Here, There be a Writer

Showing posts with label The Golden Compass. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Golden Compass. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 1, 2015

The Golden Compass: A Review

After doing a few these book to movie reviews I have learned two major things (and several smaller and equally important points as well). First (and oddly not directly related), my husband is a genius with a fresh new idea for my review projects. I had been doing book to movie reviews, but he suggested trying (or at least considering) a movie to book review. This means movies that had books written after the movie came out. It certainly might give me a different perspective on storytelling. Such possible examples include Batman and Dick Tracy.

Second, is that I realize that I am super nit picky about my written stories versus my visual stories. And because of this I forget that sometimes the movies themselves are at good at being movies and thus telling a story with visuals, especially if you are not going to be reading the books. I have been surprised by a few movies that have proven me wrong on some level or another.

Now to be fair this doesn’t mean I will go easy on the movie version of The Golden Compass. Just because the movie was actually entertaining, looking at the entertainment factor here folks, here’s a few points to note. It was eye catching and beautiful crafted, the polar bear fight (yes, you heard me correctly) was pretty awesome. Oh, the actors were well cast in their characters (voice and live action included), and the plot is 85% of what is in the book (albeit truncated in places). That means it is watchable.

But, there are some grievous mistakes and in some poor choices that affect the plot, and at least one moment of WTF-ery.

I will give my actually score at the end, so onto the review.

First point: consistency! It’s just simple consistency of facts, names, pronunciation. If a movie doesn’t have a degree of consistency whether it’s an adaptation or an original then I will have issues with it. Yes an adaptation is going to have things that are different that the original, also the vision of the original is not what the director of a movie will have, hence why it is an adaptation. Adaptation means taking one form and making into something different, the state of being adapted. Hence there will be changes. This is especially true of books that get made into movies. The biggest difference between books and movies are that books have long expansive scenes about trips to London or what occurs in Bolvangar (more on these later). But a movie has to keep the pace and within the 90 to 120 minutes given to tell a story. This is something I run across a lot when I cross a book and the counterpart movie adaptation; when the movie has to condense 30 to 40 pages of written text into 5 minutes of movie. To me it loses something, but I am biased and read a lot of books that need those 30 to 40 pages to build the development of the characters. Where a movie needs to convey that information with a short amount of time and move on. In The Golden Compass Lyra’s trip to London with Mrs. Coulter is only about 5 minutes (give or take) of the movie. The book obviously takes it’s time to show what Lyra and Mrs. Coulter are doing and thereby building their character’s relationships and character development. The movie has so much more to cover that it has to take a few important bits of information to convey Lyra’s adoration of Mrs. Coulter and the discovery of the General Oblation Board. Sometimes they get it right, sometimes not sure much.

For consistency The Golden Compass rates a 7 out of 10. This is because the ending was chewed up and spit out from book to movie. There is a decided last of consistency from the Ice Bear, Iorek Byrnison getting his amour in Trollesund to the travels north to Lord Asriel’s prison at the end of the movie.

Another case of the movie rushing a scene because of time is when Lyra is in Svalbard and Iorek Brynison is rushing to her aid. They skip quite a bit of the King’s back story with Iorek and how he became king. Suddenly we are presented with Lyra’s telling Ragnar she is Iorek’s Daemon who wants to be his Daemon. Then there is a polar bear fight with little build up. There is greater detail of the ice bears and their kingdom, but much of the movie glosses over much of this in favour of the polar bear fight. It feels rushed. I think even if you haven’t read the book you would still feel that there was something missing. You cannot have your audience feeling like there is something missing, especially if it’s an adaptation. Because their will those people who pick out this inconsistencies between the different forms.

A note to consider, the screenwriter do not have an easy job. They are the ones to cherry pick the book’s details and turn printed words to visual media. Having written a dew short plays, I understand that plays (screenplays) are more dialogue-sentric, and this is different to print media which is descriptions and dialogue combine. To movie a good movie you have to know what is good dialogue and what are good visual elements. I understand better why playwrights and screenwriters have a hard job. The Golden Compass’s consistency is overall more fluid.

For consistency The Golden Compass rates a 7 out of 10. This is because the ending was chewed up and spit out from book to movie. There is a decidedly lack of consistency from when the Ice Bear, Iorek Byrnison reclaims his amour in Trollesund to the travels north to Lord Asriel’s prison.

Second point: Order of things. It goes with consistency. This doesn’t mean that I find every since instance of misplaced scenery or dialogue bothers me. Under certain circumstances I can understand why the order might have been shifted. The problem is this, often in fantasy movies made from books the story usually has to play out a certain way. This means that Person A meets Person B and encounters Event C. If you have Person D meeting Person A first and Event E happens then many times the story will have to change within the screenplay to have the whole of the story make sense.

What I mean is that having the polar bear fight happen before Lyra gets to Bolvangar does not make sense if she still has to travel through the Ice Bear’s Kingdom to get to Lord Asriel’s prison. The bears are the one holding Asriel prisoner, if Iorek has already defeated Ragnar then it should make sense to have Iorek take Lyra to Asriel. Not straight to Bolvangar, and then to Asriel’s prison. It seems weak and poorly planned, hence inconsistent and out of order.

In the choice to move Bolvangar to the end, after the polar bear fight, wasn’t nearly as bad as what they did to the ending. This is a far more heinous act and more on that later. It still felt wrong, again I am aware of both versions and this makes me a bit biased. But when I look at the Bolvangar scenes I feel that by placing it out of order you are losing something, or at least you are rushing the stories that take places there. It is a bit frustrating when there is much more detail nuances and stories that can be told of the children. That fits right into my next point.

Out of order: A-. The movie was spot on until Polar Bear fight and Bolvangar.

Third point: Getting shit wrong! The single most irritating thing I have run across in any of these reviews it when the director, producer, screenwriter, or someone get facts blatantly wrong. There shouldn’t be a problem with naming the polar bear king Iofur, yet the movie calls him Ragnar. WTF, movie?!?!? Yes, there are times when one can probably come and defend these choices made. But simply put, if you know a character is named, or a character exists and then you change it to another, you suddenly it change the dynamic of the movie. And it does bother me, because these characters exist for a reason. So to callously toss them aside just seems wrong to the storyteller in me.

See, The Golden Compass is not unique to getting things wrong. It just has some glaring mistake. Yes, I realize that if you don’t read the books, then some of this is lost on you. But there are just simple basic that everyone should get, like King Ragnar (called Iofur in the book) or calling the animal souls of people Demons when the spelling and pronunciation is DAE-MON. It’s not just in The Golden Compass, the movie Eragon also changes the names of town visited and switching out one name for another. Eragon Review: read here if you are curious about my feelings on that one. It seems paltry, but to simply get names and basic elements wrong feels like they weren’t trying.

Getting Shit Wrong: C. I can’t give it more, because the shit that they got wrong was pretty big. As a writer, I felt that it was a disservice to the story.

Okay, so you didn’t like it then?

Nope, not even saying that this time around. Yes, there are the small and petty things I noticed. It want I do.. I could be here all day and night complaining and arguing why Pantalaimon, Stella Marie, and Hester are the only daemons who speak out loud. Never mind that these characters have big name voice actors attached to them. And generally Daemon’s only talk to their human half or other daemons. You pay good money to have Kathy Bates voice a rabbit for three lines and yet other daemons who are represented much more don’t speak at all, like Mrs. Coulter’s golden marmoset. That’s but minor. When I watch the movie, I still felt engaged, vested in the story. Yes, I clearly love top pick apart these movies. It has become a pleasant if unusual pastime.

Still there is much to be admired her. The CGI was awfully good. The daemons were well done, not really cheesy wand much of the time Pantalaimon’s animated in such a way that his character was daring, emotional, and crucial to the story at the right times. The casting was also pretty spot on. Nicole Kidman plays a delightful bitch here and also in the recent movie Paddington (just go watch it). Dakota Blue Richards (who played Lyra Belacqua) needs to be in more movies, because she’s got some talent. Even Daniel Craig, who got shafted out of a really powerful scene at the end was well cast. Action wise the movie was most often spot on with plot and filled a constant energy keeping you vested in the story.

What it didn’t get right was a gross oversight on details that were either skipped over, rearranged, or just plain wrong. As much as I can complain about the concepts mentioned earlier, the one other point that tick me off to one end is changing the ending to make the movie have a lighter, happier ending. The ending of the book is hard and cruel and utterly heartbreaking. But yet so dramatic perfect and a heartstrings moment; and there’s the BIG betrayal at the end is just glossed over. The powerful punch that Phillip Pullman gave to his story is more like a gentle tap on the shoulder.

For you completists, go and watch the revised alternate ending here. Fans of the books will appreciate the effort and anyone who likes a well crafted scene will at enjoy it for what it is. The book is a beautifully complex story and one that should be read. The rich characters and a vastly unique world created and lovingly polished like a piece of fine silver until it shines. If you like a great fantasy, with something a little outside of the box then go check it out.

After all is said and done and this review is posted, I think I will give the book an A and the movie a B-. It was worth the trip, but the staying power is in the book.

Sunday, June 21, 2015

Raining on the Porch and Writing

It's been a long week and a full weekend. The beginning of the graduation parties and holiday plans. Mi padre is coming up for July 4th!! Huzzah!  Goals are really starting to find purchase, Round 2 is almost at a close, and the Summer has only just started to summer. Lots in the works, so onto the check-in.....

This Week:
     *Reading: finished Golden Compass (Phillip Pullman), continuing with Wicked (Gregory Maguire), and Murder on the Orient Express (Agatha Christie). I think Poirot is my favourite, but I have been going through my Poirot mysteries first before hitting up the Miss Marple. Wicked is growing on me some. Still feels a bit preachy at times about politics, but I am going to finish it.
started the first chapter of
     *Social Media: managed to visit 4 blogs daily for my #ROW80 list and got to everyone who posted on Wednesday. Also visited my WIPpeteers, 2 a day when about. I still have at least 4 more to visit before Wednesday.
     *Writing: wrote Wednesday, Thursday, and a little on Friday. I wrote a poem and a short story for a fellow blogger's site, a writing challenge prompt. Been brainstorming for the secret project and planning to do a writing blitz later today (prolly before I actually post this) and working on my review of The Golden Compass from my Book to Movie reviews that I usually do in October. I miss last October because of my busy schedule and just now catching up.
     *Editing: finished the first round of edits on Love in Ferns. The short story version is going to be submitted to #writestuff's monthly challenge. I feel I need another pass before I post it wholly. Been thinking of writing an large story of it, thinking I need to do a bit of plotting on it before I attempt more. I can see more of the story on the horizon, just not sure where to go next.
      *Housetending: the usual on Sunday laundry, garbage, and dishes.
      *Submissions: I got two in this early afternoon. Also got another rejection letter. I finally figured out why for the current one. They are not looking for poetry that uses repetitious forms, like pantoums. Funny, because I am really good at pantoums. Also, the flowery language doesn't entice them. I guess I can understand. But and the other hand the poems were good, just not a right fit. Time to try elsewhere.

Side note: colouring is truly therapeutic...

From my friend James' new colouring book of his artwork from his series The Chronicles of the Imaginarium Geographica. See his stuff books and artwork at Coppervale International or at James A. Owen. Done in marker, which was difficult until I found my fine tipped markers, these were quite fun to colour.


This Week (upcoming):
     *Reading: continue with Wicked and start The Subtle Knife (Phillip Pullman). I love His Dark Materials!!
     *Writing: write daily. Works to work on Golden Compass Review and Secret Project.
     *Editing: look at where I am in The Real Road Trip revision, attempt to revise 2 page (starting small).
     *Submissions: 1 new.
     *Social Media: 4 blogs daily for ROW80 and 2 WIPpeteers blogs.
     *Blogging: 1 new post and review a review for 1 of the books I recently finished.

A Round of Words in 80 Days is a blog challenge that knows you have a life. It's a Blog Hop. So stop in for some biscuits and tea.

I bought my day pass for Saturday at Connecticon which means I have to go now. I have directions, only a scant 4 hours and 50 minutes. I get to see my friend and mentor James and see what a larger Con looks like. Thinking of cos playing as someone, not sure if I am that brave, but how often do I do this, right?

There are plans for a Renaissance Faire trip, another trip to Eldridge Park, putt putt marathon, and flea marketing. Oh and the Weird Al concert ion August! It's shaping up to be a full and fun summer.

How are your goals coming, Dear Readers? What are you planning for the summer?

Today has been nice, sunshiny and warm, with just a touch of rain. Birds are singing and neighbourhood chitlins were playing. They have since disappeared. A jogging is passing by now. It's the staple around here. Life is good!



Wednesday, June 17, 2015

Walking in Fire...Tale of a Writer

My brain has been focused on the evil day job and so I have had to really focus on the writing projects this week. After work has become my writing and editing time. And with the evil day job having had it's own problem, this time is most important. Well except coffee dates, those are important in their own right. Now t's time for the check-in. Hey Ho, and Away we Go....

This Week:
   *Reading: On the last part of The Golden Compass (Phillip Pullman). In the home stretch and I am sneaking time to read in every available moment. I finally got past the first part of Wicked (Gregory Maguire). The Munchkinlander part is REALLY EFFIN" SLOW. It has picked up in part 2 and I feel more vested in it. Have not started Murder on the Orient Express (Agatha Christie) yet.
    *Writing: wrote on Sunday (ROW80), write a little on Monday (just a paragraph, but I started developing some character for a new story. It's slightly Top Secret. Might post some on WIPpet Wednesday later this month. Wrote poem yesterday.
    *Editing: finally a pen to the currently WIP and a backstory to the WIP, called Love in Ferns. Also edited a short flash fiction piece that I am not sure what to do with, yet.
    *Social Media: finished reading all of Sunday's ROW80 entries, that is 4 a day  and 5 or 6 Monday and Tuesday. Keeping up with Twitter most day, except Tuesday. Had a coffee date with a friend I hadn't seen for any length of time and got to schedule a photo shoot later this month. Get to show off the new red hair with NICE pictures.
     *Housetending: keeping up with the basics at this point. Nothing new on the carpets, yet.

This Week (Upcoming):
     *Reading: finish Golden Compass this week. Start Subtle Knife and the next Julie Anne Lindsey cozy mystery and Murder on the Orient Express.
     *Writing: write daily on Love in Ferns and Top Secret Story.
     *Submissions: THIS IS THE GOAL TO WORK ON THIS WEEK!!!
     *Editing: pull out the Real Road Trip and attempt to pick up where I left off.
     *Social Media: visit 4 blogs daily. Start to follow some of the regular ones. Learn to up keep my email and social media sites. This might take some planning. Any ideas would be welcome.

A Round of Words in 80 Days is a blog challenge that knows you have a life. It is a Blog Hop. Come on over and visit!!



Today is Wednesday. It's WIPpet Wednesday. The brain child of K.L. Schwengel, is a Blog Hop for WIPpeteers. You take the date and do some funky math and share a piece of the WIP you are working on. Date is 6/16/2015, so taking 6/17 you get 1 + 7 = 8. 8 lines from Love in Ferns. This is the beginning of the story, before the previous two snippets (if you are keeping track).

From MorgueFile
There was a thud. It was a decidedly Callie-like thud. “Come on! You can’t keep me in suspense,” she called. 

I couldn’t turn towards her.

The air was heavy with humidity and clung to everything. I was sweating, but I couldn’t stop. After all I had gotten this far, right? I thought to myself. Stamping down the foliage, “It’s not much farther,” I called back, feeling nervous that if I turned to look at her I would lose my nerve.



Wednesday, June 10, 2015

Sunny Days and Lovely Ferns


A Round of Words in 80 Days is a blog challenge that knows you have a life. It's a Blog Hop. Stop on in, meet some new friends and learn a thing or two. Oh and there's cheesecake and lemonade!

This Week:
     *Reading: almost a hundred pages into The Golden Compass (Phillip Pullman) and started Wicked.
(Gregory Maguire), only 1 chapter in actually. Been really good about getting up and reading before work, sometimes even on my porch.
     *Writing: wrote 1285 words yesterday, another branch to my Love in Ferns story. Might actually be a longer story or just a separate one. Not sure if I want to connect the two or not. Monday was my ROW80 check-in. so that is two days of writing, plus today's ROW80 check-in makes three in a row!!
     *Social Media: reading 8 blogs on Monday for both Sunday and Monday. 4 read yesterday. On track. Participated in Tuesday Night's #writestuff Tweet Chat.
     *Blogging: Posted yesterday (Tuesday) for #IndieRoar 10 day challenge presented by TheNotebookBlogairy.
     *Housework: dishes and laundry are caught up and staying caught up. Well...Okay, I have a few dishes in the sink and a small pile to put away still. But that is caught up for me. Trust me! :-)

This Week (upcoming):
     *Reading: continue with The Golden Compass and Wicked.
     *Writing: write daily
     *Editing: This is a BIG one! Work on Love in Ferns, currently WIP, and post it to #writestuff's monthly challenge.
     *Submissions: not done this week. 1 new submission this week.
     *Housework: vacuuming and maybe steam cleaning the carpets this weekend.

I am in week two of my vacation from theatre this summer. Still feels a little odd, like I should be doing something else. But then I see my progress on ROW80 goals. And things that I have written and I feel good. Like today, I am on my porch writing this listening to Paul McCartney's Off the Ground album and listening to the birds sing.



It's also WIPpet Wednesday! The creation of K.L. Schwengel and also a Blog Hop. Come and visit with us WIPpeteers. The math is weird, but so am I. Today's date is 6/10, so 6 + 10 + 3 = 19 lines from Love in Ferns.

Here Callie and the narrator take a walk. Sorry. That's all the lead up I can give today. This is the middle of this part of the story.

“You excited?” Callie called back. I looked up to see to the slight frame, willow-like dancing in the afternoon breeze. “This is gorgeous you know,” she said and spun around ducking below the waving branches and ferns, disappearing for a moment. My head looked around to see on the horizon dark clouds pressing closer, thunderheads. My hand pulled up over my eyes and I watched their slow march as I turned to see Callie reappeared and giggle. She was wearing a crown of buttercups, foxgloves, and daisies. Her hazel eyes looked back at me and she smiled. “You gonna tell me now?” she asking coyly.

Feeling much less nervous without a single person nearby, I put my arm around her shoulders, “not yet. Need to get to where we are going first,” as I pulled her closer.

“Don’t those look like thunder clouds?” she pointed, yet didn’t sound worried. 

I tried to be protective and pulled her closer, trying to sound like I knew everything, “I think they are.”

“What type of clouds are they then?” she said sounding callous and cocky. "Go on, tell me" she said in a mocking jest and I realized I had no response for her.

Callie pulled away, turning her hazel eyes from mine, “Can you just tell me here?” she sounded a little desperate as she motioning to the field of fern fronds, wildflowers, and trees that made the whole area look like some sort of abandoned cathedral.

I guess I was determined to have my way, “But this place is not THE place,” and I motioned past the Elms Gate up ahead. The wind slowed down and I felt the temperature rise. Or maybe it was me, but Callie looked like she had beads of sweat on her brow. I turned to look at the elm trees, the thunder clouds were closer, "Cumulonimbus Clouds," I said.

Monday, June 8, 2015

Week 1 of THE Summer Vacation from Theatre

This is day late. I know, I know. I don't really have a good excuse for writing this today versus yesterday. So, I will just present my check-in...

This Week:
    *Reading: finished reading Murder in Three Acts (Agatha Christie) yesterday. Now that I have read a number of her books in succession I like to style. Yet, she has a tendency to re-use character tropes. Not a bad thing, but you can see where stories and characters blur together. Began The Golden Compass (Philip Pullman), one chapter in as of this post, and probably start Wicked (Gregory Maguire). I am kinda itching to begin a Book to Movie review for The Golden Compass.
    *Writing: wrote daily between blog posts and poems. I did not write Saturday or Sunday.
    *Editing: I edited the two paragraphs that I posted for WIPpet Wednesday.
    *Social Media: visited 4 blogs daily. Visited all of the WIPpeteers sites. Kept up with twitter throughout the week, not so much on the weekend. Saturday tends to be my unplugged day.
     *Submission: submitted 2 poems to the last issue of the Lincoln Underground.

This week (upcoming):
    *Reading: Continue with The Golden Compass and Wicked.
    *Writing: write daily.
    *Editing: edit my flash fiction piece, Love in Ferns (working title).
    *Submissions: 1 new submission.
    *Social Media: 4 blogs daily.
    *Housework: finish this weeks laundry and dishes. Find a carpet shampoo-er I can borrow, and then finish vacuuming the house.

Last week was a very productive week. Being able to come home and work on writing and housework. Been catching up on my sleep and feeling good all the way around. Hoping for another good week of productivity. Saturday was my day to goof off. Took my friend Sara and her daughters to Eldridge Park to ride the carousel and the dragon boats (thanks you Sara, I borrowed the pictures).

 A Round of Words in 80 Days is a blog challenge that knows you have a life. Come and visit the Blog Hop. We have cookies!!

 What do you do to reward yourself for being productive or completing a goal, Dear Readers?

Me? I will go ride carousels and dragon boats...