More on "Good Omens" the Movie and Coraline
In a recent e-mail exchange I had with Neil Gaiman he confirmed that Terry Gilliam is the director for the adapation of Good Omens to the screen. On a side note, Gaiman has been working on Coraline and will be doing a signing of the book in the Barnes and Noble in Union
Square, NYC on Thursday the 11th. That's today. Update: 07/11 13:15 GMT by CT : I just wanted to
say 'Curse Your Terry Gilliam'! Ever since I read Good Omens, I wished I
was a film director just so I could direct that book. I guess
Terry will do a good job too ;)
Is this new news its been on imbd.com for a while now.
I also heard that the two of them were thinking of working on Philip K Dick's "A Scanner Darkly" but someone else got the rights first.
callum
Excuse me? Terry is primarily a director, responsible for cinematic masterpieces like Brazil, Time Bandits, Twelve Monkeys, and the (underrated, IMHO) Adventures of Baron Munchausen. Perhaps you're thinking of Terry Pratchett, who co-wrote the book with Gaiman?
Perhaps you meant here, or perhaps here.
The only thing you can accurately describe as "Scotch" is a sticky tape made by 3M. And it's
Dont mean to put a damper on things but this is old news. Good Omens has been in pre-production for 3 years now and Terry Gilliam was always going to direct it. The Hold ups have been with money and financing, not the production team or cast list. Last I saw Terry was waiting to see if the finance would be tied up in time to shoot Good Omens or wether it would get moved down the list a way while he shot Tideland.
Much to most everyone's surprise, it seems, is that Brazil is not a sci-fi movie, at all. It doesn't even take place in the future.
It is/was a satire of our *current* bureacratic times. That's why there were so many "old" things.
It is strange that everyone thinks of Brazil as sci-fi when there is nothing sci-fi about it. It's just a *very* cheeky fantasy/satire.
I hope this isn't too far off topic... but if you want to see Terry Giliams flair for darkness & humor combined... go out and rent 'Brazil'. I think he's the man do to this movie right.
Blender And Linux Fan
To get a lot of the jokes in Good Omens it helps if you have read any of Richmal Compton's Just William books.
Read them to your kids; but do read a little bit. Your appreciation of the satire in Good Omens will increase.
StrutterX
"...Terry Gilliam is American..."
He was born in Minneapolis but is now a British citizen.
http://us.imdb.com/Name?Gilliam,+Terry
-- derby
That's the other Terry, Terry Jones. He also did the voice of the Parrot.
Sara
Due to a lack of any posts on this article, and a few ignorant posts that are here, it would seem that Slashdotters don't really know or care about "Good Omens" or what it is. Here's a post to clue you all in. (If you've actually read the book, stop reading. No really! Go read something about Donald Knuth or some rant about Microsoft. Shoo!)
Good Omens is a book co-written by Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett in (I believe) the early 90's. Neil Gaiman is most famous for writing the Sandman comics (graphic novellas?). Terry Pratchett is most famous for writing the many books in the Discworld series. Basically, Gaiman writes dark and brooding stories, Pratchett writes intensely clever and funny stories. "Good Omens" is the brilliant collaboration of these two minds, producing a hilarious account of Armageddon. The book has been most compared to "Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy", and while they do share many common qualities, "Good Omens" is more readable and enjoyable to me.
Why should you care? Because the book is THAT good, and Terry Gilliam is THAT good of a director, and the combination of the two could produce a movie that is THAT good. What's the last movie that came out in the theaters that is a genuine cult classic and will be for years to come? It's been a while. Several years. It's hard to come up with one, isn't it? Well, a movie based on "Good Omens" directed by Terry Gilliam has a lot of potential to be just that: a genuine quotable flick that we can watch dozens of times over and enjoy it each and every time.
Again, what I'm saying is important here is that the *potential* is there for a really great movie that we could all love and enjoy, and we should all be pushing for it's release. Wouldn't it be much cooler if we built up hype about this potentially great movie rather than lamenting about how much George Lucas sucks and how he flushed Star Wars down the toilet?
What i wish is that slashdot would go back to doing the little [?] links to everything2. That way they could just use terms without caring who read it, because everyone could click the little question marks and find out what those things are.
/. article.
Since they seemed to have abandoned that practice, though, here's a suggestion: when they reference something you don't recognize, look it up on everything2 yourself. It's a good reference. Here are the entries for:
Good Omens
Terry Gilliam
Neil Gaiman
Terry Pratchett
Those links should cover just about anything you could concievably want to know about the backstory of this
(VG) at the end of an IMDB entry means it is a Video Game. I don't quite get why the "International Movie Database" lists video games as well, but I guess a number of actors have had voice roles in them, and there does seem to be some bleedover from Hollywood into games, as you noted.
aloha
psilo
Oh, crud. I just noticed that slashdot edited out the spaces in those links, meaning none of them work. Let's try that again with %20s this time.
Good Omens
Terry Gilliam
Neil Gaiman
Terry Pratchett
THOSE links will work.. I'm really sorry about that. Figures, the one time i forget to hit "preview", this happens.. blah.
If an echo filter adds echo, then what does a lameness filter do?
-- super ugly ultraman
I suggest consulting Gaiman's weblog which he tends to update at least daily. That way you get his writing without having to wait for the next book, comments, opinions, essays, little short stori es he throws in just because, cool things he's found, etc. a
The full title of this book is Good Omens: The Nice and Accurate Prophecies of Agnes Nutter, Witch
There are quite a few jokes related to occultism or magic(k), like the literal demonization of (Aleister) Crowley.
I'd doubt that a studio would spend the money to option all of Dick's works considering that they're going for truly astounding amounts of money. A Scanner Darkly cost $2,000,000. Remember Impostor? That went for about $1,000,000.