Silence: Scorsese’s Historical Epic to Paramount

Paramount is in negotiations to buy the U.S. distribution rights to Martin Scorsese’s historical drama “Silence.”

Andrew Garfield, Liam Neeson, Ken Watanabe and Adam Driver are starring with production expected to start in Taiwan later this year. “Silence” is financed by Emmett/Furla/Oasis.

Garfield will star as Father Rodrigues, a 17th-century Portuguese Jesuit who travels to Japan with a fellow priest amid rumors that Rodrigues’ mentor has abandoned the Church. When they arrive, they find the local Christian population driven underground by religious persecution.

Liam Neeson will play a priest who landed in Japan over a decade ago and has gone missing.

Garfield had signed to star in Scorsese’s long-gestating adaptation of Japanese novelist Shusaku Endo’s book, regarded as his masterpiece.

The film is produced by Irwin Winkler, Randall Emmett and George Furla and Emma Tillinger Koskoff.

Jay Cocks has written the adaptation of “Silence,” first published in 1966.

Paramount released Scorsese’s three most recent films — “The Wolf of Wall Street,”  “Hugo” and “Shutter Island.”

It has not set a release date for “Silence.”