divided," Howard said. "I also know that reviews were bad and the audience-reaction rating was pretty good."'SWISS ARMY KNIFE': INSIDE VP VANCE'S FIRST 5 MONTHS IN OFFICE AS 'ENFORCER' OF TRUMP'S MAGA AGENDAAccording to Howard, Vance was "frustrated" by the response to the film."I remember reading that the response to the film had really shocked him," Ebiri asked Howard. "Did you get that sense at the time?""Yes, I did," Howard said. "He was frustrated by that. He loved Glenn Closes performance and Amy Adamss performance and liked the film. And he felt that, just as reviews had kind of turned on the book, his involvement was in some way tainting or coloring the critical response, and he resented it."