BARBELITH underground
 

Subcultural engagement for the 21st Century...
Barbelith is a new kind of community (find out more)...
You can login or register.


Grant Morrison - Sunday Times Interview

 
 
Malio
13:18 / 28.12.03
Link
 
 
Bed Head
13:37 / 28.12.03
Ugh. That was a thoroughly horrid experience. Links such as this should come with a SPOILER warning, cause I think that’s spoiled cheeky Grant for me. He’s going to have to write only fantastic comics from now on, to get back into my good books. In fact, I’m going to write him a stern letter and tell him so. I’ll sign it ‘Concerned of Barbelith’.
 
 
--
13:42 / 28.12.03
H'mm. Apparently registration for me is blocked. Ah well. Morrison interviews usually aren't that different from each other anyway.(ie. references to his "religion", Alan Moore swiping, hawking his next project, predicting when the next major youth culture evolution will occur, etc.)
 
 
Our Lady of The Two Towers
14:07 / 28.12.03
No, this is Grant with his "I'm a normal person who doesn't do drugs oh no sirree" hat on. Sleepless Knight sounds interesting, though it also sounds like that Hallowe'en episode of Buffy with Buffy taken out.
Whih is good.
 
 
louisemichel
15:05 / 28.12.03
Could someone rip the interview and post it here, please ?
keep information free !
 
 
eeoam
15:12 / 28.12.03
It will be produced next year by Don Murphy, who worked on The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, starring Sir Sean Connery.

Now that's encouraging.
 
 
■
19:01 / 28.12.03
Mmmmmm.
One of his creations was St Swithin’s Day, a story about a man who tries to assassinate Margaret Thatcher.
No. It isn't.

Following the September 11 attacks on New York, Morrison agreed to recast some of the most famous superhero characters to make them more relevant to the changing world.

Wasn't NXM about four months before 11/9?

The script has been compared to Buffy the Vampire Slayer, the cult television series.

[Quick Buffy dip.] Season 2 Ep.6 Halloween where Buffy and co get trapped in Halloween costumes.

What a dull interview.
 
 
the rake at the gates
22:24 / 28.12.03
he made how much off of arkham asylam?!!!!

how come he keeps going on about how shit the pay in comics is?
 
 
Matthew Fluxington
22:46 / 28.12.03
Seriously, if you can read this article because you have registered, could you please copy and paste it into this thread? Failing that, could you at least explain what you are reacting to? Otherwise this thread is very incoherant.
 
 
Bed Head
22:48 / 28.12.03
Or this bit: In an interview with The Sunday Times he said that there was a demand for them to espouse pacifism and fight global capitalism, discrimination and religious fundamentalism. “The real heroes in the world are those guys who ran into the collapsing buildings of the World Trade Center trying to save lives,” he said.

“Spiderman wasn’t there and Superman wasn’t there. Those firemen in oilskins and helmets were there, not superhumans in costumes. In the wake of September 11, violent superhumans are not enough any more. We should be putting the current international developments in context rather than just having wrestling matches between colourful characters.”


- Who *is* this sanctimonious, unbelievably wealthy fool, and what’s he done with the real Grant Morrison? Ugh, and double-ugh. And that film pitch sounds fucking shit. I don’t care what any of you say.

Roll on Seaguy!
 
 
Bed Head
22:51 / 28.12.03
Oh, sorry Matthew how’s this?

(You’re a mod, right? If cutting and pasting the entire thing is naughty/illegal/problematic for Barbelith, you can just delete the post, can’t you?)


December 28, 2003

Film career beckons for comics hero
Senay Boztas


HE RELIEVED Batman of his trademark cape and winged mask and
made the X-Men’s Magneto into a drug addict and mass murderer.

Now Grant Morrison, the Scottish comic book writer who transformed the images of the world’s best-known super-heroes and villains after September 11, has joined the Hollywood elite by penning his first screenplay for Steven Spielberg’s film company.



Morrison, from Glasgow, has won a lucrative deal to create and write a film called Sleepless Knight. It involves an alienated teenager who becomes a hero when a faulty time machine locks the world into an eternal Hallowe’en night.

Alex Bradbury, a shy 15-year-old who feels like an outsider in normal life, comes into his own when life becomes a battle between ordinary people and the supernatural.

The hero — who is named in homage to the American fantasy writer Ray Bradbury — falls in love with a mysterious girl, but she is soon kidnapped by the monsters roaming the streets of his transformed city.

“It is a fantasy story about a time experiment that goes wrong, and people are suddenly roaming the streets wearing masks and stuck for ever in Hallowe’en,” said Morrison.

“It falls to teenagers, people who were excluded and on the margins before, to fight the forces of darkness. This shallow teenager Alex, who was into ghosts before, becomes a hero when this world of ghosts comes along.”

Morrison pitched the idea to Spielberg, whom he hopes will direct the film, and is currently completing the second draft of the script. It will be produced next year by Don Murphy, who worked on The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, starring Sir Sean Connery.

The script has been compared to Buffy the Vampire Slayer, the cult television series. The film will be live-action with computer generated images.

Morrison, who continues to live in anonymity in his home city, spent seven years without a job after leaving school. He now earns up to £150,000 a day in Los Angeles.

He rose to prominence after writing Arkham Asylum, a Batman story that became one of the biggest-selling comic books in the history of publishing.

It earned him £140,000 on the first day of sales alone, and he was soon recruited to work for Marvel Comics in New York. In the past two years, he has re-created the New X-Men, which have become a huge success with the help of two films.

One of his creations was St Swithin’s Day, a story about a man who tries to assassinate Margaret Thatcher. Other controversial titles include The New Adventures of Hitler and The Invisibles, a series about a group of occult terrorists.

Morrison, who spends part of the year in California, is working on film scripts and computer games. He is also writing a novel and continues to write comic strips for Vertigo, a branch of DC Comics based in New York.

Following the September 11 attacks on New York, Morrison agreed to recast some of the most famous superhero characters to make them more relevant to the changing world.

In an interview with The Sunday Times he said that there was a demand for them to espouse pacifism and fight global capitalism, discrimination and religious fundamentalism. “The real heroes in the world are those guys who ran into the collapsing buildings of the World Trade Center trying to save lives,” he said.

“Spiderman wasn’t there and Superman wasn’t there. Those firemen in oilskins and helmets were there, not superhumans in costumes. In the wake of September 11, violent superhumans are not enough any more. We should be putting the current international developments in context rather than just having wrestling matches between colourful characters.”

Stuart Cosgrove, director of Nations and Regions at Channel 4, which shows the Buffy spin-off, Angel, said: “Grant is one of the most gifted creatives in Scotland.

“Sleepless Knight has all the pop credentials and I hope it is the project he takes to a big world audience.”
 
 
FinderWolf
01:44 / 29.12.03
"Relived Batman of his cape and winged mask?" When the hell did he do that??
 
 
A
02:23 / 29.12.03
"Winged mask"? What the fuck is that?
 
 
01
03:09 / 29.12.03
Yeah, this little snippet is definitely Grant Morrison Lite, easily digestible for the 9-5, It's - a-shame-that-Clay-Aiken -didn't-win-American-Idol -set. Initation never ends but perhaps does get increasingly more bizzare over time. This is initiation #1.
 
 
H3ct0r L1m4
04:04 / 29.12.03
YIKES!

does it come at least with a new pic of Moz worth the registration?
 
 
Bed Head
04:08 / 29.12.03
You know, I havn't registered. I just clicked on the link and went there. I don't know what's wrong with the rest of you, that link's working fine.

I'd never register for rubbish like the bloody Times
 
 
Sax
06:19 / 29.12.03
Christ, it might not be the best interview in the world, in that it doesn't expose to the wider masses Grant's predeliction for shaving his head or hanging milk bottles off his knob, but it is, you know, the Sunday Times. A paper quite a lot of people read. Grant's probably quite proud to have appeared in the Sunday Times which is, you know, a newspaper quite a lot of people read.

Sitting there counting off on your Wolverine-gloved fingers what mistakes the writer has made with regards to your favourite super-heroes ("One - Batman does not wear a winged mask. Two - St Swithin's Day is not strictly about a young man who wishes to assassinate Margaret Thatcher, although a casual reader may well get that impression from the first couple of chapters, etc etc") is probably the kind of reaction that would have Grant groaning into his minestrone and skipping off to join his new friends at the Sunday Times who he can talk to in a grown-up manner.
 
 
louisemichel
07:03 / 29.12.03
Thanks for the copy paste !
 
 
rizla mission
09:22 / 29.12.03
He now earns up to £150,000 a day in Los Angeles.

WTF!!!

Doing what exactly....??
 
 
nedrichards is confused
09:31 / 29.12.03
The Times does some funky IP checking and lets UK IPs in free whilst asking those who're from outside to pay the cash for access. Which of course plays mery hell with AOL which routes all their traffic through Virginia for tax and sysadmin reasons.
 
 
■
11:00 / 29.12.03
My objection to the article is not just that there are minor errors, it's just that its almost entirely redundant. Recycled interview, lots of wrong background and the news is buried way down. Crap article, bad writing.
 
 
Sax
11:24 / 29.12.03
But it isn't redundant to the Sunday Times readers who don't log on to Newsarama or Comicon, is it? And how do we know it's recycled?
 
 
Rawk'n'Roll
11:57 / 29.12.03
Its hardly an interview though is it? Its a feature-ette cobbled together (badly) from old press releases. It smacks of no research other than what is available immediately to hand (GM's website for instance) and those figures are obviously someone in camp Morrison having a laugh.

And the film pitch? It The Faculty with the aliens exchanged for monsters. Yawn (unless there are some fit teen-somethings in it, which is the only excuse for these types of films).
 
 
adamswish
15:43 / 30.12.03
It is pretty bad.

And I always thought it was general knowledge how much Grant had made through "Arkham" (although didn't he make even more for two issues of Spawn?).

Even though it's in the Times it's hardly riasing his profile. I much preferred the short interview that appeared in FHM with him. If memory serves (as the clipping is in the other room right now, probably buried under a ton of other papers) it was a series of interviews with men about their jobs, and one particular month they did the job of comic book writer and got Grant on the phone for an interview.

There was even a nice picture of him holding up a copy of "Kill your boyfriend" too.
 
 
H3ct0r L1m4
00:07 / 31.12.03
a scan of that would make you a kind of late \m/ Santa for these holydays, Adam...
 
 
adamswish
15:59 / 31.12.03
Haven't got access to a scanner at the moment vortex. Give me a while to dig the cutting out (and I do mean dig) and I'll find someway of putting it up either here or on one of my two sites, or e-mail it across to you mate.
 
  
Add Your Reply