When Tolkien got precious with Lewis

From the cloistered world of Oxford they created two of the best-loved fantasy realms in English literature which themselves inspired blockbuster movies.

CS Lewis and JRR Tolkien were the closest of friends, one struggling to make his fantasy world of Middle Earth a literary reality, the other trying to convince friends his first book about Narnia deserved to be published.

But new research has revealed that their friendship was riven by the most bitter and personal of rows on everything from literature to religion and even their choice of spouse.

The fascinating revelations about their real relationship have been made by film-maker Norman Stone while researching a new drama-documentary on the life of Lewis. Stone, who made the award-winning movie about Lewis, Shadowlands, talked to mutual friends of the literary pair as well as examining documents in minute detail.

His portrayal of their frequent and occasionally destructive bickering comes on the eve of one of the most eagerly-awaited movies of the year, the £129m The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion the Witch and the Wardrobe, and follows the astounding critical and commercial success of the Lord of the Rings trilogy.

But Stone’s drama-documentary, to be broadcast in December this year, lays bare the sometimes unbearable tension between the two writers whose work would inspire Hollywood.

In CS Lewis, Beyond Narnia, Lewis and Tolkien are shown having a violent argument about The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe. Lewis wrote afterwards: “No harm in him, only needs a smack or so.”

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‘Cameras in Narnia’ by Ian Brodie

Ian Brodie’s new book, Cameras in Narnia, is now available for pre-order at his website & Amazon.com. (Ian is director of the New Zealand Fighter Pilots Museum in Wanaka.)

From his site: An essential guide to the filming in New Zealand of one of the most hotly anticipated movies of all time.

The first of the CS Lewis Chronicles of Narnia to be made into a movie is The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, and has been filmed and produced in New Zealand by Disney and Walden Media, with Kiwi director Andrew Adamson.

Ian Brodie has been on set and on location throughout its production, and has documented the making of the film from behind the cameras, with interviews with the director and key crew members. Using this movie as a specific example, he explains in layman’s terms the magical process of turning a much-loved classic of children’s literature into a blockbuster movie.

Through the latest Computer Generated Imaging techniques, the fabulous creatures of Narnia will astound viewers and this book explains how Aslan and Mr Tumnus were created, and why the centaurs look so real. Dolly grips, gaffers, clapperloaders and best boys are explained, and the process of making a movie documented with over 200 full-colour movie and behind-the-camera images, nearly all of them exclusive to this book.

This will be a valuable teaching tool and a superb record of a much-loved movie, with anecdotes and information to delight in equal measure.

All copies of this book purchased from his website will be autographed by the author.

The book’s release date is November 10, 2005, so it should arrive in plenty of time to read before the film’s opening in December. Lord of the Rings fans will be familiar with Ian’s outstanding Lord of the Rings Location Guide, essential for New Zealand visitors to Rings locations. This looks like a terrific followup.

Order from his website
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Exclusive Interview with Devin Brown, Author of Inside Narnia

Devin Brown took some time to answer some questions about the upcoming film, and his Chronicles of Narnia book. Take a look at at the introduction to the book!

Devin Brown is English Professor at Asbury College, where among other things, he teaches a class on C. S. Lewis and J. R. R. Tolkien. A recent review has called his book Inside Narnia: A Guide to Exploring The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe (Baker Books, Sept. 2005) an “indispensable reference” for those who want to learn more about Lewis’s classic story.

NarniaFans.com: How do you think the movie will impact Lewis’s legacy?

Devin Brown: Certainly the movie is going to generate a tidal wave of positive interest in C. S. Lewis and his writing. Some of this interest will be new, some will be renewed as it will come from an audience who read the Narnia stories when they were younger.

Lewis, whether in his books or now on screen, has an incredible ability to bring together very different kinds of people, which is a tremendous gift, one that we need now more than ever. The Chronicles of Narnia, perhaps more so than any other set of books, unite very diverse groups of people who join together in their appreciation of them: believers and non-believers, the old and the young, the literary and the non-academic, and even (gasp!) very different kinds of Christians. And this aspect, along with many others, makes The Chronicles of Narnia worth reading and the film adaptation of The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe worth seeing.

By the way, though it will be almost negligible, I expect the movie to also bring out a small amount of anti-Lewis sentiment. It will come from certain elements on the far right who criticize the Narnia stories because of their use of magic, and from certain elements on the far left who criticize the Narnia stories, not because they are Christian, but more, it seems to me, because Lewis himself was a Christian, a very serious, committed Christian.

NF: Will the movie attract new fans to Lewis’s other works?

Devin Brown: While some movie goers who enjoy the film won’t be interested enough to want to read more, many of them will, and for these people their interest can take them as far as they like. Because of the film, there will be a large number of people who will go on to read or to re-read The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. Some will read a second or a third book from the series (Prince Caspian would be a good choice); others will read the entire seven volumes.

Going beyond the Narnia stories will be a step that, I think, will be taken mainly by older fans. For them the next logical place to go after Narnia would be to read Lewis’s space trilogy, beginning with Out of the Silent Planet. The film is also going to generate interest in Lewis’s life, and for these people there are two really good biographies available, one written by Green and Hooper (just revised) and the other by George Sayer. I wouldn’t be surprised to see a jump in sales of the movie Shadowlands, which tells the story of Lewis’s marriage late in life to Joy Gresham.

For people who would like to read more about Narnia, there are a number of good books for them to choose from depending on exactly what their interest is. My book, Inside Narnia, goes through The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe from beginning to end looking closely at the text and adding interesting insights and details from Lewis’s life and other works.

NF: What were Lewis’s intentions for writing the work?

Devin Brown: So many people get confused about this issue of what Lewis’s intentions were that a few years after the story was published, Lewis himself decided to set the record straight. In a letter written to a fifth-grade class in Maryland, Lewis explained that he did not begin by trying to represent Jesus as he is in our world by a lion in Narnia. He made it clear that The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe is not an allegory where everything is supposed to ‘represent’ something in this world. (Lewis did write an allegory; it’s called The Pilgrim’s Regress.)

When Lewis set out to write The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe he set out to write a story, one that would communicate truth in a way not possible with a non-fiction format. He set out to write in a mythic way, because Lewis believed myth was “a real though unfocused gleam of divine truth falling on human imagination.”

NF: Were the characters in the book based on people in Lewis’s life?

Devin Brown: Lewis was a professor during World War II, he did live (somewhat) in the country, and like Professor Kirke in the story, Lewis was a bachelor at the time and did have school children come stay with him when London was being bombed by the Germans. So you could argue that Lewis put some of himself into this character.

At the same time, Professor Kirke also resembles the tutor Lewis privately studied with instead of attending the last years of high school. William Kirkpatrick, besides bearing a similar name to Professor Kirke in the story, shared a number of other similarities. He also had white hair and shaggy white mutton chops and was noted for his rigorous logic, a passion which gets echoed in the Professor’s statement, “Logic! Why don’t they teach logic at these schools?”

There were several other elements from Lewis’s life which he adopted for his own story-telling purposes and made his own. For example the Professor’s house and the surrounding countryside could be seen to be loosely based on Lewis’s memories of Little Lea, his boyhood home in Belfast, Northern Ireland. Interestingly, there were actually two wardrobes, one in Little Lea and one which Lewis owned as an adult, which may (or may not) have been in the back of his mind when he was picturing the one at the Professor’s.

NF: How faithful is the movie going to be to the original writing?

Devin Brown: To fully know how close the movie is to the book, we are going to have to wait until December 9th when the final version of the film comes out. In interviews, director Andrew Adamson has always said it was his intention to be faithful to the original. Even when he has added more material to flesh out some of the lesser developed characters, he has claimed that anything he added was “all there in the book.”

Comments from two other heavyweights add further support. In an interview Douglas Gresham, Lewis’s stepson and one of the film’s co-producers, claimed, “Of course, the story is adhered to, so it is going to be terrific.” Michael Flaherty of Walden Media put it this way: “The film is the book, pure and simple. So any themes in the book are there in the film.”

Lewis fans, in addition to loving Narnia, also love the internet. Within 24 hours after the movie trailer was released, I read in a chat room that one viewer was “outraged” because the wardrobe in the movie has a dustcover on it. I doubt this is the kind of detail most people think about when the question of faithfulness comes up. Having said this, I think having Lucy pull this cover off actually improves on Lewis’s original scene from the book (gasp again!).

Sixteen-year-old Anna Popplewell, who plays Susan, has put a slightly different twist on the fidelity question. When asked about the way she interpreted her character, Popplewell said, “Not that it’s very different from C. S. Lewis’s Susan, but the way in which C. S. Lewis wrote the books means that the characters are open to a certain amount of interpretation, because he writes with this wonderful style and tone that encourages you to use your imagination and create characters for yourself slightly.”

A final difference worth noting is that fact that Lucy and Susan play a somewhat larger role in the fighting in the film than in the original. This may or may not be something that lovers of the books find bothersome. In a later story, The Horse and his Boy, Lewis has Lucy going off to war armed with a bow and a quiver full of arrows, dressed in a mail shirt and a helmet.

NF: How was Lewis’s writing able to be so powerful and memorable yet so simple?

Devin Brown: There are lots of ways that you could answer this question. Let me offer four.

First, Lewis spent many years writing poetry, a genre where every word, every comma, every line break is given great importance. A second reason Lewis was such a successful writer was because he was so widely read, one of the most widely read scholars of his day. Young writers today sometimes want to skip over this step. Thirdly, during the years when Lewis was turning out one great book after another, he was part of a writing group called the Inklings, a group which included his best friend J. R. R. Tolkien, a group which was a very important source of both encouragement and criticism. Finally, Lewis simply wrote a lot, a whole lot. And as he wrote, he revised. This is another step that young writers today sometimes want to skip over.

Of course, I could also mention Lewis’s sheer genius, his incredible imagination, or his nearly photographic memory. I could also mention his wonderful blend of making the imaginary world of Narnia seem familiar but not too familiar, strange but not too strange.

NF: How will Inside Narnia help readers and moviegoers better understand The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe?

Devin Brown: Perhaps the best way to describe my book is to use an analogy. Every July, my wife and I watch the Wimbledon tennis tournament on TV. Now I suppose if you searched hard enough, you could find someone who liked to watch the matches with the sound turned off, but most people find that the commentary provided by the experts adds to their understanding and enjoyment of what’s going on.

I hope that Inside Narnia provides that same kind of helpful observation and insight.

NF: How does Inside Narnia illuminate the rich meaning in the text?

Devin Brown: Let me reply to this with a sample passage from my book which shows the kind of thing I try to do. In chapter four, “Turkish Delight” I wrote this:

Lewis’s point here with the Turkish Delight is not that enjoying sweets is bad; in fact, his position is quite the contrary. Enjoyment of life’s pleasures in all their variety and plentitude will be an essential quality of proper Narnian life, as has been seen already in the tea that Mr. Tumnus provided for Lucy which included “a nice brown egg, lightly boiled, for each of them, and then sardines on toast, and then buttered toast, and then toast with honey, and then a sugar-topped cake” (15). In both his fiction and non-fiction, Lewis suggests over and over that “to be fully human involves a certain stance toward the things of creation” (Meilaender 1998, 8), one of enjoyment but not slavish adoration.

NF: And finally, why is a literary analysis of this work so important?

Devin Brown: By way of response, here is another paragraph from my book, this one from the Preface:

My claim is this: although The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe can be simply read and enjoyed by children, it also can be read seriously by adults because it is a work rich with meaning. Some of this meaning will be discovered just by spending time with the text and paying close attention to what Lewis has written. Further meaning will be seen by drawing connections – connections not only to other passages within the novel but also to other works by Lewis, to the events of Lewis’s life, and to the work of other writers who influenced Lewis. The most significant of these other writers is J. R. R. Tolkien, who not only greatly influenced Lewis but also was greatly influenced by him. I contend that this twofold approach – first, a careful reading and then second, adding these kinds of connections – will result in greater enjoyment of an already enjoyable book.

–Devin Brown, author of Inside Narnia: A Guide to Exploring The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. (Baker Books, Sept. 2005)

The stage has been set for the World Premiere of Walt Disney Pictures/Walden Media’s “The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe,” one of the most eagerly anticipated films of the year. On December 7, in the presence of TRH The Prince of Wales and The Duchess of Cornwall, this extraordinary event film will transform Royal Albert Hall and Kensington Garden in to Narnia’s 100 year winter. Chosen as the prestigious 2005 Royal Film Performance, the premiere is a fundraising event in aid of the Cinema and Television Benevolent Fund, it was announced today jointly by the Walt Disney Studios, Walden Media, the CTBF and Clarence House.

The magic of Disney will transform the evening into a glittering Winter Wonderland reflective of C. S. Lewis’ vision of Narnia’s 100 Year Winter. Royal Albert Hall will be turned in to a spectacular film palace with a glamorous white carpet replacing the traditional premiere red carpet. The 100 Year Winter theme will continue at the exclusive party in Kensington Garden following the screening where guests from around the world will be transported into a magnificent land with giant trees, frosted and sparkling, and adorned with ice carvings. Towering over the guests will be a giant iced chandelier as the centerpiece to the party. And, no matter what the weather may be outside, it is a guarantee that snow will be falling inside as guests enjoy a feast including Turkish delights and skating on an ice rink created exclusively for their enjoyment.

Unique to this event, a select group of seats will also be made available to the public for purchase. Grandstand seating will also be offered to the public so they may view up close and personal all the action and celebrity arrivals. Huge screens will broadcast the star-studded arrivals.

Commenting on the announcement, Dick Cook, chairman of the Walt Disney Studios, said, “We are proud and thrilled that ‘The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe’ has been selected as this year’s Royal Film Performance, in aid of the Cinema and Television Benevolent Fund. It is truly a great honor to be chosen for this most prestigious event on the British film calendar, and we think this event is the perfect place to introduce the film to audiences around the world. It is particularly gratifying and appropriate that this event take place in C.S. Lewis’ beloved homeland. The cherished and timeless classic that he created over 50 years ago is rooted in Britain, and remains one of the best loved books of all time. The big screen version of ‘Narnia’ is a fantastic and faithful adaptation of Lewis’ stories and we know that audiences everywhere are going to be enthralled with this unique and entertaining motion picture experience.”

David Weil, CEO of Anschutz Film Group, parent company of Walden Media, said: “We feel privileged that ‘The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe’ will make its world premiere as the 2005 Royal Film Performance in aid of The Cinema and Television Benevolent Fund. This film, and particularly the premiere at Royal Albert Hall, is the culmination of a long and fulfilling journey for Walden Media. From our first meetings with the C.S. Lewis Company over four years ago, to our hiring of director Andrew Adamson, to our partnership with our friends at The Walt Disney Company, we have worked tirelessly to produce a film worthy of one of the most popular and beloved books of all time. The enchantment of the magical world Andrew has created is truly a tribute to C.S. Lewis and his millions of fans in Great Britain and around the world. It is with tremendous pride that we share this film with moviegoers and literary fans everywhere.”

Commenting on the selection of “The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe” as the 2005 Royal Film Performance Peter Hore, Chief Executive of the Cinema and Television Benevolent Fund says: “The Cinema and Television Benevolent Fund, the cinema industry’s unique trade charity, is delighted that Buena Vista International (UK) have offered the ‘Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe’ for the 59th Royal Film Performance, a unique and very special occasion for the film industry and all concerned, in front of the cameras and behind the scenes.”

Based on C.S. Lewis’ timeless adventure “The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe,” the movie follows the exploits of the four Pevensie siblings — Lucy (Georgie Henley), Edmund (Skandar Keynes), Susan (Anna Popplewell) and Peter (William Moseley) — in World War II England who enter the world of Narnia through a magical wardrobe while playing a game of ‘hide-and-seek’ in the rural country home of an elderly professor (Jim Broadbent). Once there, the children discover an incredible new world inhabited by talking beasts, dwarves, fauns, centaurs and giants that has become cursed to eternal winter by the evil White Witch (Tilda Swinton). Under the guidance of a noble and mystical ruler, the lion Aslan (voiced by Liam Neeson), the children fight to overcome the White Witch’s powerful hold over Narnia in a spectacular, climactic battle that will free Narnia from her icy spell forever.

The film marks the first live-action directorial effort for New Zealander Andrew Adamson (the Oscar(R)-winning “Shrek,” “Shrek 2″), who also co-wrote the screenplay adaptation with Emmy Award-winner Ann Peacock (HBO’s “A Lesson Before Dying”) and scribes Christopher Markus & Stephen McFeely (all writing credits not final). The film is produced by Academy Award(R)-winning filmmaker Mark Johnson and Philip Steuer.

To bring his dazzling vision to the screen, Adamson has secured the talents of Oscar(R)-nominated cinematographer Donald M. McAlpine, ASC, ACS, Oscar(R)-nominated production designer Roger Ford, seasoned costume designer Isis Mussenden, film editors Sim Evan-Jones and Jim May and composer Harry Gregson-Williams.

Walt Disney Pictures and Walden Media’s “The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe,” is released in the UK by Buena Vista International (UK) Ltd and opens in cinemas everywhere in December 2005. Directed by Andrew Adamson (“Shrek,” “Shrek 2″) and produced by Mark Johnson (“The Rookie,” “Rain Man”) and Philip Steuer, screenplay by Ann Peacock and Andrew Adamson and Christopher Markus & Stephen McFeely (writing credits not final), the film stars Tilda Swinton, James McAvoy, Rupert Everett and Jim Broadbent with Ray Winstone, Dawn French, Liam Neeson, Georgie Henley, Skandar Keynes, William Moseley and Anna Popplewell, with Liam Neeson as the voice of Aslan.

Taubman Center Malls to Transforms into Narnia for Holidays

Taubman Centers Inc. announced today plans for an innovative promotion surrounding the highly-anticipated theatrical release of Walt Disney Pictures’/Walden Media’s “The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe” this holiday season.

For the first time ever, Taubman shopping centers will bring to life the spectacular classic fantasy adventure through a groundbreaking, interactive experience in 11 Taubman malls across the country. Beginning November 15, families who visit select Taubman shopping centers will have the opportunity to enter an environment showcasing elements of the world created by Walt Disney Pictures and Walden Media in the film, “The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe,” leading up to the December 9th release.

Decor will adorn the mall and the unique experience will bring to life key moments from the film through larger than life snow globes. The spectacular holiday set will include a walk-through magic wardrobe that simulates snowfall in Narnia; life-like figures that help tell the story from the film; and a green screen digital photography opportunity. Children will also have the opportunity to have their picture taken with Santa Claus and receive a special Narnia themed photo snow globe gift from Kodak.

“We are so excited to be working with Walt Disney Pictures and Walden Media to bring this classic story to life for families across the country this holiday season,” said David Goldberg, Taubman vice president sponsorship and marketing. “This experience will be different than any other and will create holiday memories that will last a lifetime.”

The experience was designed and produced by the Becker Group. “We are thrilled to be working with the Taubman Centers and Buena Vista Pictures Marketing to create an immersive experience that both transforms the centers into a magical holiday destination and brings the film to life in such a unique way,” stated Glenn Tilley, President of the Becker Group.

Oren Aviv, President of Buena Vista Pictures Marketing, added, “‘The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe’ is shaping up to be the family film event of the holiday season, and the mall displays at Taubman shopping centers in 11 cities are the perfect way to share the fun, fantasy and excitement with moviegoers and mallgoers across the country. This unprecedented and colorful mall experience captures the spirit and imagination of the C. S. Lewis books as well as our ambitious big screen adaptation, and it’s also a great way for millions of visitors to get into the joy of the season. Disney is thrilled to be working with Walden Media, director Andrew Adamson, and Academy Award® winning producer Mark Johnson in bringing the rich characters and storytelling legacy of ‘Narnia’ to theaters this December, and we know that mallgoers will enjoy this very special event.”

Admission is free to The Narnia holiday experience. Participating centers include:

* Beverly Center – Los Angeles, Calif.
* The Mall at Short Hills – Short Hills, N.J.
* Dolphin Mall – Miami, Fla.
* Fair Oaks – Fairfax, Va.
* The Shops at Willow Bend – Plano, Texas
* Cherry Creek – Denver, Colo.
* International Plaza – Tampa, Fla.
* Northlake Mall – Charlotte, N.C.
* Westfarms – Hartford, Conn.
* MacArthur Center – Norfolk, Va.
* The Mall at Wellington Green – Wellington, Fla.

Attendees to the experience will also have a chance to enter a Kodak sponsored multi-faceted sweepstakes promotion for each of the 11 Taubman malls including:

* (2) Round trip all expense paid trips to the film’s World Premiere in London

* Kodak EasyShare digital cameras, printer docks, memory cards, photo books and coupons

* Free movie tickets to the Chronicles of Narnia

“Kodak is about story telling and sharing memories, and we are thrilled to partner with Disney and Taubman to raise awareness for the nationwide release of such an exciting motion picture as The Chronicles of Narnia,” said Liz Crisafi, Kodak’s Director of Studio Initiatives. “In fact, The Chronicles of Narnia was shot and printed on Kodak film, so this promotion is a great fit that covers many parts of our business.”

Exclusive: The Introduction to Inside Narnia

This is a NarniaFans.com exclusive. Look for our interview with the author, Devin Brown, tomorrow!

Inside Narnia: An introduction to The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe
By Devin Brown, adapted from Inside Narnia (Baker Books)

In the summer of 1948, Clive Staples Lewis, like most men his age, must have paused more than once to consider his upcoming fiftieth birthday, just months away. As he looked out from his rooms in Oxford, surely he must have felt that the boy from the suburbs of Belfast, Northern Ireland, born on November 29, 1898, the son of a police court lawyer and an educated rector’s daughter, had done pretty well – all things considered.

Those fifty years began well but soon took a turn for the worse. After a somewhat idyllic childhood, Lewis faced the death of his mother when he was nine, and after that came the disastrous series of private schools where bullying often seemed to be more in fashion than learning. But when he was fifteen, his father had allowed him, after a great deal of persuading, to complete his final two years of preparing for university with a wonderful tutor. Those studies resulted in a scholarship to the most prestigious academic institution in the country, perhaps in the world – Oxford University.

Then came six years as a student at Oxford: six because a brief stint in the trenches of France during World War I intervened; six because he had gotten two degrees – one in philosophy and one in literature – with firsts on all his exams, the highest mark possible. Finally on May 20, 1925, at the age of twenty-six, Lewis had been chosen to be a fellow at Magdalen College.

There at Magdalen College, Oxford, Lewis was given his own set of rooms, rooms he had been using for twenty-three years now for student tutorials, for preparing lectures, for meetings with his friends, and, whenever he could squeeze it in, for writing.

Lewis’s first two works, extensive book-length poems, had gone nowhere after they were published. No matter how he had tried, he was not a poet, at least not a critically acclaimed one. But his later works had succeeded where these had not, and his writing had taken off in directions he would never have predicted – that no one would have predicted.

Over the past ten years, he had published a science fiction trilogy, a philosophical book on the problem of pain, a satirical novel about the afterlife, a treatise on miracles, and a book of letters from a devil named Screwtape – all successes. In addition, he had broadcast a series of talks on the BBC, had received an honorary Doctor of Divinity degree from St. Andrews, and, to top it all off, had even been featured on the cover of Time magazine.

Of course, besides his brother, he had no family to speak of – no wife or children, at least not yet. But by way of compensation he had a family of another sort, the Inklings, his writing and conversation group which included his closest friends. Among them was his colleague J. R. R. Tolkien, who had just finished a long fictional epic about a ring and a race called hobbits and was now working on getting it published.

And so in the summer of 1948, as Professor Lewis looked back over his fifty years, he must have found much to be proud of. But with the greater part of his life behind him, his thoughts must also have turned to all he still hoped to accomplish.

One project kept forcing its way back into his reflections: a story he had started nine years ago during the war . . . a story he had written the opening paragraph for, and then put away . . . a story about four children who went to stay with an old professor . . . a story based on a picture which had been in his head since he was sixteen, the image of a faun from Greek mythology, carrying an umbrella and parcels as he walked home through a snowy wood. . . .
In the summer of 1948, as he approached his fiftieth birthday, C. S. Lewis picked up pen and paper and resumed the story he had started nine years earlier, shortly after a group of schoolgirls evacuated from London had come to stay with him.

What he could not have known was that he was beginning what many would later consider to be one of his greatest accomplishments.

~*~On October 16, 1950, six weeks before Lewis’s fifty-second birthday, The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe was released in England by Geoffrey Bles Publishers. Three weeks later, Macmillan issued the U.S. version of the novel. Although he had supported Lewis’s other works, fellow writer J. R. R. Tolkien did not like the book, responding, “It really won’t do, you know!” (Green and Hooper 241). Tolkien’s biggest complaint was Lewis’s “jumble of unrelated mythologies” – the Roman fauns and nymphs, the Germanic dwarfs, Father Christmas, and the new characters of Lewis’s own invention – all in the same work (Sayer 312).

Despite Tolkien’s misgivings, The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe was an instant success and has remained widely popular over the years, with copies of the individual volumes and the boxed set of the Chronicles of Narnia selling into the tens of millions. After the initial volume, Lewis published one Chronicle each year until the seven-book set was complete. When The Last Battle came out in 1956, it won the Carnegie Medal, an award given by children’s librarians to the year’s most outstanding book for young people, though in Lewis’s case perhaps given as much in recognition for the whole series as for the final book.

The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe was the first of the seven Chronicles of Narnia that Lewis wrote. While he was alive it was always listed as the first volume in the series. In 1980, seventeen years after Lewis’s death, Collins, part of what would later become HarperCollins, first published the stories with a somewhat different numbering; The Magician’s Nephew – originally listed sixth – was moved to first, and The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe was numbered second. This revised order appears on all editions published today along with this statement on the copyright page: “The HarperCollins editions of The Chronicles of Narnia have been renumbered in compliance with the original wishes of the author, C. S. Lewis.”

The change was in part based upon a letter Lewis wrote in 1957 to a young boy named Laurence Krieg. In response to a question about which order the Narnia books should be read in – the way they were originally numbered, which corresponded with their order of publication, or their chronological order – Lewis came down in a qualified way slightly on the side of chronology, which was the way Laurence Krieg had proposed. Maybe Lewis really felt renumbering the Chronicles would be an improvement, but quite possibly he was simply trying to be supportive of a young fan’s suggestion, as he went on to add, “perhaps it does not matter very much in which order anyone reads them” (1995, 68).

In his book Imagination and the Arts in C. S. Lewis, Hope College professor Peter Schakel includes an essay which questions the meaning of the phrase from the copyright page “the original wishes of the author.” He writes, “Does original mean from the time at which The Magician’s Nephew was completed? If so, why did Lewis not request the Bodley Head to include this renumbering in the new book, or in The Last Battle the following year, or have Geoffrey Bles change the order in later reprints of the other books?” (Schakel 2002, 43). Schakel takes a firm stand regarding Lewis’s statement to Laurence Krieg, arguing that the reading order in fact “matters a great deal” (44) and that if readers are going to share the wonder and suspense of the children in the story, they need to read the Chronicles in the order they were published. This means reading The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe first.

Lewis’s letter to Laurence Krieg is famous among Narnia enthusiasts for another reason. From it we learn about Lewis’s plans, or rather his lack of plans, for further Chronicles. Lewis told Krieg, “When I wrote The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe I did not know I was going to write any more. Then I wrote Prince Caspian as a sequel and still didn’t think there would be any more, and when I had done The Voyage of the Dawn Treader I felt quite sure it would be the last” (1995, 68).

Questions, controversy, and mixed opinions about the Chronicles of Narnia still abound today. An article headlined “Narnia books attacked as racist and sexist” appeared in the June 3, 2002, issue of the British newspaper The Guardian. In it John Ezard quotes Philip Pullman, the Whitbread Book Award – winning author of the His Dark Materials trilogy, who calls Lewis’s work “propaganda” and accuses it of being “monumentally disparaging of girls and women” and “blatantly racist.” Laura Miller, senior editor for the online magazine Salon, has also been critical of the Narnia books in certain ways. In an article titled “Personal Best” which appeared in the September 30, 1996 issue, Miller described an experience shared by a number of readers as they grew older. She states, “Lewis’s books are very, very English and very Christian, in a particular way. The latter I didn’t realize until I was a good deal older, and this discovery filled me with anger and bitterness. I had been tricked into giving my heart to the very noxious, twisted religion I had tried so hard to elude.”

Children’s literature scholar Peter Hunt has also cast a less-than-favorable eye on Lewis’s series for young people, claiming that “not far beneath the genial surface of the books lie some very sexist, racist, and violent attitudes” (2001, 200). About the widely varying responses which the books have generated, Hunt claims, “If there is a single, central example of the divergence of popular and critical taste, then the seven books concerning the mythical land of Narnia . . . must qualify” (199).

Another anti-Narnia voice comes from a very different source – the radical right of fundamental Christianity, a somewhat strange bedfellow of other critics. A website titled Balaam’s Ass Speaks includes a section called “C. S. Lewis: The Devil’s Wisest Fool.” In it Mary Van Nattan claims, “The Chronicles of Narnia are one of the most powerful tools of Satan that Lewis ever produced. Worst of all, these books are geared toward children.” The leading criticism raised in the essay, one which given its source may not be completely unexpected, is that the series is an “indoctrinating tool of witchcraft.”

While opponents often raise strong, even vehement, objections, fans’ support for The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe has remained unwavering. In British bookseller Waterstone’s voting for “Best Books of the Century,” The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe finished twenty-first, ahead of works by such acclaimed authors as Franz Kafka, Virginia Woolf, John Steinbeck, and Toni Morrison. In The Big Read series sponsored by the BBC in fall 2003, voters ranked The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe as their number nine choice.

To coincide with the fiftieth anniversary of the publication of The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, HarperCollins released a special deluxe hardcover edition with nineteen full-color plates by the original illustrator Pauline Baynes. In the United States, the Focus on the Family Radio Theatre has produced audio adaptations of all seven of the Narnia stories, with Douglas Gresham, Lewis’s stepson, serving as host. Some of the famous voices include Paul Scofield as the narrator and David Suchet as Aslan.

The first film adaptations of the stories were made by the BBC in the late 1980s. Rather low-budget projects, they still have their share of devoted fans, though many viewers see them now as somewhat dated. The major motion picture version of The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, directed by Andrew Adamson and scheduled for release in December 2005, builds on the positive reception given to the Harry Potter films and Peter Jackson’s Lord of the Rings.

Anyone looking at the fairy tale Lewis put to paper around his fiftieth birthday must wonder at its enduring popularity and wide acceptance. How is it that its appeal has not waned over the years but has remained steady and even grown?

For one answer, we can turn to a distinction used by Lewis himself. In an essay titled “On Three Ways of Writing for Children,” Lewis described what he called a Boy’s Book or a Girl’s Book. In it, he says, we find “the immensely popular and successful schoolboy or schoolgirl,” the one who “discovers the spy’s plot or rides the horse that none of the cowboys can manage” (Lewis 1982e, 38). The problem with this book, he claims, is that while we find pleasure in reading it, we always return to our own world feeling as though our own life can never measure up. We will never catch the spy; we will never ride the unrideable pony; we will not be friends with magicians. We run to this book, Lewis states, to escape from “the disappointments and humiliations of the real world” but then afterwards return “undivinely discontented” to reality, to a world and to a life in that world which have been made a little less wonderful than before.

A second type of book, Lewis suggests, wipes away the film of the ordinary from our world and makes the events of our daily lives and the people we encounter more special, not less. After reading this type of book, we do not despise our friends, our robins, or our wardrobes for being unmagical. These stories cast a spell over our world and make all robins and wardrobes a little marvelous, a little more wonderful than before. We see with a new perspective that indeed our friends in a sense are magicians. As Lewis states, the reader of this second kind of book “does not despise real woods because he has read of enchanted woods: the reading makes all real woods a little enchanted” (1982e, 38).

While Lewis intended this distinction to refer to young people’s books in general, The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe certainly fits his description of this second type of book rather than the first, and one of its chief functions is to re-enchant a disenchanted world.

Lewis biographer A. N. Wilson has observed that since the publication of The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe in 1950, “a whole generation has grown up of people who read the Narnia stories in childhood” (1991, 220) and then passed them on to their own children and even to their grandchildren, making the stories a part of the cultural heritage for three generations of readers on both sides of the Atlantic. Another explanation for the enduring popularity of The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe is that the Narnia stories represent, as Green and Hooper note, “a new mythology” (1994, 251) and as such can play an integral role in the personal growth and development of those who read them. Roland Hein, author of Christian Mythmakers, has argued, “With Lewis, myth was a vehicle by which supernatural reality communicates to man” (1998, 206).

The difficulty in achieving worldwide recognition in even a single genre makes Lewis’s ability to switch from the expository writing in his early works to the mythic-style fiction seen in the Chronicles of Narnia all the more remarkable. Clearly Lewis understood the need for a creative format rather than a discursive one in order to address life’s most fundamental questions. Speaking of himself as well as of others writing in a similar vein, he said that “there may be an author who at a particular moment finds not only fantasy but fantasy-for-children the exactly right form for what he wants to say” (Lewis 1982e, 36). Lewis believed that by conveying vital insights through an imaginary mode, one could make them “for the first time appear in their real potency” (1982f, 47).

Lewis saw myth not as “misunderstood history, . . . nor diabolical illusion, . . . nor priestly lying, . . . but, at its best, a real though unfocused gleam of divine truth falling on human imagination” (Lewis 1996d, 134) and as a form which “enables man to express the inexpressible” (Kilby 1964, 81). In the preface to the anthology of George MacDonald that Lewis compiled, he wrote that myth “gets under our skin” and “hits us at a level deeper than our thoughts” (MacDonald 1996, xxviii).

Lewis further clarifies what he saw as the function of myth for its readers by saying, “In the enjoyment of a great myth we come nearest to experiencing as a concrete what can otherwise be understood only as an abstraction” (1996e, 66). In another context Lewis wrote that the experience of myth “is not only grave but awe inspiring. . . . It is as if something of great moment had been communicated to us” (1996a, 44).

Clyde Kilby, one of the first scholars to write about Lewis, has noted Lewis’s recognition of the importance of myth-making as “one of man’s deepest needs and highest accomplishments” (Kilby 1964, 80). Kilby argues that Lewis wrote “hardly a single book in which he does not, in one way or another, discuss and illustrate this subject.” What, according to Lewis, was behind myth-making? Kilby explains that Lewis envisioned a “great sovereign, uncreated, unconditioned Reality at the core of things” (81) and viewed myth as “a kind of picture-making which helps man to understand this Reality” as well as a response to “a deep call from that Reality.”

In describing Lewis’s decision to write in a fictional rather than expository mode, Donald Glover states that Lewis did so because he believed that this “indirect” approach could “bring the reader closer to the truth” (1981, 3). In his book C. S. Lewis: The Art of Enchantment, Glover suggests that Lewis was well aware of the power of myth “to present in understandable form concepts which could be approached in no other direct fashion” (51).

“Let us suppose that this everyday world were, at some point, invaded by the marvelous” (Lewis 1982b, 21). C. S. Lewis penned these words to describe the feeling evoked by the novels of his friend Charles Williams. However, Lewis’s description could equally be used to describe the effect produced by his own stories. More than fifty years after it was first published, readers from all over the world, young and old, continue to share the perception that as they read The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, their everyday world truly is invaded by the marvelous.

Devin Brown (Ph.D., University of South Carolina) is professor of English at Asbury College. A C. S. Lewis aficionado, Brown has been regularly writing, teaching, and lecturing on C. S. Lewis for more than ten years. Brown lives in Lexington, Kentucky.

Adapted from the introduction of Inside Narnia: A Guide to Exploring The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe by Devin Brown. Baker Books, Sept. 1, 2005. Used with permission of Baker Books, a division of Baker Publishing Group, copyright ©2005-2006. All rights to this material are reserved. Materials are not to be distributed to other web locations for retrieval, published in other media, or mirrored at other sites without written permission from Baker Publishing Group.

Moviefone’s “World of Narnia”

Moviefone has launched a new “The World of Narnia” homepage to house exclusive clips, trailers and behind the scenes featurettes from the film. Currently, they’re hosting pictures from the film, Behind the Magic featurettes including the latest one of Visual Effects, and much more excellent stuff!

Moviefone’s The World of Narnia

Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe Soundtrack Covers

Here’s an update on the soundtracks that are coming out this fall. As it stands, there will definitely be three soundtracks for the film: the Inspired Soundtrack, the Score and the Children’s soundtrack and here’s three proposed covers for the soundtracks, except for the children’s one:

Behind the Magic of Narnia – Chapter V: Visual Effects

See how the filmmakers utilized visual effects to create a whole world of Narnia’s creatures and characters. Go behind the scenes of the film’s visual effects.

Moviefone’s got the fifth Behind the Magic clip up on their website! Check it out at our source link!

See Mr. Beaver speak! It’s pretty incredible the way he moves… it’s not cartoony and it’s not photo-realistic, but it is completely logical somehow.

Spoilers!

Mr. Beaver: “Aslan’s return, Tumnus’ arrest, the secret police… it’s all happening because of you!”

Susan: “You’re blaming us.”

Mr. Beaver: “There’s… there’s a prophecy.”

Exclusive Interview with C.S. Lewis Scholar Bruce Edwards

Renowned C. S. Lewis scholar Bruce Edwards took some time to answer some questions about the upcoming film, and his Chronicles of Narnia books.

NarniaFans.com: How do you think the movie will impact Lewis’s legacy?

Bruce Edwards: Difficult to say–especially without seeing the movie first. Movies, even badly made ones, tend to send people back to the original text. And this promises to be a very good movie given the high production values, skilled director, and the integrity of Walden Media and Doug Gresham at the helm. The main thing is, if it will bring more readers not only to Narnia, but to the rest of Lewis’s works, which are uniformly thought provoking and excellent, it will be worth “the risk.” I am more excited that the movie(s) are being made than learning that “more” Narnian tales are being created by present day authors, who may not possess the Christian imagination that characterized Lewis’s life and work. It’s the quality of the person more than the re-assembling of Narnian characters that makes the difference.

NF: Will the movie attract new fans to Lewis’s other works?

Bruce Edwards: We can hope so. Movies can be fickle; and are sort of “self-consuming artifacts,” as literary scholar, Stanley Fish (who also admires Lewis’s work on Milton), used to say of certain books. That is, movie have am elusive “presence” only when one is watching them. . . while the written word seems to have a more enduring and lingering quality even if the book is closed. The Lord of the Rings movies certainly elevated an already high profile Tolkien possessed. . . and, in my view, Lewis has so much more to offer the adventurous reader–not in terms of fantasy, but in all the other genres he mastered (literary criticism, satire, narrative poetry, dream-vision, science-fiction, memoir. . .) There is a feast awaiting any reader who only knows Narnia.

NF: How was Lewis’s writing able to become so powerful and memorable yet so simple?

Bruce Edwards: Deceptively simple I would say–it takes a lot of hard work to make a work “seem” so simple. Quite honestly, I think it is Lewis’s lifelong perspicacious reading, which began in childhood (at age 3 no less!), that gave him much to draw on. He had an intrinsic sense of eloquence, but there is also no doubt that those authors who had the greatest impact on him when he was young (E. Nesbit or Beatrix Potter–as well as Chesterton and MacDonald) had a tremendous influence on his own composing. When I teach Lewis I also draw attention to mastery of the arresting metaphor–and his foundational tri-chomomies–the forced choice among three mutually exclusive options (liar, lunatic, lord) whic he learned from St. Augustine and, I believe, William Kirkpatrick, his tutor in the last stages of his adolescent learning, whom he called The Great Knock, a little of whom is in Professor Kirke.

NF: How will Not a Tame Lion help readers and moviegoers better understand The Chronicles of Narnia?

Bruce Edwards: If I may quote from my preface–the aim of NOT A TAME LION is to:

“. . . prevent the possibility that Lewis’s Christian convictions, which inhabit and animate the Narnian landscape, will be “lost in translation” as the stories migrate from text to film.

“We can hope that this is not the case, and no one would be happier than me should the movies do justice to these beloved tales. But I have endeavored in this book to take nothing for granted, making it my goal specifically to orient the willing reader new to The Chronicles (as well as the veteran sojourner there) to what we might call Narnia’s spiritual geography, that is, to its ultimately Christian themes, and, most assuredly, to its undeniable center: King Aslan, the Great Lion, Son of the Great Emperor-Beyond-the-Sea.

“Aslan must again be the one to save Narnia, to rescue it from becoming just one more kingdom swept away in the homogenizing flood of popular culture that jettisons its core convictions and compelling charm.”

NF: How does Not a Tame Lion illuminate the rich meaning in the text?

Bruce Edwards: Well, this is for the reader to say, but what I have attempted to do is point out the fact that the center of gravity in the Narnian story is Aslan, who is Lewis’s greatest literary creation in my view. My book is a kind of “synoptic gospel” of Aslan’s encounters with Narnians, and the sons and daughters of Adam and Eve. It is, in a word, a “biography of Aslan.” It is covers not just The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe, but ALL seven tales.

So my new book pays its greatest homage is to Aslan. Indeed, “He is not a tame lion,” as Mr. Beaver intones near the end of The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe. By titling my work, Not a Tame Lion, I am implying, no, stipulating, that without Aslan the Narnian adventures would have little meaning, certainly lesser value, and lack spiritual poignancy or potency.

NF: And finally, why is an exploration into the spiritual dimensions of Narnia so important?

Bruce Edwards: There are stories and movies a plenty which feature vagabond children making their entrance and exit through strange and dangerous worlds using their ingenuity or creativity or sheer bravado, learning their lessons and claiming their renown. But Narnia is not a world one simply passes through on the way to somewhere else, storing up experience for the next fantastic journey. Narnia is a spiritual address, a world imbued with ultimate destinies determined by profound personal choices driven by individual allegiances, either to eternal truth or mournfully temporal falsehood. What do I mean by “spiritual”?

Narnia is a “cosmos,” an orderly, yet created world that has a discernible beginning, middle, and end. Narnia’s ordered existence is willed-rather, sung-into being by Aslan. Under Aslan’s rule, there is, if you will, both a “natural order,” and a “supernatural” or spiritual order. There is, on the one hand, the day-to-day, the deeds, the thoughts, the outcomes wrought by each individual; on the other hand, there is a meaning and an impact beyond these deeds, thoughts, outcomes that point to Something Else, and, what’s more, to Someone Else. Here we discover that we are not our own. Our lives rest in Another.

NF: We would also like to point out that in addition to NOT A TAME LION, he also has a second book coming out next week, Further Up and Further In: Understanding C. S. Lewis’s The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe, which is an entirely different work.