"Children of Men": Literary sabotage, or award-winning adaptation?

The debate continues:

Did the screenwriters for Children of Men take a novel written by a Christian, which offered a profoundly Christian vision of human depravity and redemption, and turn it into an attack on Christianity?

Or were they just interested in taking P.D. James' premise and exploiting it for their own purposes?Read more


Nightmares Abolished! The Cover Art Will Rule.


For years, I have browsed the fantasy literature section of bookstores, and cringed at how many book covers display appallingly bad art.

So much fantasy art is cheesy, ridiculously lurid, painfully derivative, and preoccupied with violent spectacles.

All along the way, I've prayed: "Lord, if you ever bless me with the publication of a store, please, please, please... save me from a bad book cover." And I've had nightmares about what I would do if the book had a cover that misrepresented the story or depicted characters who were not at all what I saw in my own imagination. (Have you seen some of those early Lord of the Rings covers? Yikes.)

This week, I saw an early draft of concept art for the front cover of Auralia's Colors, designed by an artist named Kristopher Orr.

Oh.Read more


Vote now in CT's readers' poll: Best Movies of 2006!

Just so you know, Christianity Today gives positive reviews to wicked movies like Pan's Labyrinth. At least, that's what this letter writer says on the by Jeffrey Overstreet

New Innocence Mission Album Details

from FMQB:

On March 20, Badman Recording Co. will release We Walked In Song, the ninth studio recording from The Innocence Mission. The 11 tracks were recorded and mixed by Don Peris at his home studio in Lancaster with his wife Karen on vocals, guitars, pump and Hammond organs and piano. Don Peris handles backing vocals, guitars, drums and Hammond organ, and Mike Bitts is on upright and electric bass. The band plans on touring the East Coast in the spring.

What about the West Coast? We miss you in Seattle!


Watership Down (1978): Looking Back at an Animation Classic

2014 Update: Oh how I wish someone would re-release Watership Down on Region 1 blu-ray in a format that captures the vivid beauty of the theatrical release. The current American DVDs show that they were produced from a worn and faded print. Attention, lords of the Criterion Collection! Save this timeless, exemplary work!

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Before you choose Martin Rosen's animated feature Watership Down as a movie-time babysitter for your kids, please note: This is not Finding Nemo.Read more


Hobbit Trouble Continues

Somebody needs to send Peter Jackson and New Line's head guy Robert Shaye to marriage counseling:

In an interview with SciFi.com, Shaye says that, "Not that I don't think Peter is a good filmmaker and that he hasn't contributed significantly to filmography and made three very good movies. And I don't even expect him to say 'thank you' for having me make it happen and having New Line make it happen. But to think that I, as a functionary in [a] company that has been around for a long time, but is now owned by a very big conglomerate, would care one bit about trying to cheat the guy, ... he's either had very poor counsel or is completely misinformed and myopic to think that I care whether I give him [anything]."

Shaye, who was also an executive producer on the “Rings” films, added: "He got a quarter of a billion dollars paid to him so far, justifiably, according to contract, completely right, and this guy, who already has received a quarter of a billion dollars, turns around without wanting to have a discussion with us and sues us and refuses to discuss it unless we just give in to his plan. I don't want to work with that guy anymore. Why would I? So the answer is he will never make any movie with New Line Cinema again while I'm still working for the company."


You Can Count On Me (2000)

2007 Update: It's been a few years since I've seen this 2000 film, and yet I remember moments from it so vividly. Terry and the boy taking a nature walk. The reverend informing Sammy that fornication is a sin. Sammy's office confrontation with the boss. And yet, I wonder... what has become of Ken Lonergan, who wrote such a delicate, heartfelt screenplay? He was a co-writer on Gangs of New York, and then what?

Turning to the IMDB, I learn that he's written and directed a drama called Margaret, starring Anna Paquin and Matt Damon. Where is this film?

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Kenneth Lonergan’s You Can Count On Me is about a young woman trying to leave the past behind and live life on her own terms. And, of course, the past catches up with her.

This Sundance Grand Jury Prize-winning film is a small movie with a big heart. Lonergan, who also wrote the mediocre comedy Analyze This, strives for something more meaningful here, and the story sounds like it was based on personal experiences.

Set in Scottsville, a quaint small town in upstate New York, the film introduces us to Sammy (Laura Linney of The Exorcism of Emily Rose), a nervous, struggling single mother and bank worker. Sammy lives a seemingly simple life, trying her best to raise her son Rudy and to cope with a tyrannical new boss at the bank. But she is also haunted by the long-ago tragedy of her parents' untimely death in a car accident.

When her reckless and wandering brother Terry (Mark Rufalo) shows up in Scottsville, their happy reunion takes an abrupt turn into a nasty argument over responsibility and money. The problems in both of their lives surge to the surface, and Sammy and Terry's lives spiral downward into chaos until they hit bottom and learn something that just might help them back to some semblance, order, and peace.

Laura Linney plays Sammy with such confidence that it makes you wonder how much she actually identifies with the character. Sammy's just trying to set a good example for her son, even as her own loneliness causes her to stumble into foolish and potentially disastrous errors in judgment. Linney's performance is a dramatic pendulum, swinging from moral outrage to moral lapses, with amusing and understandable motivations for both. She makes us nervous with the tightwire she walks, but we never stop caring for her all the same.

Rory Culkin (fortunately starting his career out on something more admirable than a goofy Home Alone flick) gives a delicate, quiet performance as Rudy, Sammy's eight-year-old son, who is watching grownups carefully and learning from what he sees.

Newcomer Mark Ruffalo... give the man an Oscar nomination... makes a strong first impression as Terry, Sammy's brother, who has drifted around the country with a feeble grasp on order and responsibility, returning home only to occasionally borrow money from his hardworking sister. Ruffalo's halting speech reveals a man who is poorly educated, lonely, and still a frightened little boy under the unshaven good looks and the cocky Brando-like machismo.

Matthew Broderick and Lonergan himself contribute memorable supporting work as Sammy’s boyfriend and the neighborhood cleric.

In a season of showy, aggressive films, You Can Count On Me is a modest, quiet work but its virtues are profound. (And apparently, audiences and critics appreciate it: the film won the Sundance Grand Jury Prize and the Waldo Salt Screenwriting Award.) Lonergan's writing is exceptionally honest, sensitive, and revealing. The camerawork isn't showy; it's just what it needs to be, standing back and letting us watch, never drawing attention to itself. And the music is equally appropriate, featuring soft country flourishes by Steve Earle.

Lonergan avoids the faults of so many other contemporary American storytellers by refusing to cast his characters in a judgmental light, giving each one just enough dignity to make him or her convincing and sympathetic. I believed in the characters, I winced when they stumbled, and I was moved when they learned and grew. I was especially pleased to see a Christian character portrayed without evident prejudice on the part of the director; he seemed as decent, as sincere, as real as the others, and he also seemed to have some wisdom to impart. In this way, Lonergan reveals himself to be more of an artist than an entertainer.

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Writer and director - Kenneth Lonergan; director of photography - Stephen Kazmierski; editor - Anne McCabe; music - Lesley Barber; production designer - Michael Shaw; producers - John N. Hart, Jeffrey Sharp, Larry Meistrich and Barbara De Fina. Starring Laura Linney (Sammy), Mark Ruffalo (Terry), Matthew Broderick (Brian), Jon Tenney (Bob), Rory Culkin (Rudy), J. Smith-Cameron (Mabel), Josh Lucas (Rudy Sr.), Gaby Hoffmann (Sheila) and Adam LeFevre (Sheriff Darryl). Paramount Classics. 111 minutes. Rated R for sexual situations, strong language and a violent fight scene.

 


Join us for the "Through a Screen Darkly" release party.

SATURDAY, FEB. 24, 7:30 PM


WHAT?
It's time to celebrate! Come and share one of the most exciting evenings of my life... the Through a Screen Darkly book release party.Read more


Jonathan Mardukas in the House

This photo of my cat, Mardukas, is featured as the "Pet Photo of the Week" in Seattle Pacific University's faculty/staff newsletter this week.
And the fact of the matter is, quite simply, that he is the most handsome cat on the planet.

He looks like a black cat, but he isn't — he has white fur that is tipped with black. I named him after Jonathan Mardukas, a white-collar criminal played by Charles Grodin in the film Midnight Run.

Cuaron on "Children of Men" and Christian Themes

Thanks to Steven Greydanus for catching this revealing admission from Alfonso Cuarón regarding Children of Men:

Filmmaker: Was there a script already written when you came on?

Cuarón: There was a script and I read the beginning of it and didn’t like it. I wasn’t interested in making a science fiction film and secondly I wasn’t interested in the environment that the book takes place, all this upper class drama. For me it was more important to explore the thematics that are shaping our contemporary world. The P.D. James book is almost like a look at Christianity, and that wasn’t my interest. I didn’t want to shy away from the spiritual archetypes but I wasn’t interested in dealing with dogma.