Books to Movies News: The Road and The Talisman
August 8, 2008 at 10:14 am | In Books, Movie Adaptations | 2 CommentsTags: Cormac McCarthy, Peter Straub, Stephen King
/Film has posted stills from the movie adaptation of Cormac McCarthy’s The Road, starring Viggo Mortensen. The photos look quite bleak. Apparently, the film is being shot near Pittsburgh without CGI enhancement. I’m still not enthused about seeing this, though. Reading the book was rough enough.
/Film also posted a demo reel for The Talisman (by Stephen King and Peter Straub), filmed by Mathieu Ratthe in an effort to convince Stephen Speilberg, who owns the rights, that he would be the right director to bring The Talisman to the big screen. The reel is quite good, one of the better King adaptations I’ve seen. The Talisman is not one of my favorite King books, but I’d still be interested in seeing a good adaptation of it.
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What Is Speculative Fiction?
April 11, 2008 at 12:34 pm | In Books, Genres | 5 CommentsTags: Alternate history, Cormac McCarthy, David Mitchell, Fantasy, Fiction, Horror, Jonathan Lethem, Kazuo Ishiguro, Magical realism, Michael Chabon, Michael Cunningham, Neil Gaiman, Science fiction, Speculative fiction
The kind of fiction I like to read the most, and that I tend to focus on here, falls under the broad umbrella of “speculative fiction.” I’ve never been entirely comfortable with the traditional genre labels of science fiction, fantasy and horror. The definitions that are most often applied to these genres seem so limiting, and they leave out a wide swath of really great books.
All three of these genres have one thing in common: The stories concern elements that do not exist in the so-called real world. In other words, they speculate about what might be possible but, in our everyday experience, isn’t.
In science fiction, the speculations must be grounded in the principles of science; they might not be possible now, but someday they could be, which is why science fiction is often set on future Earth or on another planet. The subjects of science fiction are space travel, dimensional travel, time travel, post-apocalyptic societies and technological innovations.
In fantasy, however, the speculations are usually based on magic and the supernatural. These speculations must follow rules, but they are not the rules of science. Generally, fantasy stories take place in imagined worlds (but not necessarily another planet) or on a fictional historical Earth.
Horror, on the other hand, most often takes place in the present day, in the world in which we live. But it introduces a fantastic or supernatural element, usually a monster of some kind. Horror also differs from fantasy in that it, by definition, should be frightening and dark.
But what about fiction that doesn’t fit neatly into one of these three categories? For instance, where would Neil Gaiman’s American Gods be classified? It is set in the modern-day world, but with its cast of mythical gods, it shades more toward fantasy than horror, although it does have horrific elements. Or what about David Mitchell’s excellent novel Cloud Atlas? This experimental novel is set in several different times, in the past, present and future, including a post-apocalyptic society. But it doesn’t read like traditional science fiction.
That’s where the label speculative fiction is useful. It covers any work of fiction that posits a “what if” question and then attempts to answer that question. That includes science fiction, fantasy and horror, plus narrower genres like alternate history and magical realism, as well as works that defy any neat label.
More contemporary writers who aren’t often associated with genre writing are stepping out of the bounds of literary fiction and into the realm of the speculative, and I’m glad because they are turning out some great works. For example, Michael Chabon’s The Yiddish Policeman’s Union is a fascinating alternate history, and one-third of Michael Cunningham’s Specimen Days is set on a future Earth, with aliens and space travel. I first started reading Jonathan Lethem via his genre-defying novels Gun, with Occasional Music, As She Climbed Across the Table and Amnesia Moon.
I like the speculative fiction label because it describes my favorite kind of writing but is much more open than the traditional genres. When I read speculative fiction, I can read hard sci-fi, traditional fantasy, contemporary horror or experimental literary fiction. The label also encourages good authors to experiment and stretch themselves without fear of being pigeonholed into an undesirable section of the bookstore. The stigma of writing about such subjects seems to have been dropped. For proof, just look at Cormac McCarthy’s Pulitzer Prize-winning (and Oprah Book Club pick) post-apocalyptic novel The Road or Kazuo Ishiguro’s foray into science fiction, Never Let Me Go, which was shortlisted for the Booker Prize and named one of Time’s 100 Best Novels of All Time.
Want to know more? Check out these sites:
Congrats to the Coen Brothers and Cormac McCarthy
February 25, 2008 at 8:53 am | In Movie Adaptations | 2 CommentsTags: Cormac McCarthy
I didn’t have the endurance to make it through the full Oscars ceremony last night, but I was very pleased to open the paper this morning and find that No Country for Old Men took all the top honors, including best adapted screenplay and best supporting actor for the surprisingly dreamy Javier Bardem. (I also want to give a shout-out to Daniel Day-Lewis, who was far and away the best actor.)
I did see the adapted screenplay award given out, and I believe I spotted Cormac himself in the audience. Congratulations, you old coot. It was a great book, and the Coens made a great movie out of it.
This is the first time in a long time that I can remember the Oscars going to movies that I felt really deserved them. Maybe it’s the start of a promising new trend…
The Road Film Adaptation News
January 16, 2008 at 9:59 am | In Books, Movie Adaptations | 3 CommentsTags: Cormac McCarthy
I saw on /Film that Viggo Mortensen is set to star in the film adaptation of Cormac McCarthy’s The Road, and Charlize Theron will play his wife, who will apparently have a larger role in the film than in the book.
I’m not sure how I feel about this film adapatation. I am certainly not looking forward to it with the same avidness as No Country for Old Men, but then I thoroughly trust the Coen brothers as directors and screenwriters. If they do The Road right, the film will be two hours of unrelenting bleakness, and I’m not sure I want to sit through that. If they do it wrong (which is more likely, in my opinion), the film may obscure the vivid imagery I constructed for myself when I was reading The Road, which is what made it such a powerful experience for me. I’m tempted to skip it altogether.
If you also loved the book, how do you feel about seeing it on film?
Monthly Reading: December 2007
January 1, 2008 at 1:27 pm | In Monthly Reading, Reviews | Leave a CommentTags: Classic, Contemporary fiction, Cormac McCarthy, Crime, Douglas Adams, Ian McEwan, Japanese, Mainstream, Natuso Kirino, Novella, Post-apocalypse, Sarah Hall, Science fiction, Tom Perrotta, Truman Capote
The Road by Cormac McCarthy — post-apocalyptic science fiction
Breakfast at Tiffany’s by Truman Capote — classic novella
Atonement by Ian McEwan — contemporary fiction
The Abstinence Teacher by Tom Perrotta — mainstream fiction
Out by Natsuo Kirino — Japanese crime
Mostly Harmless by Douglas Adams — abandoned
Haweswater by Sarah Hall — abandoned
My rating scale:
- 1 star: Abandoned before finishing. Don’t waste your time.
- 2 stars: Poor. Avoid with extreme prejudice.
- 3 stars: Average. Read it, have a good time and move on. Or not.
- 4 stars: Great. Push it on your friends and family.
- 5 stars: Excellent. Keep it, treasure it, reread it.
Disclaimer: My ratings are very personal and may have little to do with the book’s artistic or commercial merit, or its place in the literary canon. Rather, the rating reflects how the story, characters and writing spoke to me and augmented my understanding of the world.
Worth Reading: The Road
December 30, 2007 at 1:36 pm | In Books, Reviews | 5 CommentsTags: Cormac McCarthy, Post-apocalypse, Pulitzer Prize, Science fiction, Voyages and travels
The Road, Cormac McCarthy (2006)
5 stars!
When he woke in the woods in the dark and the cold of the night he’d reach out to touch the child sleeping beside him.
In 2007 The Road won the Pulitzer Prize for literature. It also had the distinction of probably being the first post-apocalyptic novel with cannibalistic themes selected for Oprah’s Book Club and slated for reading by middle-aged housewives everywhere. This is actually a good thing, I think. I just finished reading it, and it is one of my favorite books that I have read this year. Here is my review.
I have read a lot of post-apocalyptic books, but never have I read one where the vision of the experience of living on an earth that has been completely decimated was so fully realized. This simple story of a man and his son traveling to the coast along a road through a ravaged, ash-covered America, foraging for food in an entirely lifeless landscape and avoiding other survivors, is chilling in its stark realism. McCarthy conjures his bleak, colorless world with simple, spare sentences that leave vibrant after-images in the imagination: a burned forest, a deserted city, a lone farmhouse, a gray ocean. All are tinged with threat, malice and hopelessness.
Not a lot happens during the course of their journey, but the cumulative effect is terrifying. And yet, at the end, McCarthy manages to inject some small ration of hope for humanity. This is a magnificent work, worthy of the Pulitzer it won, a book that will stay with you for a long time.
Read the Book: No Country for Old Men
November 25, 2007 at 8:19 pm | In Books, Movie Adaptations | 3 CommentsTags: Cormac McCarthy, Thriller, Western
No Country for Old Men, Cormac McCarthy (2005)
The movie version of this novel came out last Wednesday, adapted and directed by two of my favorite directors, Joel and Ethan Coen. As is the case with most of their movies, it was terrific. This is my review of the novel that the movie was based on.
I don’t think this novel had the same sense of sweeping epic as McCarthy’s masterpiece Blood Meridian, but the parallels between the two novels are clear. Even in the modern era, the West is a place of violent inevitability, a place that breeds shootouts and wars in its rocky soil.
The novel opens with a young man, Llewelyn Moss, stumbling across the grisly remains of a drug-related shootout in the Texas back country, where he finds and takes a satchel full of money. He then makes a crucial mistake — a mistake fueled by compassion or perhaps guilt — and that sets into motion a chain of events. He becomes hunted by an inhuman killer, and they in turn are being tracked by a small-town Texas sheriff, who is becoming more and more aware of his futile role in the war that these dark forces are waging around him. There is no law in Texas, and the drug runners and their customers are just modern-day equivalents of the Indian hunters and renegade soldier-cowboy-outlaws of an earlier time.
See also: Book vs. Film: No Country for Old Men (Onion AV Club)
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