Neil Gaiman appeared on this morning’s Today Show to discuss Coraline, as well as his newly Newberry winning The Graveyard Book. Shortly before he went on air, Gaiman twittered that he had been given the go ahead to reveal who was set to write and direct a big screen adaptation of The Graveyard Book and once he was in the hot seat, he was good to his word.

Rather fantastically, the name he gave was none other than Neil Jordan.

Gaiman apparently confirmed on the show that Framestore, from here in good old Blighty, would be handling the FX.  We already knew they were producing the film with the author, since an MTV interview of last year.

Much of Jordan’s work in, or at the cusp of, the fantasy genre shows a very distinct sensibility that still seems compatible with Gaiman’s, from The Company of Wolves to In Dreams and Angel (which definitely has a fantasy component, if you ask me - or at least a magical one) to The Butcher Boy .  Actually, while Wolves author Angela Carter was alive, she was my favourite publishing novelist; today, I’d select Gaiman - and if you didn’t know, Jordan is also a novelist, and a darn good one too.

Some of Jordan’s films are more popular than others, but I don’t think he’s ever made an entirely bad one, and the least of them all - probably High Spirits, I’d say - was extremely compromised by others. Studio others. Purse-string pulling others.

The cinematography of In Dreams is alone well worth the price of a good copy, so I’m hoping for a really well mastered Blu-Ray edition soon.

Jordan is currently finishing up Ondine, a Mermaid fable with Colin Farrell as a Fisherman, Alicja Bachleda-Curus as the scaled lady and Stephen Rea as proof that we’re watching a Neil Jordan film. Hopefully we’ll be seeing it soon.

I think that The Graveyard Book is a very deserving Newberry winner. A few years spattered with talking-about in the making, this take on the basic narrative and spirit of Kipling’s Jungle Book doesn’t put an orphaned man-child in the care of animals, but instead, the boy hero Nobody Owens is raised by the various ooky and spooky (and not so much of either) inhabitants of a graveyard. After a solid yet (forgivably) steady beginning, I felt that the book really kicked it up a notch from chapter four then dragged me by the nose, if one is ever dragged so happily, to a very satisfying, and sequel happy, conclusion.

I assume the film will still come as The Graveyard Book, just like Disney’s take on Kipling’s Jungle - not to mention Stephen Sommers version, or the upcoming John Downer take. I would definitely prefer this, though I definitely wouldn’t lose sleep over seeing The Graveyard Film on the posters.

Regular readers of Gaiman’s blog will know he’s a friend of Joe Hill, whose book Heart Shaped Box has also been linked to a Jordan adaptation. No news on that one lately, I’m afraid, so I can only suppose it has been stalled.

Next on my Gaiman wish list is a big-screen version of Anansi Boys, perhaps adapted by David Renwick and starring Lenny Henry.

  • Across
    Give me American Gods as an HBO Miniseries.
  • Nice, i just finished this book like three weeks ago and it was awesome. I hope they keep the whole dark feel to it. Hollywood was going to do an Anansi boys live action movie but was going to cast Anansi, Fat Charlie and Spider as white people. Gaiman would let them do that so he said they couldn't make the movie if they changed his character skin colors.
  • What's your source on that?
  • Wikipedia, i know it not really good source worth but it was something about it.
  • There's an eastern European "book trailer" that recast the characters race, and I think that started an urban myth that may have been the reason this ended up on Wikipedia.

    It's not as if Hollywood only makes films about white folk.

    Thank the heavens.
  • To tell you the truth, whenever i read Anansi Boys i always picture Anansi as Jack Nicholson. Don't know why but i do.
  • sexy.
  • I've never heard of this project but it sounds really interesting.
  • The question now is: who is Stephen Rea going to play?
    And the rumour about Anansi Boys is sourced to an old interview with Gaiman.
    Who is also apparently as of november last year late in turning in a screenplay for Anansi Boys for an undisclosed director and actor.
  • Already the Rea rumours have begun. I will check them out, see if any of them hold water.
  • I'd love to see either American Gods or Anansi Boys be filmed.
  • We're all waiting for an amazing Sandman adaptation. I think the timing is right. @Across American Gods would make a pretty cool HBO miniseries, great idea.
  • I think there is too material for a Sandman movie and that it would possibly work better as a mini series on a cable network. Still, I'm not sure how many people aside from the following would be into watching such a story. I would love see a Sandman project, but at the same time I fear what someone might do with the story.
  • jrice73
    Neil Gaiman's two issue run on BATMAN starts in a few weeks--"Whatever Happened to the Caped Crusader?" Let's hope it lives up to the hype and is as good as what Alan Moore did with Superman back in the eighties...
  • I'm terribly excited about The Graveyard Book becoming a movie. It was a really nice book and well deserving of the Newberry award! After my daughter finished she expressed how she would like to see a movie version done in stop-motion like Coraline, but I think this news will be just as exciting. lol
  • Right there with you. Interesting but even more so with Neil Jordan's involvement.
  • The Graveyard Book was good, but not as good as his previous writings. I agree that American Gods would be a fantastic mini-series. I think you could get some really good stuff out of that.
  • Mest
    Add writer Neil Gaiman to the celebrity Scientology list. Neil Gaiman was a class VIII auditor and Executive Director of the Birmingham Org. He was a Case Supervisor at the Guardian Office. In 1983 Neil Gaiman is supposedly declared "suppressive" but in 1988, FIVE YEARS AFTER THE DECLARE, Neil’s name appears in graduate lists in The Auditor Worldwide as completing three courses. His family members are heavy-weight Scientologists; father David Gaiman was head of the Guardian Office and is active in Russia, sister Claire Edwards is an executive in Scientology Missions International (recruiting end of Scieno), wife Mary Gaiman is listed as "clear" in 2002, Mother Sheila Gaiman is a big time Scientologist with her own site and is also active in Russia. Other sister Lizzie Calcione “runs a Scientology practice in East Grinstead , that is a mixture of auditing and WISE delivery.” The Gaiman Family are listed as founding US "Patrons" of Scientology for 2004 & 2006 so they donate large amounts of money to "clear the planet." According to Celebrity Scientology blog-writer Grahame when asked about Neil’s scientology current status: "My answer is that I heard from a close relative of his that he (Neil Gaiman) is taking services at Flag."
  • erik
    Ugggh. All of Gaiman's movies have been awful. Gaiman should go back to comics. Gaiman stinks.
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