Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Before you stuff yourself with turkey and stuffing and mashed potatoes and cranberry sauce ... oh, sorry there, I was busy wiping away my drool ... anyway, you should check out the new movie Enchanted.

I was a little leery before I saw it. I mean, an animated Disney movie, with the characters coming out into the real world? But I was utterly, well, enchanted by it. (Sorry, it had to be said at least once. It's out of my system now, don't worry.) A cartoon princess, Giselle (Amy Adams), falls in love with her prince, but the wicked stepmother (Susan Sarandon) doesn't want Giselle usurping the throne. So the wicked stepmother sends Giselle into the real world. Uggh, and who wants to be in the real world? Certainly not me.

Once she lands on the mean streets of New York, the lost, confused, and adorably-naive Giselle meets Robert (Patrick Dempsey), an equally adorable single father. Robert is convinced Giselle is nuts, but helps her anyway.

But wait, of course there's more. Giselle's prince is off to the real world to save her. The queen sends a henchman with a poisoned apple to do away with her. There's a musical number in Central Park, thousands of critters cleaning house (ew, by the way), a dragon ...

Adams's Giselle is wide-eyed and innocent. But just wait until she discovers anger--and real love--for the first time. It's a star-defining role. If you didn't know who this actress was before (I'll admit, I had to do an IMDB search myself), you will after this movie.

The movie is charming and touching. Hilarious, heartwarming, suspenseful. I almost felt myself crying at some points, but then I got mad at myself because it's a Disney movie and I'm an adult. But still ... Oh, and watch out for references to other famous Disney movies.

Basically, Enchanted is everything you'd expect a Disney movie to be, yet it some how defies all the stereotypes and cliches. Plus Mr. Dempsey isn't too hard on the eyes. I'm just saying.

Anyway, no matter what you do, have a great Thanksgiving. Enjoy spending time with your families, eat some good food, and try avoiding the crowds at the malls. Oh, and if you get bored, why don't you write us about some of your favorite Thanksgiving traditions, or what you plan to do with all of your spare time, or what books you want to read next. (Hey, this is a literary blog, I had to throw it in!)


# #
Jessica    Posted by
Jessica
on 11/20/2007
8:50 PM
 Friday, November 16, 2007

What could be better than running a toy store? How about running a magical one? Yeah, awesome! In the new movie, Mr. Magorium's Wonder Emporium, a 243-year-old toy store owner (Dustin Hoffman) is leaving his business to shy, insecure Molly Mahoney (Natalie Portman). Will she be able to overcome her self-doubt and run the store, or will the stuffy accountant (Jason Bateman) spoil all the fun?

No, really, will she be able to? I don't know. I haven't seen it yet. (What's the point of being a writer if you don't get free press passes for advance screenings of movies? Sigh.) So I'll be right there with you experiencing this movie. If you see it over the weekend, drop a comment, and we can compare notes!

Oh, and I know you all want to help others. The good folks behind the movie are organizing a toy drive, and they're trying to set a world record for the most toys collected. So do some good, and help people out. Click here for more information.

And here's some more fun for you. Not only is Natalie Portman a beauty and a smartie--she went to an Ivy league school!--but she always picks cool roles for herself. Molly Mahoney should be no different. Read on for an exclusive interview with the actress.

Word: In the new movie, Mr. Magorium's Wonder Emporium, your character Molly Mahoney is a piano player. Do you play an instrument?
Natalie Portman: I learned the piano a bit for the movie and hope to continue (I've been lazy so far!). I really enjoyed it.

Word: The movie takes place in a magical toy store. What was your favorite toy when you were growing up?
Portman: I really liked making stuff out of clay and Plasticene. My mom and I would go to museums and then try and make stuff like what we saw. I also liked cutting my Barbies' hair and drawing on their faces.

Word: What was it like filming the movie?
Portman: It was really fun. We had kids and/or animals in every shot, so it was always unpredictable and exciting.

Word: How long did it take to film?
Portman: 3 months.

Word: Where did you get inspiration for your character?
Portman: My imagination.

Word: What was it like working with Dustin Hoffman?
Portman: He's hilarious. He always tries out new things and has great ideas for ways to make a scene more special.  He's very caring and acted so lovingly toward me that it was easy to find our onscreen closeness.

Word: How closely does the movie follow the book?
Portman: I haven't read the book.

Word: Did you do your own stunts?
Portman: I didn't really have any.

Word: What was the best part about filming?
Portman: Getting to dance on bubble wrap!

Word: How did you become an actor?
Portman: I really liked performing and begged my parents to let me audition, since we lived in New York. They finally gave in, and luckily I got some jobs.

Word: When your character finds herself in charge of the toy store, she has a lot of self doubt. Do you ever have self doubt? If so, how do you deal with it?
Portman: I have lots of self-doubt. I get over it by reminding myself that everyone, even the most amazing people I know, all have moments like that and that it will only prevent me from doing the things I hope to do.

Word: Who has been your favorite person to work with so far, and why? Who would you like to work with in the future?
Portman: I really liked working with Mike Nichols. He is so funny and smart and has lots of interesting stories and experiences to impart. I also loved working with everyone on Magorium--Zach Helm, the director, is super smart and easygoing. Dustin is always making you laugh and being really unique. Jason is hilarious and is also a great person. And little Zach [Mills] is so bright and curious and fun to be with.

Word: Do you like watching your own movies?
Portman: Not really. I get embarrassed and think how I could've been better.

Word: You've been in the new Star Wars movies, been a character on The Simpsons, and have even been nominated for an Oscar. How do you choose your roles?
Portman: I do what I think I might learn from, what will be a positive, interesting experience, and what people might enjoy watching!

Word: What is your all-time favorite movie, and why?
Portman: I love Days of Heaven. It's hard to explain why.

Word: If you couldn't be an actor, what would you want to do?
Portman: Maybe a farmer? or a doctor? or an astronaut? or a mom? I don't know!

Word: What was your favorite subject in school, and why did you like it?
Portman: I liked English a lot because I love stories--so reading fiction for homework is actually fun. I also loved math--it was so exciting to think about things like infinity.

Word: If you could only one book, listen to one CD, and eat one type of food for the rest of your life, what would you choose and why?
Portman: Probably The Bible, because it's a big book with lots of good stories that could keep me busy for a lifetime.  I like Bach's The Goldberg Variations by Glenn Gould--it's very relaxing and beautiful and I don't think I'd get sick of it.  And maybe eat salad because I don't really get sick of that either--and it is very nutritious! (Also maybe Carvel ice cream cake.)

Word: What do you like to do in your spare time?
Portman: Travel and read. Scuba dive and hang out with friends.

Word: What advice can you give to teens who would like to become actors?
Portman: Stay curious--try and be sensitive to how people feel around you and think about what other lives are like.

OK, now it's your turn to leave me some love. If you had a magic toy, what would it do? Are you excited for this movie? Are you going to get popcorn or Junior MInts? (I can't decide ...)


# (1)#
Jessica    Posted by
Jessica
on 11/16/2007
4:48 PM
 Thursday, November 15, 2007

In the current issue of READ (November 16, 2007), we feature a story by Cynthia Leitich Smith as well as an abridged interview with the author. Here is that interview in it's entirety, without commercial interruption.

READ: What was your inspiration for your story "A Real-Live Blond Cherokee and his Equally Annoyed Soul-Mate" (featured in the current issue of READ)?

Cynthia Leitich Smith: There's sort of a running joke in Indian Country about non-Indians who want to be Indians (or at least their idea of what it means to be an Indian) saying they have Cherokee grandmothers. However, the Cherokees are quite numerous. Many of them really do have Cherokee grandmothers. Biracial kids are common, and this is nothing new.
    
Mixed bloods also look like...well, however we look. Whatever the DNA cocktail produces. I have predictably olive-toned skin and dark brown hair and eyes. But I have cousins who're sandy blonds. (We're tribally enrolled Creek, not Cherokee, but the principle holds).
    
All of this is to say, there are real-live blond Cherokees, who no doubt may be at times unfairly greeted with some skepticism about their heritage. A friend of mine from college fell into this category, and put mildly, she found it annoying.

READ: Jason, the Blond Cherokee, seems very angry through most of your story. Did you face a lot of the same ignorance amongst your schoolmates growing up as he did?

Smith: Not really. Back in the 1970s and 1980s, kids--especially mixed race kids--tended to be quiet about our heritage when among the larger population. This was before the idea of celebrating culture really took off. My best friends knew that I was Native, but probably most people at my high school just thought I had a great tan.
     There were moments, though. I remember racist remarks flying on a team bus when it passed Haskell Indian College in Lawrence. I had a boyfriend tell me his father would never forgive him for going out with an Indian girl. An occasional friend would make a remark in passing, not realizing how deeply it struck.
     That said, adolescence is hard for everyone. Kids who were gay or overweight or had serious skin problems were probably treated a lot worse at my high school.

READ: "Blond Cherokee" deals with a teenager struggling to find his identity as a Cherokee Indian living in modern American society. Lots of this story deals with appearances and assumptions. It seems apparent that his blondness complicates his ability to connect to his heritage, or complicates people's perception of his heritage. To what degree do you think that looking the part helps you gain acceptance by other Indians? How important is to "look" Indian to be accepted as one by the outside world?

Smith: Jason strikes me as secure with who he is. Among other Indian people, there's an understanding of the huge diversity. We're talking about thousands of Native Nations in the Americas--different cultures, religions, languages, histories, socio-economics, levels of education, urban, rural, reservation, tribal town, and so on. Generally speaking, people are accepting. For the most part, you aren't presenting yourself "cold" either; you're a tribally enrolled member or from a family-community with a certain history and relationships.
     That said, some folks in the the wider society have the most stubborn stereotypes about us. I'm not sure why. I suspect Hollywood is partly to blame. Maybe some vague sense of ancestral guilt.
     But what happens in the story isn't directed racism. The frat guys aren't "playing Indian" to attack Jason per se. They don't realize that's an aspect of his identity. But the fact that they feel so casual and comfortable with their behavior, that they'd act that way in public, and that it doesn't occur to them that there would be a Native person in the room says a lot about their awareness and where they're coming from.

READ: What makes someone a part of the tribe? Blood relations? Being culturally integrated into tribal society? Both? Neither? Do you think it is difficult for American Indians who aren't surrounded with other people from their tribe to stay attached to their tribal culture?

Smith: The legal answer to that question is that it varies from tribe to tribe. As sovereign nations, they set their own criteria, but yes, ethnic heritage is a universal component.
     As for the "heart" aspects of the question, I've never lived anywhere that there wasn't an intertribal population. I've connected with Native communities in college towns, cities, etc. The Internet also has been a godsend. I'm on an email listserv for members of my tribe. This isn't to suggest people don't go home whenever they can, but we're a people of the 21st century and we've been one of the greatest survival stories by virtue of our ability to adapt.

READ: Jason refers to Nika at first as "Little Miss Gentrification." Is it safe to say that he's making a good deal of assumptions about her when he says so?

Smith: Yes, definitely, Jason makes many assumptions. I wanted to do a story about stereotypes and expectations, especially those associated with Native people, but Jason is nobody's victim. If anything, he's more guilty in this particular scenario than anyone else and has to come to terms with it quickly.

READ: You write both fantasy and Native American stories. Which do you like better, why? Do the two genres ever meet in your writing?

Smith: I love aspects of each, but it's more the difference between writing realistic fiction versus fantasy than writing stories set in a particular kind of community. With fantasy, I can be much more extreme in the stakes, for example, because of the mitigating power of the metaphor. What they both have in common, though, is that for the majority of readers, they're coming to my world as outsiders. I have to provide enough of a foundation for the story and its context to make sense to them.

READ: At the 2007 National Book Festival, you said that "Reading time counts as writing time." Can you elaborate on that for our readers?

Smith: As you read, you become aware of the norms of a genre, the structure of story, the success (or lack thereof) of various devices. What's so wonderful about it is that you can go to the masters, the classics, and the best of those writing today. On the Gothic fantasy front, I can read Bram Stoker's Dracula (1897) and M. T. Anderson's Thirsty (1997) and wonder and study and learn. Within the world of Native literature, N. Scott Momaday and Joseph Bruchac have provided texts of inspiration.

READ: I loved the story that you told at the Book Festival about how you talk to your characters (in writing) in preparation for a story. What kind of conversations do you have with your characters when you are trying to figure out who they are?

Smith: Thank you. The key questions I ask my characters are: What do you think you want, and what do you really want? Once you know that about a protagonist, much of the story falls into place. I also ask characters about their fears, their weaknesses, what makes them laugh. I dive into the minutia--how they wear their hair, the smell that reminds them of their grandfather's funeral, why they sometimes want to dance in the rain.

To dance in the rain with Cynthia Leitich Smith, visit her web site. To order READ, the only middle school/high school literary magazine in the world that features "A Real-Live Blond Cherokee and his Equally Annoyed Soul Mate" in its November 16, 2007 issue, visit our web store.


# #
Bryon    Posted by
Bryon
on 11/15/2007
5:36 PM
 Wednesday, November 14, 2007

Last year, READ adapted L.M. Montgomery's classic novel Anne of Green Gables into a Reader's Theater play (if you would like a copy, email us at read@weeklyreader.com).

For some reason, the story has been on my mind lately. So I decided to rent the movie. I just got finished watching it. Hey, I never said I was cool. Anyway, enjoy this fun video some other way un-cool person made on youtube. Then go to the library and get yourself a copy of the book.

P.S. The Cure rulz too.


# (4)#
Bryon    Posted by
Bryon
on 11/14/2007
1:24 AM
 Monday, November 12, 2007

Look. We get it. You're an amazing writer. You've inspired billions of children to become interested in reading. You've given us a literary icon for the ages. But come on, J. K. Rowling, isn't it enough already?

Apparently not.

The Harry Potter author is back and writing. This time, it's a collection of fairy stories called "The Tales of Beetle the Bard." But here's the kicker: only seven copies will be published.

That's right. Seven. Do you know how many copies of the different Harry Potter books were sold? I don't know either, but it was was more than seven. Like seven plus multiple millions. So it's likely that you won't get to read it.

One copy of the work is going to be auctioned off, and the others are going to be given as gifts.

Now that's just greedy.

J. K. Rowling, if you insist on writing instead of relaxing (I envision her diving into her millions of dollars ala Scrooge McDuck), at least have the decency to share your work with the rest of us. Now you're just showing off! Not that I'm bitter or anything.

Is anyone out there interested in reading the new work from Rowling? And what would you pay to get your hands on "The Tales of Beetle the Bard"?


# (4)#
Jessica    Posted by
Jessica
on 11/12/2007
9:19 PM


Read and Writing Blog Writing Magazine Read Magazine Books and Authors Get Published Writing Tips 1000 Words Musings and Ramblings Cool Links Fiction Student Writing Nonfiction Student Writing Poetry Student Writing Submit Your Student Writing