Budding comedy scribe Katie Dippold
loved cop movies growing up. Now a grown up, her love for cop movies
continues and had successfully penned the latest Sandra Bullock and Melissa
McCarthy starrer “The Heat” directed by Paul Feig. The
estrogen-filled comedy features Sandra Bullock as the uptight FBI agent Sarah
Ashburn and Melissa McCarthy as the unorthodox Boston police officer paired together
to hunt down a ruthless drug lord.
“The Heat” is the first produced
screenplay by Katie Dippold, who has written for television shows like Parks
and Recreation and MadTV. The film was born from Dippold’s love of
buddy-cop movies. She has many favorites, but singles out the 1986
comedy-action film Running Scared, starring Billy Crystal and Gregory Hines as
wisecracking Chicago street cops. “I’ve always enjoyed those kinds of
movies,” says Dippold, who recently signed a deal to write another comedy for
director Paul Feig. “The characters and actors always seemed like they
were having so much fun.”
Dippold’s love of buddy-cop films
provided the foundation for a script that ultimately transcended the genre with
outrageous humor and heart. Feig sparked to the script, calling it “one
of the funniest I’ve ever read.”
“It turns the genre on its head by
adding some breasts,” jokes Bullock. “It’s gonna surprise people what
women with breasts can do.”
When the filmmaker told Dippold that
“The Heat” was going to be his next film, the neophyte screenwriter was
flummoxed. “I thought I was being pranked,” Dippold admits. “I got an
email saying that Paul wanted to have lunch with me. After reading the
email, I sat there frozen for several minutes. Then, I thought it was a
joke.” “Well, that’s Katie,” says producer Jenno Topping. “She’s
incredibly humble and real.”
With Dippold’s first draft in hand,
Feig moved at warp speed to cast the film, a task facilitated by his
visualizing his “dream team” in the script. “I’ve always been a fan of
Sandra Bullock, and as I was reading I was just like, okay, Ashburn is
Sandra. Ashburn felt like her. Sandra is so funny in movies and in
real life. She’s confident and cool, but she’s also analytical about things
to a point where it’s comical, and which I love. And that’s how I felt
about the Ashburn character.”
“Sandra brings a sweet quality to
what could have been an unlikable character,” adds Katie Dippold. “She
really nails that ‘A+-student’ vibe, and she’s hilarious.” And McCarthy
notes that, “Sandra is great, funny and weird. We are very much in sync.”
It didn’t take much convincing to
bring Bullock aboard. She was a big fan of “Bridesmaids,” and eager to work
with its director, Feig. “Watching Bridesmaids was one of those rare
moments when I thought to myself that this is a person [Feig] I want to work
with because you know he is going to make you better – and that he could turn
“The Heat” into something memorable.”
The strength of the Bullock-McCarthy
dynamic, evident even then, inspired additional script fine-tuning. “By
the end of that first read, it was obvious that Sandy and Melissa really
inhabited these characters, and that it was up to Katie Dippold and me to take
all that magic and get it into the script – and really let the women fly,” says
Feig.
For Dippold, the process was
liberating. “Sandy and Melissa took what was on the page and made it
funnier than I thought it could ever be,” she says. A particular favorite
came during a Mullins’ tirade against her captain (played by Tom Wilson) –
accusing him of lacking a set of testes – when he refuses her demand to boot
Ashburn from the case. “Melissa really ran with the one scripted line,
‘Have you seen the captain’s balls?’ and turned it into something spectacular.”
Rated R-13, “The Heat” opens June 27
in theaters from 20th Century Fox to be distributed by Warner Bros.
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