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Walls
and Bridges:
by Joel Meadows
03-17-06
There's quite
a lot to pack into this week's entry. First there's V For Vendetta.
There's been talk for years of bringing Alan Moore and David Lloyd's
brilliantly dystopian view of a near future Britain to the screen
for a number of years now with rumours of shifting the action to
the States and generally messing around with the concept. It was
public knowledge last year that Moore disowned himself from the
project, asking his name to be removed from its credits and giving
his slice of the movie money to artist David Lloyd. And now it's
here. I went to a press screening to see it last week (by the time
you read this, it will be on general release in the US and the UK)
and I have to say that I was actually pretty impressed. Unlike League
of Extraordinary Gentlemen, which was cack-handed and pointless,
and From Hell, which was a worthy effort but let down by a very
shaky script and some pantomime performances, V For Vendetta manages
to keep the flavour of Moore and Lloyd's work without changing things
for their own sake. Natalie Portman plays ingenue Evey, who gets
rescued by the eponymous V (Hugo Weaving) and brought in as his
co-conspirator. It's not perfect by any means: sometimes Portman
shows her limitations as an actress and her indeterminate English
accent can be annoying but Weaving is excellent, delivering classic
lines with style and grace. V For Vendetta the film takes a microscope
to modern authority while remaining intelligent and one of the most
interesting aspects to the film is that it comes across as a very
British affair despite the fact that the director is Australian
and the producers are American. V For Vendetta puts across some
bold ideas in a dynamic and exciting fashion without dumbing down
the source material.
I also took
a trip to the London Book Fair last week, hawking around the London
Bridges book proposal and beginning to set up a number of other
projects. It's an amazing show and this year it moved from the Victorian
tram shed of Olympia to the purpose built, modern environs of Excel
in Docklands. Basically Docklands is in the east of London and it's
a huge area, redeveloped from the original London docks as expensive
loft apartments and commercial space. Excel is a fantastic venue
and the book publishers seem much more at home here than they did
in Olympia. If anyone gets the chance, I would recommend trying
to visit the Book Fair at least once.
On Wednesday
evening, I went to a Nick Park and Steve Box Wallace & Gromit
signing at my friend Russell's Animation Art Gallery. It was absolutely
jam packed with people so I didn't get the chance to meet them but
left my card with someone at the gallery. It's heartening to see
that Wallace & Gromit's success continues unabated.
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