Big Win for “The Arrival”

Back in 1991 I sold a story called “Groundswell” to Aurealis magazine — my first in that now-venerable Australian SF journal. The story was illustrated by a then little-known WA artist by the name of Shaun Tan. It was a fantastic illustration that did all that an illustration should do, enhancing the experience of reading the story without giving anything away and displaying a keen awareness of what it was about. Shaun illustrated several of my stories over the years, always superbly, and has also been responsible for some of my best book covers.

Since then, of course, he has become justly famous for his beautiful children’s illustrated books, such as “The Rabbits”, “The Lost Thing” and “The Red Tree” — books which, in their graphically intelligent and detailed beauty, are as much for adults as they are for children. His latest, “The Arrival” — an entirely wordless and entirely magnificent graphic novel about the experience of being an immigrant in a strange land — has already won him a 2007 World Fantasy Award for Best Artist.

Now it has been announced that the book has won Album of the Year at Angouleme, one of the world’s biggest comic book festivals.

Arrival pic

Check out Shaun’s work on his website — and go buy a copy of the book. Now!

Here is a recent interview with Shaun.

Posted in Books, News, Pictorial art | 3 Comments

Update: Giant Monster Film List

I’ve just updated and perpetrated a major upgrade on my list of Giant Monster films. You can check it out anytime via the links to the right on the Backbrain main page — or here.

Posted in Giant Monsters, Godzilla, Sheer administration | 1 Comment

At the Aurealis Awards

Cat Sparks and I just did a flying visit to Brisbane over the Australia Day weekend for the Aurealis Speculative Fiction Awards (for fiction written in 2007). I was a presenter in the Horror Short Fiction section (it went to Anna Tambour — yay, Anna!) and Cat won in the SF Short Fiction section for her story “Hollywood Roadkill”. She then went on the win the Best of the Best Convenors’ selection award — the Golden Aurealis. The ceremony was a spectacular affair, attracting publishers and writers galore, and a wonderful time was had by all. Especially Cat.

Her win was well deserved and comes on the heels of an intense and determined year of writing. Keep an ear/eye out for great things from Cat. She’s on an upward track. Way to go, Cat!

Here is me blathering on:

Rob at 2007 AAs

and here’s Cat, all aglow with her awards (still neatly packaged):

Cat and her awards

If you want to see lots more pictures, go here.

Here‘s some more, taken by Mil Clayton.

And for a full list of winners, go here.

Posted in Activity, Books, News | Leave a comment

More Cloverfield

With Cloverfield‘s opening weekend box-office clocking in at $41 million (from a budget of $25-30 million) — a record for January — it seems certain we’ll get a sequel. But what will it be?

The Cloverfield “shadow” website (which consists of movable snapshots) has been updated with some interesting pictures that might provide an answer. Here’s three that caught my attention:

The monster’s left-overs?

Snap from Cloverfield website — leftovers?

The Navy attacks!

Snap from Cloverfield website — battle

And suffers the consequences…

Snap from Cloverfield website — aftermath

 

With Abrams and crew you never know what the clues might lead to — and it’s quite likely that these pictures simply represent some nifty “extras” for the DVD. But then again…

Posted in Cloverfield, Daikaiju, Film, Giant Monsters | 2 Comments

A US Godzilla?

This isn’t a review. That will come later. These are just some initial thoughts on Cloverfield, producer J.J. Abrams’ (of “Lost” fame) and director Matt Reeves’ excellent giant monster film.

In literally the first moments, while the production company logos are on the screen, there is a “reference” to the original Gojira: a series of pounding, bass beats, like a heavy tread. This is also how Gojira started.

Personally, I loved the film, despite physiological difficulties with the shaky-camera technique. It was new (using old techniques), it was carefully constructed (despite its appearance of casual accident), it was scary. Giant monster movies are rarely scary.

Some initial thoughts:

  1. This is an “American” Godzilla film not because it has Godzilla in New York, but because it does for the US in the 2000s post-9-11 what “Gojira” did for the Japanese in the 1950s post-Hiroshima.
  2. The film is not plot-driven; rather it’s about what it’s like emotionally to be an ordinary person caught up in a giant monster attack. There is a very basic story, but this is about the experience. Hence, the human characters matter.
  3. There are no explanations given, no origins, no rationale. The unanswered questions are the point, of course. This is about ordinary people. Ordinary people don’t get answers. Or they get many answers, all speculation based on partial knowledge, ambiguous snatches of experience, vague glimpses. They escape or they get killed. They are not “the omnipotent hero”, “the in-the-know agent”, or “the knowledgeable scientist”. They engage in small heroisms only. And those heroisms are performed in the dark. Any rationalisation would come later, after the events of the film. And even that would be mostly speculation or propagandist spin anyway. Just like 9-11. If you want answers, bad luck. Welcome to the real world.
  4. Mind you, it appears we get one answer to a major question in the very last scene (the taped-over footage of Coney Island) — at least by way of implication. Very subtle, but rather clever.
  5. This film is short, which it has to be. The street-level, hand-held digital camera technique is used cleverly and thoughtfully and it totally works — but there’s only so much you can take. I started to feel nauseous with the movement about halfway through, as did my partner and many others. So be warned. (But on the other hand I did make it through. I didn’t, and haven’t been able to, get through “Blair Witch” in the cinema or on DVD.) Reeves is conscious of the potential problem of motion sickness and tries to control it through a rhythm of action and stillness.
  6. I was really impressed by how effectively and seamlessly information was conveyed through shifts in perspective, snatches of carefully chosen “random” dialogue, gradual build-up of image fragments, placement — even the excellent use of the “pre-existing” footage that Hud is taping over, as we get snatches of it, filling out (often ironically) the romantic backstory.
  7. Contrary to what some people have suggested you definitely see the monster. But the film works up to it — in rather clever ways. You do not see the beastie in its totality all the way through. And it’s a fantastic monster — alien, indescribable, yet curiously “realistic” in its alienness.
  8. The first US giant monster film to take the genre absolutely seriously in making the kaiju resonate with the times without simply replicating the nuclear or standard environmental metaphors of the past.
  9. The end-credit music is superb.

Cloverfield is not a typical Hollywood action blockbuster. As a result, it will probably have limited appeal. On the other hand the film has already (as of two days after the opening) made something like $16 million on a budget of $25-$30 million or so. It will never earn what I Am Legend (for example) will make, but it may very well be more profitable.

As an article on CNN concludes:

It all depends on how you measure success. I’m figuring Paramount may not have a $200 million box office on their hands. (If they thought it would be bigger, they wouldn’t have released it in January.) But Abrams and friends have created a film that is a raucous, head-rattling thrill ride of a flick. And they did it for less than what Will Smith will report to the IRS for his role in “I Am Legend.”

Read the rest of the article here.

Will Cloverfield start a new movement in giant monster films?

Perhaps. I sort of hope, however, that we won’t get a slew of jerky hand-held camera films. My stomach wouldn’t take it. Cloverfield uses the technique superbly, but once was enough.

Putting aside arguments about the merits of individual movies (on which subject I’m sure divided opinion is inevitable), it’s hard not to see a giant monster renaissance taking place anyway, post-Godzilla Final Wars (2004). The big guy might have gone into stasis, but his “last” film (which I enjoyed for what it was) led into:

    • King Kong (Peter Jackson’s remake)
    • Gamera the Brave
    • Spielberg’s War of the Worlds
    • Transformers
    • The Host
    • D-Wars
    • Cloverfield

… all of which are biggish budgeted and fairly decent films. OK, Transformers and War of the Worlds are “big robot” movies, but the principles of daikaiju eiga are all there. Jackson’s Kong is unlikely to lead to anything directly, just as the original Kong only influenced the genre indirectly and several decades later. And D-Wars was not a box-office success. Nevertheless, giant monster fans have been gifted with these films over the past few years. And there are also a plethora of low-budget Sci-Fi channel films, too, though few would argue that they have much by way of great merit, being cheap, cliched and very repetitive. Still, despite the negatives, some of them are good for an hour or two’s mindless monster action. I like giant snake movies. And Octopi.

There has even been a TV series — one that I found riveting and which had a lot of potential to go even further, until it was axed. I’m talking about “Surface”, of course.

Then there are the various dragon movies, such as Eragon, if you want to count those.

What the heck! Here’s everything with prominent giant monsters (except dragons) in it that I can think of since 2004:

    • Anacondas: The Hunt for the Blood Orchid (US, 2004; dir. Dwight H. Little)
    • Boa vs Python (US, 2004; dir. David Flores)
    • Dragon Storm (US-2004; dir. Stephen Furst)
    • Garuda (Thai, 2004; dir. Monthon Arayangkoon)
    • Monster Island (Canada/US-2004; dir. Jack Perez)
    • Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow (US/UK/Italy, 2004; dir. Kerry Conran)
    • Ultraman (2004; dir. Kazuya Konaka) aka Ultraman: The Next
    • King Kong (NZ/US, 2005; dir. Peter Jackson)
    • King of the Lost World (US-2005; dir. Leigh Scott)
    • Komodo vs. Cobra (US-2005; dir. Jim Wynorski)
    • Pteradactyl (US, 2005; dir. Mark L. Lester)
    • The Snake King (US, 2005; dir. Allan A. Goldstein)
    • Stinger (Sweden/US-2005; dir. Martin Munthe)
    • War of the Worlds (US-2005; dir. Steven Spielberg)
    • Wakusei daikaiju Negadon (2005; dir. Jun Awazu) aka Negadon: the Monster from Mars
    • Yokai daisenso (2005; dir. Takashi Miike) aka The Great Yokai War
    • Basilisk: The Serpent King (US, 2006; dir. Louie Myman)
    • Cry of the Winged Serpent (US, 2006; dir. Jamie Wagner)
    • D-War (South Korea, 2006; dir. Hyung-rae Shim)
    • The Fallen Ones (US, 2005; dir. Kevin VanHook
    • Gamera: Chiisaka yusha-tachi (2006; dir. Ryuta Tazaki) aka Gamera the Brave
    • Gwoemul (South Korea, 2006; dir. Joon-ho Bong) aka The Host
    • Kraken: Tentacles of the Deep (US, 2006; dir. Tibor Takács)
    • Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest (US, 2006; dir. Gore Verbinski)
    • Ice Spiders (US-2007; dir. Tibor Takács)
    • Transformers (US-2007; dir. Michael Bay)
    • Transmorphers (US-2007; dir. Leigh Scott)
    • The Water Horse (US-2007; dir. Jay Russell)
    • Cloverfield (US-2008; dir. Matt Reeves)
    • Monster (US-2008; dir. Eric Forsberg)

There was also a glimpse of a giant monster in The Mist, I believe.

Coming giants that I know of are:

    • Transformers 2
    • The Host 2
    • Matt Stone and Trey Parker’s rumoured suitmation film about monsters attacking Tokyo, Giant Monsters Attack Japan!
    • the live-action film of Neon Genesis Evangelion (if it ever happens).

Not bad, all round.

Posted in Daikaiju, Film, Giant Monsters, Idle Thoughts | 4 Comments

Preview: Diary of the Dead

George A. Romero’s Diary of the Dead – an alternative view of the beginning of the zombie apocalypse he began in Night of the Living Dead in 1968. What with the soon-to-be-released Cloverfield (giant monster apocalypse seen from “street level” via video camera and cellphone camera footage), the “found” movie technique has become de rigor for apocalypses, it seems.

Posted in Film, Preview, Zombies | Leave a comment

When Dinosaurs Ruled the Earth

Not the movie, but the t-shirt! This cool t-shirt design was created by Brian Walline and is available through the Threadless T-Shirt site.

When Dinos t-shirt design - large

Posted in Dinosaurs, Weird stuff | Leave a comment

The Las Vegas Monster

This animation is a rare piece of stop-motion footage, featuring a very peculiar and intriguing monster. It is a test animation for a film, The Las Vegas Monster, that never went through to completion. The designer was Pete Peterson, who was a technician on Mighty Joe Young (1949) and special effects assistant to Willis O’Brien on The Black Scorpion (1957) and The Giant Behemoth (1959). He was also an animator on The Thing with Two Heads (1972). [I took this information, somewhat uncritically, from the Internet Movie Database, and I have since been informed that Peterson in fact died in the 1960s.]

This test animation presents us with an interestingly different monster and showcases the effectiveness of Peterson’s work.

More information can be found on the BlueSpill site, which features lots of rare stop-motion footage.

Posted in Animation, Daikaiju, Film, Giant Monsters, The Lost | 6 Comments

Lost Continent

Here someone has conveniently put together the stop-motion dinosaur sequences from the 1951 “lost world” film, Lost Continent, directed by Samuel Neufield. Edward Nassour was the stop-motion animation supervisor.

Posted in Animation, Dinosaurs, Film, Giant Monsters | 2 Comments

Review: Trespassers

Trespassers is one of those not-quite-a-zombie-flick zombie flicks that draws on some of the aesthetics of recent successes in the genre without embracing the full package. It has a supernatural scenario that involves a curse and a horde of cannibalistic, semi-decayed human monsters — the product of the curse. But if you pay attention to the somewhat inelegantly inserted back-story that occurs toward the end, you’ll soon realise that the “monsters” are neither zombies nor corporeal ghosts — they are men and women who have simply been cursed with an insatiable hunger for everything, whether human flesh or not.

Read full review.

Posted in Film, Review, Zombies | Leave a comment