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Interview: Ransom Riggs thrilled to enter ‘Peculiar’ world of Tim Burton

20th Century FoxBy Tim Lammers

Ransom Riggs certainly doesn’t mind being called a peculiar person, and not just for the fact that he wrote the novel “Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children,” which spawned into a best-selling book trilogy. He’s peculiar in Hollywood, especially, because he’s a novelist, screenwriter and filmmaker, and not necessarily in that order.

Usually, you’ll find one or another, but hardly ever together.

And through an extraordinary series of events, “Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children” — a little more than five years after it was published — will debut in theaters later this month as the latest film from acclaimed director Tim Burton. The novel has come a long way in a short time, considering that Riggs wrote it while trying to carve out a career as a filmmaker and writer. Usually, it’s the other way around, where a writer writes, and someday, maybe, their novel is adapted for the big screen.

But writing “Miss Peregrine’s” wasn’t a novel idea, so to speak, for Riggs. The genesis of the idea dated back before film school, when he started collecting vintage photos of peculiar people wherever he could find them. Eventually those people — children, in particular — made their way in Riggs’ story to an orphanage on an abandoned Welsh Island, where the titular Miss Peregrine watched over the kids, who were dubbed “Peculiars.”

“I was writing fiction in my spare time since I was a kid, and telling various iterations of a kid trapped in seemingly normal world who finds a door hidden within that world to another one, to an extraordinary place,” Riggs said in a recent phone conversation from New York City. “The photos just became another way for me to tell that story in a style that appealed to me, having just finished film school, because I had been trying to tell stories for three years using words and pictures. So, it was a natural thing to be writing a screenplay on one hand, and at the same time be writing an illustrated novel on the other.”

Tim Burton Book 2
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The images were not drawings, though, but most of the time were haunting photos that helped Riggs tell his story.

“The photos became a fun resource to draw on when I got to the point of the story and said, ‘OK, I need to create this characters — who are they and what do they look like? — I needed a little grounding,” Riggs recalled. “Also, I liked using the photos because they are a document of a real, incontestably actual thing — a person or a place — in a story that is hugely fantastic and fictional. They just ground in a little bit of history in this story that otherwise might float off into the ether.”

The opening of “Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children,” in theaters nationwide Sept. 30, will no doubt assure Riggs that his characters didn’t float off into the ether. Grounding Miss Peregrine is the always charismatic Eva Green, while Asa Butterfield plays Jacob Portman, a Peculiar with the unique ability to see monstrous ex-Peculiars called “Hollowgasts.” The film also stars the likes of Samuel L. Jackson, Allison Janney and Judi Dench, while Jane Goldman adapted the screenplay. Burton’s longtime collaborator Derek Frey serves as one of the film’s executive producers.

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Of course, while some authors fret over how their work is going to be adapted, Riggs the filmmaker knows that try as anyone might, they are never going to 100 percent be able to adapt the written words in a novel for the big screen, because they are simply two different mediums. But coming from a similar background as Burton (“We both grew up in very sunny, suburban places dreaming of Gothic castles,” Riggs noted with a laugh), the writer knew his creation was in caring hands.

“I think the best adaptation from novel to film is not always the most faithful adaptation. In order to really make a great film that stands on its own as a piece of cinematic art, the filmmaker has to take the material and internalize it, and make it their own,” Riggs observed. “And yet, while the film diverges from the book in different aspects, Tim captures the spirit and the tone and the messages of the book in ways that I don’t think that any other filmmaker could have. I suppose that’s why Tim gravitated to book. He saw something in it that resonated with him.”

The interesting thing is, while Riggs knew there would be changes in the interpretation of “Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children” from book to film, he was pleasantly surprised with the changes, even to the point where he found himself saying, “Why didn’t I think of that?”

“I constantly was thinking of that. Constantly,” Riggs said, laughing. “So many changes that Tim made — and they’re tweaks, really, there weren’t any enormous changes — were so smart. When something is finished, it’s fun to step back and think, ‘Wouldn’t it be funny if the extremely strong girl wasn’t this brawny teenager, but this little, Shirley Temple-like Kewpie Doll girl? Yes! That’s hilarious!’ When you’re making a film and you’re going to be confronted with the visuals of these characters 24 frames a second, making them look right and tweaking the characters to look a certain way is so important.”

September is a big month for Riggs. In addition to Burton’s “Miss Peregrine’s” film, author/photographer Leah Gallo’s “The Art of Miss Peregrine’s Home For Peculiar Children” (Quirk Books), which Riggs wrote the foreword for, was released this week. Then, on Saturday, Riggs’ latest novel, “Tales of the Peculiar” (Quirk Books) — which he describes as “an artifact from the Peculiar world” – hits the shelves.

“‘Tales of the Peculiar’ are like the ‘Grimm’s Fairy Tales’ for the Peculiars. They’re the beloved tales that they have grown up reading or hearing read to them by their Ymbrynes (who hide Peculiars from the world’s dangers) and reading to one-another,” Riggs explained. “In the second book in the series (‘Hollow City’), the tales become very important because they contain all sorts of coded messages and secrets about the location of important loops, and the identities of Peculiars and Ymbrynes, who can help them. There are actually a couple tales entirely told within the text of ‘Hollow City,’ and I had so much fun writing them that when I finished the three books, I wanted to write more.”

Interview: Horror springs eternal for Reeve Carney in ‘Penny Dreadful’

Forget about his behind-the-scenes access and knowing the material inside and out: When “Penny Dreadful” star Reeve Carney said he watched the first episode of the hit Showtime horror series, he knew he was part of something special because it freaked him out just as much as everybody else.

“Even though I knew what was going to happen because I read the scripts and was there a lot of the days the show was being filmed, I was still terrified,” Carney told me with a laugh in a phone call Monday from Ireland, where filming is underway on the show’s second season.  “The show does a great job of making you leave your sense of reality behind when you’re watching it.”

Carney stars as the classic literary character Dorian Gray in creator John Logan’s unique Victorian-era world, which also weaves in such literary icons as Victor Frankenstein (Harry Treadaway), his creature (Rory Kinnear) and other famed characters who strike fear in the hearts of horror fans.

Also starring Eva Green, Timothy Dalton and Josh Hartnett as trio who team together to battle evil, supernatural forces, “Penny Dreadful” makes its debut on Blu-ray and DVD (ShowTime/CBS Home Entertainment) Tuesday.

Eva Green and Reeve Carney in 'Penny Dreadful' (photo -- Showtime)
Originating, of course, as the ageless title character in Oscar Wilde’s classic novel “The Picture of Dorian Gray,” Carney knew going into the project of the responsibility of staying true the Dorian’s literary roots, while at the same time making the character his own under the auspices of Logan.  Carney says Logan, the Oscar-nominated screenwriter of “Gladiator,” “The Aviator” and “Hugo,” gave Carney the choice to delve into the original material for some context, but it wasn’t required.

“In the final audition stages, I asked John if I should read it, but he said, ‘It’s up to you.’ I thought it was my duty to do so,” Carney recalled. “At the same time, I knew John was taking the character not in a different direction, but elaborating upon him in a different way. It’s so exciting. This is the sort of show I would watch even if I wasn’t involved in it.”

Carney, 31, says working on “Penny Dreadful” has been thrilling, not only for its spine-tingling material, but for working with the likes of Green, Hartnett and Dalton and the veteran charisma they bring to the series. Humbled by their presence, Carney said he takes every opportunity to learn from them.

“I go to the set on my days off to watch them, hopefully inconspicuously,” Carney said with a chuckle. “Compared to someone like Eva, Tim and Josh, I’m relatively new to this game, and they’ve been very helpful.”

“Tim gave me some great advice because I couldn’t watch myself on the screen, but now I can endure it,” Carney added. “He said, ‘You can’t be worried about any of the surface-level things and ultimately, you have to be looking for the truth.’ If you ask yourself, ‘Am I telling the truth?’ and you are, that’s all you can do. That’s something I learned from Tim that I will carry with me forever.”

Tim Burton Book 2
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Giant leaps

Carney’s path to “Penny Dreadful” is no doubt unique, from playing guitar for blues maestro Jonny Lang from 2005-06, to singing and slinging webs originating the Marvel-ous title character in the Broadway smash “Spider-Man: Turn off the Dark” from 2010-13. The New York native has also had roles on the big screen, having starred in such films “The Tempest,” the Shakespeare classic adapted by his “Spider-Man” director Julie Taymor in 2010.

On TV with “Penny Dreadful,” the series presented an unusual opportunity for Carney in that it required him to strip down, both figuratively and literally. The great thing, Carney knew, was that the nakedness was something that he could only build upon.

“At first I was a little afraid to be involved, not because of the horror genre – because I’ve always loved that – but just the idea of having to take my clothes off a lot. I thought, ‘Wow, this is going to take a different type of courage for me,'” Carney said with laugh. “I knew after ‘Spider-Man’ that if I were going to put more of my focus into the acting world, that I had to do something as far away from the musical as I could possibly get. I only do that because I want to continue to take big leaps, so people don’t think that I’m just interested in one thing. I like to stretch as much as possible.”

The wonderful thing is, as much success as Carney has had in his time as a performance artist, “Penny Dreadful” — and his time with his band, Carney — he feels what is happening now only marks the beginning of a very promising career. And like Dorian Gray, youth is definitely on Carney’s side.

“If you would have asked me five years ago if I had any plans after  ‘Spider-Man,’ I probably would have said, ‘No, I’m just going to be a musician,'” Carney observed. “But I really do enjoy both music and acting now. I feel things are just beginning for me in a true sense.”

So, while musical theater doesn’t appear to be in the cards for Carney at this juncture, he’s still going to approach his dual occupations keeping both sensibilities in mind — especially using what he’s learned as an actor in his work as a musician.

“I enjoy them both. I think music and theater inform each other,” Carney enthused. “I approach acting as a musician would, and I think I approach music as an actor. Being an interpreter of songs, you don’t want to force your opinion into any song. You want to be open to the idea that something exists beyond yourself.”

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Review: Tim Lammers talks ‘300: Rise of an Empire’ on KARE-TV

Eva Green in '300 Rise of an Empire' (Warner Bros)

Tim reviews the long anticipated action adventure epic “300: Rise of an Empire,” starring Eva Green and Sullivan Stapleton, on KARE 11 TV (NBC) in Minneapolis. He also reviews the John Cusack and Robert De Niro crime thriller “The Bag Man.”

MORE: Eva Green interview

Interview: Eva Green brings bloody battle to ‘300: Rise of an Empire’

Sure, seven years have passed since the first “300” film and the specter of Gerard Butler’s King Leonidas is still looming large. But if anybody has fears that such a larger-than-life screen persona can’t be replicated, they’re sure to be knocked on their asses with Eva Green’s stunning portrayal of Artemisia in “300: Rise of an Empire.”

Beautiful, charismatic, ruthless and sexy as hell, Green’s Artemisia commands your attention every second she’s on-screen. The great thing is, while Green possesses all the physical attributes to make the character work, you can also see the wheels spinning behind her piercing eyes because Artemisia is also wrought with inner turmoil. The character is filled with all sorts of complexities, and Green said she reveled in every single one of them.

Eva Green in '300 Rise of an Empire' (photo -- Warner Bros)
Eva Green in ‘300 Rise of an Empire’ (photo: Warner Bros.).

“Thank God there’s the back story, otherwise, she would just be a one-dimensional killing machine,” Green observed. “Instead, we find out that she was traumatized as a child and had to build this sort of inner armor to survive. Her heart is so hard and there’s almost nothing left.”

Nothing, except a passion ignited by her enemy, the Greek General Themistokles (Sullivan Stapleton); an adversary she doesn’t necessarily loathe — but admires — because he’s equal to her in skill and stature. They go toe-to-toe and them some throughout “300: Rise of an Empire,” and in one of the film’s wildest scenes, Artemisia tries to seduce Themistokles in what may is destined to be one of the most-talked about sex scenes in years to come.

“It is kind of interesting when Themistokles shows up and it’s like, ‘Whoa,'” Green said with a laugh. “He might have awakened something in her, or not, because she’s completely mad. That childhood trauma made her blind and so full of vengeance. Her mission in life is ‘War, war and war.'”

Opening in theaters Friday in 2D, 3D and on IMAX screens, “300: Rise of an Empire” is based on the graphic novel “Xerxes” by “300” author Frank Miller. Directed by Noam Murro and produced and co-written by “300” helmer Zack Snyder, the story not only recalls the origins of the mortal-turned-god Xerxes (Rodrigo Santoro), it effectively runs parallel to the fateful journey of the 300 Spartans who march into battle against the Persian Army.

The crux of the story, though, is Themistokles’ battle against the massive invading Persian forces, ruled by Xerxes and led by Artemisia, who is the vengeful commander of the Persian Navy.

Tim Burton Book 2
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Admittedly shy in real life, Green loves roles like Artemisia because they give her an opportunity to blow off steam in ways she never otherwise dream of doing. After all, the soft-spoken yet engaging French-born actress clearly isn’t the sort of person who you’d imagine decapitating a person and kissing their disembodied head on the lips. She’ll leave that up to somebody as insane as Artemisia.

“To be irreverent, not polite and have no respect is fun because it’s so big. It’s fun to go so extreme,” Green, 33, enthused. “I think it’s important to have fun with it instead of being so serious and doing it with butterflies in your stomach.”

Adding to the fun for Green on “300: Rise of an Empire” was to get trained in the ways of the warrior. Not only did Green dive into an intense regimen to not only be fit physically to do all her own stunts, she also became very proficient with knives, swords and a bow and arrow.

“I’m action hero now,” Green said, laughing. “It was one of the things that I found appealing about the role. I was so excited to learn for a couple months how to play with double swords. It ended up being like a dance, in a way. But you still have to learn how to train to get stronger to do the fight scenes. You have to lift weights, and do lunges and squats so you can go low in your stances.”

Green said the idea of doing so much training was daunting at first, but it didn’t take long for the jitters to go away.

“I really got a kick out of it. I’m not really physical, usually, so it was like, ‘Whoa. This is a challenge,’ but it turned out to be great. I felt so much stronger. Now, I’ve lost everything I gained, of course,” she lamented.

Effectively, Green got the entire package playing Artemisia in “300: Rise of an Empire,” and to top it all off, she got to wear some pretty wicked wardrobe, too.

“The costumes were beautiful. Very regal, yet rock ‘n’ roll,” Green said. “They were very cool.”

Green is teaming up with Miller again in August in the “Sin City” sequel “Sin City: A Dame to Kill For.” Before that, she’ll be starring in the new Showtime series “Penny Dreadful,” which is described by the cable network as a psycho-sexual thriller.

Gamora pre-order Sideshow 2
Click image to pre-order the 12-inch (1:6 scale) figure of Gamora from “Guardians of the Galaxy” from Hot Toys/Sideshow Collectibles.