The Dreaming » 2005 » February
Feb 23

The current School Library Journal has two articles to note.

Bonnie Kunzel’s Hooray for Harry, is a round-up of recommended young adult fantasy novelists, including Garth Nix, Cornelia Funke, Tamora Pierce, and Eoin Colfer. Given the current discussion on the Journal, however, it might be worth noting that while Kunzel does list American Gods as a teen book in the following, be advised it falls into the adult literature category due to it’s content.

Most teens know Neil Gaiman as the author of the award-winning graphic-novel series Sandman, which follows the exploits of a family of seven immortals. But Gaiman is also one heck of a novelist, and American Gods (Morrow, 2001), his tale of middle-age, ex-con Shadow Moon’s eerie road trip, swept sci-fi and fantasy’s triple crown in 2002-winning a Hugo Award as the year’s top sci-fi title, the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America’s Nebula Award for best novel, and the annual Bram Stoker Award for the number-one work of horror. Although American Gods was published for adult readers, it has plenty of teen appeal. In addition, Gaiman wrote Coraline (HarperCollins, 2002), the winner of a Hugo award Coraline opens a mysterious locked door-which usually opens onto a bricked-up passageway-she finds herself in a very dark tunnel. At the other end, her “other” mother and father await with gleaming, black button eyes that are sewed on by thread. They’d love the young girl to stay with them forever, but there’s a catch: she must first have her eyes replaced with those gleaming black buttons. As Gaiman traveled the country reading Coraline to groups of children and parents, he discovered that kids responded to the story as a terrifie, sitting-on-the-edge-of-their-seat adventure. As for the adults in the audience, Coraline was the stuff of nightmares.

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Steve Weiner reviews Inside the Mind Of the Creator -Hanging Out with the Dream King: Conversations with Neil Gaiman & His Collaborators in the same issue:

Neil Gaiman is rapidly becoming a superstar, having written several stellar graphic-novel series-Sandman and The Books of Magic-and more than a few best-selling novels, such as Coraline and Wolves in the Walls. In addition to being a prolific writer, the witty, erudite Gaiman is also a great interview. Now, some of his interviews have been collected in a single volume, Hanging Out with the Dream King.The book also features interviews with many of his collaborators, who present an intriguing behind-the-scenes view of what it’s like to actually work with Gaiman. Hanging Out is a must-read for Gaiman’s many devotees-and for anyone else who’s wild about fantasy, horror, and graphic novels.

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For what it’s worth, the biography done for Rosen Publishing’s “Library of Graphic Novelists” is also out - the entire series is available through Midtown Comics and other retailers.

Feb 18
Clippings
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Mirrormask was reviewed in the February 15th Daily Variety by Scott Foundas.

Mirrormask(U.K.)
A Sony Pictures Entertainment release of a Destination Films presentation of a Jim Henson production. Produced by Simon Moorhead. Executive producers, Lisa Henson, Michael Polis, Martin G. Baker. Directed by David McKean. Screenplay, Neil Gaiman; story, Gaiman, McKean.

Valentine - Jason Barry
Morris Campbell/Prime Minister - Rob Brydon
Helena/Anti-Helena - Stephanie Leonidas
Joanne/Queen of Light/Queen of Shadows - Gina McKee

Filmed largely against a blue screen and worked over by some 17 credited animators and effects artists, the Jim Henson Co.’s “Mirrormask”emerges as an overproduced novelty pic that looks and feels more like a company promo reel than an engaging piece of storytelling. An elaborate kids fantasy that reps the feature directing debut of acclaimed graphic designer David McKean, pic is loaded with references to Lewis Carroll and L. Frank Baum, but far too often relies on its technology as a substitute for imagination. Without the built-in audience of a “Harry Potter” or “Lemony Snicket,” pic seems destined for the most fleeting of theatrical careers before passing on to vid/DVD afterlife.

Scripted by cult comic-book author Neil Gaiman (the “Sandman” series), “Mirrormask” inverts the childhood fantasy of running off to join the circus.Having spent her entire life living among circus performers, 15-year-old Helena (Stephanie Leonidas) wishes aloud for a life more ordinary, but quickly regrets having done so when her mother (Gina McKee) mysteriously collapses.

Blaming her selfish desires for her mother’s illness, a distraught Helena journeys into the Dark Lands, a drably colored parallel reality where fish swim in mid-air, books become airborne skateboards and everyone wears a mask .

In a distinctly “Oz”-like gambit, the Dark Lands are also populated with a host of familiar faces that create parallels to Helena’s world — from the comatose Queen of Light (McKee again) to the sage-like Prime Minister (Rob Brydon, who also plays Helena’s father) to Helena’s own menacing alter-ego, who has evidently swapped places with Helena out of her own desire to escape her familiar surroundings.

After being mistaken for the anti-Helena by the anti-Helena’s possessive mother, the Queen of Shadows (also McKee), the real Helena teams up with a juggler named Valentine (Jason Barry, whose CG head resembles a box of french fries), Helena then finds herself in a race against time to recover a powerful charm capable of revivifying the Queen of Light and restoring order to the universe.

“Mirrormask” is the type of film that gets hailed as “visionary” because it doesn’t quite look like any other movie. But while that’s true up to a point, its labor-intensive computer-generated (or enhanced) imagery creates a sense of disconnection between the actors and their environment, as well as between audience and film.

Though it recalls, in its broad outlines, such modern children’s fantasies as “The Neverending Story” and (particularly) the Henson Co.’s own “Labyrinth” and “The Dark Crystal,” pic lacks those films’ enveloping atmosphere and sense that it would be possible to reach out and touch what’s onscreen. Instead, “Mirrormask” feels chilly and distant, like watching a high-style videogame being played by someone else.

McKean achieves no modulation whatsoever between the his real and fantasy universes, swirling his camera about violently even when a more tempered set-up might better fit the occasion and setting the film to an omnipresent jazz fusion score (by Ian Ballamy) that quickly wears out its welcome. Oddly enough for a pic whose visual elements are the sell, images on print screened were often murky and soft, suggesting a poor transfer from digital post-production elements.

Camera (Soho Images color), Antony Shearn; editor, Nicolas Gaster; music, Ian Ballamy; production designer, McKean; supervising art director, Zoe Trodden; costume designer, Robert Lever; sound (Dolby Digital), Ian Sands; sound designers, Hugh Johnson, Barnaby Smith; supervising sound editors, Larry Sider, Joakim Sundstrom; CGI supervisor and producer, Max McMullin; digital animation and effects, Hourglass Studios; assistant director, Joe Lea; casting, Louis Hammond. Reviewed at Aidikoff Screening Room, Beverly Hills, January 17, 2005. (In Sundance Film Festival — Premieres). Running time: 96 MIN.

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Here’s an additional review from AICN.

And as always, Rotten Tomatoes is collecting reviews from both print and electronic sources.

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And here’s C.A. Bridges not name dropping

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From the February 18th Rocky Mountain News

Melinda
By Neil Gaiman; illustrated by Dagmara Matuszak; signed and limited to 1000 copies (Hill House Publishers, $90).
Grade: A

In its first two decades, Hill House published only three titles: the signed/limited versions of Peter Straub’s Ghost Story; Raymond Feist’s Faerie Tale; and Al Sarrantonio’s landmark anthology, 999.

However, a couple of years ago the small press began producing fine editions of the works of some of today’s most important genre authors, including Ray Bradbury, Neal Stephenson, Stephen Donaldson and Neil Gaiman.

Generally, Hill House titles are similar, but much nicer and significantly more expensive than their mass market counterparts. For instance, the Hill House adaptation of Ray Bradbury’s The Cat’s Pajamas features silk binding and a silk slipcase and includes five stories not in the Knopf original. In addition to a presentation similar to the Bradbury, the Hill House version of Neil Gaiman’s award-winning American Gods includes 12,000 words excised from the trade edition.

Now, for the first time, Hill House has published a book that’s not available anywhere else, Neil Gaiman’s Melinda.

Beautifully presented with Dagmara Matuszak’s breathtaking 48 black-and-white and eight-color plates, Gaiman tells the foreboding story of Melinda, an orphan child in a dark, mechanized future.

“She’s seven, but she’s seen it all,” writes Gaiman. “She’s lived in heating pipes and vents and run with dogs, and battled wolves. She’s learned it takes a lot of sense to build yourself a nest above; down on the ground it’s cat eat dog, she’ll forage there for food or love.”

Gaiman’s words and Matuzak’s illustrations seamlessly put readers into Melinda’s life where they can almost feel the cold and share the hunger of the lonely but resilient child. The only way Melinda can overcome the world’s sense of desolation and despair is to escape into fantasy, fueled by robot versions of Goldilocks and the Three Bears and Little Red Riding Hood.

While $90 may seem a hefty price for this short work, two factors make the book worth it: the exceptional production values, and the fact that Gaiman fans won’t find it anywhere else.

Melinda can be ordered from booksellers or directly from Hill House Publishers, 491 Illington Road, Ossining, NY 10562, and online at http://hillhousepublishers.com.
- Mark Graham

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From the March April Horn Book:

Children’s Literature New England’s nineteenth annual institute, “The Fairy Tale Belongs to the Poor,” will be held at Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, Harvard University, in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on August 7–13, 2005. Speakers include Elizabeth Bicknell, Susan Cooper, Sarah Ellis, Neil Gaiman, Betsy Hearne, Donna Jo Napoli, Elizabeth Partridge, Jacqueline Woodson, and Paul Zelinsky. For more information see www.CLNE.org or call or e-mail registrar Martha Walke (802-765-4935; walkem@sover.net).

Feb 11
Clippings
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The January Chronicle notes the following, although obviously it’s been reported elsewhere:

Neil Gaiman and Caroline illustrator Dave McKean sold Mirronnask tie-ins, related to a Jim Henson Company film written by Gaiman and directed by McKean, an oversized complete script and Storyboards with notes from the creators, as well as full-color art from the film, to William Morrow, for publication in summer 2005, plus a Mirrormask picture book illustrated with film art, to Harper Children’s, by Merrilee Heifetz at Writers House.

Feb 10
Interview at IGN Film Force
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There’s a longish, MirrorMask related interview at IGN Film Force, which recently also posted an interview with Dave McKean

Feb 9

Along with letting us know about the interview in the Winter 2004 issue of Gothic Beauty way back on the 5th, Eden writes to let us know about PopMatter’s review of A Short Film About John Bolton.

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Rochelle O’Gorman has this to say about the audio adaption of Monarch of the Glen from Legends II - Volume 3 in the February 6th Boston Globe:

In the case of Gaiman’s ”The Monarch of the Glen,” his character Shadow from ”American Gods” is traveling through a craggy and remote Scottish village. This is the best of the three if only because it sounds the most complete as a stand-alone story. Narrator Michael Emerson conjures up a strong Scottish accent and several other British voices. Of the three tales, this is the one that lingers, leaving the listener wanting more.

She also has this to say about the version of Chivalry which is on Selected Shorts, Volume XVIII from Symphony Space:

The best in this collection of seven stories is ”Chivalry,” by Neil Gaiman. The idea is very simple: A widow finds the Holy Grail in an Oxfam shop and decides it will look perfect on her mantel. All is well until Sir Galahad turns up on her doorstep, hoping to complete his quest in her modest living room. Unfortunately, this smart and sweet little gem is paired with the weakest reader in the bunch, actress Christina Pickles, who fumbles too often and does not sound prepared.

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NB: While deciding to keep all of the clips on certain subjects together is probably all fine, well and good when you want to search for items later, it does mean that I have a tendency to wait until there’s enough news on a subject to warrant an entry.

Which apparently means it just sits in various inboxes collecting dust until it shows up in Neil’s journal and I find myself banging my head against the keyboard that I’ve missed it.

So I’m going back to the old method. Yes, items may very well move after they are initially posted as ‘Clippings’, but at least this will stay a bit more current than it has.

At least I hope so.