I can't speak for Nav or Gart, but my pics have been delayed by my computer being brought almost to a standstill by a sudden influx of almost unshiftable viruses. I'll post them as soon as I have the means.
Hey, if I don't remember this quite correctly please forgive me ...
At Foyle Book Shop in London, Stephen Donaldon mentioned big PAINTINGS, done for the people pitching the "Covenant" movies, designed to communicate how excellent a film of Lord Fouls Bane can be - the first being a painting of REVELSTONE.
Now Stephen said he has himself a picture of Revelstone in his mind, and this picture by a movie artist was bigger, better, and stunning (hey I don't remember his words - but he was expressing being WOWed by it!!!). And he said they'd done another picture with Covenant and DROOL in KIRIL THRENDOR, which he said was "almost as good".
Hey, this excites me just thinking about it!
I get the impression that now - after the Lord of the Rings - that he is much cooler about the idea of a movie being made, and he's very pleased that the people working to get it together are fans.
I guess everyone of us knows now that a good movie (and even and excellent movie) CAN be made out of a book of epic fantasy, so the prospect is now a very much happier one.
He's very cool about it "having to be somewhat different (from the book)" - he of course understands that they're very different mediums.
He sounded rather excited about it, I think!
And he's very happy about "finding money on the ground"!
I would be very excited to see a Covenant movie made with the integrity and quality of the Lord of the Rings ( and why not now even better? ). The Lord of the Rings movie certainly never spoiled anything for me! I thought it was a delight! And it don't change the book for me at all!
"The first quality that is needed is audacity"
~ Winston Churchill
If I had to guess, I'd say the pictures mentioned are story boards or the like. Very cool. The chances of a movie seem pretty good.
"It is not the literal past that rules us, save, possibly, in a biological sense. It is images of the past. Each new historical era mirrors itself in the picture and active mythology of its past or of a past borrowed from other cultures. It tests its sense of identity, of regress or new achievement against that past.”
-George Steiner
What killed me about LOTR is that FOTR had a good deal of the characterization and interactions that were part of the book... But TTT was just too focused on the siege. ROTK was in between, but TTT really dropped the ball in my opinion.
I hope the people working on these movies (should they ever actually happen) don't get caught up in cool fight scenes and forget about the deep wounds those conflicts inflicted on the characters.
I totally agree with your points, Believer. TTT left me cold as well. I felt the Matrix sequels were also guilty of focusing too much on "cool fight scenes" to the detriment of the story.
If the people behind the Covenant movie are intending to have three films corresponding to the three books of the original trilogy, then I will be especially worried about The Illearth War, since I consider it the best book of the three. I value the importance of making a good first impression, so yes, they should certainly come out blazing with Lord Foul's Bane. But can they avoid "dropping the ball" with TIW? There are more than enough bad sequels out there to learn good lessons from. The pitfalls are clearly marked, so there's really no excuse for these Covenant movie folks to fall into one.
I know, I'm getting ahead of myself. Just examining the possibilities, that's all.
Well, my problem with the two Matrix sequels was the heavy-handedness of the philosophy. I'm not sure philosophy can be discussed well in movies. Either it's a surface treatment, like in Matrix 1, or it gets boring, like in 2 and 3.
I think philosophy in movies needs to be demonstrated and lived, not discussed, to be effective. It's the way SRD treats philosophy in his novels... The characters don't talk about it too much, except in the course of living it. Like Lord Mhoram and his discovery of how to channel the power of desecration into something good.
I was awed by FOTR and bored by TTT. FOTR struck me as movie history! And then the theatrical cut of TTT was, frankly, an utter MESS.
And then when I saw the full length version, I thought, hey, this is actually not a bad film!
And ROTK did perk things up as well, and my favorite bits were Pippin's bits (my favorite character in books and films) and I was thrilled with the lighting of the beacons sequence.
But it was never scary to me again, like the Riders were in the first film. When are they going to learn that CGI is JUST NOT SCARY!!!
I was very much looking forward to being terrified by the Dead, and it just didn't happen. The effects were great, yet I felt no fear AT ALL!!
I think the points made about pitfalls to be avoided in a Covenenant adaptation are spot on.
Healthsense aside, I think the Covenant books will be easy to adapt. They are so much about people.
"The first quality that is needed is audacity"
~ Winston Churchill
Yeah...very much about people...but so much of it is internal in the books, t'll be a challenge; not an insurmountable challenge, but a challenge all the same...better be someone good directing.
"A choice made freely is stronger than one compelled"
- Stephen R. Donaldson's The Wounded Land
Hmm, not the most flattering photo of me I've ever seen.
What you said, doubled - if ever there was a day when I should've remembered my d*mn contact lenses that was it. Ah well...as I've always said, I don't photograph well.