Palos Park native Steve Desmond in front of a marquee banner advertising the movie "A Knock at the Cabin," which he co-wrote. (Supplied photos)

Palos Park native Steve Desmond in front of a marquee banner advertising the movie "A Knock at the Cabin," which he co-wrote. (Supplied photos)

Palos Park native helps write screenplay for ‘Knock at the Cabin’

Spread the love
reporter desmond dave bautista

Screenwriting partners Michael Sherman (left) and Steve Desmond are joined by Dave Bautista, a star of their movie “A Knock at the Cabin.”

By Dermot Connolly

Palos Park native Steve Desmond, 40, has been thinking about making movies for most of his life, and now one he co-wrote can be found in a theater near you.

Desmond and his screenwriting partner, Michael Sherman, share writing credits with director M. Night Shyamalan for the screenplay for “Knock at the Cabin,” a mystery thriller based on the novel “The Cabin at the End of the World,” by Paul G. Tremblay.

This is the first movie the partners, with their production company Dreaming Ants, have seen come to the big screen. But Desmond has been thinking of writing and directing movies for most of his life.

For a second-grade career fair at Palos East Elementary School in Palos Heights, Desmond dressed up as a movie director.

“Everyone else was dressed like a police officer or fireman. Here I come looking like Cecil B. DeMille, modeled after a picture I found in the encyclopedia,” said Desmond with a laugh during a recent phone conversation from his home in Los Angeles, where he lives with his wife, Rachel Burrows.

“It started when I was even younger than that,” he added. “When I was 5, I had a babysitter named Kim who helped me make a movie with my toy dinosaurs. I was able to make a little story, and when my parents (Steve and Maria Desmond) came home, I was making a movie poster for it, because I knew they went up in theaters.”

“The idea of making a career of it wasn’t tangible to me yet. It was just an empowering experience, showing me I could do it,” said Desmond.

“I always joke that my parents missed their calling as PR agents—they are my biggest promoters.”

Their own successful life stories inspired him as well. His mother emigrated from Italy at age 8, and his father was orphaned when his parents died when he was a teenager.

“Growing up, I used to make (movies) with neighborhood friends. This was not high art, but it was a lot of fun at time,” he said.

Desmond went on to Palos South Middle School in Palos Park and then Sandburg High School in Orland Park.

His first interview with this newspaper occurred after his 2001 graduation, when he was heading off to film school at the University of Southern California—one of seven schools that had accepted him.

“I had made a bunch of high school films. I guess it was rare, a novelty that someone from around here was going to California like that,” he said.

He said then that seeing “Star Wars” for the first time at age 5 set him on the movie-making path. He had already won awards for two short films he made at Sandburg and expressed his hope to become a film director for a major studio.

Desmond earned a degree in film and television production and has lived and worked in LA ever since. But he visits Palos Park as often as possible and has not forgotten the grounding he got in high school.

“I love Sandburg. It was a defining period of my life. We didn’t have film-making classes then, but as soon as I showed an interest, my teachers allowed me to turn my class reports into movies. I was constantly making short films for English, for history.”

“I played football but I also was on the speech team and theater. (Sandburg) was all about being yourself and finding your voice,” said Desmond.

“Even now, I constantly have to pitch movie ideas, which is all public speaking. Every time, I still do the Sandburg Speech team warm-ups,” he noted.

As a junior in high school, he said a college counselor—Bob Kindmark—”drilled into me how hard getting into the movie industry would be.”  But getting to talk to comedian Tom Dreesen, who made it from Harvey to Hollywood, gave him the encouragement to try.

“My dad is good friends with his brother,” he explained. “We met when I was 16, and he was so positive and so encouraging. We still talk.”

“I always thought cinematography was so cool,” he said, recalling how lucky he felt to get college credit for setting up crash scenes in his own movies.

After graduating from USC, he and Michael Sherman decided to form their own company. Dreaming Ants, “because I felt we had similar sensibilities,” said Desmond. They typically share screenwriting duties while Desmond directs and Sherman produces their projects.

“We came up with the name because we felt like ants dreaming,” he added.

“My jobs (in LA) were always in the entertainment industry, I worked as a reality television editor, and as a commercial treatment writer,” he said. “It wasn’t until five years ago that I could do this full time.”

“We have been working on ‘A Knock at the Cabin’ for that long, but it was another script that made it possible,” he explained.

He said working with Shyamalan, known as an expert in the mystery genre since directing “The Sixth Sense,” was another dream come true.

“In high school, when ‘The Sixth Sense’ came out, we kept trying to get in to see it at the Marcus theater (in Orland Park) but it was always sold out. It took us three times,” he said.

“When Michael and I got hired to adapt this novel, it was just this little indy film. But the scope of it went bigger than I ever expected,” he said.

“The words I would use would be surreal and validating. It is crazy to see your name on billboards. It means that the struggle and the journey was worth it.”

“After a lot of years of constant rejection, to keep going and be able to say I have been a professional writer for the past five years. It is pretty cool to be able to share something with an audience.”

When the movie came out, he returned to USC for a Q&A session moderated by film critic Leonard Maltin in one of the 300-seat lecture halls he sat in as a student.

“I try to be an inspiration. I feel very lucky to get to tell stories for a living, it took a lot of years and a lot of day jobs. But it has been extremely gratifying.”

reporter desmond and wife

Palos Park native Steve Desmond and his wife, Rachel Burrows, at the LA opening of “A Knock at the Cabin,” which he co-wrote (Photo by Evan Agostini of Invision).

Local News

ChicagoCitySeal

New effort to aid kids with disabilities

Spread the love

Spread the love. From staff reports A new grant program aimed at providing financial assistance to families of children with disabilities was launched recently by Mayor Brandon Johnson, in partnership with the Mayor’s Office for People with Disabilities and Ada S. McKinley Community Services. Children with disabilities is a population disproportionately affected by the pandemic,…

Cook County Sheriff Thomas J. Dart

Dart warns of Sheriff’s Office imposters

Spread the love

Spread the love. From staff reports Cook County Sheriff Thomas J. Dart recently alerted the public of an uptick in telephone and email phishing scams in which scammers identify themselves as a Sheriff’s Office employee in an attempt to defraud victims. Scammers are using the actual names and respective titles of Sheriff’s Office employees to…

Peggy Zabicki

It’s ‘Batter up!’ time in West Lawn

Spread the love

Spread the love. Peggy Zabicki Your correspondent in West Lawn 3633 W. 60th Place •  (773) 504-9327 . It must be May because baseball season is here. I recently reported on the West Lawn Little League, whose 2024 season is now underway. Another West Lawn youth athletic association is Midway Baseball Softball Association. Their teams…

Mary Stanek

Cinco de Mayo, here we come

Spread the love

Spread the love. By Mary Stanek Your correspondent in Archer Heights and West Elsdon 3808 W. 57th Place •  (773) 517-7796 . It’s time to bring out the Corona, Tecate, Modelo or Dos Equis, along with a few limes. Heck, maybe even bring out the Patrón! It is Cinco de Mayo this Sunday, translated to…

Chicago Christian’s Holland Winthrop eyes a high fastball during an at-bat last week. Photo by Xavier Sanchez

Softball | Jocelyn Hovanec scores two runs, Ks 12 in Chicago Christian win

Spread the love

Spread the loveBy Xavier Sanchez Correspondent Chicago Christian  is working to find its footing in the inaugural season of the Chicagoland Christian Conference. The Knights entered this week 6-8 overall and 4-6 in the CCC, putting them in fifth place with just two conference games to play among their final seven regular-season contests. The Knights…

Chicago Christian players celebrate after a point during a match agsint St. Edward. Photo by Xavier Sanchez

Boys Volleyball | Chicago Christian finishes April strong, takes second at Ridgewood Invitational

Spread the love

Spread the loveBy Xavier Sanchez Correspondent A busy and largely successful final seven days of April saw Chicago Christian briefly climb back to the .500 mark after a tough first month of the season. The Knights (11-12, 4-4 Chicagoland Christian Conference) have won seven of their past 10 matches, all of which were played over…

MP Roof Repair 2 (1)

Work moving forward at Marquette Park

Spread the love

Spread the love. Kathy Headley Your correspondent in Chicago Lawn and Marquette Manor 6610 S. Francisco • (773) 776-7778 . In the March 29 edition of the Greater Southwest News-Herald, I wrote a story about a town hall meeting at Marquette Park, we learned of some of the upcoming plans the Park District has for…

Marist middle hitter Jack Meador attacks against Glenbard West  in the championship match at the Lincoln-Way East Invitational on April 27 in Frankfort. Photo by Jeff Vorva

Boys Volleyball | Marist hands Glenbard West first loss of season

Spread the love

Spread the loveBy Jeff Vorva Correspondent Marist was scary good in the first set. The RedHawks won it 25-12. Even by Marist standards, that’s pretty impressive. Complete dominance. What’s even more stunning is that it came against the second-ranked team in the nation. The RedHawks, who came into the match ranked sixth in the country…

Red Stars forward Mallory Swanson (left) looks for a pass from Penelope Hocking on April 27. Photo by Jeff Vorva

Sophia Smith’s brace sinks Red Stars

Spread the love

Spread the loveBy Jeff Vorva Correspondent Home has not been that sweet lately for the Chicago Red Stars. The team lost its second straight game at SeatGeek Stadium with a 2-0 setback to Portland in front of an announced crowd of 4,443 on April 27. Portland star Sophia Smith scored in the 10th and 26th…

Nazareth Academy Principal Therese Hawkins and football offensive coordinator Casey Moran pay close attention to the drafting of J.J. McCarthy at The Stadium Club. (Photos by Steve Metsch)

Nazareth Academy celebrates ‘special talent’ J.J. McCarthy in NFL Draft

Spread the love

Spread the loveBy Steve Metsch Dennis Moran has no doubts that J.J. McCarthy – the former Nazareth Academy quarterback who is now with the Minnesota Vikings – will succeed in the National Football League. Moran was among about 60 or so Nazareth Academy fans, friends and coaches who gathered Thursday night at The Stadium Club…

Neighbors

Lawmakers pitch sweeping changes to energy industry and Chicagoland transit system

Lawmakers pitch sweeping changes to energy industry and Chicagoland transit system

By ANDREW ADAMS  Capitol News Illinois aadams@capitolnewsillinois.com A group of lawmakers and influential environmental advocates are calling for broad changes to the state’s energy industry and a massive increase in state oversight of Chicagoland’s transit system – which faces a projected $730 million budget shortfall.  Advocates for the policy platform, which is broken up into…

Democrats flex muscle to kick off final month of session as revenues remain on track

Democrats flex muscle to kick off final month of session as revenues remain on track

By JERRY NOWICKI Capitol News Illinois jnowicki@capitolnewsillinois.com SPRINGFIELD – With about three weeks to go before the Illinois General Assembly is scheduled to adjourn its spring legislative session, supermajority Democrats showed their strength this week as fiscal forecasters noted state revenues remain on track. April is typically a make-or-break month for state coffers, as income…

Former state trooper who caused fatal crash halts effort to get driving privileges restored

Former state trooper who caused fatal crash halts effort to get driving privileges restored

By BETH HUNDSDORFER Capitol News Illinois bhundsdorfer@capitolnewsillinois.com The former Illinois State Trooper who pleaded guilty to vehicular manslaughter of two sisters in 2007 has abandoned his efforts to have a hearing into the restoration of his driving privileges – for now.  Matt Mitchell, 45, requested at least two delays in the hearing after he failed…

Capitol Briefs: Senate advances elections bill, measure targeting ‘predatory’ lending

Capitol Briefs: Senate advances elections bill, measure targeting ‘predatory’ lending

By PETER HANCOCK & HANNAH MEISEL Capitol News Illinois news@capitolnewsillinois.com SPRINGFIELD – A bill that would put more controls on certain kinds of high-cost loans to small businesses cleared the Illinois Senate Thursday. Senate Bill 2234, known as the Small Business Financial Transparency Act, targets a relatively new kind of nontraditional lender in the credit…

Law enforcement community honors fallen officers at Illinois Capitol

Law enforcement community honors fallen officers at Illinois Capitol

By COLE LONGCOR Capitol News Illinois clongcor@capitolnewsillinois.com SPRINGFIELD – Six fallen police officers were honored at an annual memorial service outside the State Capitol Thursday. The Illinois Police Officers Memorial occurs annually on the first Thursday of May to honor officers who died in the line of duty and to support their families.  “No one…

Democrats muscle through changes to ballot access, advisory questions

Democrats muscle through changes to ballot access, advisory questions

By JERRY NOWICKI HANNAH MEISEL & PETER HANCOCK Capitol News Illinois news@capitolnewsillinois.com SPRINGFIELD – Supermajority Democrats in the Illinois House moved quickly Wednesday to push through a change to state election laws that partially limits ballot access and adds three nonbinding referendums to the 2024 general election ballot.  It’s a move that caused minority party…

After 3 years, state poised to enforce law aiming to end lending discrimination

After 3 years, state poised to enforce law aiming to end lending discrimination

By PETER HANCOCK Capitol News Illinois phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com SPRINGFIELD – In 1977, then-President Jimmy Carter signed into law the Community Reinvestment Act, a federal law that sought to wipe away the last vestiges of racial discrimination and redlining in America’s home mortgage industry. The idea was simple. By requiring lenders – primarily banks – to make…

Capitol News Illinois partners with ‘Illinois Lawmakers’ program to bring it back to air

Capitol News Illinois partners with ‘Illinois Lawmakers’ program to bring it back to air

Capitol News Illinois announced today it will produce the long-running “Illinois Lawmakers” program this spring, in partnership with longtime host and producer Jak Tichenor.  “This new partnership is absolutely critical to providing Illinois residents with reliable, independent, in-depth, up to date coverage from the Illinois Capitol after many newspapers and broadcasters shuttered their Statehouse bureaus over…

Election officials to weigh whether Darren Bailey and GOP operative Dan Proft illegally coordinated

Election officials to weigh whether Darren Bailey and GOP operative Dan Proft illegally coordinated

By ANDREW ADAMS & HANNAH MEISEL Capitol News Illinois news@capitolnewsillinois.com CHICAGO – A year and a half after Republican Darren Bailey lost his campaign to challenge Gov. JB Pritzker, state election officials are weighing whether he illegally colluded with conservative radio show host and political operative Dan Proft in the 2022 campaign. The State Board…

Immigrant advocates tout new report showing benefits of state-funded health plans

Immigrant advocates tout new report showing benefits of state-funded health plans

By PETER HANCOCK  and JERRY NOWICKI  Capitol News Illinois news@capitolnewsillinois.com SPRINGFIELD – Immigrant rights advocates on Friday continued to push for one of their top budget priorities: full funding for state-run health care programs that benefit noncitizens, regardless of their immigration status. Those programs offer health coverage for low-income individuals who would otherwise qualify for…