The Dreaming » 2005
Sep 18
Clippings
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Interviews don’t quite abound, but the trickle has started: not only is there the Three Monkeys piece, but there’s a rather long feature in DB Magazine (thanks Matt!), and the Author Tracker teases us with a audio interview (Windows Media Player), the news that there will be a Jouni Koponen’s illustrated version of A Study in Emerald (yay Journi!!!), and the promise of a new website.


From the September 14th Hollywood Reporter (via The Book Standard):

‘All the rules are turned upside down.’

Fantasy writer Neil Gaiman has been creating worlds beyond the imagination for decades now, and even he admits that he probably is the most-optioned author in Hollywood who has yet to have any of his work translated to the big screen. Gaiman has had a somewhat easier time authoring original scripts, penning, among other things, the English-language release of the 1999 anime classic Princess Mononoke and partnering with Roger Avary on the screenplay for Robert Zemeckis’ upcoming performance-capture adaptation of the ancient epic Beowulf. British-born Gaiman’s current cinematic venture; the $4 million production MirrorMask, which Sony plans to release Sept. 30, designed and directed by longtime collaborator Dave McKean; introduces audiences to a visually breathtaking alternate universe navigated by plucky heroine Helena (Stephanie Leonidas) and rendered almost entirely on McKean’s computer. Gaiman spoke recently with The Hollywood Reporter‘s Gina McIntyre about the genesis of the groundbreaking project, his rapport with McKean and how special effects might impact the future of cinematic storytelling.

The Hollywood Reporter: I understand you and Dave McKean conceived the story for MirrorMask in a rather interesting locale?

Neil Gaiman: We did. We were in Jim Henson’s house in London. When we were there, it hadn’t been touched since Jim died — to the point where we couldn’t really do e-mail and things because there were still dial telephones on the walls. But it was a good place to surround ourselves with the idea of making a film. The brief was very straightforward: Make a film for children in the tradition of (1986′s) Labyrinth and (1982′s) The Dark Crystal, which is to say that you’re trying to make a film that is intelligent enough for kids with enough action and cool bits to keep adults interested.

THR: Did you approach writing this screenplay differently than any of your other projects?

Gaiman: Normally, I would write something, and I’d give it to Dave. The problem was that I couldn’t do that this time because only Dave knew how he could make something like MirrorMask for $4 million. I would say to Dave, “I want a scene with Helena at school,” and he’d say, “Well, you can’t have a scene with Helena at school because we’d need a school location, we’d need at least 10 kids, we’d need a teacher, and we can’t afford it.” Then he’d see the expression on my face and say, “I tell you what, we could have the world crumpling up like a piece of paper, and I could do that for nothing.” It was turning the whole idea about special effects upside down. In fact, Dave did the assemblage of the first version of MirrorMask with an awful lot of bluescreen, and he showed it to the animators he’d brought in. They said, “How many special effects shots are there in this?” Dave said, “Well, only one, but it lasts 80 minutes.” Without that, it couldn’t have been done for the money.

THR: It’s probably the first film where special effects cost less than the practical locations.

Gaiman: Actually, yes. (Laughs) In terms of the future of filmmaking, I’ve (been working on the screenplay for) with Zemeckis recently. It was a script that we originally wrote as a live-action film, and suddenly we’re doing it as a motion-capture film. Again, all the rules are turned upside down. There was one scene that I started writing, and I phoned Bob Zemeckis and said, “We’re working on this scene, and we’re worried it might be too expensive, this whole dragon battle.” Bob just said, “There’s nothing you and Roger Avary could possibly write that will cost me more than $1 million a minute to shoot.” It’s suddenly indicating a universe in which everything costs the same, whether it’s a man battling a dragon or a bunch of people having a party.

THR: To date, a majority of your work has seemed a bit unadaptable — projects based on the Sandman graphic novels have been in development for years. Do you think the advances in computer technology are more likely to help bring those stories and others like them to the screen?

Gaiman: I think I have probably the privilege of being the only person in the history of The Hollywood Reporter to have had a cover story (about being the only person) with the most stuff sold to Hollywood that hasn’t happened. It’s not necessarily a bad thing. You get to cash the checks anyway, and you don’t have people coming up to you saying, “Why did you let them do that?” As if as a writer you have this power to say, “No, don’t do that,” and they’d all go, “Oh, right then.” I was about to say that I don’t think technology has changed things, but it probably has. I remember my first trip to Hollywood in 1990, the hushed reverence with which the words CGI would be uttered — “Oh, no, that’s going to be CGI.” Now, we live in a world in which any kid can do on his desktop with (off-the-shelf) software in half an hour what in 1991 definitely would have been $1 million worth of stuff.

THR: Where do you think things are heading for filmmakers in the next few years and beyond?

Gaiman: I think we’re heading soon to the point where a lot of things are going to be up for grabs. We’re moving into a world in which the actual recording process is cheap and free. I would love to see a deep democratization of film, and I think that is actually on the border of happening. I think the Web will level the playing field, is already leveling the playing field, as broadband starts to become more of an international reality. If I wanted to make a film now and I wanted people to see it, I’d just put it up on the Web. There’s not really a way to make money off that, which is one of the places where things sort of break down. I’m fascinated by people, like (filmmaker) Steven Soderbergh, who are saying they’ll release (movies simultaneously) on the Web and on DVD. I don’t know that the time for that has quite come yet, but it makes absolute sense that people will do it like that one day or that delivery methods will change. Having said that, I also do not believe that any (changes in) delivery methods will make cinema and films obsolete. I think that things that work will probably remain; cinemas will remain because nothing quite replaces that experience. People have been predicting the death of cinema since probably about 1948. It was known that cinema was doomed because everybody had TV, so why would they want to go out and watch movies? The answer is that even a large-screen TV with quadraphonic (sound) doesn’t give you that same experience.

THR: So, you’re saying that, much in the same way a novel or a graphic novel allows a writer to tell any story that he can conceive, soon any medium will offer writers that same kind of freedom?

Gaiman: I think that’s definitely true. I also think that what we will find when that happens is that it’s fundamentally irrelevant — the fact that we can (have that creative freedom) — for two reasons. Reason 1, comics and books have always had the amazing advantage of having an unlimited special-effects budget, but nobody buys them because of the unlimited special-effects budget. They buy because it’s a good story. The other side of things is, I have two daughters. They love movies, and they love DVDs. I’ve gone with them to the movies and watched TV with them. The only time that I recall either of them ever gasping at special effects was last May when I got the Criterion DVD of (Jean Cocteau’s 1947 theatrically released) Beauty and the Beast. They were putting up with the fact that it was subtitled and in French because it was cool. Then it got to the point where the father enters the beast’s castle, and suddenly, you’re dealing with incredibly simple special effects based on people putting their arms through holes in walls and filming things backwards, and the kids are gasping at the magic of it. I thought, That’s the important thing. It’s the moments of magic that people will always remember.


Oh, and CB’s Gallery event may stream in Windows Media; then again, it may not, given the most recent shows in the archives are 2004′s CMJ Music Marathon (we’re in the middle of the 2005 one now). But it may be worth checking out if you have high speed internet access; the reading tonight would start at 8:00pm EST-ish. (Likely to be very -ish).

Sep 17
Anansi Boys Clippings
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From the September 23rd Entertainment Weekly:

When you take the free-fall plunge into a Neil Gaiman book, anything can happen. And anything invariably does, which makes reading this awesomely inventive British writer both thrilling and frustrating: Gaiman doesn’t operate by consistent rules, but according to the arbitrary whims of his jumpy imagination. In 2001′s American Gods, the deities of U.S. immigrants haunt the fringes of society, supplanted by “gods of credit card and freeway, of Internet and telephone.” In his trippy follow-up, Anansi Boys, Gaiman contrives a family history for one of those cast-off gods, the trickster Anansi of African folklore.

Fat Charlie Nancy, the novel’s milquetoast hero, is a bland, upstanding bookkeeper who has actively tried to forget his womanizing, cheroot-smoking father, Mr. Nancy (or Anansi), who’s carousing somewhere in the American South. When Charlie’s fiancée insists he invite Dad to the wedding, Charlie dutifully tries to contact “the old goat,” only to learn that he’s recently died while singing in a karaoke bar, collapsing on a buxom blonde and denuding her of her tube top as his final act on earth. Charlie also learns he has a long-lost brother, Spider, whom he can summon by chatting up an arachnid. Sure enough, Spider turns up and proceeds to steal Charlie’s girl and mess with his head.

Gaiman, who wrote the screenplay for this month’s film MirrorMask and is best known for his Sandman comic series, describes his fizzy new book as “a magical-horror-thriller-ghost-romantic-comedy-family-epic, although that leaves out the detective bits and much of the food.” You can’t come up with a finer description than that for this daft tale, which zigzags around the globe before arriving in the Caribbean for a madcap finale. It’s a giddy but somewhat unsatisfying ride. Whenever Gaiman runs into a narrative jam, he veers off in an exhilarating new direction, a diversionary tactic that starts to feel like a cheat. In his gravity-free fictional universe, nothing he has to say seems to carry any weight. B-
–Jennifer Reese

From the 17th September Times Online:

Once upon a time, asy, 15,000 years ago, Tiger had all the stories. Every story started with tears and ended with blood. All that mattered in a Tiger story is how you hunted and killed. Mankind knew only Tiger stories then, and we take on the shape of the stories we tell. The world was a bleak and savage place.

Then along came Anansi. Anansi is a Trickster God, He wasn’t as strong as Tiger, but he was sly and charming. So he tricked Tiger and stole the stories. Suddenly the people were telling Anansi stories, tales of trickery. And since you take on the shape of the stories you tell, people learnt from them. They learnt that the weak could defeat the strong through cunning. Ever since that day Anansi stories have been told with relish by slaves, by children, by the underclass of every culture. And ever since then the servants of Tiger have tried to get the stories back. To regain control of the way we see the world.

But Anansi is a Trickster God. Anansi didn’t steal the stories out of altruism: he wanted them so as to make more mischief. He is bored by order. Chaos trails in his wake. He is answerable only to his appetites. One day he’ll give humanity fire, the next bring death into the world.

The battle between the bully and the trickster and the interplay between the Gods and man are the engines of Neil Gaiman’s Anansi Boys. The author of the Sandman graphic novels and American Gods gives us powerful deities – Anansi is as charming and dangerous as he ought to be – but the human level of the novel is less convincing. Gaiman cites, among others, Tex Avery and P. G. Wodehouse as touchstones. A little less Avery and a little more Wodehouse would have meant subtler characters.

Fat Charlie, estranged from his family and resident in London, discovers his father was Anansi. Spider, Charlie’s long- lost brother, arrives from America and uses all of Anansi’s wiles to destroy Charlie’s life. Charlie must fight fire with fire: draw on his birthright to banish his brother. In doing so, he becomes embroiled in the timeless struggle between Anansi and Tiger.

Charlie’s domestic world is drawn too broadly to persuade. Secondary characters and locations seem second-hand, taken from films or TV, not life (by the by, is this the first novel to include a Deleted Scene?). Sometimes Gaiman’s humour distances the reader from the predicaments of his characters. This is a pity, as Anansi Boys is a thoughtful, atmospheric novel. I wonder how it will be received in America. The story of the ingenious weak outwitting the tyrannical strong might not be a comfortable paradigm.
–Daniel Morden

Anansi Boys is also being included in fall previews in sources such as the Detroit News, the Arizona Republic, the Globe and Mail, Washington, D.C.’s MetroWeekly, and the St. Louis Post Dispatch.

Tour information has been included in the Charlotte Observer, the Chicago Sun-Times (event of the week), the Rocky Mountain News, and the Washington Post.

Anansi Boys is also Newsweek’s read of the week (September 26th).

Sep 17
MirrorMask Clippings
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CBR has posted many features on Mirrormask, including Andy Khouri’s interviews with Dave McKean and Neil Gaiman, a review, and an interview with producer Michael Polis

Meanwhile, the film has been included in fall previews from sources including the Associated Press, Boston Globe, New York Times, Chicago Tribune, Los Angeles Times, and Seattle Times. Most listings are in order by date, so look for the September 30th entries.

Landmark Theaters has posted a Dave McKean-penned feature titled ’24 Lessons A Second’.

The soundtrack is available via Amazon, but no samples are listed.

Finally, Hamish Mackintosh’s interview with Dave McKean appeared in the 8 September Guardian:

When did you switch to a Mac for design work?

I took the plunge in 1994, because I was designing a lot of CD covers, and my competitors were using Macs. I read the Photoshop manual from cover to cover. Everything else I picked up along the way. My first job was a cover for Michael Nyman’s The Piano soundtrack. I finished the images in RGB (Red-Green-Blue), and turned them into CMYK (the color model used in offset printing for full-color documents) for printing, and they proved unprintable. I learned all the difficult lessons on that job.

Have you used a PC?

All the anima tion and model building was done in Maya on PCs. I’m happier on a Mac, so the 2D files and editing and compositing were done on them.

Did you use any special software/ hardware for the film?

No. The PCs running Maya and Houdini created the 3D world and animation, Photoshop the texture maps, with After Effects and Final Cut running on Macs for the compositing and editing. The render farm and the networking and storage needed for dealing with a feature film’s huge amount of data were the only two areas outside the norm. These effects, animation techniques and image manipulation techniques have been de-mystified over the past few years. Anyone can do this, it just takes ideas and time.

Any technical hitches during filming?

Nothing worked smoothly. We constantly battled glitches and breakdowns. Next time I’d rethink the entire workflow. But there was a playfulness that came with ignorance – we just barrelled on regardless.

Does digital now mean you can be more ambitious on a modest budget?

Not just more ambitious, but you can try different kinds of stories, told in radically different ways. MirrorMask is a traditional story. Next time I’d like to work with much more unusual material, and excavate the new language of film that digital suggests, There is a world of untapped possibilities once you start to realise what the 3D environment can do.

Where do you imagine 3D graphics software going?

Anything that can bridge the gap between intuitive tools and maths will help. Some programs allow you to “sculpt” polygons in a manner similar to clay modelling. There are more and more ways of getting motion into a computer and so many ready-made solutions to physical problems such as gravity, inertia and fluid effects.

Can you instantly tell if you’re watching computer generated images in a movie?

Yes, although the integration is sometimes so clever it is hard to be sure. I think some images that are unashamed to look fabricated can be fascinating in their own right, especially as many make use of what computers can do very well, creating complexity, adding complex systems to manmade simple basic building blocks.

Sep 07

The September edition of Explorations includes a brief review of Anansi Boys and a very useful reference page with a brief bio and links to what’s currently in print in the States.

The Union Square signing starts at 6:00pm on the 20th. I can’t even guess when we should start queuing, and have not been able to find someone who will let on as to when they will allow us to do so.

Sep 06

From the September 8th issue of Time Out New York:

Scared silly

Despite his penchant for dark themes, Neil Gaiman has never shied away from levity. His last novel, 2001′s phantasmagoric American Gods, was filled with subtle jokes. But in Anansi Boys, due out September 20th, even the funeral scene is studded with one-liners. “I decided that I wanted to write a book that would exist mostly to make people feel better when they finished it than when they began,” a black -clad Gaiman notes while perched on an old stenographer’s chair in the stockroom of Dreamhaven, an indie bookstore in Minneapolis. So with Anansi Boys, he opted to broaden his range, leavening the book’s apocalyptic vision with whimsical material, resulting in something that’s akin to a cross between P.G.Wodehouse and Stephen King.

Still, Gaiman, 44, hasn’t abandoned the subjects that have made him a cult figure: monstrous entities, murder, magic. Anansi Boys even hinges on a character from his aforementioned masterwork-Mr. Nancy, the dapper human manifestation of the West African trickster god Anansi. By the time the book opens, Nancy has found a wife, fathered a son and alienated them both. On page 18, he keels over in a Florida karaoke bar while singing to a blond tourist from Michigan. The extent of Nancy’s lechery is such that he pulls down her tube top on his way to the floor.

”I came up with the idea for Anansi Boys in 1996, before I started American Gods,” Gaiman says, his English accent still crisp despite more than a decade of living in the Midwest. “The idea that one’s parents are embarrassing is what drives the story. And Mr. Nancy, by definition, is more embarrassing than most.” Shortly after Mr. Nancy’s funeral, his London-based son, Charles, meets Spider, who claims to be a long-lost brother. A night of drunken revelry leads the duo into a tangle of mistaken identities that rivals The Importance of Being Earnest, sending the high-speed, knotty plot into overdrive. While the author provides occasional breaks from the narrative maelstrom with Anansi tales lifted from African mythology, the lunging pace never relents; and neither do the laughs.

” It’s probably the most organic thing I’ve ever written,” Gaiman says, although he admits that it was a challenge getting the horror and the high jinks to mesh. “There was a point halfway through where I really felt that the book had derailed itself. I wasn’t sure whether I was writing humor or horror, a comic novel with scary bits or a scary novel with comic bits.” But after some tough love from his agent, Gaiman successfully steered the dynamic romp to a balanced conclusion. And perhaps his confusion paid off, insofar as it helped Gaiman keep the book unpredictable. Even the author was fazed by some of his creations. “In the end, there wasn’t a character who didn’t surprise me,” he says.

Finishing the novel was hard work, but the multitasking Gaiman is excited about keeping busy this fall. The wafer-thin writer is currently seeing a personal trainer in preparation for his cross-country Anansi Boys reading tour at the end of the month. On September 30, longtime collaborator Dave McKean’s fantasy film MirrorMask, for which Gaiman wrote the script, will be released in theaters. “Given the fact that it was made with such a small budget, it’s turning out to be quite the little movie that could,” Gaiman says.

In mid-September, he will also auction off a name on a gravestone in his forthcoming illustrated children’s novel The Graveyard Book, as part of a massive eBay-based fund-raiser for the First Amendment Project, a nonprofit advocacy group that provides pro bono legal support for free-speech-related issues. “The price of freedom is eternal vigilance and enormous sums of money,” he says. The author is no stranger to charity bidding wars. The Comic Book Legal Defense Fund received a much-needed $3,500 after Gaiman peddled the name of a Caribbean cruise ship that plays a crucial, if fleeting, role in Anansi Boys.

Such fundraising is fitting, as Gaiman has long been a comics enthusiast and writer (he penned the influential Sandman series), and Anansi Boys has the fantastical feel of a comic book. But as the author notes, his latest novel is also grounded in extensive research–expeditions to funerals in Florida, trips to the Caribbean and even close observation of some eccentric family members.

“One of the book’s characters is inspired by a certain great-aunt of mine, who keeps only bottles of water and newspapers in her fridge,” he says. “But I could never use the bit with the newspapers-it’s too weird for fiction.”
– Rod Smith

A) Yes, this is Fall Preview issue of Time Out New York, and if you live locally, you already need to pick it up for reference and planning.
B) Yes, Anansi Boys is the only book that gets the feature treatment. Which is remarkably cool.
C) And if reasons A) and B) weren’t enough to get you to go visit your newsstand (or order the back issue), do keep in mind that Jayson Wold’s photo of said author is lovely.

Sep 01

Neil will be in Vancouver, BC on October 6th for his Anansi Boys promotional tour! Tickets are on sale now!

I’ve already got my tickets ordered — see you there!

Edit:
Here’s the full information, from Neil’s Journal:
7:00 PM PDT
VANCOUVER, CANADA
(In Connection with the Vancouver International Writers Festival)
Magee Secondary School
6360 Maple Street
Vancouver, British Columbia
604-681-6330

If you use Google Earth (why not, it’s free!) you can see exactly where this is by opening this file.

Aug 29

Upon entering library school, every student gets a subscription to Unshelved.

I am kidding, but they should. Although as long as you’ve worked in any customer service capacity, the strip resonates.

Anyway, as a long time reader, I was really pleased to see this as their second Sunday full color ‘Book Club’ feature. So without further ado…

Unshelved, August 28, 2005 © Overdue Media LLC

With thanks to Gene Ambaum and Bill Barnes for the permissions.
Aug 29

Green Man Review reviews Anansi Boys

Aug 28

Lisa Snellings-Clark is calling for submissions for Tiny Stories, a collection of 100-word short stories.

Aug 22
Clippings
icon1 lucy_anne | icon2 Misc | icon4 8:32 pm| icon3No Comments »

Goodbye, twenty minutes of work. And this wasn’t even supposed to be a real update to start with.

So quickly, Mirrormask won a Bank of Scotland Herald Angel at the Edinburgh International Film Festival; if you’re interested in the CBC Studio One Book Club event on October 6th, you may also want to check check either the Vancouver International Writers Festival or Georgia Straight websites, at least until the labor dispute is over, and finally, the journal made it into the Feedster Top 500, not that you can read it through LJ at the moment.

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