Tuesday, January 8, 2008

Link to a forum : The Golden Compass (there will be no sequel)

12-02-2007(>49 posts)
First comment from this forum :

"I went with my daughter to a sneak preview showing of the Golden Compass. The theater was sold out. To put it quite simply, the movie did not have an ending. The audience sat there in stunned silence as the movie simply ended. I did not hear a single positive comment about the film as we left the theater. We actually felt "ripped-off" as we left the theater.

I was hoping that there would be an ending that would explain what happened in the previous, laborious 1 hour and 45 minutes. It was nothing more than boring confusion.

While the producers are banking on the fact that people will flock to see the sequel, I don't see this as a likely possibility. People have to like the first movie before they will see a sequel.

If the sequel has already been shot, I would suggest that it will go direct to DVD and bypass the theaters. This movie, and toys based upon it, are destined for the $1 bargain bin."

Link to a forum : Awful

12-09-2007 (>10 posts)
First comment from this forum :

"Its fascinating how the dimwits who made the movie effecively destroyed the book. Its understandable that the movie cant incorporate all the scenes from the book, but how can you not show the ending??? Incorporated in the Book or into the Movie, it leaves the reader pending, and wanting to know what happens when the bridge is crossed... Aside from the fact that the story seemed rushed, the character development in the movie was abysmal. The development of Lyra as a person, who moves on from being a child and finally an adult is one of the most crucial elements of the trilogy. In the film, Lyra fails to change into nothing more than what she started of as. I hope (if there is) the sequal proves me wrong."

see this forum at :
http://www.rottentomatoes.com/vine/showthread.php?t=602956

Link to a forum : I Love The Golden Compass

12-09-2007 (>10 posts)
First comment from this forum :

"This is a fantastic movie.
I think kids ages 12 and older will like it. The daemons are really cool (mine is a gibbon). It is a mysterious story, based on an oppressing 'magestirium', magic dust(atoms), and disappearing children. The magestirium represents the catholic church, who are furious at the movie. They lie, distort science, and steal your soul. The parallels to fantasy and reality are really awesome.

The special effects in this movie are outstanding and breathtaking, really should be seen on the big screen. The story and ideas are original, have deeper meanings, intriguing and mysterious to the end.

As far as having no ending, the story within does wrap 'part one' very well. It's not quite a cliffhanger as Lord of The Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring. What people are talking about is after the ending, they have a 'lead in' to part two. The book is a Trilogy.

I have heard people rip the movie, they either have no imagination are close minded or are comparing it to the books. You have to realize that any movie is a "cliff notes" version of the books. Any movie is going to be a "fly by" overview of the book. Still it has heart, its intriguing, good allegory, outstanding special effects and very lovable characters.

I love the bear(Byronson) and also "the wild west" character by Sam Elliot(Scoresby), I like the Daemons and the idea of your soul living outside you in a shape-shifting animal.

Way better than the Chronicles of Narnia, I recommends this movie to anyone who loves Fantasy, special effects and action and appreciates anti-catholic allegory. I want to go see it again.

Also the song for the movie was done by the incredible KATE BUSH."

Sunday, January 6, 2008

The Golden Compass movie

Release Date: December 7, 2007
Studio: New Line Cinema
Director: Chris Weitz
Screenwriter: Chris Weitz
Starring: Nicole Kidman, Daniel Craig, Sam Elliott, Eva Green, Dakota Blue Richards, Ian McKellen, Ian McShane, Freddy Highmore, Kathy Bates, Tom Courtenay, Ben Walker, Adam Godley, Simon McBurney, Nonso Anozie, Jim Carter, Clare Higgins, Jack Shepherd, Magda Szubanski
Genre: Action, Adventure, Drama, Fantasy, Thriller
MPAA Rating: Not Available
Official Website: GoldenCompassmovie.com
Review: Not Available
DVD Review: Not Available
DVD: Not Available


Plot Summary: Based on author Philip Pullman's bestselling and award-winning novel, "The Golden Compass" tells the first story in Pullman's "His Dark Materials" trilogy. "The Golden Compass" is an exciting fantasy adventure, set in an alternative world where people's souls manifest themselves as animals, talking bears fight wars, and Gyptians and witches co-exist. At the center of the story is Lyra (played by newcomer Dakota Blue Richards), a 12-year-old girl who starts out trying to rescue a friend who's been kidnapped by a mysterious organization known as the Gobblers - and winds up on an epic quest to save not only her world, but ours as well. "The Golden Compass" stars an ensemble cast that includes Nicole Kidman, Daniel Craig, Sam Elliott, and Ian McShane. The film is written and directed by Chris Weitz ("About A Boy," "Antz") and produced by Deborah Forte and Bill Carraro ("Frequency"). It is executive produced by Andrew Miano and Paul Weitz ("In Good Company"). "The Golden Compass" is scheduled for a Dec. 7, 2007 release.

News : Pullman not promoting atheism in ‘Golden Compass’ (Nov. 2, 2007)

Author on anti-Catholic criticism and how he imagined the epic world
TODAY
updated 1:22 p.m. ET Nov. 2, 2007

“The Golden Compass” is the first in Philip Pullman’s “His Dark Materials” trilogy. In the first volume, Pullman invites readers into a world as convincing and thoroughly realized as Narnia, Earthsea or Redwall. Here lives an 11-year-old orphaned ward named Lyra Belacqua, whose carefree life among the scholars at Oxford's Jordan College is shattered by the arrival of two powerful visitors. First, her fearsome uncle, Lord Asriel, appears with evidence of mystery and danger in the far North, including photographs of a mysterious celestial phenomenon called Dust and the dim outline of a city suspended in the Aurora Borealis that he suspects is part of an alternate universe. He leaves Lyra in the care of Mrs. Coulter, an enigmatic scholar and explorer who offers to give Lyra the attention her uncle has long refused her.

Some eager readers sent in questions for Philip. In his answers, he discusses anti-Catholic comments, how he imagined such an epic world, and how he came up with the daemon characters. Read his responses:

How do you respond to the claim that your books are anti-Catholic and promote atheism? Lyndsay Petersen, Parkersburg, Iowa

Hello, Lyndsay:
In the world of the story — Lyra’s world — there is a church that has acquired great political power, rather in the way that some religions in our world have done at various times, and still do (think of the Taliban in Afghanistan). My point is that religion is at its best — it does most good — when it is farthest away from political power, and that when it gets hold of the power to (for example) send armies to war or to condemn people to death, or to rule every aspect of our lives, it rapidly goes bad. Sometimes people think that if something is done in the name of faith or religion, it must be good. Unfortunately, that isn’t true; some things done in the name of religion are very bad. That was what I was trying to describe in my story.

I think the qualities that the books celebrate are those such as kindness, love, courage and courtesy too. And intellectual curiosity. All these good things. And the qualities that the books attack are cold-heartedness, tyranny, close-mindedness, cruelty, the things that we all agree are bad things.

Is there an underlying message for atheism in your book or did you simply want to write a fantasy story, like Tolkien? Kim Mapstead, Friday Harbor, Wash.

Hello, Kim: What I was mainly doing, I hope, was telling a story, but not a story like Tolkien’s. (To be honest I don’t much care for “The Lord of the Rings.”) As for the atheism, it doesn’t matter to me whether people believe in God or not, so I’m not promoting anything of that sort. What I do care about is whether people are cruel or whether they’re kind, whether they act for democracy or for tyranny, whether they believe in open-minded enquiry or in shutting the freedom of thought and expression. Good things have been done in the name of religion, and so have bad things; and both good things and bad things have been done with no religion at all. What I care about is the good, wherever it comes from.



How do you imagine such an epic world in “The Golden Compass”? Did you look for it or did it come to you? Muhaimin

Hello, Muhaimin: This is an interesting question, because it’s something I’ve often wondered about myself. When I’m telling a story I know, with part of my mind, that I’m making it up; but with another part of my mind, it feels as if I’m discovering something that is already there, in some mysterious way, and I’m learning about it rather than inventing it. So I can’t give you a definite answer! The one thing I do know is that if I don’t work steadily and try to write every day, no story will get written at all. So I try to do that.

I have always wondered about a bear's armor. It is said that armor is the soul of the bear, yet doesn't Iorek forge a replacement set? Perhaps I misunderstood something from the text, but if the armor is taken from a bear, does creating a new set give the bear his soul back? Paul Jacobs, Corvallis, Ore.

Hello Paul: Thanks for the question. When Iorek said that to Lyra — describing his armour as his soul — he was using a metaphor to express how important the armour was to him. Each bear makes his own armour, piece by piece, and gradually acquires the full set as he grows to maturity; so naturally it’s very important and special. The forging scene involving Iorek doesn’t involve his armour, but Will’s Subtle Knife.

Random House

Dear Mr. Pullman, My class is reading “The Golden Compass” and we were wondering how did you come with the concept of daemons? What inspired you? Hayden (age 8) Annadale, Va.

Hello, Hayden: Thank you for the question, and please give my greetings to your class and to your teacher. The idea of daemons came to me very suddenly and from nowhere that I can be sure of. I wrote the first chapter of “The Golden Compass” several times before I got it right, and at first it wasn’t going well at all. I didn’t know why until I realized that Lyra had to have a companion to speak to and share things with, and suddenly this daemon idea just came into my mind. It was an exciting moment, and it made the whole story come into focus for me. I’m still discovering new things to do with the idea, and I’m writing about them in a book that will be called “The Book of Dust.” But I’m a long way from finishing that yet.

source : http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21595083/

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News : Golden Compass author hits back (Thursday, 29 November 2007)

Thursday, 29 November 2007

The author of the book on which the new film The Golden Compass is based has hit back at critics who accuse him of peddling "candy-coated atheism".

Phillip Pullman
Phillip Pullman won the Whitbread prize for the third part of his trilogy

Philip Pullman dismissed as "absolute rubbish" accusations by the US-based Catholic League that the film promotes atheism and denigrates Christianity.

"I am a story teller," he said. "If I wanted to send a message I would have written a sermon."

The Golden Compass - which stars Nicole Kidman - premiered in London on Tuesday.

Epic battle

The film also stars James Bond actor Daniel Craig and is based on the first part of Mr Pullman's best-selling His Dark Materials children's trilogy.

In the book - set in an imaginary world - the heroine Lyra fights against the Magisterium, an evil organisation some have interpreted as based on the Catholic Church.


The three-part series culminates in an epic battle in which God dies - at the hand of a child.

Those who have seen the film - which cost £90m to make - say the explicit anti-religious message of the books has been muted. But the Catholic League, which bills itself as America's largest Catholic civil rights organisation, has nevertheless launched a nationwide boycott campaign.

Nicole Kidman and Dakota Blue Richards
Nicole Kidman and Dakota Blue Richards star in the film

The League says that parents might be taken in by the toned-down film - but will then be fooled into buying the "overtly atheistic and anti-Christian" books.

League President Bill Donohue said: "Eighty-five per cent of the people in this country are Catholic or Protestant and I'd like them to stay at home, or go see some other movie.

"Pullman is using this film as a sort of stealth campaign. He likes to play the game that he's really not atheistic and anti-Catholic. But yes he is and we have researched this.

"This movie is the bait for the books."

Too many layers

But Mr Pullman - who is attending Tuesday's premier in London's Leicester Square - dismissed the Catholic League as "a tiny, unrepresentative organisation."

He told the BBC: "The only person Bill Donohue represents is himself.

"I don't want to talk about these criticisms about atheism in my books. It's too long an argument to have, and there are too many layers to the subject."

A spokeswoman for the Catholic Church in Britain said she was unaware of a concerted UK campaign to boycott the film: "We have not seen the film yet, so we cannot comment on its message," she said.

Armoured bears fighting
Armoured bears feature in a fantasy set in an imaginary world

Christian journalist Peter Hitchens said that while he opposed a boycott, he wanted parents to be aware of Philip Pullman's themes.

He said: "If you buy this book for your child, don't imagine for a moment that you are handing over a neutral story: this author has a purpose.

"Don't forget, this is a writer who has previously gone on the record to say he is trying to undermine the basis of Christian belief."

Anti-religious

Ironically, Mr Pullman has also come under fire from secularists - who say there's isn't enough anti-religious sentiment in the film.

Terry Sanderson, president of the National Secular Society, said: "We knew from the beginning that the producers of this film intended to leave out the anti-religious references.

Daniel Craig
James Bond actor Daniel Craig plays Lord Asriel

"We think this is a great shame. The fight against the Magisterium (Pullman's thinly-disguised version of the Catholic Church) is the whole point of the book. Take that away and the most original and interesting element of the story is lost."

Whether the Catholic League's campaign against the Golden Compass will succeed is open to question.

It previously spoke out against the Da Vinci Code - a fictional film that alleged Jesus married and had a child.

The film went on to become one of the highest-grossing movies of 2006.

source : http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/7115300.stm

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