Chuck Logan is so elated that his novel "Homefront" has been made into a Hollywood movie, he lapses into action-flick lingo when talking about it.
"This movie just came along like a skyhook," he said, swiveling in a chair in his Stillwater writing studio to look at a huge poster of Jason Statham on the wall. "I feel like I was standing in the dark and suddenly got picked up by a runaway train."
Based on the sixth and last of Logan's pop-fiction thrillers featuring Phil Broker, "Homefront" opens nationwide Wednesday. Starring top action hero Statham and all-over-the-place James Franco, directed by Gary Fleder ("Runaway Jury," "Kiss the Girls") and written by Sylvester Stallone, who also co-produced, the $70 million film is one of the biggest movies ever made from a Minnesota author's work.
If it's a hit, the movie could re-ignite sales of his other books, as well as publisher interest in more Broker plot lines.
Seeing a book make it to the big screen is a long shot under any circumstances. "Out of a million books sold, the number that get optioned is in the thousands, and of those the ones that get made and distributed are in the tens," said Sloan Harris, Logan's agent at ICM Partners.
Statham stars as Broker, a retired DEA agent and widower who moves his 10-year-old daughter to a small Southern town where altercations on the playground and later with the local meth kingpin (Franco) lead to deadlier conflicts.
Harris said Stallone took "an instant liking" to "Homefront" when he handed it to him during a meeting.
Stallone's version veers from Logan's in a few key ways. For one thing, it was shot in Louisiana — a state that offers filmmakers some of the most tempting financial incentives in the nation — instead of northern Minnesota. And a main character, Broker's wife, Nina, is dead and barely referenced in the movie.