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  • What ‘Ender’s Game’ Must Ultimately Accomplish

    What ‘Ender’s Game’ Must Ultimately Accomplish

    Warning: This editorial contains MAJOR book spoilers for Ender’s Game.

    Ender's Game 2013

    As we head into 2013 and move closer to Ender’s Game, I want to address what I think the Ender’s Game movie will need to do in order to be a success in the eyes of faithful book fans.

    I should note that I’m not talking about box office success. I’ve been an admin for Mockingjay.net, one the oldest and largest Hunger Games fansites out there, for a year and a half and what I have learned is that when you stalk a movie’s production and marketing, somewhere along the way you form expectations. You form a list of which scenes you assume are impossible to cut. And while the movie can rake in piles and piles of cash, it can still leave its book fans feeling somewhat lost and empty.

    To give some perspective, I began working for Mockingjay.net in June 2011. For close to a year, I knew every bit of news that came out about the movie. I talked the movie to death with other fansites on a weekly podcast and daily on Skype. We analyzed every still, every frame of every trailer, and prepared ourselves for its release in March.

    We were invited to the world premiere at the Nokia and got to watch the movie with the cast, crew, and hundreds of other fans. But when the lights came on after it was over, and everyone around me was gushing, I felt slightly sick. I was so disappointed. Since then, I’ve gone through a roller coaster of opinions and now months later, I feel it was a decent film adaptation, but ultimately feel the true heart of the book didn’t make it. But back then, everyone was so fixated on the joy of how big the movie was becoming that it felt wrong to be disappointed. When I finally did feel brave enough to voice my discontent, I found that tons of other fans felt exactly the same way.

    Ender’s Game has always held a special place in my book heart. The little boy who lost his childhood in order to save the world made me feel so many things when I was a teenager. Sympathy. Heartache. Pride. Love. Loss.

    I’ve talked extensively on this site about the obvious changes to Ender. He’s now 10-12 instead of 6-10. I’ve had a long time to come to terms with this change, which is probably why you’ll find so many of my editorials in support of his “new” age. The set visit that Summit treated the fansites to in May made us aware of yet another glaring change, one that I have become increasingly wary of because I think it has the potential to alienate a lot of book fans if it isn’t pulled off perfectly.

    We have to expect changes. Big ones and small ones. We have to expect omissions and new scenes as well. This is a film adaptation, so a large percentage of the book will be cut out. For instance, from looking at the casting list, there’s no Shen. Hot Soup isn’t listed either. I think most people would agree that there’s probably little to no room for Locke and Demosthenes.

    Ender-GraffWhat Asa Butterfield and Gavin Hood have to do is get the audience to love him. Despite Stilson, Bernard, and Bonzo. People have to be able to love Ender. And yet that’s just part of the ultimate goal. Yes, we need stunning graphics, exciting Battle Room scenes, perfect chemistry between Ender’s friends, a kickass score, and great performances as well, but in the end I think it comes down to preserving the hidden truth about the final battle.

    If you think about the ending and Ender’s final test, it seems rather difficult to hide the twist from both the audience and from Ender, but I think this is the only way they can capture the heart of the book on screen. That grand deception is what serves as the platform for our overwhelming sympathy and love for Ender. A genius made into a weapon. A child tricked into the worst act imaginable. A boy made into a monster.

    Going back to The Hunger Games, to me the heart of the book rested in the last quarter of the book. An emotionally and mentally broken Katniss Everdeen just barely holding it together. And what came out in the theater was a tough girl shrugging off the horrors of the Arena and almost casually dismissing everything that had happened. She was a heroine and that was what director Gary Ross wanted to accomplish. But the Katniss that mattered didn’t emerge and as a result, moviegoers who hadn’t read the book lost out on all that emotion and never really got to see what is truly the heart of that story.

    There’s no doubt people fell in love with Jennifer Lawrence as Katniss. It was hard not to. But her Katniss was only part of book-Katniss. She needed the right scenes to truly bring the full potential of movie-Katniss out. And in the end, whether by editing or by writing, audiences never got to see that Katniss. In the book, you couldn’t help but wonder at how young and vulnerable she was and think, “Look at what they did to her.” In the movie, it was as if she could take down the world all by herself.

    Asa Butterfield’s Ender will need the right scenes as well. I have no doubt he’ll be able to play a great Ender, but without that last scene in which he finally becomes aware of what they’ve tricked him into doing, the book’s heart is lost. You have to be able to see that look of betrayal in Ender’s eyes. You have to see his pain and think, “Look at what they did to him.”

    If they can accomplish that and place all the other little pieces that make a movie great all around it, they’ll have succeeded in my eyes and hopefully for all other book fans as well.

  • Video and Gallery: Aramis Knight in The Dark Knight Rises

    Video and Gallery: Aramis Knight in The Dark Knight Rises

    Aramis Knight in The Dark Knight Rises

    Months before he headed off to New Orleans to film Ender’s Game, Aramis Knight (Bean) filmed a short scene with Anne Hathaway in Christopher Nolan’s The Dark Knight Rises. 18 screencaps of Aramis from this scene have been added to the EnderWiggin.net gallery.

    You can watch a video of the scene below. While you’re at it, be sure to subscribe to EnderWiggin.net’s YouTube channel!

  • EnderCast Episode 2 – Year of the Ender Available

    EnderCast Episode 2 – Year of the Ender Available

    EnderCast

    Episode 2 of EnderCast is now available to bring pain and suffering to your ears! Kelly and I had so much fun with episode one that we recorded another one last night. Episode topics included:

    • Release date and discussion on Earth Afire
    • Release date and discussion on Ender’s World
    • Hi-res still (same Ender and Graff one) analysis
    • Predictions for 2013′s marketing campaign for the movie
    • Ender’s Game Merchandise We Hope We Never See

    To listen to the episode, head over to the EnderCast website or download it on iTunes!

  • Pondering the Fate of Stilson

    Pondering the Fate of Stilson

    Warning: This editorial contains MAJOR spoilers for the book Ender’s Game.

    In the twenty or so years since I first read Ender’s Game, I’ve probably read the book around four additional times. Each time, I found myself marveling at the story and loving the way it was written, how it progressed, and what happened to the characters. It’s always remained a favorite of mine as the years went by. Yet the one thing in the entire book that’s never really sat well with me was what happened to Stilson.

    Caleb Thaggard
    Caleb Thaggard

    The bully that torments Ender in the first chapter and eventually pays the ultimate price is very likely to be in the film. Stilson was first going to be played by the young actor Brendan Meyer. He even reported to the set in New Orleans and hung out with the cast.

    At the last minute, a scheduling conflict required him to step down from the role, and in his place came Caleb Thaggard, an actor who bore an odd resemblance to actor Jimmy Jax Pinchak (Peter Wiggin), another tormentor of Ender. Once Thaggard stepped in, I began to wonder if they’d decided to change the script slightly because Thaggard looked decidedly bigger than Meyer, and with Asa Butterfield looking so slender, was it even going to be believable that Stilson was dead?

    Which leads me to the big question: Does Stilson really have to die in the film adaptation? I posed this question to the EnderWiggin.net fans on Facebook and 100% of the answers came back with a resounding YES. Everyone who answered felt that Stilson’s death was completely necessary for Ender’s character building to become the leader he did and eventually led to him wiping out the Formics.

    But I’m still not convinced of this. We never learn about Stilson’s death until the end of the book during Graff’s trial, and it’s safe to say that Ender never learns it until then either. So how does Stilson’s death play at all into Ender’s leadership building up until his final battle? It doesn’t, really. It was enough that Ender knew he’d beaten Stilson to a bloody pulp for him to feel deep remorse about it, and this was when he was six years old. It’s likely that due to both his heightened intelligence and the actions of his brother, Peter, Ender developed a moral compass much earlier than most children, and the incident with Stilson was enough to strengthen his character.

    Some people argued that Stilson’s death played a huge role in the sequels, haunting Ender for the rest of his days. This is something I completely agree with, but the thing about that is we’re not really sure they’ll make Speaker for the Dead, Xenocide, and Children of the Mind movies right after Ender’s Game. In fact, I think it’s highly unlikely they will because those books would require a completely new cast and frankly are a bit too politically and morally centric to fit in with a franchise starting with the more action-filled and young-adult-targeted Ender’s Game. I do feel they could eventually be made, but other movies keeping the young cast would be likely to come first, and in the process, a lot more weight could be added to Ender’s load of guilt that would make up for a change in the fate of Stilson.

    One of the biggest reasons I thought Orson Scott Card and Ender shouldn’t have killed Stilson was because Ender was six at the time. I can see why he withheld that bit of information until the end because the thought of Ender being a murderer at age six is a pretty repulsive thing. Reveal that at the start and people would have had a hard time falling in love with the character.

    The same can go for movie Ender. Given their difference in stature, is Ender going to take a 2×4 to Stilson’s head in the movie? Or has he taken self-defense classes on Earth and is already a deadly weapon? In this case, how will Gavin Hood prevent people from recoiling from the main character if he goes so far with Stilson at the start? Sure, we all had a laugh when Peter Parker punched Flash down the hallway and got food spilled onto his face, but Peter Parker never killed his bully to make a point.

    Which brings me to another concern. With the influence of media on today’s youth, is it even wise to have Ender kill his tormentor from school? School bullying is an increasingly large problem in schools, and I’m sure it’s at least part of the conversation that the studio could end up sending the wrong message about how to go about solving one’s problems with a bully in school.

    The Dark Knight Rises theater shooting was horrific and cast a huge cloud of gloom onto the movie. We all looked in horror at what he’d done and probably thought to ourselves, “How could he do that? It’s just a movie!” To the vast majority of us, it is just a movie. But to that one kid out there who’s just been pushed a little bit too far, watching something like this in a movie could be enough to push them over the edge. And it only really takes one real-life incident influenced by a movie for it to be too much.

    One point someone brought up was that killing was simply what he did, thus the name Ender. But Ender never intended to kill Stilson, which means he was convinced that a beating would do the trick. So why is a death necessary if Ender himself doesn’t think it is? In a way, the death of Stilson in the book became essential to cementing the notion that Ender was a monster, looked upon by the world the way they should have looked at Peter, which is why it’s always stood out to me that this was an author’s technique and not entirely flowing with the natural story.

    In short, I feel a beating with a little blood and Stilson in the hospital with broken bones could have the desired effect to convince moviegoers that this incident and Ender’s answers are why Graff has chosen Ender for Battle School and at the same time wouldn’t carry all the baggage that a Stilson death could potentially bring into our real world outside the movie. If they wanted to, they could always follow the book and say near the end that Stilson died of complications in the hospital, but at that point I think the rest of the movie would have caused people to almost forget about Stilson completely, much like how I had when I first read the novel.

    It’ll be interesting to see which way they chose to take this on. Stilson plays such a small part of the story but lays the groundwork for Ender’s journey and is therefore very important. Until the movie in November 2013 or until someone’s counterargument can convince me otherwise, I maintain that Stilson’s death in the film isn’t necessary for a successful movie adaptation.

  • Happy Birthday Conor Carroll

    Happy Birthday Conor Carroll

    Conor Carroll

    Happy Birthday to Conor Carroll, who plays Bernard in Ender’s Game! Conor just recently joined Twitter, so you can follow him @ConorMCarroll. Conor turns 14 today.

  • Photos: Asa Butterfield at Silver Linings Playbook Screening

    Photos: Asa Butterfield at Silver Linings Playbook Screening

    Harvey Weinstein Hosts Screening of 'Silver Linings Playbook'

    Asa Butterfield, who plays Ender Wiggin in Ender’s Game, attended a screening of The Silver Linings Playbook with his mother Jacqueline Farr on December 16, 2012 at the Charlotte Street Hotel in London, England. Three photos have been added to the EnderWiggin.net gallery.

    Earlier this year, Asa returned to England shortly after wrapping filming in New Orleans and doing some final work in Los Angeles. Since then he hasn’t been photographed much in public, returning to school and probably growing an additional inch a month.

    Source: Photos © Dave M. Benett/Getty Images via Ender News

  • GIVEAWAY: A Battle School Christmas Day 4

    GIVEAWAY: A Battle School Christmas Day 4

    Battle-School-Christmas

    It’s the final day of A Battle School Christmas and today I’m giving away a copy of the December 14 issue of Entertainment Weekly which has the first still from Ender’s Game and a full page exclusive first look. Since the gift edition hardcover was restricted to USA only, this giveaway will be restricted to international readers only.

    Those of you that never got a chance to buy the issue can buy it on the Entertainment Weekly Back Issues Store. Be careful, because they do sell out of back issues!

    If you haven’t done so yet, you can still enter the giveaways for Day 1, Day 2, and Day 3.

    This giveaway will end on December 24, 2012.

    a Rafflecopter giveaway

  • GIVEAWAY: A Battle School Christmas Day 3

    GIVEAWAY: A Battle School Christmas Day 3

    Battle-School-Christmas

    It’s Day 3 of A Battle School Christmas at EnderWiggin.net! If you haven’t yet entered the Day 1 or Day 2 giveaways, you can still do so!

    Today’s giveaway is a signed photo of actor Jimmy Jax Pinchak, who plays Peter Wiggin in Ender’s Game.

    Jimmy-Photo

    To enter, comment on this post and tell me what you hope to see of Peter Wiggin in the movie. After you comment, use the Rafflecopter widget to log in your entry. Be sure to use the same name and email address for verification. After that, you can enter with the optional entries.

    This giveaway is open worldwide and will end on Sunday, December 23, 2012.

    a Rafflecopter giveaway

  • Ender’s World Available for Pre-Order

    Ender’s World Available for Pre-Order

    Ender's World

    Next year, Smart Pop Books will be publishing an anthology of Ender’s Game articles edited by Orson Scott Card. The nice folks over at Smart Pop have sent over a press release revealing the contributor names and giving fans a better idea of what the book will be about.

    The book is currently available for pre-order on Amazon and is set for release April 2, 2013.

    ORSON SCOTT CARD EDITS ALL-NEW COLLECTION ON HIS CLASSIC NOVEL ENDER’S GAME

    Orson Scott Card’s Ender’s Game is a science fiction classic that has won not only Nebula, Hugo, and Locus Awards since its 1985 publication, but also the love of generations of readers. Now Card has teamed up with Smart Pop to produce Ender’s World: Fresh Perspectives on the SF Classic Ender’s Game, a collection of science fiction, fantasy, and YA writers, along with military strategists, offering new insight into Ender’s Game and other stories in the Ender chronology. Edited and with brand new content by Card himself, it’s the perfect book at the perfect time for old fans and new readers alike to (re)enter the world of Ender’s Game in preparation for the November 2013 film adaptation.

    In Ender’s World, Card answers some of readers’ biggest questions, from What qualities did the Battle School tests look for? to If you could go back and re-write Ender’s Game, what would you change?

    In addition, contributors who are also Ender’s Game fans present a spectrum of thoughtful, illuminating pieces and analyses: military strategists Colonel Tom Ruby and John F. Schmitt offer insights into (and from) the human–formic war; Aaron Johnston, coauthor of Card’s Formic Wars prequel novels, explains why Ender is a short Clint Eastwood; Grammy-nominated songwriter Janis Ian argues that, in the Ender universe, size matters; Matt Nix, creator and executive producer of Burn Notice, uses Ender’s Game as an often humorous guide to life, from angsty teenagerhood to the present; New York Times bestselling author Neal Shusterman remembers the first time he read Ender’s Game, and offers a meditation on the book’s biggest moral questions.

    The full list of contributors:

    • Hilari Bell
    • John Brown
    • Mette Ivie Harrison
    • Janis Ian
    • Aaron W. Johnston
    • Alethea Kontis
    • Mary Tobinette Kowal
    • David Lubar and Allison S. Meyers
    • Matt Nix
    • Colonel Tom Ruby
    • John F. Schmitt
    • Eric James Stone
    • Neal Shusterman
    • Ken Scholes

    With its variety of themes and viewpoints, Ender’s World intrigues, entertains, and provokes readers to further consider Ender’s Game’s influence on the science fiction genre, its commentary on society, and its place in literature.

    Source: Smart Pop Books

     

  • GIVEAWAY: A Battle School Christmas Day 2

    GIVEAWAY: A Battle School Christmas Day 2

    Battle-School-Christmas

    It’s Day 2 of A Battle School Christmas at EnderWiggin.net! If you haven’t yet entered the Day 1 giveaway, you can enter to win an EnderWiggin.net pin button or magnet here.

    Today’s giveaway is of a hardcover Gift Edition of Ender’s Game. If your copy is getting a bit dog-eared and you want to have a nice copy for display on your bookshelf, make sure you enter.

    To enter, comment on this post and tell me who your favorite character in Ender’s Game is, not counting Ender himself, and why. If you haven’t read the book yet, tell me why you think the book sounds interesting! After you comment, use the Rafflecopter widget to log in your entry. Be sure to use the same name and email address for verification. After that, you can enter with the optional entries.

    This giveaway is open to the USA only and will end on Saturday, December 22.

    a Rafflecopter giveaway

    See what else is being given away on Ender News and Ender’s Ansible.

  • A Battle School Christmas

    A Battle School Christmas

    Battle-School-Christmas

    Ho ho ho! It’s almost Christmas and your Ender’s Game fansites have banded together for a ring of giveaways for all you Ender’s Game fans. And while we realize that students in Battle School don’t celebrate holidays or birthdays, we still live on Earth and can celebrate the season of giving as we wish!

    Over the coming week, I’ll be posting several giveaways that people can enter to win great prizes including:

    • 10 EnderWiggin.net pin buttons and 10 EnderWiggin.net magnets (enter on this post)
    • 1 gift edition hardcover of Ender’s Game (enter here)
    • 1 autographed photo of Jimmy Jax Pinchak aka Peter Wiggin (enter here)
    • 1 copy of Entertainment Weekly with the first still (for non-US only, enter here)

    Here’s a sneak peek at what the pin buttons look like:

    EWnet-Buttons

    To enter to win, simply comment on this post and tell me how old you were when you first read Ender’s Game. After that, use the Rafflecopter widget to log in your blog comment entry and if you want, get yourself some additional entries with the other options. Do them all and you enter yourself five times!

    a Rafflecopter giveaway

    Today’s giveaway is for the 10 magnets and pins and is open worldwide and will end this Friday, December 21, along with the rest of the Earth. Should the Mayans be wrong and we’re all still here on Saturday, you can find out if you won. Hooray!

    Be sure to come back on Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday to enter the other giveaways.

    My fellow fansites over at Ender News, Ender’s Game Fansite, and Ender’s Ansible will also be giving out great prizes so be sure to click their logos below to check out what they’re giving away and enter to win.

    Ender-News
    Ansible

    Happy Holidays from your Ender’s Game fandom!

  • Hi-Res Version of Ender and Graff Still

    Hi-Res Version of Ender and Graff Still

    Thanks to Summit, we now have the unwatermarked version of the first official still. The image has been uploaded to the EnderWiggin.net Gallery.

    With a hi-res still, we can do a better analysis of the details of the image including something Kelly and I talked about on the premiere episode of EnderCast: Graff’s shoulder pin.

    Graff

    As you can clearly see, his pin does indeed have the IF Phi on it. As mentioned on the EnderWiggin.net Facebook, it’s possible we’ll be sitting in line for midnight premieres of Ender’s Game on Halloween 2013! Any cosplayers out there ready to start making their IF costume for SDCC? I know if I knew how I would be!

    Another thing to note about the still is that you can now clearly see that there are six people standing on the same side as Ender, which makes it safe to assume that there are only 12 launchies to a barracks, since the soldiers are standing on numbers starting from 01 with the girl in yellow on the left and then going to 02 under Ender’s feet. There also appears to be an additional girl on Ender’s side of the barracks.

    Pick up any other details? Comment and let me know what you find!

  • Synopsis and Cover for ‘Earth Afire’ Released

    Synopsis and Cover for ‘Earth Afire’ Released

    EarthAfire

    This past July, I reviewed Earth Unaware, the Ender’s Game prequel novel by Orson Scott Card and Aaron Johnston. The book did a lot of foreshadowing for Ender’s Game and was, in the end, an enjoyable read for me. The only problem was that it was obviously incomplete and felt more like a “Part 1” than a “Book 1”. Thankfully, the next book is slated for release next June.

    Titled Earth Afire, the book picks up right where Earth Unaware left off. The synopsis is below and contains SPOILERS for the first book.

    100 years before Ender’s Game, the aliens arrived on Earth with fire and death. This is the story of the First Formic War.

    Victor Delgado beat the alien ship to Earth, but just barely. Not soon enough to convince skeptical governments that there was a threat. They didn’t believe that until space stations and ships and colonies went up in sudden flame.

    And when that happened, only Mazer Rackham and the Mobile Operations Police could move fast enough to meet the threat.

    Earth Afire can currently be pre-ordered on Amazon.com.

    Source: SF Signal