Posts Categorized: News

Over at Weta Holics, Peter Jackson and Guillermo del Toro, the two bigwigs behind the upcoming film adaptation of The Hobbit answered a bucketload of questions about the upcoming movies.

Fans were invited to a live chat with the two filmakers and were able to ask the questions they wanted to know. Over 7,000 questions were submitted in total (!!!), and obviously the two were not able to answer them all, but there’s a huge wealth of knowledge about The Hobbit and it’s sequel.

Of interesting note:

at this point in time the plan is to write for the rest of this year and start early conceptual designs. 2009 will be dedicated to pre-production on both movies and 2010 will be the year we shoot both films back to back. Post productin follows one film at a time with The Hobbit being released Dec 2011, and F2 release Dec 2012. That is the schedule in about as much detail as we have ourselves at the moment.

And, in regards to the decision to hire del Toro as director:

I’ll talk more about this in a later question, but watching his films, he has respect for fantasy. He understands it, he’s not frightened by it. Guillermo also understands character, and how the power of any movie is almost always linked to how closely we empathize with characters within the story. His work shows great care and love for the main characters he creates. He also has supreme confidence with design, and visual effects. So many film makers are scared of visual effects – which is no crime, but tough if you’re doing one of these movies!

If we disagree, the director has to win, because you should never force a director to shoot something they don’t believe in. But we’re both reasonably practical and ego-free, and I believe that if we disagree, we both have the ability to express our differing theorys – state our case, like lawyers – and between us, work out what’s best for the movie.

You can find the interview HERE or download a PDF copy HERE.

Thanks to SF Crowsnest for the heads up!

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Brenner’s been around for a long time. So have his books.

Originally published by DAW in the late ’80s to mid-90s, Brenner’s series of novels, The Dance of Gods, managed to find a core of dedicated fans. Unfortunately the volume of them just wasn’t enough for DAW to keep the novels in print. Fast forward several years, through the advent of the Internet, and Brenner decided it was time to give the novels another chance.

A Good friend of this blog, Chris the Book Swede, liked the first novel:

Catastrophe’s Spell, although extremely humourous is also an engaging, interesting story and an excellent start to the Dance of Gods series. I would very much like to see this book back in print.

So what went wrong?
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Browsing the Subterranean Press web site (and Pat’s Fantasy Hotlist), I ran across some more artwork for the upcoming special addition of Steven Erikson’s Gardens of the Moon.

Upcoming art from Steven Erikson's Gardens of the Moon

There are a few problems, foremost among them the fact that Quick Ben and Kalam should have darker skin, but it’s a killer image nonetheless! Komarck, the artist, is quickly cementing himself as one of my favourite fantasy artists working today, Erikson sure made a good decision.

Pat also reports that “The other two sketches which were submitted to [Subterranean Press’s] Bill were of the rising of Tool, and the scene in which Quick Ben and Kalam spy on the Tiste Andii from the rooftops.”

You can find Komarck’s web site HERE.

There is never enough time to do everything, but there is always enough time to do the most important thing. ~ Brian Tracy

Oh how time flies.

When I first started A Dribble of Ink, a year ago today, I had no idea what I was in for. I certainly didn’t expect to be taken seriously; nor did I expect to recieve review copies of books. There was no way I thought more than a handful of people I already knew around the web would stop by to read my drivel. Least of all did I expect to have a review blurb listed in a paperback release of one of the major epic fantasy debuts of the year, Brian Ruckley’s Winterbirth:

My review blurb in Brian Ruckley's Winterbirth!

To celebrate this birthday, I thought it would be a good time to gather up all the stuff I’ve done over the year – Reviews. Interviews. Articles – and put it together into one easy to navigate list.

To those of you who have been around since the beginning, Thank you. To those of you have just discovered A Dribble of Ink, feel encouraged to check out some of the things A Dribble of Ink has put together that you may have missed!
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Last Argument of Kings by Joe AbercrombieJoe Abercrombie’s upcoming novel, Best Served Cold has been delayed.

Now that your dismay has had some time to run its course, you’ll be happy to know that it’s by only about two months or so, which ( still having about a year to wait) doesn’t make a huge difference, all things told. What is interesting, however, is Abercrombie’s post on the delay and his ideas on book delays in general. Abercrombie’s known for being candid, with a no bullshit style of telling it like it is, so his take on it is worth reading:

“I’d got used to the pace I was working at with Last Argument of Kings, and foolishly extrapolated my likely writing pace from there. That was pretty damn fast, took about 14 months including all the editing. But that was writing the third in a trilogy, the characters, plots, endings long established in my mind and ready to be vomited out onto the page. This new project has proved more difficult. In a sense, since the trilogy was one long story, this book has felt much more like my “difficult second album” than the second book did, which was only really a continuation of the first. I am beginning to understand why people end up writing endless series…

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