Showing posts with label Breaking Dawn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Breaking Dawn. Show all posts

Thursday, February 9, 2012

Dream Casting Round Up

Granted, we are millenia away from a von Strassenberg movie.
BUT to help readers see what I see (and there has been a lot of healthy debate on this issue), I have compiled a tentative dream cast for the movie which, in my dreams, is produced by Summit Entertainment.




It only seemed appropriate to use a shirtless pic of Alex Pettyfer as Peter Strauss spends a good deal of time without his. I know Daveigh Chase is only 5'7" and Pettyfer is only 5'10" but that's why they have Hollywood magic. And Abbie will just have to do a cameo, because the character is her, she is the character. It helps that she has plenty of stage experience. And remember, there's an 18 year spread between the past part of Filter and the past part of Bluestocking Girl. So Viktor is nearly forty in Bluestocking. While he's scrumptious in Filter, I think he's dangerously and tragically sexy in Bluestocking Girl and would swoon to see Tom Welling play Viktor in Bluestocking Girl. So, you want a movie? Tweet them and let them know!

And remember, both books are available in paperback and for Nook and Kindle
Ian Harding for William the Third

UPDATE!!! At my cousin's insistence I broke down and watched Pretty Little Liars. I wasn't stunned by the brilliance of the show (though I do enjoy it, the books even more so) but by Mr. Ian Harding a.k.a Mr. Ezra Fitz. He is EXACTLY how I envision  William the Third, from his the way he talks to the way he moves. I kept seeing that scene where he's running barefoot down Raquel's driveway in the rain....yup. So move Brant Daugherty over to Peter Strauss and use Ian Harding as William the Third, yes please. It's like a Pretty Little Liars reunion!

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

The Williams - Dream Casting

So, in the excitement of having found our perfect visual of William Drexler III and Katherine, I decided to put up a whole new post just for these sparkly dreams which also involve Summit Entertainment. Sigh. 

Gary Oldman as the Second and Brant Daugherty as the Third! Swooooon!

Janelle Froehlich as Katherine Demure

Saturday, October 1, 2011

Casting Call at The YA Indie Carnival

If you've been following my blog (or searching Tom Welling's name), you know that "who should play the men of Filter" is not a new topic of discussion for me. Interestingly enough, no one seems concerned with who should play Rocky or Katherine. My 13 year old cousin, however, volunteered herself for the role of Rocky. lol


The ladies on my Facebook page voted for Alex Pettyfer as that mysterious hottie Peter Strauss, Max Irons as William Drexler the Third (sigh....), Gary Oldman as his creepy father, and Klaus von Strassenberg would be played by Ronald Guttman. And when you look at Ronald Guttman and his sharp nose and high cheek bones, it makes perfect sense to have Tom Welling play his heroic son.
Tom Welling would be sublime as the dashing Viktor von Strassenberg. O ladies....I can see it all play out in my head and it makes me weak in the knees.


Filter is available for Nook, Kindle, at Smashwords and in paperback! For reviews check out Goodreads.






UPDATES!!!I believe I have found the girl who most reminds me of my mental image of Katherine. Janelle Froehlich from the Twilight Saga. 
And thanks to one of my lovely readers I have now found the perfect young man to play William III! Brant Daugherty!
Brant Daugherty












Also, if you haven't seen. The Bluestocking Girl is now available
 in paperback and for your Nook or Kindle!



    Tuesday, May 4, 2010

    Vampire Diaries: The Fury

    OMG.
    As a rule, crying during teen romance novels is unacceptable behavior.
    It almost happened though, almost but not quite.
    Maybe it's because I got up so early. We'll blame it on that.
    Thus far, The Fury is my favorite of the Vampire Diaries, which really should have all been one book...but what Stephenie Meyer can get away with today might not have flown so hot nearly twenty years ago (wow, let's not put it in those terms again!). The Fury is filled with awakenings and realizations and I was nervous for Elena and the gang, scared for them at times and then suddenly....my tiredness nearly allowed me to cry.
    LJ Smith accomplishes what Meyer never did for me...she made me nervous. Yes, I've read the books time and again but every time that concern wells back up. I know these characters, they're old friends of mine and I want things to go well for them....but sometimes things just don't. And that is something else. LJ Smith is willing to allow her characters to go down paths that might be less than favorable. She is willing to shock and to let go.
    It still makes me angry that these books were made into a television series (atrocious as it is).
    They're making Outlander into a movie and The Vampire Diaries into a series. How backward is that?
    At the end of the They Fury I ran back to my room, to my favorite shelf filled with old-school reads (which, I realized to my horror...I am missing a TON of my Christopher Pike books. Where did they go? Where is Chain Letter? And the Final Friends, hmmm? Ich weiss nicht.) and snatched Dark Reunion. Unfortunately, mommyhood duties called and it was time to feed the children. They are in bed now and I'm done talking to you, so now FINALLY I can get back to the gang.

    Monday, March 29, 2010

    Death of A Witch

    The pages of Breaking Dawn barely had time to settle back into their spine before I picked up MC Beaton's Death of a Witch. While Beaton is also no Diana Gabaldon, she is MC Beaton which is far preferable to being Stephenie Meyer. Beaton creates vivid Scottish landscapes in the desperate places of my mind, places that long for travel and the harsh yet beautiful scenery of Scotland. Sometimes I wonder if I read her novels for the story or the scenery...it may be a toss up. Beyond that, I love her characters dearly as though I have known them all these years since I picked up my first Hamish MacBeth mystery.
    They are simple reads, easily started and finished in a long, lazy day, but so entertaining. Beaton's work is the very definition of British cozy, making you want to curl up in a good, worn in chair with a blanket by a whispering fire with a cup of cocoa. I had put down her book at one point, when the sun finally shone through the dismal clouds of a windy Saturday morning and headed out to the garden. There wasn't much activity there but still the overwintered parsnips and onions and salsify give me a thrill of anticipatory excitement every time I spy their weed-like leaves hugging the cold, wet March soil. A few of the salsify had been sacrificed to discovery, I having not realized that some had made it through the winter and were beginning their growth anew.
    As I sat on the chilled timbers of the bed, listening to the birds calling one another and claiming their territories the thoughts in my mind faded from the desire to go in and put on another layer, to the bonnie mountains and heathery moors of a Scotland I have never personally seen. My eyes scanned across our own land, with it's sharp hills and rocky creek beds, all crowded by tall skinny trees alive with chickadees and cardinals and a dozen other varieties of birds. In that moment I was overwhelmed with a love for our land. Our land. My family's land. And I began to wonder again about memories being passed down through genetics. Had my ancestors in Scotland had land of their own, land they loved? Had that love been passed down to me somehow, so that I crave going back? So that I would ignore my pride and my own selfish desires to preserve our family land here, the land where I had spent my years as a teenager and my children had spent most of their lives? During my time at Truman State I had been miserable, but when we came back to my parents', it was as though every atom in me settled back into the land and my soul whispered, "I have come home."
    Perhaps that is why I love Beaton's Hamish MacBeth series so much, she takes me to Scotland with her. She brings to vivid color and even temperature, the nature of the Scottish landscape and it's people. I want to go back again and again. This is also what Gabaldon does, even more so, in her Outlander series and I never want to leave it.
    Death of a Witch was good and engrossing and with some sadness I parted with dear old friends at the end, comforted in knowing that the shelf still holds another day of companionship not yet opened.

    Sunday, March 28, 2010

    Praise and Hallelujah!

    I have finished Breaking Dawn!
    Someone give me a hanky! Tears of relief stream down my face.
    The only thing that can nicely be said is that the end almost redeemed the entire book. There was restraint in the pacing, but I was neither surprised nor relieved by the ending. I just don't think Meyer has it in her. In her to what? I will not say, for those of you who have not wasted precious hours of your life such as I have. At least I can hold my head high and say I too know the fate of Edward and Bella Cullen. Whatever that's worth.
    I couldn't handle anymore fairy tale cottages or lingering glances.....
    Beyond Hallmark.
    Stephenie Meyer is a writer of convenience. She continues to grow in skill, but as yet, she is no Diana Gabaldon. But who is? It's not really fair. I've been listening to Voyager by Gabaldon during my daily commute and everything else seems like bare bones writing compared to her.
    More editing to do...and nothing new written.

    Sunday, March 14, 2010

    9

    After watching Tim Burton, Timur Bekmambetov, and Shane Aker's 9 I am only more certain that Alice in Wonderland is Burton's best.
    9 struck me as monochromatic and vaguely familiar. Maybe the Beast reminded me too much of the bowler hat in Meet the Robinson's. There was nothing decidedly original about the storyline and, like Breaking Dawn, I just kept hoping it would suddenly surprise me with a burst of brilliance or just end.
    It just ended, after what seemed a very long time.
    The animation was impressive yes, but it was all dark and flat.
    It had moments when it reminded me of The Secrets of Nihm, but this is most likely due to the concept of miniatures living in our giant world. I've always been a sucker for such things, how the minis would use our things in their world. But, beyond that, 9 held no real interest for me. It's such a shame we were both excited to see it and then it was just blech.
    I may have even fallen asleep.

    Saturday, March 13, 2010

    Past The Breaking Point

    Page 453.
    Hasn't it ended yet?
    There comes a point when you just have to let go.
    When you keep pushing your story eventually it comes to a place where it's just ludicrous and you're beyond your own abilities .
    The baby has been born and I am ready to call it quits on the whole thing.
    Seriously, Meyer, let it go!
    Breaking Dawn is way past its breaking point.
    I wasn't stunned or shocked by the big revelation. Like with most things in this book I just found myself rolling my eyes and doing the mental math to see how many more pages are left to suffer through.
    There comes a point when your story begins to detract from your talent.
    There are other books I could be reading!
    But, let's see what other nonsense goes on.
    Are we just writing for the sake of a good box office finale? That's what it feels like. Like Thomas Harris's "Hannibal." It read like a flippin' screenplay.
    My apologies. It was necessary to vent.

    Thursday, March 11, 2010

    Busting up with Breaking Dawn

    I started reading Breaking Dawn this afternoon.
    And found a slip that made my day.
    On the morning of the wedding Bella gets up and makes her dad pancakes....two paragraphs later he stares angrily into his cereal bowl?
    It was like gold.
    I'm easily amused.
    Beyond that...well that will wait until the end, won't it?

    Friday, March 5, 2010

    Spring Break Reading List

    God is wonderfully kind and opened the gates of sunshine and warmth for us as we were unleashed for Spring Break today. The weather makes me feel hyperactive, which is perfect because though I am not going to Gulf Shores, Alabama or Cancun or anywhere typically thought to be exciting, I am going filming. And this is just the weather I need. Beautiful.
    In the moments in between filming interviews and B-roll for a student documentary and catching up on chemistry homework and folding laundry and providing a taxi service etc. etc., I will be working in the garden and reading. 
    And writing.
    Wow. I haven't written in so long that it didn't even occur to me. It will take a bit of reading to shake off the practicality that has squelched my muse once again. First I must finish MC Beaton's There Goes the Bride, an Agatha Raisin Mystery. And I should probably finish Christopher Reich's Rules of Vengeance. MC Beaton's British cozy was set aside for he sake of homework and editing, couldn't be helped. Rules of Vengeance....I've finished several other books after starting this one, that says something. It's okay, it has its moments, but it just doesn't grip me. There's something impersonal about it. Don't altogether care for it, but it isn't horrible. Reich seems to be one of those technical detail men that lacks in the emotional detail that is necessary to grip readers.
    The rest of my list in no particular order:
    Breaking Dawn (Yes, I will read it, blerg.) Stephenie Meyer
    Alice I Have Been by Melanie Benjamin
    Fallen by Lauren Kate (hush, I'm a sucker for a good cover art)
    The Physick Book of Deliverance Dane by Katherine Howe
    The Poisoner's Handbook by Deborah Blum

    I hope to get through them all...so I can go buy more!

    Monday, February 15, 2010

    Breaking Down over Breaking Dawn

    Ok.
    Several days have passed since I finished Eclipse by Stephenie Meyer.
    It seemed a natural ending point to me.
    And yet, now I must read Breaking Dawn. The book remains unopened. I haven't even been tempted.
    The only curiosity that lingers is this: does Meyer improve again?
    She said when she finished with Eclipse that she felt unable to let go of the story. Maybe that is because her characters were finally breaking out of the cardboard outlines which have confined them and stunted their growth. All except Edward, he's quite a static character. Nothing new there. Will he do anything to surprise us in Breaking Dawn? It's probably too much to ask for.
    On a different note, I haven't written in many days. Priorities. My grades in stats and chem have been slipping. Unfortunately they both require enormous amounts of time. If only the language classes had fit into my schedule. So much easier and more fun.
    Tonight, I will try to write.
    It's a dangerous business, writer's not writing.
    The voices of opposition ring more loudly when our muses begin to lose their voices due to neglect.
    And I will read. Something. Maybe Breaking Dawn. Maybe not.