Watch actress Hailee Steinfeld (Petra Arkanian) in this music video recently released by The Cab for their song ‘Endlessly’.
Blog
-
Watch ‘Ender’s Game’ Stunt Coordinator Garrett Warren on The Jeff Probst Show
According to a tweet today from Garrett Warren, he was on The Jeff Probst Show today and the show will air tomorrow 11/14/12.
Check the Jeff Probst Show website to find your local time. Garrett Warren was the stunt coordinator for Ender’s Game and has been stunt coordinator for blockbuster films such as Avatar and Immortals and also was the stunt double for Mickey Rourke in Iron Man 2.
For those of you that can’t catch it or tape it, the show adds clips online, so hopefully we’ll get to see a video of Garrett online soon after.
As an every-season Survivor watcher, I’m excited to see one of my favorite reality show hosts interview someone from Ender’s Game!
Check out the Jeff probst show tomorrow! I had a great time talking with him!!!
— Garrett Warren (@GarrettXWarren) November 14, 2012
You can follow Garrett on Twitter @GWarren333.
-
60% of ‘Ender’s Game’ to Feature Visual Effects
As is to be expected with a movie set in space with aliens and children flying in zero gravity, a large part of Ender’s Game will feature visual effects. According to a recent China Daily article, over half the movie will feature special effects to be worked on by Galloping Horse, the company that recently acquired Digital Domain.
About 60 percent of the film, focusing on conflicts between humankind and aliens in the Earth’s future, features special visual effects, according to Ivy Zhong, vice-chairperson of Galloping Horse.
Digital Domain filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in September and sold off their projects, which hopefully won’t delay post-production too much, since Ender’s Game will be the first project the two companies focus on. The need for that much special effects certainly makes the delay in the movie’s release look like a very good thing.
Source: China Daily
-
The Consequences of Placing the Weight of a Fandom on a Child’s Shoulders
The internet has been buzzing lately with the big news of Disney buying LucasFilm and the even bigger news that Star Wars Episode VII is now in the pipeline.
What started off just a few days ago as the mention of a movie has now turned into what sounds like actual pre-production, with EW getting the exclusive story that Harrison Ford (Colonel Graff in Ender’s Game), Carrie Fisher, and Mark Hamill are all up for making appearances in the film. Today, Vulture reported that Michael Arndt is being lined up to write the script.
With all this talk of Star Wars going on, eventually I began to wonder: whatever happened to that little kid that everyone blamed for Episode I being a suckfest? After some Google searching and YouTube videos, I found a rather sad story of a kid who grew up being endlessly teased about being Anakin Skywalker and ended up taking the brunt of the fandom’s anger over the film in general. Add to that, he claims he was made to do up to 60 interviews a day. That’s brutal for an adult. He was ten.
I was as disappointed in The Phantom Menace as everyone else was. I’d grown up on Star Wars and when I finally sat in the theater after waiting for months, watching the trailer over and over, and sitting in a snaking line that took me all the way into some hot and humid parking garage in Waikiki, I couldn’t believe how different it was and how apparent it was that the magic was simply gone. And I’m ashamed to say that I criticized little Jake Lloyd’s performance along with everyone else.
Still, I did this among friends. Back then I had no blog. There was no Twitter and Facebook was still restricted to certain colleges. As a fan you could pretty harmlessly criticize an actor without them feeling the sting of it. But apparently there were tons of kids and fans out there who did know him and who did make his life miserable. And there seem to be a lot of people that think he has no right to complain simply because, hey, he got to be Anakin Skywalker.
He’s destroyed all his Star Wars memorabilia and has been criticized for blaming George Lucas for what he went through but really, is he wrong?
Jake Lloyd did not write the script. He did not make up those ridiculous lines and he did not direct himself in the movie. He was ten years old for crying out loud. A child. And really, how do you place the weight of the Star Wars franchise onto the shoulders of a 10 year-old boy?
You don’t. Or at least, George Lucas shouldn’t have.
Which brings me to Ender Wiggin and Asa Butterfield. If there’s been any one major complaint about this movie (and I’m sure the discussion will continue to heat up quite a bit over the next year) it’s the fact that Asa Butterfield is 15 years old and Ender Wiggin was five when he left home for Battle School. I’ve written about this topic before and will continue to defend the studio’s decision to age Ender up because the fact of the matter is, when you have a large fanbase counting on a movie adaptation as centered upon a character as it is on Ender, it’s not a good idea to base all your hopes and expectations on a child.
I mean, how real does this experience have to be for us to have our “true” Ender? Do we have to mentally stress some little kid to the point of a nervous breakdown as Graff and Anderson tried to do for so many years? The answer is no, simply because we’re not the International Fleet and this is just a movie.
Sure, they could have searched the world for a 5-10 year-old actor to play Ender, but I think a book that has been around for 30 years and has been studied in schools for almost as long needs to have an older actor who is better equipped for the work both during and after production and needs to be able to deal with the modern backlash that can happen if all doesn’t go as planned.
After writing and watching how things work in the movie business, I have only a small glimpse of what child actors go through and with the legions of vicious cyber bullies on Twitter, Tumblr, YouTube, and Facebook, I can only imagine how much worse it can be for them now than it was for Jake Lloyd 13 years ago.
And while I’m not saying Ender’s Game is going to be as big as a Star Wars movie, the same concept applies to any body of work that has a large fandom sitting out there waiting.
I’ve briefly met Asa and he seems to have a great head on his shoulders. He takes his online presence in stride and is very well composed on the red carpet, crediting his mother for dressing him and charming those he speaks to and works with on set. This is a boy properly equipped to deal with the side effects of playing Ender Wiggin. I find it hard to believe that a much younger actor would come out of this experience as unscathed and unphased as he probably will.
As for Jake Lloyd, he has my apologies and he has my sympathies. None of it was really his fault and I wish Lucas had had the foresight to age his little Anakin up for the sake of a young boy’s childhood and young adulthood.
-
‘Ender’s Game’ Officially One Year Away
We still have a long way to go, but today ‘Ender’s Game’ fans can look at their calendars and know that we’re now officially one year away from the release of the movie starring Asa Butterfield, Harrison Ford, and Ben Kingsley.
-
Viola Davis: “I Did Not Read the Book”
In a recent interview with BlackFilm.com, Viola Davis talked about her most recent projects including the recently released film ‘Won’t Back Down’ and the young adult book adaptation ‘Beautiful Creatures’. She is later asked a bit about her role as Major Anderson and Davis mentions that she has not read ‘Ender’s Game’.
“I did not read the book. […] And in Ender’s Game, in the book, Major Anderson is actually a male so by the time… I just felt like this is a different character and I didn’t feel like I could learn anything from reading the book as much as I can learn something from studying the psychology of people who have come back from war and experience post-traumatic stress disorder and I felt that was much more valuable for me.”
Watch the full video below:
What do you think about her not having read the book? Major Anderson, while a very important player in Ender’s life at the Battle School, does most of his work “behind the scenes” of the novel and so really isn’t seen by Ender very much. Still, do you think she should have read for herself the original story?
Source: BlackFilm.com via Ender’s Game Fandom
-
Fan Art: Cover of The Hive Queen by Darian Robbins
Check out this cool fan art cover for Ender’s book ‘The Hive Queen’ by Darian Robbins. It’s kind of amusing to look at this and picture being able to buy it on Amazon’s Ansible Kindle. 🙂
-
GIVEAWAY: Ender’s Game Pins from SDCC 2012
Since ‘Ender’s Game’ is so far off, there wasn’t much of a presence at this year’s San Diego Comic Con, but they gave out some things anyway. At the Summit t-shirt booth, they offered up IF t-shirts and Ender’s Game logo shirts. They also gave out little pins of the logo. These are exclusive to SDCC 2012!
I’ve got five of these pins to give away. Don’t be deceived by the photo, these pins are tiny! About 1.5″ x 1″ in size, I just took a very close up photo of it.
To enter, all you have to do is comment on this post and tell me what is one line in the book Ender’s Game that you want to see make it into the movie.
This contest will run for one week from September 23, 2012 to September 29, 2012. Only one entry per person. Open worldwide. Five winners to be chosen at random.
Winners will have 48 hours from notification to claim prizes before they are awarded to another contestant.
UPDATE: Here are the winners!
-
Kyle Clements on Filming ‘Ender’s Game’
Actor Kyle Clements, who will be playing young Mazer Rackham in ‘Ender’s Game‘, recently spoke with his hometown newspaper about the work he’s done lately and he spoke a bit about his time on the set.
“Ender’s Game” was a large scale production. You could have kids flying around on high wires on one stage while Harrison Ford and Ben Kingsley were doing a scene on another stage. All the while I’m being spun around in the cockpit of a jet in another stage. It was crazy.”
Clements plays a fighter pilot in “Ender’s Game,” which was nostalgic to him. Growing up, “Top Gun” was one of his favorite movies.
“Having a role similar to that was very cool,” he said. “Two Navy pilots were even there as technical advisors.”
Working on a 30-year-old beloved sci-fi novel has its perks.
“’Ender’s Game’ has a huge fan base. When someone on the crew of ‘2 Guns’ heard I played Young Mazor Rackham in ‘Ender’s Game,’ he wanted a picture with me,” Clements said. “It’s flattering,” Clements said. “I encourage everyone to pursue their dreams, whatever they may be.”
Hopefully he’s prepared for more of those fan encounters as November 2013 edges closer, as people have been waiting for this movie for decades!
Source: Hammond Daily Star
-
‘Ender’s Game’ to Be Released in IMAX Theaters
In a conference call today with analysts, Lionsgate revealed that Ender’s Game will be getting an IMAX release next November. Opening three weeks before ‘The Hunger Games: Catching Fire’, the highly anticipated sequel to ‘The Hunger Games’, Ender’s Game will be the first of two Lionsgate IMAX movies in one month.
Another interesting bit to come out of that call is the fact that Lionsgate execs referred to Ender’s Games as a “franchise”, which is an exciting prospect for fans hoping to see a sequel to the movie put into production.
“There’s a lot of books,” Lionsgate CEO Jon Feltheimer said. “We’re excited about the franchise.”
But he did temper expectations slightly, noting, “it’s a very different kind of franchise than ‘The Hunger Games.’”
There’s no arguing that fact, with the book sequel to Ender’s Game taking place thousands of years later. However, you never know with movies. They could just age Ender down (as opposed to up for Ender’s Game) greatly to keep actor Asa Butterfield on as Ender Wiggin for potential sequels. Let’s hope the movie is a success, thus ensuring us more movies in the Enderverse!
Source: Yahoo! Movies
-
NPR Calls Ender’s Game Too Violent for Young Readers
Warning: this editorial contains major spoilers for the book Ender’s Game.
Readers of this site may remember that about a month ago I posted about nominating Ender’s Game for NPR’s Top 100 Young Adult novels. The founder of Ender’s Ansible had asked a bunch of the fansites to help get the book nominated into their poll by spreading word of the list to the fanbase and I was more than happy to oblige, even though I don’t put much weight into lists like these since so many places love to make them.
So imagine my surprise today when I found out that Ender’s Game has been deliberately left off of their young adult fiction poll. The reason?
The judges cut Ender’s Game for the same reason — Ender himself is young, but the book’s violence isn’t appropriate for young readers.
This baffled me, to be honest, because I’ve always felt that one of the most tragic parts of the novel includes the fact that the true violent nature of Ender’s actions is deliberately kept from him. When Card chose to hide this aspect of Ender from his own protagonist, he hid this from his readers as well until the very end.
As you may or may not recall, Ender doesn’t find out about the deaths of Stilson and Bonzo Madrid until he watches Graff’s court martial years later on Eros. By then, the climax of the novel has numbed Ender and readers, and therefore effectually softened the emotional impact of their deaths through the terrifying reality of Ender’s destruction of an entire species. The scenes of the fights themselves may have been violent, but they were also quick and somewhat vague.
Which leads me to question whether the NPR judges have even read the books they included in their poll. Other books that made it onto their list include:
- Lord of the Flies by William Golding
- The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins
- Divergent by Veronica Roth
- Maze Runner by James Dashner
- Dune by Frank Herbert
Apparently Ender’s violence isn’t “appropriate”, but the following passages are shining examples of acceptable violence for young readers.
It takes a few moments to find [name omitted for spoilers] in the dim light, in the blood. Then the raw hunk of meat that used to be my enemy makes a sound, and I know where his mouth is. And I think the word he’s trying to say is please. Pity, not vengeance, sends my arrow flying into his skull.
Collins, Suzanne (2009-09-01). The Hunger Games
Two more Grievers broke from the pack and swarmed over [name omitted for spoilers], piling on top of each other, snapping and cutting at the boy, as if they wanted to rub it in, show their vicious cruelty. Somehow, impossibly, [name omitted for spoilers] didn’t scream. Thomas lost sight of the body as he struggled with Newt, thankful for the distraction. Newt finally gave up, collapsing backward in defeat.
Dashner, James (2009-09-25). The Maze Runner
[name omitted for spoilers] lies on the floor next to his bed, clutching at his face. Surrounding his head is a halo of blood, and jutting between his clawing fingers is a silver knife handle. My heart thumping in my ears, I recognize it as a butter knife from the dining hall. The blade is stuck in [name omitted for spoilers]’s eye.
Roth, Veronica (2011-05-03). Divergent
I have read all three of these books and so I therefore know first hand just how completely violent they are.
That’s not to say that Ender’s Game isn’t violent. Ender does beat another child unconscious and fights naked in a shower, punching another student in the groin. But how is this any more violent than the passages above?
Sure, maybe the children in Ender’s Game are younger than “young adults”, but so are all the children in Lord of the Flies, which successfully made it onto the list. Dune features a very sadistic and violent group of characters in the Harkonens. Both of these books made the list because they’ve “become rites of passage for teen readers”. Does Ender’s Game get no credit for its themes on child bullying, population control, and the lengths humanity can be stretched to “for the greater good”? Does The Hunger Games, which kills a whopping 20+ children violently, only get on the list because it’s wildly popular right now?
I suppose I shouldn’t even let this bother me since as I mentioned earlier, lists like these don’t mean much. Despite this, I still find it rather ridiculous and insulting to presume that young adult readers, to which these books are pitched to, can’t handle the violence of Ender’s Game, but are deemed adequately equipped to emotionally handle mutilated corpses and head stabbings from books with more dramatic and graphic violence.
Something just doesn’t add up there.
-
Review: Earth Unaware: The First Formic War
Orson Scott Card’s latest Ender novel Earth Unaware: The First Formic War, co-authored by Aaron Johnston, was released last week on July 17 and my review copy came in the mail just a couple of days later.
A hardcover book of 364 pages (excluding the Afterword), Earth Unaware is an official Ender’s Game prequel that brings us the story of humanity’s very first encounter with the Formics. Earth Unaware has interesting and well fleshed out characters, a steady pace, and great foreshadowing for Ender’s Game. The book is split into three separate storylines and two of them eventually intertwine to provide you with a thrilling and terrifying ride through the Kuniper Belt.
First there’s the El Cavador storyline, told mostly from the perspective of Victor Delgado, a brilliant 17 year-old free miner mechanic on his Venezuelan family’s mining ship, the El Cavador. You start off meeting Victor at a time of painful loss, as his closest cousin and best friend Alejandra, nicknamed Janda, is “zogged” or married off to another clan early to an Italian clan the Delgados have been trading with for the past week because they sense that the two cousins are falling in love. (this chapter can be read as a sample on Tor.com) For her sake, Victor chooses not to say goodbye and instead immerses himself into his work.
That’s soon interrupted when Janda’s younger sister Edimar, an apprentice in the ship’s crow’s nest called The Eye, spots something in the distance that by her calculations is decelerating. The conclusion they both come to is that it’s an alien starship headed for Earth. They notify the ship’s captain immediately and with only the departed Italian ships and one corporate mining ship within communication distance, they send off messages in the hopes that they reach them.
The second storyline follows that of the Makarhu, a corporate space mining ship led by Lem Jukes, son of Ukko Jukes, who is the wealthiest man in the galaxy and president of Earth’s largest corporate mining company Juke Limited. Lem is on a mission for Juke Limited’s R&D division to test the outrageously expensive prototype “glaser” or gravity laser to hopefully provide them with a revolutionary way to mine minerals out of asteroids. The Makarhu is the corporate ship nearest to the El Cavador.
Impatient and eager to return home with good news, Lem is plagued by delays and an overcautious lead scientist and after their first test on a “pebble” or small asteroid, he makes the call to head to a much larger asteroid nearby. The problem is that it’s being mined by the Delgado clan. Not to be discouraged, Lem suggests the unethical practice of “bumping” the El Cavador from the rock and taking it for themselves. This begins a terrible conflict between the two ships, with what’s presumably a Formic ship quickly approaching.
Back on Earth, we follow Captain Wit O’Toole, head of the elite peacekeeping force known as the Mobile Operations Police or MOPs for short. Recruiting from the most elite military forces on the planet, Wit’s visit to the New Zealand SAS base is where we get our first glimpse of young Mazer Rackham. The downside is that while Wit’s story is interesting and entertaining, he parts ways with Mazer early on in the book and his story fails to tie into the meat of the story in a relevant manner and in the end Wit only serves as backstory for what’s obviously another book to come.
Victor makes for a fascinating young adult character with admirable qualities and a deeply rooted loyalty to his family and a “home” he’s never even seen in Earth, since he is space-born. Lem could have been a typical rich kid character, but thankfully, he’s a reluctant non-hero with ethics and the yoke of his father muzzling his full potential. This makes him a much more complicated and therefore interesting man.
You see shades of Ender’s Game throughout, but most notably with the glaser, which is obviously the prototype for what eventually becomes the Little Doctor. Wit O’Toole’s elite force leads one to believe that he’ll eventually help form the International Fleet, since his MOPs are a global force that do not answer to individual governments and strive to keep harm from coming to civilians. The climax of the novel brings you thrills similar to the Battle Room and you can’t help but think that this influenced how they trained the students in the school.
I’d been struggling through Children of the Mind when Earth Unaware landed on my desk and I finished the book in a quick three days, being a bit slow to start since I’d already read most of the first chapter online. Once I got a bit deeper in, however, the story and characters pulled me in until I couldn’t put it down. It’s a very strong novel for what I presume will be a set of prequel books. My only wish was that Captain Wit had tied in better with the main storyline.
If you’ve been waiting to buy the book until you read reviews, consider this review one that urges you to pick up the book immediately. While decidedly different from Ender’s Game, Earth Unaware is a quality novel and overall a highly entertaining read.
Earth Unaware was provided to me by Tor Books. I was not paid to write this review. All opinions expressed above are my own.
-
‘Earth Unaware’ Book Signing Today in Greensboro, NC
Authors Orson Scott Card and Aaron Johnston will be doing a book signing for ‘Earth Unaware‘ at Barnes & Noble at the Friendly Center in Greensboro, NC tonight from 7:00 PM.
Here’s the synopsis for the book:
A hundred years before Ender’s Game, humans thought they were alone in the galaxy. Humanity was slowly making their way out from Earth to the planets and asteroids of the Solar System, exploring and mining and founding colonies.
The mining ship El Cavador is far out from Earth, in the deeps of the Kuiper Belt, beyond Pluto. Other mining ships, and the families that live on them, are few and far between this far out. So when El Cavador’s telescopes pick up a fast-moving object coming in-system, it’s hard to know what to make of it. It’s massive and moving at a significant fraction of the speed of light.
But the ship has other problems. Their systems are old and failing. The family is getting too big. There are claim-jumping corporates bringing Asteroid Belt tactics to the Kuiper Belt. Worrying about a distant object that might or might not be an alien ship seems…not important.
They’re wrong. It’s the most important thing that has happened to the human race in a million years. This is humanity’s first contact with an alien race. The First Formic War is about to begin.
Earth Unaware was released yesterday, July 17. In the book ‘Ender’s Game’, Greensboro, NC is Ender Wiggin’s hometown.