Archive for the ‘The Horse and His Boy Movie News’ Category

NarniaFans Mailbag #44: Filming Order, Regina Spektor and Invisible Army

Thursday, July 30th, 2009

This week has been flying by.  I just remembered that it was Thursday, and that I hadn’t written this week’s mailbag.  So I’m spending lunch time writing this week’s installment.  I spent Tuesday riding roller coasters at Cedar Point, and around that day there were some really huge things happening in the world of Narnia.  The third film started shooting, and we’ve gotten some great photos of the Dawn Treader nearing completion.  I’ve got a couple of e-mails to answer this week, but before I do, I just wanted to give a status update on the secret project.  I’m currently working on speed issues on it, but it’s moving forward.  I have guests up from Florida so it’s going to take me a little longer than I had initially anticipated, but I hope that it’s worth the wait.

And a quick update on Chesterton’s The Everlasting Man that just came in from a woman named Barbara:  “C.S. Lewis’s appreciation for Chesterton’s The Everlasting Man in correspondence is well known. Tolkien borrowed the idea for Ents from Chesterton’s The Trees of Pride!  I hope these facts were brought to your attention.” Thanks Barbara!

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NarniaFans Mailbag #34: Anna Popplewell and Georgie Henley’s books, William Moseley and Prince Caspian

Friday, May 15th, 2009

I apologize for being late with this week’s mailbag.  Wednesday was the season finale of Lost and then Thursday was the season finale of The Office.  It was a very busy week besides all of that as well.  Anyway, let’s get started.

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NarniaFans Mailbag #32: More Dawn Treader Art, and old letters surface

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009

For this week’s Mailbag, I looked in my inbox and realized a couple of things: first, there was only one e-mail for this week’s mailbag.  I could take this to mean that it’s not a good feature to bring back, but that would be ridiculous.  I enjoy the chance to answer e-mails and also to put my own voice into the site just a little bit.

On a related note, I share Andrew Adamson’s birthday.  Who knew?  Andrew, if you’re reading this, that must be the reason we have similar creative minds.

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After Voyage of the Dawn Treader: Silver Chair, then Horse and His Boy

Sunday, June 1st, 2008

Sci-Fi Pulse has finally posted their red carpet interview video for Prince Caspian. In that, Douglas Gresham mentions a bit about what they’re doing with the production order for the Narnia films. From what he says, it looks like the production will continue as the books were published.

This is the smartest way to do it. Narnia purists will tell you that the only way to read the books for the first time is the original publication order. That’s what I tell anyone to do, that has not read them yet to do.

Anyway, on the red carpet in New York, Douglas Gresham says:

We still have five books to do. I’m working right now on pre-production on The Voyage of the Dawn Treader, and I’m already starting discussions on The Silver Chair; and we’re just toying with the idea of doing The Horse and His Boy after that. So we are thinking ahead.

This doesn’t confirm it solidly, but it does show a bit more of what they’re planning. That’ll just leave The Magician’s Nephew and The Last Battle to close out the series.

Watch the video on Sci-Fi Pulse. There’s a great part where Georgie Henley meets Liam Neeson. Priceless!

BREAKING! All Seven Narnia Books to be Filmed!

Saturday, July 28th, 2007

News has just come out of Comic-Con 2007 that all seven of the Chronicles of Narnia will be filmed. They also added that from Prince Caspian onward, all of the films will be released in May of the following year.

This is very exciting news, and I’m probably the most excited I’ve been, as I now know that I’ll be seeing The Last Battle on the big screen. It’s my personal favorite of the series, and if they get it right, it’s going to be visual effects intensive (not that the rest of the films are not, it’s just got some elements that will need to be poured over to appear completely realistic).

They did not, however, announce the order of release for the films. Currently, they’ve been releasing the films in the original order of the release of the books. That’s a fantastic way to do it, and I’m glad they chose to do it in that way. If they opt to film the next six films as two trilogies of stories, then The Magician’s Nephew might come before The Horse and His Boy.

I’d actually rather have it continue the traditional release pattern set by C.S. Lewis when the books were released, and have The Horse and His Boy come before The Magician’s Nephew. Then we’ll have the two bookends to the Narnia story come one right after the other.

What are your thoughts? Excited? Concerned? Share them on our forum!

From MTV.com:

And, according to director Andrew Adamson and producer Mark Johnson, they’ll be doing it again every year for the next decade.

“As long as you keep embracing these movies, we’ll make all seven,” Johnson told an appreciative audience. “We start the end of January on “The Voyage of the Dawn Treader.’ Our goal is to give you [a new] one every May starting [next year].”

The announcement came after a computer pre-visualization which showed the Pevensie children storming King Miraz’s castle alongside Prince Caspian, flying onto the topmost turrets in the talons of giant griffins.

Griffins, yes – but not Gryffindors. Comparing his work on “Narnia” to that OTHER long running fantasy series, Adamson insisted that future “Narnia” films will be both more consistent and more faithfully inclusive to the source than “Harry Potter.”

“‘Harry Potter’ is a different [animal],” he said via satellite from Prague. “C.S Lewis wrote more efficiently [than J.K. Rowling]. We have a chance to embellish, [not exclude].”

If It Ain’t Broke, Break It–And Call This An Improvement

Thursday, November 16th, 2006

In Leviticus 10:1-2 we read how Nadab and Abihu, sons of Aaron the first High Priest of Israel, brought God’s wrath on themselves by lighting their incense burners from an unauthorized flame source. Their disastrous action–disastrous because in those days God was using specific rituals to teach mankind spiritual truths, which only later would become comprehensible _without_ such exacting ritual requirements–may have been prompted by mere sloppiness or laziness. Here as in many places, the Bible does not give us a modern-day novel’s approach of looking inside people’s thoughts. But maybe, just maybe, the junior priests had a notion that they were _improving_ the process with some kind of refinements of their own. The least plausible of all explanations is that they got together and said to each other, “Hey, let’s corrupt the order of worship just to see what we can get away with!” Much of the damage done in this world is done by people who don’t exactly mean to rebel against God–they just figure they have a better idea. And even in the peripheral zones of human creativity, it can happen that people make “improvements”–which AREN’T.

The existing Narnia movie, while I would have done a few things differently, does NOT feature any alterations or expansions which I would consider damaging…providing that the slight ambiguity about Aslan’s status as Deity is cleared up in later films, as indeed they could hardly avoid clearing it up and still be filming the Chronicles of Narnia. I am, for the record, confident that the future films WILL be done right, and that I will have no serious complaints. But perhaps it wouldn’t hurt to imagine (and so be forewarned against) some “anti-improvements” which could occur if scripts for the follow-on movies were to be written by writers who DON’T appreciate the vision of Mr. Lewis. “Prince Caspian” being already scripted, I’ll start with “Dawn Treader.”

Might as well begin big and absurd. I really don’t think this would _ever_ happen, but you can’t QUITE be certain in today’s climate of political correctness. What if, instead of Eustace being a spoiled brat because of amoral socialist-humanist-secularist indoctrination, they showed him as being a spoiled brat precisely because of having a _religious_ education? Some of the regular visitors to this forum have experience of Christian homeschooling, and as a corollary are aware of the unfair, dishonest slurs that are uttered from some quarters about it and all Christian education. If a revisionist screenwriter were so bold as to change Eustace’s background story so radically, he could then proceed to portray all of Eustace’s complaints about the Narnian world as being motivated by “religious narrow-mindedness.” Before laughing off this conjecture, let the reader consider just how much modern fantasy and sci-fi writing makes a staple of slamming Christians as bigoted and anti-intellectual.

Extending this thought into “The Silver Chair,” political correctness would require the wicked bullies at the rotten school all to be boys, and their harassing of Jill Pole to be based on sexism–which again would be blamed on Christianity. Now, even a CRAZY revisionist writer, even if Rosie O’Donnell were financing the movie, couldn’t get away with having _every_ reference to Christianity be so negative–not without abandoning all pretense of doing Narnian stories at all. The trick would be to create hateful associations for every aspect of the Christian faith which the writer didn’t like, but then somehow to assure us that Jesus, in the person of Aslan, still had “the right kind” of Christianity to offer. The role model for “the right kind of Christianity” might be found in Father Mulcahey from the old “M*A*S*H” television series. Father Mulcahey was allowed to be seen as a good guy–BECAUSE he never stressed the Lordship of Jesus, never called believers to any purpose more theological than helping an orphanage, and above all NEVER showed the slightest sympathy to the cause of stopping Communism from conquering free nations.

As I say, I don’t think any of the above will actually be done–not even if (God forbid) Douglas Gresham is unable to stay with the project for all seven films. But “The Silver Chair” does offer another opening for harmful revisionism whose realization is JUST barely plausible. I have in mind the underground people of Bizm. Since their subterranean country is, as it were, inside the foundations of the Narnian world, it might be tempting for a screenwriter with New Age Earth-worshipping inclinations to tamper with the dialogue that Eustace and Jill have with these cavedwellers after the Green Witch (ding, dong) is dead. The people of Bizm could be made to talk all sorts of “Mother Earth” talk and “All Is One” talk…while the writer claimed (and maybe even sincerely believed) that the implied pantheism was nothing hostile to Biblical doctrines.

A similar degradation could be inflicted on “The Horse And His Boy,” in the name of multiculturalism. The Narnians (representing Christians, don’t forget) who are shown visiting Calormen could be shown as feeling themselves _inferior_ to the Calormenes in many aspects of civilization. Worse yet, the full significance of Rabadash’s aggression against Archenland might be severely diminished–by a plot approach common to many “realistic” movies of the past. Back in Cold War times, there were screenwriters who seemingly could not BEAR to think that Communist governments could be inherently bad; and so, if a film needed a villain who came from Red China or the Soviet Union, they would say that the villain was a fluke, NOT AT ALL representative of the nation he came from. A politically correct movie of “The Horse And His Boy” would not only show Rabadash as acting on his own initiative, but seek to convince us that his malicious intent was absolutely NOT characteristic of the Calormene aristocracy. The movie might even show the Narnian and Archenlandish defenders as unable to beat the superior numbers of Rabadash’s forces–being rescued then by OTHER CALORMENES who come to their aid, proving themselves good guys and proving the “real” Calormene culture (Tash-worship _included_) to be a positive thing.

I’m glad I _don’t_ for a minute believe that any of these ruinous changes will be made when adapting the later Narnian books for the screen. If such tampering did occur, I would shudder with nausea (might even start using the expression “Chronicles of Nausea”) at the thought of what revisionists would do to “The Last Battle.” For I have seen imaginative stories relating to the Apocalyptic times yet to come for our own world; some writers of such tales have brought into them ideas of what’s right and wrong which are seriously _opposed_ to Christian principles. And writers doing this did not always have the slightest awareness that they WERE contradicting Christianity.

I hope no one thinks that I am raising Mr. Lewis’ tales to a dignity equal with Holy Scripture, or lowering Holy Scripture to the level of mere fantasy. But the Chronicles of Narnia, though they are not strictly allegories, do have an immense parable-type value which ought not to be impaired by distortions. We would not want a pastor’s Sunday sermon to be rewritten in a way that caused it to contradict God’s Word; and the tales of Narnia are easily as worthy of safeguarding as a book of Sunday sermons.

PO1 Joseph Richard Ravitts, USN Ret.

Ut fidem praestem in difficultate!

Filming on Prince Caspian and Dawn Treader Back to Back?

Monday, April 24th, 2006

In a Narnia Fans Exclusive, ~Rogue~, a moderator here at Narnia Fans’ Dancing Lawn Forums, had a chance to meet Skandar Keynes. Not only that, but they talked a bit about the filming of the next Narnia films.

Skandar KeynesSkandar is reported as saying that they plan on filming Prince Caspian and The Voyage of the Dawn Treader back-to-back. It gives himself and Georgie less time to grow up, and he’ll be gone from England for a year this time.

This news comes hot on the heels of a new article in Entertainment Weekly about the rest of the series to be filmed, and in what order. Here’s a summary of what it says:

Prince Caspian: It’s the only other book to feature all four of the Pevensie kids. The script is currently being written. Producer Mark Johnson says that adapting this book “is proving tougher than Wardrobe.” Granat added that the film could be bumped from Christmas 2007 to Christmas 2008, due to the daunting demands of the special effects.

The Voyage of the Dawn Treader, The Silver Chair: Caspian will be followed by Dawn Treader, which features Edmund and Lucy. Walden plans to make Caspian, Dawn Treader, and Silver Chair as a trilogy of interlocking films, to be shot in that order.

The Magician’s Nephew, The Horse and His Boy, The Last Battle: It looks like they’ll, be shooting the last three books in this order, which is not even in original publishing order, but that’s alright. It brings back some characters in The Horse and His Boy that reappear in The Last Battle, so it makes sense.

And there you have it! Thanks ~Rogue~, for getting that exclusive on the back-to-back filming! And thanks to Princess Rosario for e-mailing about the EW article (even though we’d already seen it).