Interview: Margaret Stohl and Kami Garcia of “Beautiful Creatures”

Posted on February 13, 2013 at 8:00 am

Beautiful Creatures is the first of a sensationally popular series of books about a “caster” girl with magical powers and the human boy who loves her.  The books are best-sellers around the world.  I spoke to authors Kami Garcia and Margaret Stohl about their inspiration, their stories, and what it felt like to see their characters on screen.  Kami Garcia told me she’ll be at the Bethesda Barnes & Noble on February 23, 2013 at 2 pm.  They are also the founders of the YallFest, a YA authors festival in Charleston, South Carolina.

What is it about the South that makes it such an appealing setting for gothic and mysterious and romantic stories?

KG: There’s such great rich history of literature from the South.  And Margy was an American Studies major and my family is from the South.  I’ve always the South and she fell in love with the South.  We wanted to set the story in a place that was really specific and also that felt like magic could really still happen, a place with superstition and that sort of thing.  And we mostly wanted to do it so we could go there and eat pie!

MS: The low country traditionally is a logical place, where the big ships stopped and brought new things in from the ocean and the islands have a mystical tradition.  It is such a visual place, too, with these iconic villages with the Spanish moss and the village and historical homes and the coast.

When you created the town, did you physically sit down and draw up a map to show where everything was in relation to everything else?

MS: We didn’t at the very first, but we are such world-builders and super-visual so that after we started we had to figure out where the houses and library were and the shop, so then we did.  We had twenty locations!  We did the same thing with the family tree.  The scale of Southern gothic is so immense that you have to do that to keep everything straight.

I was surprised and delighted by the literary references in the movie and the books that Ethan and Lena, the two main characters read, including books by Kurt Vonnegut and Charles Bukowski.

KG: Bukowski is from my brother!  Most of the books are authors that Margy and I grew up loving.  To Kill a Mockingbird is our shared favorite book.  Slaughterhouse Five, the poetry, those are from us, and then there are certain things we borrowed from our friends like popcorn and milk duds, that’s one of Margy’s best friends’ signature movie snack.  And my brother is a big Charles Bukowski fan and Margy loves him, too.  Because we weren’t writing the book to be published, it’s our families and the things that were important to us and our friends.

MS: It’s a fallacy that people think that today’s teenagers are shallow or somehow less intelligent than in the past.  As we were writing we shared the books with seven teenagers who are so smart and girls who are powerful and not slutty and want things for themselves so we were writing up to them, not down.

KG: All the kids Margy and I know are independent and powerful and smart.  I teach these kids.  Our seven happen to be super academically smart, too, but in general, I think teens are super under-estimated.  Even if they don’t get straight A’s, they’re very sophisticated in whatever their talent is.  I always found as a teacher that as long as I was willing to challenge them, they would rise to the challenge.

Tell me about the challenge of writing from the perspective of a boy.

KG: We have six brothers between us.  And I’ve been teaching for sixteen years.  That’s another fallacy, that there aren’t boys who have that emotional side.  We get boys.  But if we write from the perspective of a girl, people associate that with us and not the character.  We wanted to do something different.

MS: The kids told us, “We loved Twilight, but we’re done with hit.”  They wanted the girl to be powerful and magical and not just fall in love with a magical and powerful boy.  And we want the boy to tell the story.

KG: They said, “We want something supernatural and not just ripping off Twilight.  Not vampires again, something different, something new.”   Those became the rules we wrote by because we were not writing something to publish; we were writing something for them.

How did it feel to watch the movie and see your story and characters come to life?

KG:  Creepy. It was so weird!

MS: I think I’ve seen it five times now, and I notice different things every time.

KG:  Now we can pay attention to it like an audience.  Before, it was almost like someone who had crept into our heads and saw everything in there!  It was neat but it was crazy.  Like when we saw the library.  I thought, “How could they possibly conceive that from our description?  I don’t think we’re that good!”  It was so surreal to see on screen everything we were trying to do.

MS: When we went on the set and saw Jeremy Irons dressed like Macon and saying what is basically the first line of the book, our editor burst into tears.

KG: And you’re supposed to be quiet on the set!  And she’s sobbing!

MS: “Get that crying girl!”

KG: The amazing thing is — we expected Jeremy Irons and Emma Thompson to be incredible but the teenagers are just astonishing.  They are going to be huge!  We’re so proud of them.  And all those major scenes right in the beginning, they may have been intimidated but you cannot see it.  Even Jeremy was talking about how remarkable they were.

MS: They don’t want to be famous.  Alden Ehrenreich is a drama nerd and Alice Englert is indie girl.  They’re so cool in the way that our characters are cool.  They have defined interests and that’s what they shared with Jeremy, Emma — that shared passions, not wanting to be like everything else, enthusiasts for what they love.

 

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Exclusive Clip from “Bless Me, Ultima”

Posted on February 12, 2013 at 4:06 pm

Be sure to check out our exclusive clip from the film “Bless Me, Ultima.”  Set in New Mexico during WWII, the the film is a beautiful coming of age story about a young Chicano boy and how his life is forever changed when an old woman comes into his life and introduces him to the power of faith.  It expands nationwide on February 22.

http://vimeo.com/56061123

 

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Google Hangout with Vince Vaughn and Owen Wilson About “The Internship”

Posted on February 12, 2013 at 3:59 pm

Check out the exclusive Google hangout with Vince Vaughn and Owen Wilson February 13th at 11am PT/2 pm ET, hosted by Conan O’Brien, to debut the trailer of their new comedy “The Internship” and talk about their experiences shooting at the famed Google campus.  After it is over, it will be available on YouTube.

Vince Vaughn and Owen Wislon are salesmen whose careers have been torpedoed by the digital world.  Trying to prove they are not obsolete, they defy the odds by talking their way into a coveted internship at Google, along with a battalion of brilliant college students.  But gaining entrance to this utopia is only half the battle.  Now they must compete with a group of the nation’s most elite, tech-savvy geniuses to prove that necessity really is the mother of re-invention.  Shawn Levy (“Night at the Museum”) directed the film, which opens on June 7.

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Celebrate Abraham Lincoln’s Birthday!

Posted on February 12, 2013 at 8:00 am

Celebrate the birthday of our 16th President with some of the classic movies about his life.  Reportedly, he has been portrayed more on screen than any other real-life character.

 

 

 

 

Coming soon to theaters: Saving Lincoln.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R-J3LhG46ZY

Still in theaters, you can see the Oscar-nominated Steven Spielberg epic, based on Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln by Doris Kearns Goodwin, with Daniel Day-Lewis and Sally Field.

And on the National Geographic Channel, based on Bill O’Reilly’s book:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fxiu2JtnZBw

On DVD:

Young Mr. Lincoln Directed by John Ford and starring Henry Fonda, this is an appealing look at Lincoln’s early law practice and his tragic romance with Ann Rutledge. Particularly exciting and moving are the scenes in the courtroom as Lincoln defends two brothers charged with murder. Both have refused to talk about what happened, each thinking he is protecting the other, and Lincoln has to find a way to prove their innocence.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XcuUvtenx6w&feature=related

Abe Lincoln in Illinois Raymond Massey in his signature role plays Lincoln from his days as a rail-splitter to his law practice and his debates with Stephen Douglas. Ruth Gordon plays his wife, Mary.

Gore Vidal’s Lincoln Sam Waterston and Mary Tyler Moore star in this miniseries that focuses on Lincoln’s political strategies and personal struggles.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sxrbIcXBYyY

Sandburg’s Lincoln Hal Holbrook plays Lincoln in this miniseries based on the biography by poet Carl Sandberg.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_669ER2Gt34

 

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