Yes, another children's book has been
bought by another studio. Today's book is called Larklight,
and the studio is Warner Brothers, but the rest of the details are pretty much what we've come to expect: an unpublished
children's book, scheduled to be the first in a trilogy, has been snapped up in the hopes that it'll be the Next Big
Thing (or, if you prefer, out of fear that someone else will be buy it and be successful). Written by Philip Reeve,
Larklight actually sounds pretty cool -- at the very least, it's weird and original, which, in an era in which
pretty much everything seems totally derivative, is encouraging. The story takes place in Victorian England, and is
about a brother and sister who save the world ... in space. Not only that, but they "team with a band of renegade
space pirates" to do so. Wow, so many questions. Are the pirates aliens? Are they members of a super-secret,
Victorian space exploration program? (If they visited the moon, JFK is going to be totally bummed.) Since the book so
far as no release date in the US (it'll hit shelves in England this summer), we're going to have to wait for the movie
to find out. And, sadly, that's likely to be a while. (Right now the rights are probably sitting on the pile at
Warner's that's labeled "Stuff we bought so no one else can have it.")
Categories
Yes, another children's book has been
bought by another studio. Today's book is called Larklight,
and the studio is Warner Brothers, but the rest of the details are pretty much what we've come to expect: an unpublished
children's book, scheduled to be the first in a trilogy, has been snapped up in the hopes that it'll be the Next Big
Thing (or, if you prefer, out of fear that someone else will be buy it and be successful). Written by Philip Reeve,
Larklight actually sounds pretty cool -- at the very least, it's weird and original, which, in an era in which
pretty much everything seems totally derivative, is encouraging. The story takes place in Victorian England, and is
about a brother and sister who save the world ... in space. Not only that, but they "team with a band of renegade
space pirates" to do so. Wow, so many questions. Are the pirates aliens? Are they members of a super-secret,
Victorian space exploration program? (If they visited the moon, JFK is going to be totally bummed.) Since the book so
far as no release date in the US (it'll hit shelves in England this summer), we're going to have to wait for the movie
to find out. And, sadly, that's likely to be a while. (Right now the rights are probably sitting on the pile at
Warner's that's labeled "Stuff we bought so no one else can have it.")
'Fone Finds
- The Best of Hot People Looking Hot in 2011 [NextMovie]
- The Top Five Super Bowl Halftime Shows [Urban Daily]
- The Most Pirated Movies of All Time [The Hollywood Reporter]
- The ‘Kindergarten Cop’ Kids: Where Are They Now? [Screen Junkies]
- 'SNL': Best & Worst Moments of 2011 [EW]
- The Worst Players Who Made the Most Money [Bleacher Report]
- The Best Reviewed Films of 2011 [Rotten Tomatoes]
- The Most Annoying Reality TV Stars of 2011 [HitFix]
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