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From the May 16th Variety:

NBC Universal’s specialty film arm Focus Features is jumping into the animation game, picking up world rights to the stop-motion pic Coraline from Laika Entertainment, the Oregon-based toon house owned by Nike co-founder Phil Knight.

Pic — based on the book by Neil Gaiman, and toplining the voice talent of Dakota Fanning — follows a young girl who walks through a secret door in her new home and discovers an alternate version of her life.

Laika supervising director Henry Selick adapted the tome for the bigscreen and will co-helm with Mike Cachuela.

Selick’s previous directing credits include “James and the Giant Peach” and “The Nightmare Before Christmas.”

Pandemonium Films topper Bill Mechanic is producing with Laika’s Mary Sandell.

Alt rockers They Might Be Giants are penning songs for the pic.

“This distribution agreement is an integral step in the evolution of Laika Entertainment as a major force in the global feature film animation marketplace,” said the unit’s prexy and CEO Dale Wahl.

Headed by James Schamus, Focus’ slate already includes Woody Allen’s “Scoop,” Allen Coulter’s “Hollywoodland” and David Cronenberg’s “Eastern Promises.”

Laika also is in pre-production on the CG pic “Jack & Ben’s Animated Adventure.” Pandemonium’s upcoming credits include “Torso,” with David Fincher attached to helm.
–Ian Mohr



From the May 17th Oregonian:

Filmmaking rookie Phil Knight has found an industry veteran to help him break into the movie business.

Focus Features will distribute Coraline, the first theatrical release from Knight’s Portland animation studio, Laika Entertainment. The companies plan to announce the deal today at the Cannes Film Festival in France.

The partnership gives Laika a way to put its first movie in theaters and an experienced partner to help market the picture, both essential for the independent studio that Nike founder Knight acquired in 2003. No decision has been made on whether Focus Features will distribute future Laika films

Focus is known for producing offbeat movies that win critical attention but often play to niche markets. Recent pictures include “Brokeback Mountain,” “The Constant Gardener” and “Lost in Translation.” Focus is owned by NBC Universal.

Coraline, now in the early stages of production in Laika’s Northwest Portland offices, is an adaptation of a spooky 2002 children’s novel by Neil Gaiman. Due in theaters in mid-2008, it is the tale of a young girl who wanders into a mirror world, where eerie reflections of her parents seek to imprison her.

The dark, complex nature of the film contrasts with much of the lighter fare in popular animation and makes the project “a little bit of a risk,” said Dale Wahl, a former Nike executive whom Knight hired last year to be Laika’s chief executive. He said Laika picked Focus in part because it has a track record of success with edgy films.

“Focus has shown over the films that they’ve done an ability to handle that risk,” Wahl said.

Focus’ relationship with NBC Universal will also help Coraline get broad distribution, Wahl said, and could eventually steer the film to broadcast and cable networks that NBC owns. Focus will not help finance the film, Wahl said, but will share the marketing costs.

Coraline is being directed by Henry Selick, Laika’s supervising director. Child star Dakota Fanning will voice the title character, and rock duo They Might Be Giants will provide songs for the movie.

After acquiring the former Vinton Studios in 2003, Knight renamed the business Laika and laid out an ambitious plan to build a major animation business in Oregon and finance the movies with the personal fortune he built at Nike. Knight’s son, Travis, works for Laika as an animator and serves on its board.

In addition to Selick, who directed the 1993 animated musical “The Nightmare Before Christmas,” Knight has hired experienced animators and executives from Pixar Animation Studios and elsewhere to help launch his company. Laika plans to blend the stop-motion animation Vinton Studios was known for with newly developed computer effects.

After Coraline, Laika’s next picture is scheduled to be an original work written by Laika animator Jorgen Klubien, tentatively called “Jack & Ben’s Animated Adventure.”

Laika has about 170 employees but expects to hire as many as 400 more animators, software engineers and technical experts in the next two years as film production ramps up. The company is seeking larger facilities in the Portland area to house its growing staff.

Nearly all the major Hollywood studios have animated films in the pipeline, and Disney agreed this year to pay $7.4 billion to buy Pixar. Film critic and animation historian Leonard Maltin said the competition has opened up the animation business to new entrants rather than closed it off.

“Whereas Disney used to have the only brand name in the business, the field is now wide open,” said Maltin, co-author of “Of Mice and Magic: A History of American Animated Cartoons.”

Viewers now judge animated films on their merits, Maltin said, not on their studio pedigree. And he said Knight has done a good job staffing Laika, which bodes well for quality.

“Henry Selick’s a very talented guy. There’s no reason not to be completely optimistic,” Maltin said.

Speaking Tuesday, in advance of the deal between Laika and Focus, Maltin said marketing an animated film requires a longer campaign than many Hollywood studios are accustomed to.

“Even though the film may not be finished, you have to have a finished trailer out months ahead of time,” Maltin said. “You want to start to build that awareness long before the movie shows up on theater screens.”

That requires juggling the production schedule, Maltin said, sometimes to the filmmakers’ frustration. But it’s vital, he said, especially to a studio starting fresh.

“The smart producers and marketers know that it’s worth that extra effort, because it’ll help build awareness for your movie,” Maltin said. “If the end result is it gets more people in the seats, then that’s what builds the studio.”
–Mike Rogoway



From the 16th May Sydney Morning Herald:

Ttpe “Neil” into Google, and the first name that pops up is not Neil Diamond or Neil Young, but Neil Gaiman. The British-born author knocked Dan Brown off the top of the the New York Times bestseller list last year and, as the creator of the acclaimed graphic novel The Sandman, he’s revered by comic fans.

Tall, dark and handsome, he’s recently been hanging out with Angelina Jolie on the set of the film Beowulf, for which he co-wrote the script. Despite all these credentials he is, like most parents, totally embarrassing to his children.

“I’m really looking forward to being a grandparent so I stop embarrassing my kids,” Gaiman says in his tidy English accent.

“My grandparents were never embarrassing, whereas parents can embarrass you just by acknowledging you on the street when your friends were around.”

Even a divine father can be embarrassing. Just ask Fat Charlie Nancy, the protagonist in Gaiman’s latest novel, Anansi Boys, which made its debut on the New York Times bestseller list late last year.

Although his dad is the West African spider god Anansi - embodied by a hip old black man in yellow gloves and a fedora - the young accountant finds him mortifyingly embarrassing. When Anansi dies at a karaoke night, Fat Charlie learns he has a long-lost brother, Spider, who inherited their father’s supernatural powers.

Soon, the charming brother is on the scene and ruining Fat Charlie’s life. Fat Charlie seeks help from some elderly neighbours who use voodoo from the old country to get rid of the annoying brother. That, of course, is where the real trouble starts.

The Anansi mythology originated in West Africa, but soon spread to Jamaica, the West Indies and the southern states of the US (where Anansi stories are often retold as Brer Rabbit tales).

In Gaiman’s story, patois and Jamaican accents are used to great effect, lending an extra dose of cool to these characters.

Did Gaiman worry about stepping out of his cultural territory and playing around with Afro-Caribbean folklore?

“Absolutely. But if I am only allowed to write stories in which the protagonist and the folklore are those of third-generation English Jews who have gone to live in America, my stories will get very boring very quickly,” he says. “But I am telling the story of my people, in that my people are humanoids living on this planet.” Gaiman did his best to get the Jamaican accents and references right, but his efforts were lost on some readers.

“What fascinated me was the amount of people who assumed that because these women were in Florida, they were little old white ladies and somehow I couldn’t work out a little old white lady accent,” he says.

“People explained that the food I’d described at the funeral was totally wrong and in fact I’d made it sound as though it was a Jamaican funeral. It was strange how it just wouldn’t enter people’s heads that it actually was a Jamaican funeral.”

Anansi Boys is the latest in a string of successes for 45-year old Gaiman. Born in Porchester in southern England, he grew up reading Tolkien and C.S. Lewis.

While working as a journalist in the 1980s - his biography of Duran Duran is something of a collectors item - he collaborated with the fantasy author Terry Pratchett on the apocalyptic comic novel Good Omens. The book spent 17 weeks on The Sunday Times bestseller list.

Nowadays, Gaiman’s output includes novels, graphic novels, poems and songs. In 2002, American Gods won the Hugo Award for the best fantasy work. But he’s probably best known for his comic series The Sandman, a sophisticated, artistically ambitious work, which garnered a loyal following during its nine years of publication. Ten volumes of the comic are still in print. The series’ hero is Dream, the “immortal anthropomorphic personification of dreams” who also goes by the names, Morpheus, Oneiros, Lord Shaper and the Prince of Stories. Confused? Gaiman himself has summarised the plot as: “The king of dreams learns one must change or die and then makes his decision.”

What is clear is that Gaiman was writing about magic long before Harry Potter made it mainstream. “In the old days, if there was anyone in the signing line over 50 it was somebody’s mum,” he says. Now, he says, there’s more diversity among his fans because more people are reading books in general. “I think that’s because people are storytelling animals and people like stories. One of the things that has got people reading again is the rise of children’s fiction which, through the ’80s and early ’90s, had practically been driven into the ground,” he says. “Most children’s fiction seemed to be rather gloomy and set on council estates and the main character’s brother had problems with heroin, and those were the cheery ones. And they wondered why kids weren’t reading! Then Harry Potter came along, stories where the biggest thing was wanting to know what happened next.”

Despite his growing army of fans, to his kids, Gaiman remains an embarrassing old fart with a bad haircut. At least his two daughters and son can feel relieved that their father has so far resisted his urge to dress like Anansi.

“When I was in New Orleans in ‘93, I got to go to the French Quarter, where you run into these little old black guys wearing bright yellow gloves and red fedoras. It seemed natty, it was a sense of style that I in my leather jacket and black jeans could only dream of,” he says.

“I thought, ‘If only I was a 70-year-old black man called Blind Melon Goodbody, I could wear a hat like that’. I mean, they wore spats for God’s sake. Who wears spats?”

Neil Gaiman will be speaking at 6.30pm on Monday at the Sydney Town Hall as part of the Sydney Writers’ Festival.
Entry $15/$10.
Bookings: 92501988.

–Sunanda Creagh

Additional Sydney Writers’ Festival events are listed here.

And if we’re very, very lucky, perhaps FBi Radio will stream the interview with Wil Anderson. We’ll know when they put up next week’s schedule.

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Clippings

From the May 11th Hello (which has photos of the set on their website):

We are used to seeing Sienna Miller, who is famous for her boho chic style, looking cool in Ugg boots, skinny jeans and gypsy wraps. The 24-year-old looked very different when she was snapped in period costume on the set of her latest film, however.

With a green parasol resting on her shoulder and a stunning lilac ballgown covering her curves, the blonde actress was more lady of the manor than London It-Girl. Her eye-catching costume didn’t look out of place against the backdrop of Castle Coombe in Wiltshire, however, as the pretty village is one of Britain’s most historically authentic.

The picturesque town, which is centred around a 14th-century marketplace, has played host to the Britons, Saxons and the Normans down through the centuries. In recent years it has become accustomed to welcoming more modern visitors, as it’s frequently used for filming period dramas. St Andrew’s Church, which dates back to the 12th century and features a 500-year-old clock, is among the sites making it a favourite with location scouts.

Its latest guests are surely among the most glamorous to date, though. Stardust, a fantasy romance set in a magical land, sees Sienna starring alongside Robert De Niro, Michelle Pfeiffer and Claire Danes.



From the May 12th Gloucestershire Echo:

Bibury is set to hit the big time as film crews descend on the Cotswolds village.

National Trust homes in Arlington Row will feature in a blockbuster called Stardust, starring Robert De Niro and Michelle Pfeiffer.

The film is a fantasy set in a make-believe, magical land.

Cameras rolled at the picturesque 14th century terrace of Cotswold stone cottages overlooking the river.

The homes are a huge tourist attraction and one of the area’s most photographed scenes.

But they were given the old-fashioned treatment with props including milk churns and sacks of grain.

TV aerials, modern guttering, signs and paving were disguised for the film, which is believed to be set in the 1890s.

Gallery owner Diane Breen said: “They have put in an amazing amount of work.

“There’s even a fake door that slots in front of one of the National Trust doors which makes it look even older.”

Bibury Trout Farm manager Ian Peters was out with his camera.

“We didn’t see any of the stars but we’ll be waiting with bated breath to see the film,” he said.

“They were here for three days and used our car park. They had snow on the cottages’ rooftops and filmed a lot at night. It was dramatic.

“People didn’t do much business because of all the film crew vehicles - there must have been about 100.”

The cottages were converted from a sheep house in 1600 for weavers who supplied cloth to Arlington Mill.



From the May 11th This Is Wiltshire:

Picturesque Castle Combe has been buzzing with activity all week as Hollywood star Sienna Miller filmed scenes for her new blockbuster film Stardust.

Over the past four days, straw and turf has been laid on the roads, and shutters added outside buildings to transform the village into a film set.

Miss Miller, on-off girlfriend of Jude Law, arrived on her fourth day of filming just after 1pm where she was quickly ushered to a private booth.

The village deemed “the prettiest village in England” has been cordoned off and security guards and police are on guard until filming stops.

Leading man Charlie Cox, who has featured in The Merchant of Venice and Casanova, was seen filming from early morning yesterday.

The film boasts an all-star cast including Robert De Niro, Michelle Pfeiffer and Claire Danes and although rumoured to be on set, Mr De Niro was nowhere to be seen yesterday.

Over 200 extras were needed for the film and actors were selected from the village to take part.

Mac Turner, of Castle Combe, was filming yesterday as an extra but was whisked away before he could talk to the Gazette.

Castle Combe Parish Council chairman Adrian Bishop said: “I believe there are quite a number of extras taken from the village and they were all bussed up to London to audition.

“It’s very exciting for Castle Combe and the village has really been transformed.

Sienna plays the romantic interest, Victoria, in the film which is directed by Matthew Vaughn, the husband of supermodel Claudia Schiffer and director of Layer Cake.

Mr Vaughn said: “I am delighted to be able to work with such a stellar cast.

“I’ve looked forward to once again shooting in the UK.”

Stardust was written by Vaughn and his writing partner Jane Goldman and is adapted from the 1997 award-winning novel written by Neil Gaiman.

Stardust, is a fantasy, adventure love story.

In the sleepy English village of Wall a young man named Tristian, Charlie Cox, goes on a quest to win the heart of his beloved, Victoria, Sienna Miller.

His journey in search of a falling star Yvaine, Clarie Danes, takes him into a magical world where he faces a witch, Lamia played by Michelle Pfeiffer, and a pirate, Captain Shakespeare, Robert De Niro.

Filming is expected to finish by Friday, weather permitting.

The release date for the film has not yet been confirmed.



From May 10th on the BBC.co.uk website (With phots and video of the set):

Castle Combe, as seen in Dr Doolittle, Poirot and Robin of Sherwood, is about to star in a major new big-budget Hollywood movie.

The “Wiltshire Mecca of Picturesque Villages” has been chosen to play the part of the sleepy English village of Wall in the fantasy-adventure-love story Stardust. But, despite it’s obvious charms and English good looks, it will be battling for screen time with some of the biggest names in Hollywood.

Sienna at Castle Combe (Realplayer)

Among those signed up, for the fantasy romp, are Robert De Niro, Michelle Pfeiffer, Claire Danes, Claudia Schaffer, Charlie Cox and Sienna Miller.

Plus at the helm will be super-model Schaffer’s husband, and Layer Cake director, Mathew Vaughn.

Based on the critically rated novel by Neil Gaiman, the action kicks-off in the village of Wall, played by Castle Combe, “a countryside town bordering on a magical land”.

It’s from this sleepy hamlet that the young lad Tristian (Charlie Cox) heads off on a quest to win over the affections of local lass, Vicotria (Sienna Miller) by tracking down a falling star.

But as he journeys through this magical world he comes face to face with the witch, Lamia (Michelle Pfeiffer) and a pirate, Captain Shakespeare (Robert De Niro).

With a number of suitably dark and mysterious places all vying for a place in the adult fairytale… Castle Combe managed to land the role of the village of Wall.

With filming, scheduled to run from Sunday May 7th for a week, Castle Combe has undergone a bit of a make-over and emerged looking even more olde-worlde than usual (if that’s possible). The main road, for instance, running through the lower village, has been turfed over and some of the already TV-aerial free cottages have had French style shutters added.

Plus over the last few days Sienna Miller has been on set, in period costume, taking advantage of the sunny weather for some exterior shots.

Filming is expected to continue, on location at Castle Combe, until the end of the week.



From the May 8th Daily Variety:

Jason Flemyng has joined Matthew Vaughn’s ensemble pic Stardust at Paramount. Story centers on a young man who ventures into a magical realm to retrieve a fallen star. Flemyng will play Primus, one of two princes in line to be king.

Thesp’s credits include “Snatch,” “Layer Cake” and “Transporter 2.”
– Stacy Dodd



From the May 5th Hoddesdon and Broxbourne Mercury News:

Tinseltown came to Hoddesdon for the day this week when a Hollywood movie director together with star of The Office and Extras Ricky Gervais breezed into town to shoot scenes for a new star-studded film.

A fleet of cars with blacked-out windows descended on the Charlton Mead Lane Industrial Estate as the top British actor turned out to film scenes for his new movie, Stardust, at a specialist prop and location warehouse Keeley Hire Film and Television.

The fantasy flick, being written and directed by Layer Cake director Matthew Vaughn - husband of Supermodel Claudia Schiffer - also stars Robert De Niro, Michelle Pfeiffer, Peter O’Toole, Charlie Cox, Billy Whitelaw and Sienna Miller.Publicists for the A-list project confirmed that Gervais, 45, had been filming in Hoddesdon and that Matthew Vaughn, 33, was also on set.

“They were there to film scenes for Stardust, that’s all we can say,” said a spokesman.

The film is being made by Paramount Pictures and is due to be released in June 2007.

The majority of filming for the movie is taking place at Pinewood Studios in Bucks and also on location in Iceland and the Isle of Skye.

Stardust is a fantasy romance adventure set in the sleepy English village of Wall and charts the adventures of young man named Tristian (Charlie Cox) who goes on a quest to win the heart of his beloved Victoria (Sienna Miller).

Although only a small part of the flick is being filmed in Hoddesdon, curious workers in Charlton Mead Lane were lapping up the action of the day.

“We noticed a lot of activity going on and posh cars with blacked-out windows going back and forth. Who’d have guessed that Ricky Gervais was here!” said one nearby office worker.



From the April 28th Norwich Evening News:

Owners of firms in historic Elm Hill hope new life will be breathed into the street when a Hollywood movie is shot on their doorstep.

Businesses have been told they will get compensation from the filmmakers when a cinema blockbuster is shot on the cobbles of the medieval thoroughfare.

But they hope to reap even more financial reward from the film, because its exposure on the big screen could draw more tourists to Norwich. As reported in the Evening News movie bosses picked Elm Hill as perfect location for a market street in the upcoming film Stardust, described as a grown-up fairy tale. Top Tinsel Town names including Michelle Pfeiffer, Robert de Niro and Claire Danes will appear in the film alongside British talent Sienna Miller.

Businesses are expected to close for one or two days of filming, proposed for June 5. Philip Goodbody of The Dormouse antique bookshop said: “We won’t really know whether it is a great thing for the street until the film comes out.

“Although I have not seen any written contract I understand that there will be some compensation for closing the business while the film crew are working.”

At 29a Elm Hill, Duncan McKeowan, owner of The Games Room, said he was looking forward to the street getting a bit of the limelight. He said: “I think it is good news.”

Pensioners Leonard and Barbara Stevenson moved to Elm Hill 48 years ago and think the arrival of Stardust is great news.

Mr Stevenson agreed: “It is fairly quiet down this street so it will be nice to have them filming here. I don’t mind at all,” he said.

Collett’s Curios owner Paul Collett, said he has been based on Elm Hill for a year and but will not be about on the day of filming: “If this film is a success it may help bring people in to the street.”

Location manager Emma Pill was not prepared to comment on whether any big stars would be coming to the street.

Rumours have spread that Robert de Niro is the most likely star to make an appearance as people confirmed they had been approached by tabloid newspapers offering money if they were able to snap the star.
–Sara Hardman.



From the April 26th Eastern Daily Press:

One of Norfolk’s most historic streets is to get a starring role in a Hollywood blockbuster featuring Michelle Pfeiffer and Robert de Niro, it was confirmed last night.

Elm Hill, in Norwich, has been chosen above scores of streets viewed across Europe as one of the locations for Stardust, to be directed by Layer Cake’s Matthew Vaughn.

The film will star a host of Hollywood hotshots including Sienna Miller and Claire Danes as well as Pfeiffer and de Niro.

But location manager Emma Pill could only confirm the film’s lead actor Charlie Cox, who plays hero Tristan Thorn, would be needed in the city, adding that Pfeiffer, de Niro and Miller would definitely not be shooting there.

Vaughn, who is married to supermodel Claudia Schiffer and lives at Coldham Hall, Suffolk, is adapting Neil Gaiman’s prize-winning novel of the same name into what is predicted to be one of the biggest films of 2007.

Elm Hill will play the part of a town in the kingdom of Stormhold, where the protagonist is trying to capture an elusive star for his beloved as part of the grown-up fairy tale.

The quaint cobbled street will now be transformed into a fantastical world of castle turrets and market stalls.

Some of the buildings are set to be painted and the magic of cinema will ensure there is snow and a computer generated flint archway at the end of the street.

Everything will be returned to its original glory after the shoot which is scheduled for early June.
–Lorna Marsh



From the April 27th Eastern Daily Press:

The splendour of Ely Cathedral has long attracted millions of visitors to the Cambridgeshire city.

Now film crews and Hollywood actors are heading to the Ship of the Fens to shoot the sequel to the lavish costume drama, Elizabeth…

…The news comes the same month it was revealed Norwich was among the locations chosen for a film tipped to be the blockbuster of the year.

Scenes from Stardust, an epic grown-up fairy tale starring Robert De Niro, Michelle Pfeiffer and Sienna Miller, will be shot in the city’s Elm Hill.

Producers plan to change the street into a fantastical walled city, complete with an unfamiliar flint archway, differently painted houses, background fairy castle turrets, snow in the middle of summer, market stalls and a gipsy caravan.

And Ely has attracted film studios before - Donald Sutherland and Al Pacino were on location for Revolution in 1985, which was also shot in King’s Lynn.
–Laura Devlin


From the April 25th Daily Express:

Hollywood came to Scotland yesterday as Michelle Pfeiffer began filming for the new fantasy blockbuster Stardust.

Pfeiffer, who plays a witch in the GBP 50million movie, braved the cold on the Isle of Skye to shoot her scenes before wrapping up in a voluminous full-length padded coat between scenes.

But there was no sign of her co-stars Robert De Niro, Sienna Miller, Claire Danes or Rupert Everett, as they wisely stayed out of the cold.

The movie, based in Victorian times, is being shot on Skye as well as Wester Ross, where the large crew and their security team have already set up camp.

The film is being directed by Matthew Vaughn, whose past films include British thriller Layer Cake. He was Guy Ritchie’s best man and fell in love with Scotland at Ritchie’s wedding to Madonna in December 2000.

Vaughn said: “I am delighted to be able to work with such a stellar cast in bringing the magic of Stardust to the screen.” Locals in Wester Ross watched in amazement last week as their caravan park was transformed into the moviemakers’ own home-from-home.

Marquees sprang up overnight and a fleet of more than 20 box vans and lorries carrying millions of pounds worth of equipment caused long tailbacks.

Stardust, set in the sleepy English village of Wall, tells the story of a young man, Tristan - played by Casanova star Charlie Cox - who is on a quest to win the heart of his beloved Victoria, played by Miller.

Tristan’s adventure takes him to a fantasy world where he faces witch Lamia, played by Pfeiffer, and De Niro in the role of pirate Captain Shakespeare.

Celia Stevenson of Scottish Screen said: “A lot of hard work has gone into getting the film here. It will be marvellous for the industry.”
–Tom Fullerton



There has also been coverage of the Stardust filming in newspapers including the Bath Chronicle, the New York Post, the Scottish Daily Record & Sunday Mail (on May 10th and April 25th), the Times, the Daily Star and the Daily Mail.

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Clippings

Dogmatika has posted a ‘review’ of the November 16th Belfast event.

Meanwhile, I have only received two reports - so many thanks to Melora98, who went to the Naperville, Illinois signing, and and JediTigger, who went to the signing in Charlotte, North Carolina.

If anyone else has sent me information over the past few months about events (or wants to forward them now), please resend to rim101ATyahoo.

Thanks in advance!



The Improbable lists the touring stops for Wolves in the Walls as follows:

  • March 23rd – April 8th 2006: Tramway, Glasgow

  • April 10th – 29th: Lyric Hammersmith, London

  • May 2nd - 6th: Perth Theatre

  • May 9th - 10th: MacRobert Centre, Stirling

  • May 12th - 13th: Adam Smith Theatre, Kirkcaldy

  • May 18th - 20th: Ayr Gaiety
  • And I’m just waiting to see how long it will take for some clever person to turn this and this into LiveJournal userpics. Or AOL Buddy Icons.



    From the November 7th, 2005 Variety:

    Nearly 200 years in the making, the National Theater of Scotland came one step closer on Nov. 1 with the launch of an inaugural 2006 program that will reach across Scotland and as far as the U.S. Backed by a two-year budget of £7.4 million ($13 million) in public funds, the NTS is the only national body to be formed since the establishment of the Scottish Parliament in 1999.

    The first-year lineup announced in Glasgow by helmer Vicky Featherstone includes an adaptation of cult U.K. TV hit Tutti Frutti by John Byrne (husband of thesp Tilda Swinton); a “site-suggestive” show called Roam staged beyond the check-in desks at Edinburgh Intl. Airport by Grid Iron theater company; and The Wolves in the Walls, a family musical co-produced by England’s Improbable that will tour to six U.S. cities in spring 2007.

    “Our raison d’etre was to give a national and international platform to outstanding Scottish talent, and that is exactly what this program will deliver,” says NTS chairman Richard Findlay, formerly group chief executive of Scottish Radio Holdings.

    The NTS is unique among national theaters for operating with neither a company nor a building. Instead, it is a commissioning body driven by a small artistic team working with existing drama producers to create, develop and exploit work all over Scotland. The model allows the org flexibility to back small-scale tours as well as high-profile foreign tours and prestige productions in the Edinburgh Intl. Festival.

    “The model means that the money will be spent on productions rather than leaking roofs and ice cream audits,” says Findlay. “It will open the door for Scotland to present theater at an international level.”

    It is the fulfillment of a dream that has been around since 1822, when a visit by King George IV to the Edinburgh Theater Royal (long since gone) gave rise to an ambition to create Scotland’s first national theater. Playwright James Bridie harbored similar ambitions for the Glasgow Citizens’ Theater in the 1940s, as did director Bill Bryden for the Edinburgh Royal Lyceum in the 1970s.

    “The fact that I’m standing here on this historic day for Scotland is testament to the dedication and vision of the people who campaigned for years to have a national theater of our own,” says Featherstone, 38, exhelmer of London-based new writing company Paines Plough. “It’s also testament to the artists who want to create the world-class theater that the NTS will be about.”

    Among the org’s artistic associates is Gotham-based Scot Alan Gumming. Casting details have yet to be announced, but names such as Gumming, Brian Cox and Ewan McGregor could be tempted home.

    Featherstone herself will co-direct The Wolves in the Walls with Improbable’s Julian Crouch, one of the team behind tuner Shockheaded Peter.

    Billed as a “musical pandemonium,” the new show is based on the 2004 children’s graphic horror novel by Neil Gaiman and Dave McKean. With music by Nick Powell of Glasgow’s Suspect Culture and a Scottish cast including lain Johnstone of children’s company Wee Stories, the production will tour Scotland from March 2006 before heading Stateside in 2007.

    As a symbolic indication that this is no ordinary national theater, the opening night on Feb. 25 will involve nine site-specific perfs taking place around Scotland, from the Isle of Lewis in the north to Dumfries and Galloway in the south. Billed as a “once-in-a-lifetime event,” the free performances, all called Home, will vary in audience capacity according to the nine leading directors.

    Other productions announced for 2006 include a revival of Chris Hannan’s 1985 drama Elizabeth Gordon Quinn; a large-scale staging of Arthur Miller’s The Crucible; a translation of Schiller’s Mary Stuart by David Harrower; and Gregory Burke’s Black Watch, based on verbatim interviews with soldiers from one of Scotland’s oldest regiments.
    Mark Fisher



    So apparently we poor New Yorkers will have to wait a bit longer for the New Victory to have a Stardust/Wolves in the Walls season. We’ll just have to amuse ourselves with Dave McKean theatrical posters in the subway stations.

    (Before anyone takes me to heart, I am mostly wishing out loud here. About the New Vic anyway. Besides, I shouldn’t be too greedy - St. Ann’s is supposed get Coraline, which is destined to be have its music written in Brooklyn for some reason. And the McKean poster was really in the Times Square subway station last I checked).



    In a recent interview at Animated News, Coraline film director Henry Selick had the following to say about the film:

    Coraline, which I’ve adapted from Neil Gaiman’s novel (meaning I wrote a screenplay based on the book) is in preproduction right now.

    It’s the story of a not-happy-enough girl, smart and brave but very bored, who discovers a better version of her life through a secret door in the old house she and her parents have just moved into. She meets her “other” mother and father – improved versions of the real ones except they have black button eyes. This other version of her life seems like a kid’s paradise with great food, magical shows, living gardens, etc. But there’s a big price to pay if Coraline wants to stay there.

    We currently have started storyboarding and art directing the film and have signed Dakota Fanning to do the lead voice. They Might Be Giants are doing a handful of original songs for us. It’s not clear if it will be CG or Stop-Motion or a combo of the two at this point. It’s a great project and, working on it here at LAIKA reminds me of early days at Skellington Productions where Nightmare Before Christmas was made.



    Speaking of Coraline, BWI, one of my favorite librarian reference websites, recently noted that, besides selling 130,000 copies in hardcover and winning the Hugo it has won the following awards:
  • ALA Best Books for Young Adults: 2003

  • ALA Notable Children’s Books: 2003

  • ALA Popular Paperbacks: 2005

  • Georgia: Children’s Book Award Nominees: 2005

  • Louisiana: Young Readers’ Choice Award Winners: 2005

  • New Jersey: Garden State Children’s Book Award Nominees: 2005

  • Oklahoma: Sequoyah Award Nominees: 2005

  • Pacific Northwest Young Reader’s Award Nominees: 2005

  • Tennessee: Volunteer State Book Award Nominees: 2005

  • Vermont: Dorothy Canfield Fisher Children’s Book: 2004
  • The Guardian’s technology blog Jack Schofield noted that American Gods was included in the “Top 20 Geek Novels” written in English since 1932; Survey Monkey has the list of nominees, but does not indicate whether the survey is closed or not.



    Publishers Weekly covered the November 12th release events for Noisy Outlaws, Unfriendly Blobs, and Some Other Things That Aren’t as Scary, Maybe, Depending on How You Feel About Lost Lands, Stray Cellphones, Creatures from the Sky, Parents Who Disappear in Peru, A Man Named Lars Farf, and One Other Story We Couldn’t Quite Finish, So Maybe You Could Help Us Out….



    From the November 6th Toronto Star:

    In his introduction to [Noisy Outlaws, Unfriendly Blobs, and...] this hodgepodge of welcome oddities for children, Lemony Snicket lampoons various familiar types of children’s stories he identifies as “tedious” - a word, he says, “which here means ’something you may have to read in school.’”

    Snicket’s targets include wizard stories, magical-land adventures, tales of junior soccer glory, excessively bleak realism, fact-dense historical fiction and stories about inanimate objects come to life (specifically, a talking paperweight).

    While by no means comprehensive, this list of enduring pigeonholes does encompass a rather large portion of the children’s books out there.

    Truth is, much of what passes for children’s “literature” is actually ultra-conventional to the point of being stale. Too many writers for children work with imaginations tethered to familiar categories, scarcely using the unlimited creative licence that has been their special prerogative since Alice first strayed down her rabbit hole.

    The people at McSweeney’s, on the other hand, have made a mission of stretching the boundaries of conventional narrative, often into the realm of the plain weird.

    More importantly, the little literary quarterly that grew has also injected a salutary spirit of play into belles-lettres. (The quarterly’s San Francisco headquarters even allegedly features a storefront selling such pirate supplies as peg legs, eye patches and sabres.)

    That combination of playfulness and high literary purpose would seem to be the perfect tonic to perk up children’s literature.

    Arch printing and packaging is one McSweeney’s hallmark (the latest quarterly is a bundle of mail bound by a rubber band), and this book’s jacket folds into a mail-in envelope for a contest inviting readers to finish a story begun by Lemony Snicket. The promised grand prize includes a Venus flytrap and “a large sack of dirt from Winnipeg.”

    Inside, stories with the pioneering spirit include a quirky little satire by Jon Scieska (author of The True Story of the Three Little Pigs and other favourites) composed entirely of advertising slogans, and Kelly Link’s “Monster,” a summer camp story in which the bullies - finally - get their heads ripped off.

    Graphic novelist James Kochalka uses a collage technique combining photographs with cartooning ( la Dave Pilkey’s classic Kat Kong and Dogzilla) to turn his cat into a super hero. And Neil Gaiman (Coraline, Sandman) and Jonathan Safran Foer (Everything Is Illuminated) revive old, forgotten forms - the tale and tall tale, respectively.

    But the most ambitious (i.e., weirdest) contribution is a fable by noted satirist George Saunders. (McSweeney’s has just reissued his previous book for children, The Incredibly Persistent Gappers of Frip, gorgeously illustrated by another celebrated contributor here, Lane Smith.) When a brush with fire makes Lars Farf “excessively fearful” for his wife and children, he responds by banishing from his home all possible hazards, including friction (known to cause fire) and drooling dogs (flood risk).

    From there his safety precautions become increasingly extreme until they ultimately backfire, thus illustrating the age-old moral that If You Love Somebody, You Have To Let Said Person Out Of His/ Her Personal Protection Pod.

    There will always be a place in children’s literature for pure whimsy, of course, and Nick Hornby’s “Small Country” is one of the collection’s most enjoyable larks. In Champina, a country so small you could walk across it “while holding your breath,” a bookish, running-averse boy is forced into the lineup of the national soccer team after his dad breaks a leg watching TV. (There are exactly 11 men of soccer-playing age in Champina.)

    The boy is “rubbish at soccer,” as he tries to warn everybody, but winds up a national hero when he uses a chess player’s strategy to lead his team to a best-ever 16-nil loss against San Marino.

    Also illustrating this classic theme of intelligence trumping brawn is Richard Kennedy’s witty, delightful cowboy story “Contests at Cowlick,” originally published in 1975.

    But the most charming piece is another archival curiosity, “Grimble,” by one Clement Freud. According to the notes on contributors, the BBC was flooded with almost 25,000 letters when the story was first broadcast in 1968. It concerns the resourceful Grimble, a boy of “about ten” (his parents were vague about birthdays), left to fend for himself when his mother and father up and go traveling in Peru. Scintillating with dry wit, following its own surreal logic, and delightfully anti-climactic, this utterly original story reminds us just how fun and freewheeling children’s writing can be.

    Resurrecting lost literary treasures is something McSweeney’s has done before, but not its most important public service. In addition to catering to the fashion needs of pirates, McSweeney’s San Francisco office (at 826 Valencia) also runs extensive writing tutorials for inner city kids. Proceeds from this book go to support a similar non-profit centre in Brooklyn, “located behind a swinging bookshelf at the back of a superhero supply store.”

    So this collection is a noble enterprise on many levels - though, like everything from McSweeney’s, parts of it may be a little odd for some tastes. It’s that very aesthetic of quirky innovation, however, that is McSweeney’s noblest quality, and why so many heavyweight writers and illustrators line up to contribute here.

    “There are many kinds of stories in this book,” Snicket promises in his introduction. “Some you might like and some you might not, (but) none of them are tedious.”
    –Kevin Bolger



    From the November 11th Times of London:

    “Last week I went to Hollywood and watched Angelina Jolie, typecast again, as Grendel’s mother,” said the graphic novelist Neil Gaiman, speaking in London about his adaptation of Beowulf for the screen. “She seemed nervous because Grendel and his mother speak Old English. We had an Old English professor on the set. Well, more of a Young American, actually.”



    From Claire E. White’s
    The Author’s Dilemma: To Blog or Not to Blog:

    …The best example of the power of an author blog is Neil Gaiman’s journal. Neil started his blog in 2001 to give readers a backstage peek into the post-publication process of the New York Times bestselling novel American Gods… Neil’s Journal was really ahead of its time in many ways. Although it was supposed to have a finite life, it appears to be heading towards immortality…So his blog continues, for now.

    Over the years, his blog has evolved into something rather different from when it began. He now discusses everything from the joys of fatherhood, the trials and tribulations of author tours, interesting websites he’s discovered, the status of his feature film projects and many other interesting things. He initially had a submission form for questions, the most frequent of which were to become a brief FAQ. But so many people wrote in with unusual comments and questions that he began answering selected emails in his blog posts. As an author to whom the concept of writer’s block is an alien concept, it is unlikely that he’ll ever run out of interesting things to say in his blog, which is fortunate, given the extremely unhappy reaction his fans had even to the suggestion of his stopping. He also has message boards on the site.

    The full article can be found on the Internet Writing Journal.



    Posted by Lauren Perry at Comicon.com on November 4th:

    Associate Marvel Editor Nick Lowe hosted a panel today at Wizard World Texas to discuss upcoming plans for the House of Ideas. See what’s on Marvel’s slate for the coming months.

    These are just random notes from the panel. This reporter tried to get things word for word, but that rascally Marvel editor talked really fast and it was tough to get some things exactly as they were said…

    …QUESTION: What can you tell us about Neil Gaiman and the
    Eternals?

    ANSWER: We won’t announce the artists yet or the publishing
    schedules, but it’s a super cool idea. Plus we will be reprinting Jack Kirby’s Eternal books, so pick them up in the interim until more news comes out about Gaiman’s Eternals. Right now, we are planning on having it be seven issue with the first and last issue being double sized…



    Posted by Matt Brady on Newsarama on November 14th:

    Sunday, a select group of comic retailers made their way home from the Great White North as DC’s RRP meeting wrapped up in Montreal. The weekend held a handful of presentations from DC’s various imprints and divisions, and while mostly focusing on information for retailers, many editorial announcements regarding upcoming projects were made.

    While many of the announcements and talking points re-iterated news from this summer’s convention season, a few new tidbits and announcements were thrown in for spice…

    Absolute Sandman starts in 2006; there was no announcement of price or extras yet, but DC will be recoloring the early issues of the Sandman series to match the higher production values of the later issues, as well as touching up the lettering in some issues where reversed lettering dropped out a bit. This is part of a plan to do every Sandman story in the Absolute format. Concurrent with the publication of Absolute Sandman, DC will not be keeping the current hardcovers edition collections of the series in print.



    From the November 3rd Time Out(London):

    …As for [Dave] McKean, whose MirrorMask is a visually stunning assault on the senses (click here to read our Locarno and Edinburgh reviews of the film), the first-timer admitted it was harder to make a film with his co-collaborator Neil Gaiman than it was to write a book.

    ‘We’ve never argued, and if we ever even slightly disagreed about something, we had a rule that if it was about the words then Neil would have final cut, and if it was the pictures, I would. But with the film I couldn’t let Neil go off and write what he wanted because I had to make sure we could do it.’

    In spite of the film’s relatively small $4 million budget however, McKean realised much of what Gaiman wrote, and the result is the beautiful, disturbing and visually breathtaking account of a young girl’s jounrey through a dark yet strangely familiar fantasy world.

    It looks like the odd argument hasn’t put the director off filmmaking either, with McKean spilling the beans about what he would like to do next.

    ‘It’s an expansion of a book that Neil and I did a while ago called Signal to Noise, he explained. ‘I always liked the book but I didn’t think we really tackled the subject. I’ve written the script and it’s much, much broader and bigger than the original. It will have some strange, extravagant and bizarre sequences in it, but it will be a more adult drama.’
    –Chris Tilly

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    This piece accompanied the debut of Anansi Boys onto the New York Times bestseller charts this Sunday:

    In the 1990’s the British novelist Neil Gaiman was among the best comic book writers alive. (Norman Mailer said of his Sandman series, “Along with all else, ‘Sandman’ is a comic strip for intellectuals, and I can say it’s about time.”) Gaiman branched out into children’s books — his Wolves in the Walls, illustrated by Dave McKean, is one of the best scary kids’ stories I know — and published a handful of novels. But he always felt like an undergroung enthusiasm. Until now. Gaiman’s new novel, Anansi Boys enters the hardcover fiction list this week at No. 1. Gaiman, who lives near Minneapolis, is poised to make plenty more cultural noise. For years he’s been thought of, as The Hollywood Reporter put it, as “the most-optioned author in Hollywood who has yet to have any of his work translated to the big screen.” But now Mirrormask, for which he wrote the script, has opened; he’s completed, with Roger Avary, a script for Robert Zemeckis’s forthcoming Beowulf; and his children’s novel Coraline is being made into a film.

    He plans to stick with fiction, though. As he told The Hollywood Reporter: “Comics and books have always had the amazing advantage of having an unlimited special effects budget.”
    –Dwight Garner

    Anansi Boys was also reviewed in this Sunday’s New York Times; the same review is carried in the Calgary Herald

    Regarding the Salon piece with Neil and Susanna Clarke, it looks like Making Light has nailed it. Providing a public service, as they often do, they have thoughtfully supplied actual photos so one can make comparisons with the sketches.

    A note: the Mirrormask list of theaters available on the Sony site may not be complete: for example, while it is only listing that the film is at the Landmark Sunshine Cinemas in New York City, it is also playing at the Cinema Arts Centre in Huntington, NY. So keep any eye on your local papers’ capsule reviews and schedules; you may be pleasantly surprised to find that it has opened in a small movie house closer to home.

    And Reg informs me that there is a CD recording available of interviews and panel highlights by Neil, Poppy Z. Brite, Robin Hobb, and the rest of the guests who attended the Continuum 3 convention in Melbourne, Australia this year. Just fill out the following order form and send your check or money order to:

    Spectrum FM Radio
    PO Box 642
    Belgrave VIC 3160
    AUSTRALIA

    No mention is made regarding shipping and handling outside Australia, although there should be fees above and beyond the $25.00AU listed.

    Alternatively, you can just pick up the CD of the Great Debate: Humans are Unnatural Creatures panel, which you all want - you just don’t realize it yet.

    And as this is nominally a family forum, it’s probably not appropriate to mention the part of the body they discuss bleaching in order to prove the they are unnatural case. But the story is infamous by now.

    No really. Not suitable for prime time, but very funny indeed.

    More details about the CDs are available at
    http://www.continuum.org.au/c4_offers_cds.htm

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    Anansi Boys is at the top of the Entertainment Weekly best selling fiction chart, knocking off Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince.

    Salon posted mp3s of the SciFi Channel/Seeing Ear productions of Murder Mysteries (with Brian Dennehy) and Snow Glass Apples (with Bebe Neuwirth)on October 3rd.

    Salon’s Laura Miller reviewed Anansi Boys on September 28th.

    The Onion A.V. Club’s Tasha Robinson reviewed Anansi Boys on October 5th.

    The San Francisco Bay Guardian notes that the Cartoon Art Museum (655 Mission St., San Francisco) is featuring the art of Sandman as part of an exhibition called “Gross, Gruesome and Gothic”; the exhibition will be open until March 12, 2006.

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    Eden notes that there has been much ado about Mirrormask over at Boing Boing.

    The Harvard Crimson’s Scoop Wasserstein posted an interview with Dave McKean about Mirrormask on September 30th.

    Wired’s Jason Silverman also posted a McKean interview on September 29th

    Reviews of the movie have appeared numerous sources including Locus (which is actually a discussion of the movie between Howard Waldrop & Lawrence Person), the Deseret Morning News, Entertainment Weekly, Zap2it, the Chicago Daily Herald, the Boston Herald, the Riverfront Times, the Detroit Free Press, and the Dallas Morning News, just to name a few.

    If you are looking for more opinions, Moogle, a Google ‘hack’ from ResearchBuzz should help you locate reviews available online.

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    Mirrormask

    Box Office Mojo has posted the estimated takes from this week’s box office: Mirrormask, playing on 18 screens, has brought in an estimated gross of $127,000, or an average of around $7000 per screen for the weekend. Actual grosses will be posted Monday.

    From the September 30th Salt Lake Tribune:

    “I wanted to build a city and populate it with my kind of characters,” illustrator-turned-filmmaker Dave McKean said of his first movie, MirrorMask.

    McKean developed the story of a teen girl caught in a bizarre fantasy world with Neil Gaiman, with whom he has collaborated on graphic novels and children’s books (Gaiman is the writer, McKean the artist). Producer Lisa Henson brought the pair back together, pitching the idea for a fantasy similar to Jim Henson’s Labyrinth.

    The basic story does echo Labyrinth, McKean said, but both films follow the tradition of such classics as Alice in Wonderland and The Wizard of Oz.

    “Neil very much liked the idea of setting up a very, very simple spine of a story that you know,” McKean said. “It’s the kind of story that this young girl would regress into. . . . At this particular point in her life, at this age, she’s on the balance of being a child or a woman — and also on the balance between going off the rails and becoming a pretty bad kid, or rising to the challenge of growing up and sorting her life out. In this sort of real crossroads, she could fall either way.”

    With an art-house budget of $4 million, McKean set up a small crew of computer animators in London to create visions that match his unique illustrations.

    “I’ve always wondered why CG work is often slavishly realistic, when it really can be anything at all,” McKean said. “We’re not dealing with the real world. We’re dealing with a girl’s imagination, a girl’s anxiety in a completely fabricated film. We can do anything.”
    – Sean P. Means

    A trio of Mirrormask related interviews with Neil have appeared in the last few days:

  • Robert Newton’s interview in Cinematical was posted on September 30th; Cinematical also has a review.

  • Tom Lanham’s interview appeared in the September 29th Oakland Tribune
  • Brian Truitt’s interview appeared in the the September 29th Washington DC Examiner.
  • Finally, there is a Mirrormask discussion group on Livejournal (thanks, Batwrangler!)



    Anansi Boys

    Not only is Anansi Boys at the top of the New York Times hardcover fiction bestseller list, it’s also at #1 on the Publishers Weekly list of hardcover fiction, at #3 on the Washington Post hardcover fiction list, at #3 on the Booksense (American Booksellers Association) hardcover fiction list, #4 on the Wall Street Journal fiction list, and #11 on the USAToday list combining fiction and non-fiction.

    From the October 2005 Booksense Picks

    ANANSI BOYS: A Novel, by Neil Gaiman (Morrow, $26.95, 006051518X)

    “A father’s funeral is going to be tough, no doubt about it. Discovering that you have a brother you didn’t know about and, by the way, that your father is one of the Old Gods would throw anyone’s life more than a little out of kilter. No one can blend ancient mythology with contemporary society like Gaiman, and Anansi Boys is one of the most entertaining reads of the year.”
    –Russ Harvey, Cody’s Books, Berkeley, CA

    Locus Online has included Anansi Boys in its new books monitor, which includes book information and features, as well as links to reviews. It will be Gary K. Wolfe’s lead review for the November issue of the Locus magazine, and an excerpt from the interview is included with the monitor summary.

    Speaking of which, there has been a review of Anansi Boys online at Emerald City since August that hasn’t been linked to via here previously; as well as an August review by Rick Kleffel in the Agony Column.

    From the September 27th SciFi Wire:

    Neil Gaiman, author of the fantastical novel Anansi Boys, told SCI FI Wire that the book allowed him to return to the kind of comedic writing he hasn’t done since he co-wrote Good Omens with Terry Pratchett in 1990.

    “I got to write my funny novel,” Gaiman said in an interview. “I wanted to write a funny one ever since Good Omens. It got to the point where everyone was convinced that Good Omens was me writing a very serious book, with Terry Pratchett dancing along behind me, scattering jokes like little flowers. So I thought, ‘Well, I’m going to write a funny novel.’ And it is.”

    Although the character of Anansi, based on a trickster spider-god from West African folklore, made a memorable appearance in Gaiman’s previous novel, American Gods, he said that the new book has only a tangential relationship to the last one. “I had the idea for Anansi Boys in about 1996,” he said. “And had these characters floating around in my head, but wasn’t quite sure whether it was a film or a TV series or a book, or what it was. So I borrowed the character for American Gods. Also, because I knew that he was going to die on page one of Anansi Boys, which really doesn’t give much away, since it’s page one.”

    The story centers on a talent agent named Fat Charlie Nancy, who travels from London to Florida after his estranged father’s death and discovers that he was in reality the god Anansi. He also learns that he has a living brother, Spider, who has inherited their father’s gifts and love of mischief.

    “People say, ‘Is it a sequel to American Gods?’” Gaiman said. ‘And I have to say, ‘No, it’s not.’ … It’s a comic novel that’s also a thriller and also a ghost story and also horror. I tried to put everything in there. And it’s also the kind of novel that makes people feel good at the end. American Gods did a lot of things, but that wasn’t one of them.”

    Finally, the Anansi Boys signings are noted in Oregonian (7:30 p.m. Monday at First Congregational Church, 1126 S.W. Park Ave., Portland, OR 503-228-4651) and the Vancouver Sun (Vancouver International Writers & Readers Festival. Magee Secondary School, 6360 Maple, Oct. 6, 7 pm, $15/13, 604 280 3311, 604-681-6330.)

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    Mirrormask coverage, as would be expected, is starting to ramp up, with television advertising starting to make appearances (although hopefully not just during the late night Adult Swim block

    Features on the film appear in the October issues of Animation Magazine and Starlog, and online at the Onion’s A.V. Club (pt 1, pt 2), and at Zap2it.

    Reviews for Mirrormask should also start coming in faster now, and as one would expect, Rotten Tomatoes will collect them more comprehensively than I can.

    However, a quick Google News search points to them already appearing in alternative papers, including San Francisco Bay Guardian and the Village Voice. Mind you the later of the two makes the reviews at IMDB look like they’re worthy of Pulitzers.
    No really.

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    Jennifer Vineyard has posted a good-size interview with Neil as part of a Mirrormask feature at MTV.com.

    IGN Filmforce posted an exclusive clip from Mirrormask. The film was also discussed in the September 24th New York Post, the September 24th Salt Lake Tribune, and Horror.about.com

    Vancouver’s Straight.com has announced a contest to win two free tickets to the reading and Q&A at noon on October 6 at the Vancouver Public Library. Rules are on their website.

    A new review of Anansi Boys was posted on September 26th in the Austin American Statesman by Jennifer Nalewicki.

    Finally, Locus’ Bestseller Monitor page should update today, but it may be too soon for Anansi Boys to appear.

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    Anansi Boys has capsule reviews in publications including Newsday and the October Men’s Health, in which it is described by Matt Bean as:

    …A welcome quasi sequel to his novel American Gods, Anansi Boys is a comic examination of strained family dynamics made even more strained when a man discovers that his recently deceased deadbeat dad was actually an ancient trickster god.

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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).

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    Clippings

    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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    Clippings

    In no particular order…

    Beowulf:

  • Hollywood Reporter
  • Chicago Tribune
  • E!Online
  • Independent
  • Fangoria
  • Comic-Con 2005 Video Blog: Michael Polis
  • First Amendment Project:

  • Red Herring
  • Associated Press
  • ZDnet
  • Guardian
  • Daytona Beach News Journal
  • Auctionbytes
  • Mirrormask:

  • New York Daily News
  • Empire (McKean interview, also on Signal to Noise)
  • Time Out UK (There’s also a short article in the current Time Out New York, but I need to get a hard copy)
  • Glasgow Herald
  • Sphyinx Cat
  • Blogcritics
  • Anansi Boys:

  • The Herald (a review, of sorts, from Manda Scott
  • Barnes & Noble, complete with reviews and notes
  • Hill House special edition
  • Harper Collins
  • Powell’s (autographed 1st edition)
  • And Deady the Evil Teddy for good measure.

    Real update soonish, hopefully. In the meanwhile, this made me chuckle.

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    Clippings

    This will be a longer “Clippings” post when it is not so near 3am, I think.

    But I did want to ask if anyone was able to locate the full text of the following article:

    “Comic release; His fans have been known to faint on meeting him, but Neil Gaiman takes adulation in his stride”, Sonia Kolesnikov, South China Morning Post, 24 July 2005.

    Thanks in advance.

    Someone has posted the link to the Which Neil Gaiman Book Are You quiz, yes?


    Besides translations of the journal into Castellano, Español, and Français, there is still an active blog for the Philipines fan base.

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