Time’s 10 Questions with Stephenie Meyer

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The very last page of the April 15, 2013 issue of Time has the 10 Questions part of the magazine with Stephenie Meyer.  The photo above is from the magazine, but there is more to it in the physical copy.  Here are the questions and answers:

In addition to being the author of The Host, you’re also a producer on the movie. How much creative input do you get?

It was basically me and one other producer and the director making all the creative decisions. That was a new experience for me, to be that involved. It was very cool.

You’ve written a lot about young people. What draws you to them as characters?

It’s about the story I want to tell. With Bella [in Twilight], I wanted someone who was falling in love for the first time. With [The Host’s] Melanie, I liked the hardship of her being young.

How do you think Melanie holds up as a role model?

The main character isn’t a teenage girl; it’s an alien who is in a teenage girl’s body. I don’t really feel like we should be looking for our role models in fiction. That being said, Melanie’s a pretty tough person, and I find Wanda, the alien, pretty aspirational. She’s kind of who I would want to be if I always did the right thing and always thought about other people before myself.

In The Host, Earth is one of several inhabited worlds. That reminds me of Mormon cosmology. Does your faith influence the worlds you create?

The way it comes out the most is that my characters think about what comes next. I find it kind of shallow in a character if they don’t have that kind of wonder and an idea about the world and where they belong and where they’re going to go.

You also worked as a producer on the movie Austenland, which was at Sundance this year, about a woman who is obsessed with Jane Austen. You have firsthand experience with obsessive fans.

I never really looked at it as, Oh, this reminds me of my fans. That’s me. I would love to go and stay at a Regency theme park where I got to dress up all day and act like a Jane Austen character.

What else are you a crazy fan of?

The Brontës. And sometimes Jeremy Renner.

The literary establishment isn’t always kind to you. How do you deal with criticism?

A lot of it I really take to heart, because I know I’m not the best writer. I do try to learn from it. I feel like with each book I’ve written, I’ve gotten a little bit better. You sometimes have to tune it out, because it can be that voice in your head all the time and be really crippling.

You’ve described being a working mom as a delicate balance. How do you and your husband divide the work at home?

Right now he’s doing 100%.

Do you consider yourself a feminist?

I do. Everybody has a little bit different definition. But to me, what I think it should be is that you shouldn’t have to do anything or not be able to do anything because you’re a woman.

I have to ask you about 50 Shades of Grey. E.L. James took something that you created and used it as inspiration for something that’s pretty raunchy. How does that make you feel?

It doesn’t feel that connected to me. I haven’t read it, so I don’t know. I’m glad that she is doing well and succeeding, and that’s cool. The raunchy part, I wish that wasn’t attached to Twilight, just because I don’t like to think of it that way, but, you know, it doesn’t hurt Twilight.

Do you think you’ll ever return to the Twilight universe?

When the Twilight Saga movies ended, I kept thinking I was going to be really sad. I was waiting for it to hit. I just felt nothing but relief. And I don’t miss that world at all.

Source: Time

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Posted on by Sarah in Movie News, Stephenie Meyer
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Will There Be a Sequel to ‘The Host’ Movie?

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The girls at Strictly Robsten tipped us on an article published today at Movieline (source) addressing the issue if there will be a sequel to The Host movie.  Based on both international and domestic box office results, the film has not made back its $40 million budget.  According to Box Office Mojo, it is sitting at over $24 million right now total with six days of release so far.  I am wondering if it will drop out of the top ten this weekend completely.

“A spokeswoman for The Host says information regarding the probability of a sequel “is not available at this time,” but the film’s dismal opening weekend does not bode well for a follow-up.  The hordes who swarmed the film adaptations of Meyer’s Twilight saga apparently did not find a romance about a parasitic alien nearly as compelling because they did not show up at the cineplex last weekend.”

Of course, Stephenie Meyer still has not finished writing the second novel, so that complicates matters further.

I really don’t know what happened with this movie.  I am still stumped at all the overwhelming negative reviews.  Is it associating Stephenie Meyer and Twilight with it?  Is it the subject matter of aliens?  Is it just a bad job at promoting it?  Or is just a really bad movie?

Lizzie commented on this post and what she said stood out for me:

“I was not surprised at the negative reviews or the haters that surface every time a book or a movie with Stephenie Meyer’s name attached to it comes out. It’s happened since the first Twilight film and continued throughout all 5 of them. But the critics and haters were balanced by an overwhelmingly large, and I thought, loyal Twilight fan base.

So where are all these loyal Twifans now? Why have so few of them gone to see The Host, in support of SM. Do they think that if they stay away and the Host bombs, she’ll forget about the sequels, and her mermaid book and finish Midnight Sun or start writing about vampires again?. If I was her I wouldn’t – not for people who let me down when I needed them. If even a quarter of her “loyal” fans gave up 2 hours and the cost of a movie ticket to The Host, I’m confident it would be a hit. Not a mega hit like Twilight, but a modest hit. If Twi-apathy continues and the fans don’t support her The Host won’t even earn back the cost of production and promotion.

If The Host fails how will that impact future movies with SM’s name attached like Austenland, The Dark at the End of the Hall, and Anna Dressed in Blood? There could be a whole domino effect here, so if you are a twifan and you haven’t gone to see The Host, please go before it leaves your local theater, which might be very soon.”

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Posted on by Sarah in Movie News
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One Critic Gives You Five Reasons to See ‘The Host’

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One of the few critics out there that gave The Host a positive review is Nancy Churnin of The Dallas Morning News.  Nancy wrote a follow up to her review after the un-impressive performance of the film at the box office.  She calls it “Five Reasons You Must See The Host.”  You can find the full article here (source). (I would just like to say that I really like this woman!)

“1. Know anyone who has ever been bullied for being different? Are you sick of the us vs. them mentality? In a world that too often pits one group against another, The Host is all about empathy, making its lead character a likeable alien in a human body after an alien invasion of the earth.

2. Are you tired of stereotypes of girls clawing each other over some guy? One of the most beautiful relationships in The Host is between the human, Melanie, and alien, Wanderer, who are co-habiting Melanie’s body. They start out as adversaries, but ultimately, literally become “sisters under the skin.” (I love that in my interview with Stephenie Meyer, she said she drew upon her relationships with her own sisters for this relationship.)

3. Are you a fan of Orson Scott Card? Stephenie Meyer is, and you can see his influence in the way she gets inside the heads and hearts of her aliens, helping you understand them in  a similar way to how Card gets you to care about the piggies and the Hive Queen in Speaker for the Dead, his sequel to the amazing Ender’s Game (coming to movie screens in November, can’t wait!). Card raved about The Host book in a blurb he wrote for it, by the way.

4. Do you like a touch of romance with your science fiction? I can’t think of anything more romantic than a guy who falls in love with a soul — Wanderer — who has a separate spirit from the body she inhabits. This is a guy who loves the girl because he loves her essence — and nothing, not time nor circumstance or changes in her body, will change his feelings for her.

5. Do you think for yourself? Just because a film does not rule at the box office, does not mean it is not a good film. The Iron Giant and The Shawshank Redemption are among my personal favorites that were not box office hits. The Wizard of Oz was considered a flop on its release in 1939, grossing $3 million on a $2.8 million budget. Sure, it’s made plenty of money since thanks to re-releases in 1949 and 1955 and television airings starting in 1956. But if you had been one of the people who refused to give Wizarda second look back in 1939  because other people didn’t give it a chance, just think of what you would have missed.

 

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Posted on by Sarah in Movie News
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Interview with Andrew Niccol Discussing the Look and the Ending of ‘The Host’

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Andre NiccolAndrew Niccol (screenwriter and director) really has not done many interviews for The Host.  He did not participate in the junket in LA, but we were able to speak to him briefly on the red carpet.  Crave Online (source) has an in depth interview with him where he addresses the two parts that Saoirse Ronan acted out, the ending, the aliens, and the overall look of the film.  Excerpts are below, but I highly recommend you go read the full interview.

Stephenie Meyer is coming off of all these other adaptations of her books, and they’ve done so well. Was there more pressure or less pressure on you, do you think, because of that?

I’m so, probably, naïve that I didn’t think too much about it. Everyone would say that, but I’d go, I have a job, so I’m just going to make this as good as I can. But I’ve never really felt the expectation. The only thing, I have more ephemeral creative pressure to honor the book and the story of the book, rather than commercial pressure. It’ll do what it does.

I have not read the book, my apologies. Has there been a lot of major changes to make it filmable? Because a lot of it’s in the character’s head…

Right. Well, that was the big change. In the book you read conversations, and it’s two sets of thoughts, and as compelling as Saoirse Ronan’s face might be that’s not very cinematic. That’s radio, if I’m just going to photograph your face and hear two sets of thoughts. So I made the decision early on that I would hear the host’s voice – Melanie’s voice, the human voice – in her head, and see [Wanderer] speak, so that even if she had to hide the fact that she was having a tense conversation with herself you would have something visual to hold onto.

Did Saoirse record all of that in post, or did you record it earlier so she could react to it?

We recorded her whole performance before we shot. I added other things later, but I had this earpiece that I put in her ear, a hidden earpiece, so that she – and there’s one technician, whose job was to basically feed her her own lines, her own voice – so she could hear it. But none of the cast or crew could hear it in a scene, which was very odd. And I could hear it. But she would have these intense conversations with herself wandering through the desert, and her lines are being fed into her head! Like some babbling homeless person!

Everything the aliens have is bright and silver. What was your thought on that, were you thinking about a certain movie?

No, I was thinking that the design philosophy should come out of the philosophy of the Souls, and that the Souls… Most of them are dressed modestly. There’s no signage, of course, because there’s no competition, and they would never want to be flashy unless they had to stand out, like the Seekers. The chrome from the Seekers comes from the chrome of the creature itself, so that’s why they have an affinity for chrome. It reminds them of their natural state.

Regarding the aliens in their own “skin:”

You’re closer. [Laughs] I wanted them to be ethereal. I didn’t want them to be a fearsome creature. I wanted them to be quite fragile, in fact. You could crush them. They emanated so much light in fact that you cannot tell their true shape, which I thought was interesting. It keeps a mystery to the creature. Even though you’re looking at it you can’t really see it, it’s like our ideas sometimes of God. You can’t really look at [God], it’s just a light.

There’s a couple of questions I wanted to ask you about the ending.

Sure.

In no particular order. It seems like a set-up for a sequel.

It is supposed to be a trilogy.

So you’re letting that…?

I’m allowing for that next phase to go.

Would you want to come back for that one, or do you feel like this was enough for you?

I want to see what the book is, first of all, because Stephenie’s supposed to be writing… There’s The Host, and then The Seeker and there’s The Soul, is the trilogy.

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‘The Host’ Behind the Scenes Footage (B Roll)

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BTS Clip Screen Grab

Here is the official behind the scenes footage for The Host.  This is also called the “B Roll.”

*Do not watch this video if you have not seen the film yet.  It is spoiler heavy.*

The video is close to thirty minutes long, and it shows a great deal from the filming process including stunts (Thank you, Sam Hargrave!), the chickens, how scenes were shot, rehearsing for scenes, and it even shows scenes that did not make it into the film.  Of course, there is also some joking around in the video also.  Love the last bit in this video with Saoirse and Jake climbing in the back of the car and trying to get William Hurt to do it as well.  Looks like Lacey was supposed to appear in at least a couple more scenes.  With the scenes that are in this video and those that are in the trailers and featurettes that are not in the film, I am hoping for lots of deleted scenes on the DVD.

The one thing I did find a little odd was that they were calling out Melanie’s lines at the car crash scene while Saoirse portrayed Wanda.  I thought they always had something in her ear for that, but maybe it was not working that day.

Source: Open Road Films

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Posted on by Sarah in Andrew Niccol, Boyd Holbrook, Chandler Canterbury, Diane Kruger, Emily Browning, Frances Fisher, Jake Abel, Lee Hardee, Max Irons, Movie News, Mustafa Harris, Raeden Greer, Saoirse Ronan, Scott Lawrence, Shawn Carter Peterson, Stephenie Meyer, Video, William Hurt
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