The Golden Compass Promotional Footage and On the Issue of God and Religion in the His Dark Materials Films (Updated)

Here is a first look at footage from the upcoming adaptation of Pullman’s first His Dark Materials book.

There are many things that look promising about the film, but I’d like to say something about the theme of religion and fundamentalism in the series. A little over two years ago, press reports began noting that God and religion had been excised from the film version of the trilogy and fans went into an uproar. Philip Pullman responded by noting the following:

And that is why those who are intent on mischief will do what fundamentalists of every stripe always do: insist on a literal interpretation of every single word, a point-by-point identification of this with that, a ‘correct’ reading that’s authorised and approved and certified by the authorities they submit to. …There are more ways than one of telling the story of Lyra and Will

While I think this is entirely true, it is an unfair response to the reasons that fans cringe at the removal of references to religion–and Christianity in particular. Read the rest of this entry »

Some Tolkien Lore: Andrew Lang’s Fairy Books and Tolkien’s Childhood Stories

Though this blog has not been visited by a large number of people, I was surprised to learn that somehow people are finding some of my posts. I never intended this: I set up the blog to post articles by others that had interested me and might prove valuable for some later research project (I did this so that I could have the articles readily available in one place). But, since clearly many are interested in the popular culture, mythology, and fandom that fascinates me, perhaps I will try to comment more on what I post.

So here is some Tolkien blogging:

I was recently working on a project related to fairy tales and anthropology in the 19th century, and I became very interested in Andrew Lang. He was a Scottish anthropologist, classicist, folklorist, author, and journalist who seems to have involved himself in nearly every argument going on in Victorian England. He argued vocally with Max Müller over Müller’s theories of solar mythology (Müller contended that most ancient myths are really allegorical representations of nature), and he argued with Edward Tylor over the origins of religious thought. In the 1890s, he began collecting and compiling world folklore and mythology and published many volumes of color-coded “Fairy Books.” For children growing up at this time, Lang’s Fairy Books would have been much like the Grimms’ collection.

J.R.R. Tolkien, who was born in 1892, grew up as Lang’s books were published, and they had an enormous impact on him. In The Red Fairy Book, Lang included “The Story of Sigurd” from The Volsung Saga. The story, which featured Fafnir the dragon, excited Tolkien’s imagination and is particularly important to his later. As Humphrey Carpenter, Tolkien’s biographer, notes (from J.R.R. Tolkien: A biography, page 30) :

[Tolkien] found delight in the Fairy Books of Andrew Lang, especially the Red Fairy Book, for tucked away in its closing pages was the best story he had ever read. This was the tale of Sigurd who slew the dragon Fafnir: a strange and powerful tale set in the nameless North. Whenever he read it Ronald found it absorbing: “I desired dragons with a profound desire,” he said long afterwards. “Of course, I in my timid body did not wish to have them in the neighborhood. But the world that contained even the imagination of Fafnir was richer and more beautiful, at whatever cost of peril.”

I am bringing this up because during my research on Lang, I found an excellent website on the Fairy Books. At that site, you can access every single one of the 13 books. Of course, they probably influenced many of Tolkien’s colleagues in the world of literary fantasy as well (Lewis would have been familiar with him too). So you can browse that website and read some myths and tales you may never have read before, or see how the myths you already know were presented to young Tolkien. Doing so, you’ll find all sorts of gems, like these from “The Story of Sigurd”:

“When Sigurd heard the story he said to Regin:

`Make me a good sword that I may kill this Dragon.’

So Regin made a sword, and Sigurd tried it with a blow on a lump of iron, and the sword broke.

Another sword he made, and Sigurd broke that too.

Then Sigurd went to his mother, and asked for the broken pieces of his father’s blade, and gave them to Regin. And he hammered and wrought them into a new sword, so sharp that fire seemed to burn along its edges.”

It is important to note that these were not collected by Lang in the same way that we think of the Grimms literally transcribing tales from “the folk.” Lang re-presented texts that he collected, and as such, anyone interested in the influence of these stories should see how they were presented to Tolkien–how Lang edited them and changed them from other sources to make them suitable for Victorian children.

Other connections between Tolkien and Lang: Tolken quoted Lang a few times in his famous essay “On Fairy Stories,” and while at Oxford, he actually supervised Roger Lancellyn Green’s dissertation on Lang (Green has written many books on modern fantasy writers).

CNN Transcript of Narnia as Passion for Kids Segment

Link

VERJEE: The new film “The Chronicles of Narnia” tells the tale of four children who tumble through the door of a magical wardrobe, then they discover a wondrous land where animals speak and unicorns roam.

CLANCY: Sounds really good. On the surface, “The Lion, the witch and the Wardrobe,” the whole setup doesn’t seem to be deeply spiritual story. But why are the marketers focusing so much on religious undertones as they promote the film?

Delia Gallagher has more on that.
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‘Nemo’ fans net fish warning

‘Nemo’ fans net fish warning
Animal welfare groups cite concerns in latest film pet craze

Link

(CNN) –The hit Disney movie “Finding Nemo” is bringing smiles and sales to pet stores, where clownfish, blue tangs and aquarium accessories are flying off the shelves.

But the retailers’ glee contrasts with a sense of frustration among animal welfare activists.

“Probably every shelter in the world cringes when a pet gets hot in the movies, on TV or in a commercial,” said Kathy Bauch of the Humane Society of the United States.
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Tony Watkins Interviews Philip Pullman (In depth theological discussion)

Link

Philip Pullman: About ten years ago I got very interested in the growth of these sort of home-based Christian groups. I wanted to find out how they worked, what they did, what motivated them and so on. I discovered a group that was holding regular meetings in one of the Oxford cinemas, and they’ve got an office in The Cornmarket in Oxford above a betting shop. So I went and knocked on the door and said I was interested. And it was very curious to talk to them, to talk to the chap in charge. But even more curious to go to this meeting on a Sunday in this big cinema in Broad Street, because here was quite a large group of people, all of whom were intensely bound together in sort of networks of fellowship and mutual aid: ‘So and so’s just had a baby – what can we do to help?’ That sort of thing. ‘So and so’s volunteered for baby sitting.’ All this sort of stuff. Everything was done by couples: Bob and Shirley, Tom and Mary, as if they didn’t have an individual existence but only a joint existence. And of course they had their own school, the King’s School, they call it.

It seemed to me that, invisible to the general population, certainly invisible to me before then, was a sort of secret welfare state, in effect. It was a strange thing because if you were in trouble there was instantly a dozen, two dozen, scores of people ready to help, keen and eager to help. You know, anything from babysitting to help with looking after a relative who was dying. All these people were there and ready to pitch in and help and so on. Which was fine and jolly good. But at the same time they went in for speaking in tongues in a rather self-conscious way. It was very odd, because they had this well-organised service, lasting about three hours, It was well organised because it seemed to be very casual and informal, and if the Spirit moved you, you went to the front and said something: ‘I’ve got a happy announcement – so and so’s had a baby. Isn’t it wonderful? Well done everybody.’ But you could see that it was very controlled and there were moments of excitement and emotional intensity, then again some friendly announcements, and so on.

There was a sort of controlling intelligence behind all this. At one point, during one of the moments of intensity, there were three or four chaps at the front, sort of praying. And one of them started going ‘gobbledygobbledy gobbledygobbledy’ and I thought, ‘Blimey, he’s gone mad. Oh no, he’s speaking in tongues.’ But the interesting thing was — because I’d never seen this before, as far as I was concerned it’s a lot of old fraud — as soon as the others saw him, you could see them [looking sideways at him] and then speaking in tongues themselves, or pretending to, because whether he was being moved in some strange way – maybe he was – they weren’t. They were doing what he was doing in order to join in. So it was a curious thing: here were these people doing all sorts of good things in a sort of social way, yet behaving entirely (it seemed to me) fraudulently when it came to that. I couldn’t get to grips with it. I was interested because I wanted to do a story, a novel against that sort of background but nothing came of it. It’s an experience which is just sort of there and hasn’t been used.

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NYT: Evidence of Christians Directly Influencing Marketing of Narnia (1/21/06)

Television Cul-de-Sac Mystery: Why Was Reality Show Killed?
By JACQUES STEINBERG
January 21, 2006
Link

AUSTIN, Tex. – A year ago, Stephen Wright and his partner, John Wright, embarked on a sociology experiment that only a reality show producer could concoct: theirs was one of seven families competing to persuade the residents of a cul-de-sac here to award them a red-brick McMansion purchased on their behalf by the ABC television network.

The unscripted series, “Welcome to the Neighborhood,” was heavily promoted and scheduled to appear in a summer time slot usually occupied by “Desperate Housewives.” Stephen Wright, 51, who was already living in a nice house a few miles away with his partner and adopted son, said he participated primarily for one reason: to show tens of millions of prime-time viewers that a real gay family might, over the course of six episodes, charm a neighborhood whose residents overwhelmingly identified themselves as white, Christian and Republican.
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BBC: Pullman attacks Narnia film plans (10/16/05)

Pullman attacks Narnia film plans
Author Philip Pullman has attacked plans to turn The Chronicles of Narnia into a movie series, calling CS Lewis’ books “racist” and “misogynistic”.

The first film in the series – The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe – is due to be released in December.

His Dark Materials author Pullman said the 1950s stories were “reactionary”.

“If the Disney corporation wants to market this film as a great Christian story, they’ll just have to tell lies about it,” he told The Observer.
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Holy war looms over Disney’s Narnia epic (10/16/05)

Holy war looms over Disney’s Narnia epic
As the UK prepares for a CS Lewis movie blockbuster this Christmas, a row has broken out about its Christian message
by Paul Harris
Sunday October 16, 2005
The Observer

To millions The Chronicles of Narnia are a childhood tale of wonder and triumph now made into a film that could inspire millions of children to read. To others, including the celebrated fantasy author Philip Pullman, they are stories of racism and thinly veiled religious propaganda that will corrupt children rather than inspiring them.

Either way, one thing is certain: this Christmas, and perhaps the next six, depending on sequels, everyone will be talking about Narnia. Disney is already in the middle of one of the biggest marketing campaigns in recent cinematic history. It is trying to lure both mainstream filmgoers and evangelical Christians, who will respond to CS Lewis’s parallels between his characters and the Bible. HarperCollins is set to publish 170 Lewis-related books in more than 60 countries, many of them Christian-themed works. Disney has hired Christian marketing groups to handle the film.
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Mess Market Media:A short lesson on why the existential void (and good writing) shouldn’t just be for kids

Mess Market Media:A short lesson on why the existential void (and good writing) shouldn’t just be for kids
By Hannah Strom-Martin

Pop-culture analysts and members of the PTA have long been rattling the bars, swearing that children are being talked down to, taken advantage of, and otherwise cheated by purveyors of entertainment. It’s a fair assumption–just look at the kiddie-centric, late-stage career of Ice Cube. What these same people and, indeed, the entire viewing or reading public often fail to take into account is that adults have it far worse; the entire reality TV oeuvre, for example, is aimed at people old enough to wear Jessica Simpson cosmetics.

One would assume, given the moral sewer that currently passes for television, that literary-minded adults would fare much better. Literature has always been the last refuge of complex, original ideas, right? Well, it depends on what sort of literature you’re talking about. Because frankly, my dear, when it comes to pop-lit, the adults are getting the soggy end of the stick.
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For the Love of Narnia

Hello! I see that many people are coming to this spot to read the Michael Nelson article about Narnia that I’ve linked to below. Please feel free to look around the rest of the blog; though I began this blog only to save articles that interested me (as a form of e-newspaper clipping), I’ve begun commenting on many of the topics that the articles I cite discuss. These topics include the following: mythology, popular culture, films and books(like Tolkien’s books, Harry Potter, Narnia, Star Wars, and Philip Pullman’s books), fandom, some politics, and some religion. These are all things that I’m studying in graduate school today, so I’d love to hear your thoughts on these topics as well as your thoughts on my thoughts! Thanks for coming and enjoy the article!

The Chronicle of Higher Education: The Chronicle Review
12/2/2005

For the Love of Narnia
By MICHAEL NELSON

The strategy for marketing the movie The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, which will open across the country on December 9, resembles nothing so much as the strategy used to re-elect George W. Bush as president in 2004: Pursue mainstream voters, er, viewers in widely broadcast ads that stress martial valor and family values, and target Christian evangelicals with overtly religious appeals church by church, radio station by radio station.
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