Blog

Guest Post: Casting Call Contest

peat_is_beat_web

mattfaceHello, fans and friends of Peter V. Brett!

That’s seems a bit wordy. Would you mind if I call you Peatlings? Actually, forget that. It suggests you’re all a bunch of tiny Peats, and that would just be creepy. I’ve got it–The Warded Fans! So…

Greetings, Warded Fans!

My name is Matt and I will be guest-hosting this post while your regular host catches up on some much needed work. And sleep. And family time. Put it this way–the man is swamped, and if you ever want to read The Desert Spear, you’re going to have to afford him a short break from blogging. But that doesn’t mean YOU need to take a break from the blog.

Being the great friend to Peat that I am (I may not rate a Sam, but on a scale from Gollum to Gandalf, I’m at least a Merry or Pippin), I offered to kick off another contest. Feel free to write a haiku about it, but this contest will be all about fantasy casting the movie that we’re all hoping is coming soon out of the recently announced Paul WS Anderson movie option.

The rules are simple:

Peat has selected the 4 main characters and 6 supporting characters from The Warded Man who he is most excited to see on film, and he wants you–his Warded Fans–to do your best job of playing armchair casting director with them. You can only pick one actor for each role (feel free to include a web address to either their IMDB page or some other site where anyone unfamiliar can check them out). The winner and runners-up are going to be chosen at the end of the month, based simply on whomever Peat decides has the best cast.

Bonus points if you provide a little insight into WHY you pick who you pick. The best why to win is to convince Peat that your cast is the best!

And speaking of the names, here they are:

ARLEN
LEESHA
ROJER
JARDIR

Supporting characters:

BRUNA
ARRICK
RAGEN
ELISSA
COB
ELONA

You’ll also get extra credit if you cast more than the 10.

Prizes: The 1st Place Winner will get to choose from the following: signed Warded Man Hardback, signed German TPB, and signed UK Paperback. 2nd and 3rd will get one of the two books that remain.

I’ve been trying to convince Peat to also offer up his used copies of Milla Jojovich’s Divine Comedy CD and the first Resident Evil DVD as part of the prize package, but I don’t think he’s willing to part with either.

But still–good luck!

Oh, and if this still isn’t enough to tide you over until Peat is back to a regular blogging schedule, feel free to check out MY website, No  Cure for Comics.

Posted on August 9, 2009 at 12:42 pm by PeatB
Filed under Contests, Desert Spear, Fans, Germany, Movie
30 Comments »

Scyla y Fantasymundo Entrevistas

hombre_marcado_cover_webTwo new interviews today, these done for my Spanish publisher, Minotauro, who have recently released the Spanish translation of The Warded Man, El Hombre Marcado.

The interviews were conducted in English and then translated into Spanish, but Alejandro Serrano, the interviewer, was kind enough to post both versions, so if you don’t read Spanish, don’t fret! You can scroll down to the English version.

The first interview can be found on Scyla, the website of Minotauro’s parent publisher, Timun Mas.

The second interview can be found on Fantasymundo, one of the premiere Spanish fantasy sites.

While I’m at it, here are some reviews of the Spanish translation:

There are some mild spoilers in this review by Sakura125, but it’s a wonderful review, and has a nice slideshow of art from the different book editions at the end: Spanish version and English autotranslate

Here is a discussion thread on Abrete libro: Spanish version and English autotranslate

I was very excited to get my first copy of El Hombre Marcado the other day. I’ve been looking forward to this edition for some time.

Here’s a picture of a sweaty baby trying to steal my copy:

cassie_ehm1

Posted on August 4, 2009 at 1:51 pm by PeatB
Filed under Craft, Desert Spear, Fans, Interviews, Reviews, Sales, World Traveler, Writing
10 Comments »

Warded Option

So the best thing about the Warded/Painted Man movie option so far is that I got to meet Milla Jovovich.

No, seriously.

I love Milla Jovovich. Ironically, it’s not in the way most nerds of my ilk love her. I think of her as a musician.

I listen to music all the time. When I read, when I exercise, when I surf  the web or ride the train. Apart from when I’m sleeping or watching television, I am always surrounded by music.

I particularly like to listen to music when I write. I don’t know that I could write without it. I am very particular about my writing music, though. Unlike music for other occasions, writing music needs to affect mood while not distracting the mind. For me that means mostly instrumental music, but also some select vocalists who create the right atmosphere (which varies with the tone of what I’m writing). I also like music that is timeless, or at least that which calls back to simpler times. My current writing playlist has musicians like Howard Shore, Loreena McKennit, Iron & Wine, Enya, The Decemberists, Medieval Baebes, A Perfect Circle, Tori Amos, and Milla Jovovich.

In truth, Milla predates most of those artists for me. I bought her one album, The Divine Comedy, back in 1994 after hearing the single, The Gentleman Who Fell, on the radio. I loved it, and it’s been in my writing music rotation ever since. It’s not in my top 10 favorite albums of all time, but definitely in my top 25. That’s saying a lot. I have 15,000 songs on my iPod, and I still listen to Divine Comedy regularly even now. Milla’s rendition of In a Glade is one of the most beautiful things I’ve ever heard in my life.

Didn’t hurt, of course, when I looked at her jacket pictures and saw she was also a supermodel.

Anyway, a couple of years later I heard about The 5th Element, and went to see it mainly for her.

I thought it was meh. All I really remember is orange. Sacrilege, I know, but I recall thinking to myself, “She stopped making that beautiful music for this? Argh!”

But life goes on. One great CD beats none, and she was amazing in Resident Evil and Ultraviolet and other movies, so good for her. She deserved the success, but I was always a little sad about the music that might have been, if she had put the time into growing her talents there.

What was I talking about? Oh, right, the movie thing. So I got a call last year from my agent saying that Paul WS Anderson’s production company was interested my book. It wasn’t the first such call. Nor the last.

All I knew about Paul offhand was that he directed AVP. I pulled up his directorial filmography on IMDB to see what else he directed that I had seen. Event Horizon and the first Resident Evil. That got me psyched. I bought a copy of Event Horizon in 1998 after my friend Dave Charnews told me it scared the bejeezus out of him and gave him nightmares. Scared the heck out of me, too. Not a movie to watch late at night, especially if you’ve been drinking. As for Resident Evil, I challenge anyone to name a better videogame to film translation than RE1. Visually it was stunning, and the story was still far less improbable than the game itself. Plus it starred Milla Jovovich, and she, as I have established, is awesome. Paul and Milla later married.

Paul also directed Death Race with Jason Statham. I haven’t seen that, but I’ve long thought that if Jason Statham were younger, he would be a great Painted Man. Remember The Transporter? Dude is like Spider-man. I imagined a Paul WS Anderson movie based on The Painted Man, with Statham as the PM and Milla as Leesha, and I gotta say, it was pretty damned awesome.

(Note to rumormongers: Do not take away from this post that either Jason Statham or Milla Jovovich are in any way attached to the Warded Man movie project. Nothing of the sort has ever been mentioned or discussed. I’m just saying I imagined it for a minute and it was cool.)

But come on. What were the odds that Paul WS Anderson, or anyone really, was going to actually want to make a movie out of my book? My world view refused to consider the possibility of that happening. I mean shit, I still can’t believe I have a friggin’ book deal at all. I figured at best someone would try to option it for a pittance and just shelve it in case it ever became valuable, and I’d be corespawned before I ever let that happen.

So the morning of the lunch meeting, I was oddly calm about it. Fatalist. But as I was leaving the house, I turned to Dani and said, “Wouldn’t it be cool if I got to meet Milla Jovovich today?”

“That would be crazy,” she said.

So I meet Paul at the restaurant in his hotel. We sit down, and I see Paul is a young, friendly, smart guy. He has an infant daughter, same as me, and we bonded about new fatherhood and what it was like to have a daughter for several minutes. We also talked about what fantasy movies we liked and what we didn’t, which helped me get a real feel for where he would be coming from in making a fantasy movie. I immediately liked him, but I like a lot of people. You don’t give your baby to just anyone to watch, and I am no less guarded with my writing. I had my gloves on and fists up when we turned to business.

So we talked, and Paul really impressed me. He and I had a deep conversation about the book. Deeper in some ways than I had even with my publishers. He wanted all the meta stuff, like how fear itself plays the main villain in each of the characters’ lives, but also the minute details, like what I based the martial arts on, or the social structures of the prominent city states. He wanted to know what happened in the sequel, and in the books after. We discussed the imagery, and how it could translate to film. One editor had once criticized my writing as “too cinematic”, but one person’s weakness is another’s strength, because I was moved by the power of some of those potential shots.

Then we talked about how friggin’ cool the demons might look.

Paul had already won by decision when the knockout punch arrived. I see Paul waving, and suddenly Milla Jovovich walks up to the table.

“Mind if I join you boys?” she asks.

“Dahr,” I said, but I stood up, because that’s what you do when a lady enters the room, and it was all I could think to do anyway.

Paul introduces us and we sit down. I open my mouth to tell Milla how much I loved The Divine Comedy, but before I can say anything, she leans across the table to me, looks me right in the eye, and says, “Can I just tell you? I loved your book.”

“I really loved The Divine Co… say what?” I said.

The Painted Man,” Milla said. “Paul couldn’t stop raving about it, but he reads too slow, so I took his copy and made him buy his own. I loved it!”

I am still reeling from this news when Milla starts talking to me about the book every bit as intensely as Paul did. She really read it, and thought deeply about it. She asked smart questions and loved long answers. The three of us had an amazing conversation about character motivations and book to screenplay translation. Eventually I got to tell her how much I love her music and how I write while listening to it all the time.

Then Milla got up and left. “I don’t want to disturb you boys while you’re talking shop,” she said to me, “but I just wanted to meet you and tell you how much I loved the book.” She hugged me goodbye. She smelled like angels.

After she left, Paul told me he and his partner Jeremy Bolt wanted to use their  own money to option the book because he believed in it that much, and was really excited to make it his next project. I believed him, and felt very confident that he could do a good job. He told me to have my people call his people, or something. They did, and eventually worked out an option deal. There were other potential offers along the way, but none of them impressed me the way Paul did.

So maybe a movie will get made. It certainly is a boost to have an excited and proven director who loves the source material, but it’s easier to walk the Ring to Mordor than to turn an option into a film in theaters, and I know the way is fraught with pitfalls.

But if a movie IS made, I go into it confident that the top people involved will “get it”, and that is all I could possibly ask for.

And if one ISN’T made, well, Milla Jovovich loved my friggin’ book, and no one can take that away from me.

Posted on August 1, 2009 at 1:11 pm by PeatB
Filed under Craft, Events, Interviews, Movie, Musings, Writing
9 Comments »

The Hits Keep on Coming

The paperback of The Painted Man continues to sell up a storm in the UK, still kicking ass on the Amazon bestseller list as it enters into its THIRD printing.

Meanwhile, the German translation, Das Lied der Dunkelheit, has sold tens of thousands of copies in the three months its been out, surpassing any other market, and is entering into a second printing.

In other news, I should be handing in the final draft of The Desert Spear next month, and am almost done with the page proofs for The Great Bazaar.

Oh, and there’s this: http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/content_display/news/e3ide843f7bf07c511f72af7f1bfe79a0a8

Ahem.

Posted on July 29, 2009 at 1:05 am by PeatB
Filed under Desert Spear, Events, Germany, Movie, Sales, World Traveler, Writing
9 Comments »

100 x 100

I’ve now spent 100 days in the Amazon UK top 100 fiction books. Whoot!

100_in_100a

Posted on July 24, 2009 at 1:39 am by PeatB
Filed under Events, Sales, Writing
3 Comments »