
FORT WORTH, Texas â The story of a North Texas couple, who embezzled nearly $17 million from a fruitcake company, is getting a film adaption thanks to actress Jennifer Garner and a Fort Worth, Texas, company.
Deadline has revealed that Garner and Paul Walter Hauser joined âFruitcake,â a movie about the embezzlement case that rocked Corsicana-based Collin Street Bakery. It is a sordid tale of greed and broken trust that ultimately leads to a nest of diamonds, expensive cars and trips to exotic resorts on private jets.
Hauser is set to play the bakeryâs accountant Sandy Jenkins, who embezzled $16.6 million out of the company from 2004 to 2013. Garner will play Jenkinsâ wife, Kay.
In 2015, Sandy Jenkins was sentenced to 10 years in prison and died four years later at a Fort Worth federal prison hospital. Kay Jenkins was sentenced to five years probation and to complete 100 hours of community service.
Max Winkler is directing the film thatâs based off the Texas Monthly article âJust Deserts.â Trey Selman wrote the script and is a producer on the movie, along with Fort Worth native Red Sanders.
Sanders, who owns and operates local video production company Red Productions, said heâs particularly familiar with the bakery story.
âThey pitched the story and I was like, âI love that story, I know it wellâ,â Sanders told the Star-Telegram. âMy cousin owns the fruitcake bakery that it happened too and theyâre like, âYeah rightâ.â
Sanders first caught wind of the bakery film adaption at the Tribeca Film Festival in 2017, which he attended as a producer for the movie âOne Percent More Humid.â
It was there where Sanders met Winkler, whoâs first movie, âFlower,â also premiered at the festival. After reading Selmanâs âFruitcakeâ script on the flight back to Texas, and having met Winkler, Sanders was all in on the the project.
In May 2019, it was announced that Will Ferrell and Laura Dern had been cast in the project as Sandy and Kay Jenkins. By February 2020, the rest of the cast was formalized.
But it would be all for naught, as the world shut down just weeks later as reports of COVID-19 infections spread and a pall hung across the globe from an enigmatic pandemic.
âWe were planning to shoot in summer 2020 and that got totally derailed,â Sanders said.
With the first iteration of the fruitcake story on ice, the tale found new life as a documentary.
Sanders began working with director Celia Aniskovich on a television project titled âFruitcake Fraud,â which landed on Discovery+ in 2021. While a success for the streamer, Sanders held on to ambitions of giving the story the full big screen treatment.
Things picked up steam last summer when Texas Monthly came aboard, but again, a few weeks later the project hit another brick wall. Both the Writerâs Guild of America and Screen Actors Guild – American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (SAG-AFTRA) took to the picket lines, pushing the projectâs timeline back even more.
After both strikes ended towards the end of last year, work picked up again on âFruitcake.â This time Garner and Hauser had joined the cast.
âItâs been one of these things of like, âOkay, Iâm a producer and Iâm stubborn. I love this story, I love Treyâs writing in itâ,â Sanders said. âThis has to be made.â
The âFruitcakeâ story is firmly set in North Texas and Sanders said they hope to shoot the movie in the same place.
With Garner and Hauser on board, the next step in the filmmaking process is finalizing the rest of the cast and applying for production incentives. Like many states, Texas offers tax incentives such as cash grants for productions that film in state.
After being approved for incentives, the project would move into pre-production and eventually begin shooting.
âJust because you say youâre gonna film in Texas doesnât mean that youâre approved for incentives,â Sanders said. âWe gotta see if weâre actually approved.â
If the production does end up shooting in North Texas, Sanders said theyâll aim to hire workers from the area. A boon for two local entities, the Fort Worth Film Commission and Tarrant County College, who had partnered on a new training program last fall. Their mission: Grow film-related jobs in the region. Students can gain certifications in construction, lighting and electric work.
For anyone looking to work on productions filming in North Texas, whether that be on âYellowstoneâ creator Taylor Sheridanâs numerous shows such as âLandman,â or on âFruitcake,â Sanders said enrolling in the program is the way to go.
âIf we are to shoot here, weâve got to make sure that the workforce continues to grow here,â Sanders said.
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