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Die New York Times hat einen langen und sehr guten Artikel über Spike Jonze und „Where the wild things are“, der zunächst mit einer „Blogger retten Wild Things“-Story einsteigt und dann zu einem ziemlich persönliches Portrait von Jonze mutiert. Sehr schön!

In February 2008, a blogger named Devin Faraci led off a post on the Hollywood news site CHUD (Cinematic Happenings Under Development) with a solemn proclamation: “We’re on the verge of losing a movie.” He was referring to “Where the Wild Things Are,” a big-budget adaptation of Maurice Sendak’s classic picture book for children. According to Faraci, executives at Warner Brothers had deemed an early cut of the film “too weird and ‘too scary’ ” and were now contemplating extensive personnel changes and reshoots. The newsrippled through Hollywood’s online underground. At Slashfilm.com, it generated 88 reader responses. At Firstshowing.net, another 25. Some readers pleaded with the studio: “Please please please follow through with the original.” Others took a more authoritative tone: “Do not turn ‘Where the Wild Things Are’ into something common and forgettable!” There were calls for fan solidarity and several threats of boycott, or worse: “I will personally face-punch anyone who stands in the way of this film being released.” Such variations aside, though, a common theme emerged: “Jonze is brilliant”; “Jonze is an artist”; “Trust Jonze!”

Spike Jonze, who is 39, has directed just two feature-length films, “Being John Malkovich” and “Adaptation.” Both were critical and commercial successes, praised for their originality and absurd humor, and yet they represent only a small fraction of the work that Jonze’s fans admire. He is part of the first generation of filmmakers to come up through the music-video world — in the seven years between 1995 and 2001, he was named best director three times at the MTV Video Music Awards — and his inventive, adventurous style is evident not just in the Hollywood movies he has worked on but also in his videos, skateboard-company promos and TV commercials for companies like Ikea, Nike and the Gap. These miniatures, which Jonze considers to be of no less artistic merit than his longer works, will be celebrated next month as part of a 10-day retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art, an unlikely honor for a filmmaker with his background. He never went to film school — or, for that matter, to college. When “Star Wars” had its first run in the movie theaters he went to see it eight times, but he didn’t see “Citizen Kane” until he was well into his 20s, he told me, and he has never seen a single movie by Howard Hawks or John Ford.

Bringing ‘Where the Wild Things Are’ to the Screen (via First Showing)

4 Kommentare

  1. Ich bin sooooooo gespannt!!

    Kommentar #1 von DrJonezzz am 03.09.2009 um 13:11 Uhr

  2. Geht nur mir das so, oder muss sich jeder ab Seite 3 der NYT registrieren, um weiterlesen zu können?

    Kommentar #2 von stb247 am 03.09.2009 um 19:13 Uhr

  3. Ich musste mich nicht registrieren.

    Sehr schöner Artikel übrigens, danke für den Tipp.

    Kommentar #3 von DonPablito am 03.09.2009 um 21:01 Uhr

  4. … die Gemeinschaft ist stark… den zusammen erreichen WIR mehr! ^_^

    Kommentar #4 von GunGrave am 16.09.2009 um 20:25 Uhr

Sag was!