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Quint wanders around Pinewood and checks out Matthew Vaughn's STARDUST!!!

Published at:  Jul 07, 2006 5:44:34 AM CDT

Ahoy, squirts! Quint here. Obviously, London is full of history. I did a bunch of sight-seeing on my 5 day trip back in May... Big Ben, Parliament, London Eye, Picadilly, Covent Garden, SoHo, Leicester Sq., Buckingham, Trafalgar Sq., etc, but, possibly to my detriment, I didn't feel as awed by that real life history as I felt when I arrived at Pinewood Studios today (check out their website here!). My destination: the Stanley Kubrick Building, right next to the 007 Stage. That's right. The Stanley Kubrick Building. The 007 Stage.



Don't get me wrong. Buckingham was gorgeous and up close Big Ben took my breath away. The walk through St. James Park was one of the prettiest walks I've ever done. But my passion is film and God what a geekout I had to suppress when I arrived at Pinewood (oddly enough, my arrival was foretold as my car approached... The Classical station was on and for no apparent reason John Williams' STAR WARS theme was played. Nifty, huh?).



I was there to tour around the sets of STARDUST, the next film from LAYER CAKE's Matthew Vaughn, adapted from a novel by Neil Gaiman. The story is very much a fantasy/mission movie along the lines of THE PRINCESS BRIDE or LORD OF THE RINGS, but with Gaiman's skewered reality laid on top of everything.



The story centers on a young man named Tristan Thorne who is a child of... shall we say... interracial parents. This world exists in both the history we know and a fantasy world. The border to these worlds is a town appropriately called Wall, a quaint English town that guards the only opening in a long wall that separates the two communities.



These two worlds mix only once every nine years when a fair is held in the field beyond Wall's wall. Only then are people from the real world allowed to mingle with the people of the world of faerie. At all other times the passageway is guarded by watchmen from Wall.



One night young Tristan Thorne is escorting young Victoria home. The girl, prettiest in Wall, has his heart. She is being coy with him, obviously not really interested, but the boy has his mind made up. She will be his. He asks for a kiss. He is denied. He asks for her hand in marriage. He is denied again. He offers her the world in return for her by his side. Nope. They both see a falling star and she tells him that if he can bring her that fallen star he can have whatever he wants from her, including her hand.



So the adventure starts.



This star is being sought by more than just Tristan for a variety of other, darker reasons. Also after this star are a trio of Princely Brothers, constantly fighting for the right to rule in their father's stead... to the death... and an evil witch whose business with the star is far more sinister and brutal. Tristan has to travel into the world of Faerie to recover the fallen star and the whole stage is set for the romantic fantasy adventure.



Let's go over the cast first, shall we?



TRISTAN - Charlie Cox



YVAINE (the star) - Claire Danes



SEPTIMUS - Mark Strong



PRIMUS - Jason Flemyng



SECONDUS - Rupert Everett



CAPTAIN SHAKESPEARE - Robert De Niro



SLAVE GIRL/UNA - Kate Magowan (Saw her headshot and she's absolutely gorgeous... And I recently saw her act in IT'S ALL GONE, PETE TONG... she played a real bitch in that movie, but her beauty is undeniable)



DITCHWATER SAL - Melanie Hill



LAMIA - Michelle Pfeiffer



DUNSTAN - Nathaniel Parker



BERNARD - Jake Curran (supposedly physically looks like a goat... those who read the book will know why that's important)



VICTORIA - Sienna Miller (Good Lord, this girl's beautiful)



HUMPHREY - Henry Cavill



KING OF STORMHOLD - Peter O'Toole



FERDY THE FENCE - Ricky Gervais



MR. MONDAY - Frank Ellis



When I arrived at Pinewood, I was driven past the 007 Building (supposedly currently housing a Venice set that I couldn't manage to sneak in to) and delivered to the Stanley Kubrick Building where I was to meet with producer Lorenzo Di Bonaventura.









Now, I wasn't quite sure how this meeting was going to go. Harry and Lorenzo had a rather public feud for quite a long time back when Lorenzo was head of Warner Bros... back in the BATMAN & ROBIN days. So, you can see where there might be some tension.



Lorenzo's assistant, Izzy, met me when I arrived and deposited me in Lorenzo's office as he was being wrangled back to meet with me. The office was simple, the walls decorated with at least 2 dozen pieces of production artwork, ranging from designs for the Prince's chariot (think of Dracula's chariot mixed with the Batmobile from BATMAN BEGINS and you're on the right path) to our star sitting in crater, nursing her broken leg. Not to mention a DVD of STARDUST dailies that really tested my moral barometer, damn near begging me to pick it up and put into my pocket.



Lorenzo came into the room and warmly greeted me, no hint of the venomous B&R Wars about him. He just seemed genuinely excited about the project and about Matthew Vaughn. Of course, he is the producer, so I wouldn't expect him to tell me he hated the project.



Lorenzo opened a giant leather satchel/binder thing and showed me a lot more production art and some shots from their location shooting already accomplished.



There was a section of the movie shot in Iceland on a black sand beach. Everyday icebergs the size of a large desk wash up on shore. They also shot in Scotland in a place called the Faerie Hills. Neil Gaiman has a house there, apparently. The trees are short, the lakes are small... Lorenzo called it a sort of postage stamp place that messes with your optics. Lamia's Inn is placed there, but more on that in a minute.



I asked about the rating since we were talking about the Inn. For those not familiar with the book... there are some pretty gruesome sequences that take place here. The rating will be PG-13, but will "be right on the edge." A lot of the violence will happen off-screen. To me, this part of the book (Lamia's Inn) really takes the story into a sort of Grimm's Fairy Tale area. Some really nasty stuff happens here. Of all the sequences in the movie, this is the one I'm most hoping they pull off.



I also got a glimpse of the designs for Lamia's knife set... They are sharp, elegant and black as the night. Absolutely evil looking.



In terms of a real life time period, they figured Victorian England. Neil Gaiman felt strongly they needed to set the time and place for the movie, so they all settled on Victorian England.



Saw a piece of art of the actual wall in Wall, which doesn't look like it could really keep anybody out... maybe chest high on an average man, with the gap in the wall being very narrow, but person-sized. I guess the idea is most of the people of Wall don't want to venture into the land of Faerie, so it doesn't need to be massive and imposing. I also saw a piece of art that was a far up aerial view of the crater the star makes when she falls. It's giant, but then they added in a smaller, person-sized crater that Yvaine is sitting in, giving it a kind of ripple in a pond effect.



Speaking of the star, I saw a few tests for her appearance throughout the film, how they're planning on giving Claire Danes a fantasy-creature look. She's dressed mostly in white and throughout the film she will glow. I'm assuming it'll be slight, but I do know that they are planning on having her glow increased when she's happy and dimmed when she's sad or frustrated. They want her to be almost ethereal. They hadn't settled on a definite look yet, but they were toying with even making her slightly translucent when she's really dim.



Also saw Stormhold. It's giant, very much looking like Minas Morgul from ROTK, however with more historical England looking architecture. It's stone black, but I was told that they put in layers of different architecture as if the castle has been building and building through so many generations that as the style changes so does the continued construction.



For the 7 Royal Brothers (Primus, Secondus, etc all the way up to Septimus) they told me about a bit of trickery. These guys are killing each other off as their father (Peter O'Toole) is getting closer to death's door. At the beginning of the movie there are only 4 brothers left, with the other 3 seen by us as ghosts observing the family drama (in the book it's never really settled upon whether or not the characters know these ghosts are there). Rupert Everett plays Secondus. The trick here is that you expect him to be the hero Prince, but right away he's out the window, and splat. Dead. For the rest of the movie he appears as a ghost with a mashed-up face, marring his good looks.



Lorenzo spent some time talking about the challenge of marketing a film like this. It's a fairy tale, so you can't completely alienate families, but at the same time you want to faithfully adapt the material. How do you market these beautiful images of Yvaine as a glowing, fairy-looking being without turning off the boys and teens? I argued that post-LOTR it's easier to sell a movie like this, that you can cut a trailer that has the brutal aspects, the adventure aspects and the romance aspects and if it looks cool at all, you'll hook most kids. Sell the adventure and they'll come. If the adaptation is faithful to Gaiman's work, then you'll get the fans on board, too.



After looking at the art, he asked if I'd like to have a walk around Pinewood and some of the sets. The first stop was a giant flying ship built to scale (1:1, I'd imagine). This was huge and aged by some of the best set builders in the world. Imagine a pirate ship and then put it up in the sky, with a TRON-like sail in the back as well as a regular sail like all the old vessels we might have seen in bottles or Errol Flynn movies.



This ship captures lightening and is electric-powered. The rigging has electric coils around them, etc. I saw a piece of art that showed a crewman holding what looked like a fire hose up to a brass and glass box that stood about chest-high, filled with electric bolts. Whether he was emptying the catch into the box or retrieving the lightning from it I do not know.



The ship built for shooting was massive, easily 50-60 feet long and 20-30 feet wide. It actually reminded me of my days on KONG standing aboard the Venture that was built on the Stone Street Studios backlot in Wellington. Very well constructed and very authentic, down to the peeling paint, rust spots and solid wood deck.



After disembarking, I went to see the interior of the boat, specifically Captain Shakespeare's (Robert DeNiro) quarters, built on another stage. The Captain's quarters is very spacious and near overflowing with stuff. Liquors, books, art... what you imagine a fantasy land Robert DeNiro sky captain would keep around, obviously. Although there was a rather large closet filled with dresses, costumes and various other clothes from his pillaging. Not very DeNiro that... a closetful of Victorian era pomp and circumstance.



The tour kept going, with a stop over at Tristan Thorne's humble abode in Wall. Pretty much a typical, dark Victorian Era working class home. Dirty, simple, not elegant at all, but comfortable in its own way.



The last two stops had to do with Michelle Pfeiffer's character, Lamia, the cold-ass evil fucking bitch of the story. Check her out below... this is a first look, AICN exclusive still!









Firstly, there's a point in the movie where she sets a trap for our heroes in the form of a magically created Inn. I went to this inn. It has a huge fireplace, in front of which will be a giant tub. The doors to the Inn are slightly bigger than you might think, but that has to do with some action that happens a little bit after we are first introduced to this place.



There's a stable that is also a part of the Inn and it looked very stably. Think Rohan.



The other set was the Witches Lair. Lamia and her two sisters live in this place, built in a sinkhole. It's a decent sized castle from the outside, but it is mammoth on the inside. And colorless. Everything is black or silver. The walls are all black wood, the floor black marble, the chandeliers are obsidian glass. There is silver trim to some of the sculptures built into the wall (depicting little cherubic angels eviscerating a pig, intestines and all falling out). There are also giant floor to ceiling mirrors every 10 feet or so down the enormous hall. This was my favorite piece of set work I saw and it was only about 60% finished when I saw it.



Lorenzo then took me to meet Matthew Vaughn, who was about to run through a rehearsal with Robert DeNiro who had just arrived onset. Vaughn struck me as a really cool guy, one of us. His first question to me was, "Have you seen X3 yet?" (Keep in mind this was about 3 weeks before it was released). He was genuinely curious about the film and touched upon his involvement, saying that he heard about 4 of his scenes remained 100% intact. He wouldn't tell me which scenes they were. He also was hoping fandom wouldn't tear him apart since it was his idea to cast Kelsey Grammer as Beast. I told him that Grammer was great casting and if the fans hate him it'll be because of how they physically approach the character.



I didn't get much time to bullshit with Vaughn. He left DeNiro sitting in his trailer to bother with the likes of me to start with and he had to get back to the Taxi Driver. I was secretly hoping to be invited to watch DeNiro go through his rehearsal... I mean, how many times do you get to see a master at work, especially since this'll be his first fantasy film since what? BRAZIL? Damn. That wasn't to be however and I didn't feel like pressing my welcome.



So, there you have it. My hour or so at one of the most famous studios in the world, looking at the pieces that will build up a fantasy flick that'll hit screens next year. I really dig Neil Gaiman's book and it seems that Gaiman is very much a creative producer on this film, giving his input on all the creative decisions. I love Vaughn's freshman outing, LAYER CAKE, and I'm really damned excited to see him attack some fantasy, especially if it's going to look like the production art I saw.



There are still a lot of question marks with this project. I didn't see what any of the footage looked like. I haven't seen how any of the actors are portraying their characters. I just know that the source material would make a fantastic movie and the talent they have attached seem to be up the challenge. I'm pulling for this one.



Hope you guys enjoyed the peek behind the curtain. I have one more UK visit to dive in to, which shouldn't be too long in the waiting. Stay tuned for my HOT FUZZ coverage! 'Til then, this is Quint bidding you all a fond farewell and adieu.



-Quint

quint@aintitcool.com








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    Readers Talkback

  • Jul 07, 2006 6:37:40 AM CDT

    Seeing Lamia reminds me

    by white owl

    of the witch from the Sam Neill "Merlin" series.. oh bugger I forget her name. Anyways.. yeah I loved that series. This movie sounds cool enough, I might have to check out the book. Good reporting, Quint!

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jul 07, 2006 6:44:35 AM CDT

    So....

    by dude_gimme_tabs

    So if Vaughn is tackling something of this scale then he clearly didn't leave X3 because he was scared of something that big. He said it was because he didn't want to leave his family for that long..... hmmmmmmm....

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jul 07, 2006 7:02:00 AM CDT

    yeah that was her.. thought she was a hottie too.

    by white owl

    In a MILF sort of way. Actually.. the more I think about it the more I miss that show. It was good but I haven't seen it in a grip.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jul 07, 2006 7:18:24 AM CDT

    Speaking of Neil Gaiman...

    by rev_skarekroe

    ...where's this week's comics column?

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jul 07, 2006 7:21:22 AM CDT

    The chance to watch De Niro work

    by dastickboy

    ...and you didn't feel like pressing your welcome?? Dude...

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jul 07, 2006 7:24:19 AM CDT

    Is Michelle Pfiefer=Michelle Pfeiffer?

    by derlanghaarige

  • Jul 07, 2006 7:27:25 AM CDT

    cmon Der, you have read AICN before right?

    by white owl

    you DO know that they don't spell check or edit their articles, right?

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jul 07, 2006 7:36:56 AM CDT

    Layer Cake is awesome, tho unnecessary

    by tripp5

    lookin forward to vaughn tryin somethin other than a british crime movie

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jul 07, 2006 8:58:43 AM CDT

    I know about the spell checks...

    by derlanghaarige

    ...but that doesn't mean that there is probably an actress named Michelle Pfiefer in the movie!

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jul 07, 2006 9:02:38 AM CDT

    excellent cast and excellent book

    by scaryjim

    here's to hoping they can't go wrong. I think American Gods would be a goodie to make aswell .

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jul 07, 2006 9:19:24 AM CDT

    Capt. Shakespeare? Ferdy the Fence?

    by chickychow

    Sounds like a movie for homos to me. Ditchwater Sal, what's he like a puddle of ditchwater that walks around and shit? Is Ferdy the Fence a fuckin Fence? Yeah thats a cool character Neil, a fuckin Fence and some ditchwater with legs chumming around the screen for hours. This dude's overrated man.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jul 07, 2006 9:27:30 AM CDT

    GREAT JOB QUINT

    by jackinitraw

    You never disappoint.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jul 07, 2006 10:02:50 AM CDT

    It would take more than Sienna Miller to get me...

    by googamooga

    ...to go on some half assed quest into the land of "Faerie". Perhaps its that I prefer brunettes, EXOTIC brunettes, EXOTIC brunettes with big boobies.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jul 07, 2006 11:25:09 AM CDT

    Huge hopes for this

    by jack burton

    The book is a great little fairy tale with a dark edge. Basically typical in tone to all of Gaiman's work, which I'm a huge fan of. So fingers crossed we finally get a Gaiman movie that doesn't stumble into development hell (besides Mirrormask of course).

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jul 07, 2006 11:40:04 AM CDT

    Chickychow is a bitch!!

    by bunger

    yer a dumbass you dumbfuck!! read the comic and figure out that these characters are not fences or puddles!!

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jul 07, 2006 11:41:13 AM CDT

    So, when does this come out?

    by the engineer

    Dig the book, dig the cast. More info please, Quint

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jul 07, 2006 11:50:47 AM CDT

    it's a gay movie if by that you mean Gaiman

    by oisin5199

    dumbass. There should be a studio that only produces Gaiman adaptations. Mr. Punch, American Gods, Death: The High Cost of Living, the list is Endless (there's a pun for you Sandman fans). Speaking of, full on Sandman series for HBO or Showtime or some network with the balls to do it. Can't wait for Stardust. Yes, and Michele Pfeifer is now the American Miranda Richardson.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jul 07, 2006 12:58:55 PM CDT

    my favorite Gaiman book by FAR...

    by traumnovelle

    This shit is gonna be doooooope. I loved the set pics they ran here a while back, and it seems as if everythings running smooth as silk. And what's all this about a Kubrick building?!? I was just IN London! Fuck, man. I would have RAN there. Yo Harry.....have you ever been to Lyon, France? THE birthplace of cinema? THAT'S the real film geek's pilgrimage. I went last year. Fucking gorgeous. The Lumiere house. My own personal haaj. Anyway, Stardust, fuck yes.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jul 07, 2006 1:05:46 PM CDT

    Not a Gaiman fan, but this sounds interesting

    by noeland

    Based soley on this article, and that picture, I want to see this. I don't give two fucks what the captain is called. Shakespeare is a REAL name you know. Fuckin idiots. Anyway, that picture looks very good. In mood and art direction, I like it very much.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jul 07, 2006 2:33:46 PM CDT

    What the hell happened to the NEVERWHERE movie?

    by frijole

    I know it stalled in development and is on the super-duper-backburner now... but does anyone know WHY?

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jul 07, 2006 2:44:44 PM CDT

    Sounds Different...

    by pawprint

    and 'trippy' enough to interest me. I like my fantasy with a little bit of a cheeky spin on it.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jul 07, 2006 3:05:28 PM CDT

    Oh, and ChickyChow...

    by pawprint

    I do hope that was an attempt at sarcasm.... 'Shakespeare' is not an uncommon surname in the UK, you MUST know that anyone referred to as 'a fence' is someone who moves on stolen goods. Ditchwater Sal? Not too far removed from 'Bootstrap Bill' is it? Not that I have seen any POTC films, but is he like a giant bootstrap that walks around and shit? Are those films overrated, man? Why don't we reserve comment until the film's released, man?

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jul 07, 2006 4:28:35 PM CDT

    Neil in his blog said he breathed a sigh of relief

    by dogsoup

    ...when he saw 30 minutes of finished film. If it's good enough for him it's good enough for us.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jul 07, 2006 4:36:13 PM CDT

    Peter O'Toole?

    by deadpanwalking

    That's all you had to say. I'm not that big on Gaiman after seeing Mirrormask (fell asleep) and reading Neverwhere (it read like it was written by a very talented 14-year-old) but I like this cast so I'll download it or something.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jul 07, 2006 5:21:05 PM CDT

    The original novel was illustrated

    by freeluna

    It's hard to remember the details of a book I read 7-8 years ago, but the original was illustrated by Charles Vess setting the visual cues for the movie adaptation. The wall at Wall was indeed very low with a narrow opening that could be guarded by a single person, but Faerie being Faerie, no one wanders in unless they have a very good reason. Also, since the dead brothers were on one side of their dying father's bed, and the living on the other, I suspect they were aware of each other though the book does make it ambiguous. Here's hoping for a faithful adaptation!

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jul 07, 2006 8:00:36 PM CDT

    If you read only one thing from Gaiman...

    by ourmaninmontr

    ...'Neverwhere' is not it. Try 'American Gods', 'Violent Cases', 'Mr. Punch' or 'Black Orchid'. Of course, 'The Sandman' is the shit, but that can turn out to be a bit of a long read, as once you read one paperback, you HAVE to go through the lot. Then, of course, there's 'Stardust', which is a lot of fun, and showcases really well Gaiman's ability to juggle many themes and tones within a single story.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jul 07, 2006 8:15:21 PM CDT

    No Pawprint, I really do think...

    by chickychow

    The character is a Fence, like a white picket fence that walks about, most likely with a little rapier that he carries around, you know, to fence with and whatnot. Ditchwater? I don't wanna watch not character made outta ditchwater! And yes, man, the POTC movies are overrated.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jul 07, 2006 10:58:33 PM CDT

    I have a question....

    by movieman742

    Is this based on a book or just another fantasy movie? I read through most of the article but I don't remember seeing anything either way. The cast looks good and the story sounds really cool. I'll definetly check it out

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jul 07, 2006 11:53:32 PM CDT

    movieman742

    by xsi kal

    Straight from the article: "I was there to tour around the sets of STARDUST, the next film from LAYER CAKE's Matthew Vaughn, adapted from a novel by Neil Gaiman."

    Yes, it's based on a book.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jul 08, 2006 5:43:24 AM CDT

    no subject

    by jimbubble

    No way will they pull off the Inn scene,not even with a PG 13.
    Someone should tell WB that this is NOT a kids film!
    I pray they get this one right,but I feel they`ll do another Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire and completely miss the point!

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jul 08, 2006 12:18:59 PM CDT

    jimbubble - agree re: PG-13

    by milkybar

    For one reason above all others - Yvaine's first word (after a chain of ouch) is, in lowercase, "Fuck". The way it is delivered in the books makes it one of the funniest moments in a sea of dark comedy... when you go back and re-read it now picturing Yvaine in your head as this delicate Star-like sylph it is even funnier.... one niggle already - Lamia is supposed to be brunette with falling curls - and Pfeiffer still looks very blonde in that photo... all in all, if Gaiman is happy, then here's hoping - because I think Anansi Boys could be an even better picture....

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jul 08, 2006 3:36:39 PM CDT

    Quint, not sure on some of those names

    by xsi kal

    Not sure where you got the character names, but I reread Stardust last night, and a few of the names are just wrong.

    The Captain of the flying ship is Captain Johannes Alberic, not Captain Shakespeare. The witches are collectively known as the Lilim, and the oldest (who is the one to go in search of the star, and will be played by Michelle Pfeiffer) is never named.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jul 08, 2006 3:38:02 PM CDT

    Incidentally...

    by xsi kal

    I liked Neverwhere and American Gods far more than Stardust (and Anansi Boys far less). Go figure.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jul 08, 2006 5:57:46 PM CDT

    Where's Ziggy in this flick?

    by r.c. the "wise"

    J/K. By the way, Kelsey Grammar was a great Beast. It's too bad the writers sucked ass.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jul 09, 2006 5:22:54 AM CDT

    So, you went to Buckingham?????

    by the*tick*

    Is that Buckingham in Buckinghamshire? Did you check out Buckingham leisure centre, or the museum. It does seem like an odd place for a tourist to want to visit, you might want to try Buckingham Palace next time.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jul 10, 2006 4:33:39 AM CDT

    Thanks for killing the X-Men franchise, Vaugh!

    by chien_sale

  • Jul 10, 2006 8:04:52 AM CDT

    I've read this script and it's good

    by druganaut

    Yeah, I read this and it's actually very readable and (from what I can gather from flicking through the rather wordy but cool original books) it's respectful to all the key elements but ups the entertainment factor and humour quite a bit. I can't think of anything to compare it too really (possibly the Princess Bride due to it's mixture of comittment to fantasy and humour) but it works really well. Some of the fantasy elements should look amazing (there are effects all the way through) and the kid-on-a-mission (with a love story) in another world angle is entertaining. I think it'll be a big hit and Vaughn will be in further in clover - fair enough he chose well.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jul 11, 2006 12:15:18 AM CDT

    Names and such...

    by kevinbe

    For those who have read the books and are wondering about the names (xsi kal). Neil mentioned in his blog months ago that Matthew Vaughn decided to change Captain Alberic to Captain Shakespeare and to refer to Pfiffer's character as Lilim, rather than the 3 witches as the Lilim.

    I've been a fan of Gaiman since I read the first issue of Sandman in 1989, and I think "Stardust" is probably the best story they could pick to turn into a high-budget motion picture. Especially now with the success of LOTR. I still hope to see "Sandman" one day, but only if they can get the right cast and screenplay. Since the property is owned by DC comics I doubt that Neil will be as involved as he is with "Stardust."

    As for his novels (meaning "American Gods" and "Anansi Boys" specifically) if they ever get made I hope it's by a fan that will stay true to the book; as PJackson did with LOTR. I have high hopes that Terry Gillam will eventually get around to making "Good Omens" which Neil co-wrote with Terry Pratchett. It is a fantastic humour filled story about the end of the world, highly recommended!

    "Stardust" was originally a 3 issue graphic series, kind of like a comic book but without the panels or word balloons, that Neil later turned into a novel. And "Neverwhere" was originally written and produced as a BBC mini-series that he also later turned into a novel, one day this may see form as a Hollywood movie.

    Neil wrote the screenplay for "Mirrormask" based on a story idea by Dave McKean who was the major creative force behind the art-flick. I doubt that there will be many (if any) similarities between it and "Stardust." So don't let any disappointment in MM stop you from seeing this one.

    If "Stardust" is as big a success as I think (pray, hope...) it will be then expect to see much more of Gaiman coming out of Hollywood! (It's a long wait, last I heard Stardust is scheduled to come out March 7th, 2007.)

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jul 11, 2006 7:10:02 PM CDT

    Why oh why?

    by annoyyou

    I loved this book, but I can't believe they cast the highly overrated, totally plain AMERICAN Claire Danes as the ingenue. WTF? There wasn't a much more suitable and probably much cheaper *British* actress available for the role? Danes is a show-killer -- all her recent movies have tanked hard. This is so disappointing. The rest of the cast sounds OK (Pfeiffer is always good, and there's a chance that DeNiro won't embarrass himself with one of his crappy accents, being that he still is one of the greatest actors in film), but to put the execreble Danes in this role...pftttt.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jul 12, 2006 3:24:44 AM CDT

    This sounds great

    by kwisatzhaderach

    Peter O'Toole and Robert DeNiro in the same movie????? Count me in...

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jul 13, 2006 9:29:43 PM CDT

    What a wonderful book. :)

    by anna valerious

    Very happy that the lovely Noel Fielding is playing Sextmus. If you haven't seen "The Mighty Boosh" whenever BBC America runs it, I suggest you watch it. He is quite brilliant....and yes, a cute glam boy. Thus, I'm crossplaying him, looking like he did after he was shoved off a cliff with his clothes mangled up and his face with too many cuts and bruises...in black and white. That, and Yvaine's celestial gown. :) I can't wait to see this and "Eragon" at this point...

    Reply to Talkback

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